
Five of the best David Attenborough shows to watch
Look, both Blue Planets are excellent. The first was groundbreaking, opening up the underwater world to us in a way that had never really been done before. We saw worlds so foreign that they were practically alien: just think of the whalefall: ie. the sight of millions of critters feasting on a whale carcass in the deep. But Blue Planet II went one better, combining beauty with tragedy in the way that it started to show the effect that human activity was having on the oceans. The sight of a whale mourning its calf – which had, we are told, died from plastic poisoning – was enough to spark calls to ban single-use plastic for good. It's still shockingly powerful stuff today.

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Evening Standard
08-05-2025
- Evening Standard
Five of the best David Attenborough shows to watch
Look, both Blue Planets are excellent. The first was groundbreaking, opening up the underwater world to us in a way that had never really been done before. We saw worlds so foreign that they were practically alien: just think of the whalefall: ie. the sight of millions of critters feasting on a whale carcass in the deep. But Blue Planet II went one better, combining beauty with tragedy in the way that it started to show the effect that human activity was having on the oceans. The sight of a whale mourning its calf – which had, we are told, died from plastic poisoning – was enough to spark calls to ban single-use plastic for good. It's still shockingly powerful stuff today.


The Guardian
01-05-2025
- The Guardian
Attenborough at 99: naturalist ‘goes further than before' to speak out against industrial fishing in new film
When David Attenborough's Blue Planet II documentary aired eight years ago, its impact was so strong it was credited with bringing about a revolution in the way people use plastics. Now film-makers are hoping he can do the same for other destructive environmental practices that the world's best-known living naturalist describes as 'draining the life from our oceans'. The industrial fishing method of bottom trawling is the focus of a large part of Attenborough's latest film, Ocean, which airs in cinemas from 8 May, the naturalist's 99th birthday. In a remarkably no-holds-barred narrative, he says these vessels tear the seabed with such force 'the trails of destruction can be seen from space'. He also condemns what he calls 'modern day colonialism at sea', where huge trawlers, operating off the coasts of countries reliant on fish for food and livelihoods, are blamed for dwindling local catches. Industrial fishing, he says, has killed 'two-thirds of all large predator fish'. In Antarctica, trawlers may be 'removing the foundation of an entire ecosystem'. Sharks and turtles that survived the extinction of the dinosaurs, he says, may not survive hundreds of thousands of industrial trawling vessels, which compete with marine life and coastal fishing communities in 'every corner of the ocean'. In railing against such widespread fishing practices, Attenborough has 'gone a lot further' than he has before, says Keith Scholey, one of the film's directors and co-founder of Silverback Films, who has worked with Attenborough for more than 40 years. 'He's come to a new place. He knows how much the public trusts him and how careful he has to be. He does want to bring about this change. So he absolutely has gone a lot further with this than before. 'He is very sure that this is an opportunity for the world.' The film's most dramatic scenes include world-first footage showing bottom trawlers, including a scallop dredger off the south coast of Britain and another in Turkey. Clouds of carbon-capturing sediment are churned up, and fish and other marine life leap in vain to escape heavy beams smashing their way across the sea bed, destroying everything in their path. 'The idea of bulldozing a rainforest causes outrage, yet we do the same underwater every day,' says Attenborough. 'Surely you would argue it must be illegal.' Attenborough has faced some criticism in the past for not going far enough with his messaging around the climate crisis. His response has been that repeated warnings about human destruction of the natural world can be a 'turn-off' for viewers and his role was not to campaign but to tell 'gripping and truthful' wildlife stories. Scholey says Attenborough's role as a storyteller, rather than campaigner, has helped people understand the natural world. 'What David has succeeded at doing is remaining trusted by everyone, so that when he plays his cards, he can affect things in a huge way.' As he approaches 100 years on the planet, Attenborough tells viewers of the film, two years in the making, that it is the seas that cover more than 70% of our planet that should be the focus of our concern: 'I now understand that the most important place on Earth is not on land but at sea,' he says. 'We are at a crossroads, with humanity draining the life from the ocean.' The documentary's mission, says Scholey, is to highlight the UN's upcoming Ocean Conference in Nice, in June, where it is hoped a plan for ocean protection can be reached. Member states have agreed in principle to protect 30% of the world's oceans from destructive fishing by 2030, as part of an agreement to stop biodiversity loss. Attenborough's message is that this target needs more action. Sign up to Global Dispatch Get a different world view with a roundup of the best news, features and pictures, curated by our global development team after newsletter promotion Scholey compares the rise of industrial fishing with commercial whaling, both of which have driven species 'to the point of collapse'. Amid the anti-whaling protests of the 1970s and 80s, it was thought whale populations, some hunted to the brink of extinction, might never recover. But an agreement by the International Whaling Commission in 1982 stopped commercial whaling, and species are now thriving. 'Success is possible,' Attenborough attests from the deck of a vessel, as a blue whale swims alongside. 'I've seen it on a global scale once before.' Toby Nowlan, one of Ocean's three directors, who also produced it, says: 'There is an element of wake-up call, but really it's a story of hope and recovery.' The film shows inspirational stories of ocean recovery in places where destructive fishing is banned, including off the Isle of Arran, Scotland, and Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument, Hawaii. 'The ocean can recover faster than we can ever imagine: it can bounce back to life,' says Attenborough. Ocean will be available on Hulu and Disney+ later this year


Telegraph
17-11-2024
- Telegraph
The wildest – and most worrying – images from Barack Obama's nature documentary
It doesn't bear thinking about, but the world must prepare for Our Oceans is not the former president's first rodeo – he narrated Our Oceans , who also produced 2017's Blue Planet II. Obama, he explains, 'is such a great fit for the series. He's a man of the ocean, he was born in the middle of the Pacific [in Hawaii], and he's protected more of the ocean than pretty much anyone else. He's a very authentic and passionate voice in that area.' Over five years in the making, Our Oceans will offer never-before-seen glimpses into life under the sea over five episodes, each focused on a different ocean. Technological advances have opened up a new world, including non-invasive suction cameras attached to cetaceans, which show a thrilling whale's eye view of a female There are narwhals stunning Arctic char with their tusks, and an octopus turning its siphon into a blowgun to shoot fish in the face. 'The magic of That world is rapidly changing, and he says the mission was not only to entertain, but to help viewers connect with and care for the oceans. 'It's a world in crisis. Ocean health is in decline. We address the climate crisis, the biodiversity crisis due to overfishing, and pollution. It's about finding a balance that allows people to immerse themselves in the joys and wonders and excitements of all the discovery that's happening underwater.' Our Oceans will be on Netflix from 20 November