Skip to content
  • About us
  • Music
  • Celebrities
  • TV and Movies
  • Fashion
  • Entertaiment
  • Life Style
  • Travel and Health
Style Focus

Style Focus

  • About us
  • Music
  • Celebrities
  • TV and Movies
  • Fashion
  • Entertaiment
  • Life Style
  • Travel and Health
  • Toggle search form
  • Zendaya Transforms Into a Couture Robot for ‘Dune: Part Two’ Premiere Uncategorised
  • British author Samantha Harvey wins Booker with space story Uncategorised
  • Matthew Perry: Friends stars ‘devastated’ by death Uncategorised
  • Bands boycott music festival after group’s set ‘cut off’ Uncategorised
  • Rihanna Flashes Ring on That Finger While Rocking Denim-on-Denim Look for A$AP Rocky Date Night Uncategorised
  • Marko Bošnjak wins Dora 2025 and will represent Croatia at Eurovision Uncategorised
  • Elton John album on hold because he ‘can’t see’ Uncategorised
  • Spain: RTVE postpones Benidorm Fest 2025 artists reveal Uncategorised

Planet Earth III magnificent but horrifying, say reviewers

Posted on 23 October 2023 By Admin No Comments on Planet Earth III magnificent but horrifying, say reviewers
Turtles in Raine Island, AustraliaBBC Studios
By Paul Glynn
Entertainment reporter

Critics have called Sir David Attenborough’s latest series of Planet Earth “awe-inspiring” and “magnificent” but also “horrifying” and “sad”.

The third instalment of the landmark, award-winning programme began on Sunday on BBC One.

The eight-part series shows animals around the world fighting for survival amid constant environmental change.

The Guardian described episode one as “yet more majestic TV” from the veteran broadcaster.

“This awe-inspiring series has a scale that is simply spectacular,” wrote Rebecca Nicholson in a five-star review. “It is possible to watch and enjoy it purely for the astonishing footage – but it will horrify you too.”

She added: “It should be alarming that, in the six years since Planet Earth last appeared on our screens, this third series finds itself in a darker mood.”

The documentary, narrated by Sir David, 93, contains footage of the natural world – including shots from overhead drones and remotely operated deep-sea submersibles – gathered over five years across 43 countries.

The first episode is dedicated to coasts from Kent to South Africa, Mexico to Australia and beyond. It focuses on two cautionary tales; around the plights of the Caribbean flamingos on Mexico’s Yucatán Peninsula, and the similarly endangered green turtles of Raine Island on the Great Barrier Reef.

This video can not be played

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

We see old footage of a young Sir David visiting the same island more than 60 years earlier, and hear of the devastating impact human activity has had.

The Times’ Carol Midgley, in a four-star review, said the new series “is magnificent, but it’s a fast track to becoming really quite sad.”

“I thought the footage of the desert lions paddling in the sea to catch cormorants mid-air in the pitch darkness was amazing,” she wrote. “Miserably, so was the poor Caribbean flamingos having their entire nests wrecked by worsening storms (attributed to climate change), their chicks pathetically trying to scramble onto rocks as Attenborough’s voice doomily explained: ‘Soaked and cold [they] will soon perish unless they can get out of water. Some years no chicks survive.'”

Flamingos in Mexico

BBC Studios

A garter snake in Canada

BBC Studios

The Telegraph’s Ed Power wrote that Sir David “remains peerless when it comes describing the beauty – and fragility – of our planet”.

Planet Earth III “packs the sort of dazzling visual punch of which Hollywood could only dream, with languid overhead shots of flapping flamingos and their young who struggle to survive in the freezing rain”.

“At a time when there is so much uncertainty in the world, how enormously reassuring to know Attenborough is still on hand to share his passion with us,” he concluded.

This YouTube post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on YouTube

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. YouTube content may contain adverts.

Skip youtube video by BBC

Allow YouTube content?

This article contains content provided by Google YouTube. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Google’s cookie policy and privacy policy before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. YouTube content may contain adverts.

