Great Barrier Reef

2012

Documentary

Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Top cast

720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
463.71 MB
1280*714
English 2.0
NR
29.97 fps
12 hr 50 min
P/S 4 / 2
859.54 MB
1920*1072
English 2.0
NR
29.97 fps
12 hr 50 min
P/S 1 / 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by DeeNine-210 / 10

Absolutely gorgeous and very interesting

The quality of the camera work and the incredible diversity of marine and shore life seen in this BBC video is world class, mostly in the same league as "Planet Earth" (2006) and in some ways better. The sheer profusion of life in the reef with the explosive dazzle of color and the graceful dance and sway of the sea creatures is mesmerizing.

The presentation by Monty Hall who narrates and stars is not the best however. His underwater vocals are garbled and his presence in some places is artificial and forced. He does look the part however, healthy and macho, and he even lives up to his namesake with a bit of slapstick when he gets sand thrown sharply in his face from a green turtle covering her clutch of eggs.

The DVD is 185 minutes long and I hardly noticed the time flying by until I got to the final sixty minutes or so. Here the focus is mostly on the green turtles that lay their eggs in the sands of Raine Island in the reef's Queensland National Park. This part of the show may be a bit unsettling for some viewers especially when some of the turtles can't get back to the sea and die in the hot sun or when the tiger sharks rip apart their corpses when they are later washed out to sea. It is also not fun to watch the baby turtles scrambling over the sand to the ocean only to be snapped up, desperately wriggling in the beak of a Rufous Night Heron.

The video also shows us a bit of the life ashore near the reef including some footage of the mangrove swamps; and there's some history of the reef and how the reef affects the Australian mainland. There are many surprises including tiny pink sea horses a centimeter long, a shrimp and a fish living symbiotically together, and sea snakes that live in the anus of sea cucumbers.

I'm looking forward to watching this again...well except for the last part about the green turtles.

—Dennis Littrell, author of "The World Is Not as We Think It Is"

Reviewed by SnoopyStyle8 / 10

another BBC nature doc

This BBC exploration of Australia's Great Barrier Reef is presented by Monty Halls. It's three hour-long episodes. The first episode examines the reef and the creatures around the reef. The second visits some of the isolated islands within the reef. The third examines the reef as it reaches outward.

I don't know this Monty Halls. He seems to be a producer and presenter in Britain. I have no problem with trying new voices other than the Attenboroughs. His voice is fine but I'm not completely sold. He's not really a guy I want to hang around with for that long. I don't really get the division among the episodes. It needs to explain the reef and the various locations in a better way. It needs to be more specific about the bleaching like when and where. It needs some organizing. Overall, this has a lot of the same pretty nature shots. It doesn't get much more awe-inspiring than having schools of fish swarming on top while the reef bursts with unimagined colors. This has the great BBC nature identity.

Reviewed by ravensteals10 / 10

Beautiful

Not too sure about Monty Halls ... not such an interesting guy or guide for that matter... but the camera man deserves an Oscar for this masterpiece...its beautiful. Really well done doc. thought out... and fascinating! You cannot take your eyes off it! Would watch again and again! Kids and adults alike will love it! Would recommend as a present... or just a nice addition to your documentary collection... Am off home to re-watch this again! My 8 year old son loves it, especially when it gets to the sharks... some great pieces on sharks... even a shark I have never heard of! Giving this a 10 out of 10 Hopefully the camera man gets the Oscar! :)

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