This time around, the series has moved to an earlier time slot of 18:15 BST, a move Attenborough and the producers said would give children more opportunities to observe and understand the natural world.

“Children have an instinctive understanding about the way the world operates,” Sir David said recently, while also issuing a warning about the perils of deforestation.

“The huge problem is the way we are gobbling up space, and have gobbled up space as though it belongs to us and nobody else.

“And the notion that you should actually have to restrain yourself in order to accommodate the natural world is not one which everybody feels.”

He added: “We need to persuade people that it’s quite a selfish thing to do because, apart from anything else, we depend upon the natural world and we had assumed that the natural world was inextinguishable for many, many years and no matter what we did, we could do what we like, because the natural world was always there.

“It is not always there, simply because we have now become such a dominant species in terms of numbers, we have come to realise that we have to live together and not just entirely on the terms that we choose.”

David Attenborough

Great white sharks and cape fur seals are also shown, off the coast of South Africa

BBC Studios

Appraising his latest efforts, the Daily Mail’s Christopher Stevens said: “Every moment of this opening episode was fascinating.

“It’s impossible to pinpoint any Attenborough series from the past seven decades as ‘the best’,” he continued. “But Planet Earth III can certainly claim to be the most visually stunning.”

In his five-star review, the I newspaper’s Gerard Gilbert called the show “spectacular, eye-opening, awe-inspiring – and terrifying”.

He stressed the latest series was “the closest David Attenborough has come to despair.”

“Altogether, it was heartening to realise that there is still so much nature out there to discover – even if the underlying message seemed to be ‘catch it while you can’.”

Related Topics

  • Television
  • Nature
  • Climate change
  • David Attenborough

Adblock test (Why?)

Uncategorised

Post navigation

Previous Post: New music this week (part 2): Songs from Käärijä, Mimicat, Elina Born and more
Next Post: Latin Grammys warm up: Benidorm Fest 2024 artists to be revealed ahead of awards show in Sevilla

Related Posts

  • “Take my hand and spin me”: Olly Alexander yearns for affection in “Dizzy” lyrics Uncategorised
  • Erika Vikman wins UMK 2025 and will represent Finland at Eurovision Uncategorised
  • Molly-Mae is back, and I Kissed a Boy returns: What’s coming up this week Uncategorised
  • Pride in London 2025: Chaka Khan, JJ and Miriana Conte confirmed Uncategorised
  • New music this week: Songs from Käärijä, Achille Lauro, Konstrakta and more Uncategorised
  • Norway: Bobbysocks return to Melodi Grand Prix 40 years after their Eurovision victory Uncategorised

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Ariana Grande announces first tour for seven years
  • BuDhaGirl’s Jessica Jesse Is Making Mindfulness Chic With Bangles That Double as Daily Rituals
  • What difference will marriage make to Taylor Swift’s music?
  • Meghan on who said ‘I love you’ first, and what she misses about UK
  • Jerry Adler, who starred in The Sopranos, dies aged 96

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023
  • April 2023
  • March 2023
  • February 2023
  • January 2023
  • March 2022

Categories

  • announcements
  • Events
  • Fashion
  • music
  • Persons
  • Uncategorised
  • Meet our Eurovision 2023 family! Uncategorised
  • Olivia Rodrigo leaves Glastonbury on a high Uncategorised
  • Kate Middleton’s Best Style Statements Uncategorised
  • Everything you need to know as Strictly returns Uncategorised
  • Fantastic Four and Pokémon Presents: What’s coming up this week? Uncategorised
  • Dad’s Army star Ian Lavender dies aged 77 Uncategorised
  • Poll results: Our readers choose Miriana Conte as their favourite to win Malta Eurovision Song Contest 2025 Uncategorised
  • Armenia confirms Eurovision 2025 return with Depi Evratesil as national selection Uncategorised

Copyright © Style Focus

Powered by PressBook News WordPress theme