Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake
At 99, Attenborough's voice is still strong, and his capacity to move people with revelations of the astonishing world around them is undiminished.
Now there is growing evidence that of the many tens of documentaries he has presented or created over his career, Ocean is having the most immediate impact of them all.
'I believe Ocean will prove to be Sir David's masterpiece,' says Andrew Forrest, the billionaire Fortescue Metals Group chairman, whose Minderoo Pictures provided almost half the film's funding, and who recently attended its world premiere in London last month with Attenborough and King Charles.
The film (its full title is Ocean with David Attenborough) focuses on the wonder of our seas, and their centrality to life on earth, and reveals how rapidly they are being pillaged and destroyed by industrial fishing.
Of all Attenborough's films, it is his most political. 'We have drained the life from our ocean. Now we are almost out of time,' he says at one point.
One particular sequence in the film appears to having a profound impact not only on audiences, but on politicians and policymakers.
Having established the extraordinary beauty and complexity of life in the shallow waters of the world's continental shelves, the camera follows the chains of a bottom trawling net to the ocean floor. In the blue-green murk, it is a scene from a horror movie.
'From the surface you would have no idea that this was happening,' says Attenborough in the narration. 'It has remained hidden from view, until now.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
2 days ago
- News.com.au
What's on in Darwin this long weekend: Rides, music, scones and a new mango matcha option
WHAT'S ON THIS WEEKEND Happy long weekend, my friends. It is, of course, show weekend at the Darwin Showgrounds, so if you haven't checked that out, the last day is today, and it is open until 10pm. If you're looking for music and musical theatre, there are plenty of options across town this weekend. Kicking it off, it's the Triple J Hottest 100 Australian Songs of All Time today. You can tune in wherever you are – and they're playing it at One Mile Brewery all day. You can catch two musical performances at Darwin Entertainment Centre tonight: The Wedding Singer Musical, and Kate Ceberano is also in town with her Australian Made tour. If discovering some new music is on the agenda, the Railway Club have Emily Lubitz releasing her debut album, 'Two Black Horses' tonight, too. The Waterfront is home to another cultural festival this weekend. And get ready to experience the colours, flavours, music, and magic of Bangladesh on Saturday afternoon. On Sunday, catch Za Za Zoo, a blend of Soul, RnB, Blues, Funk, and HipHop at Flora's Temper in Nightcliff – I'm told Happy hour starts at 11.30am. And there may still be tickets to OCEAN with David Attenborough at the Deckchair Cinema for Sunday night, these will sell out, so get in quick. SOMEWHERE YOU NEED TO EAT I have two hot tips for you today: one food, one drink. Lucky you. I've talked about the Matcha trend before, but there's a new kid on the block, and it's very Territory. Have you tried a MANGO Matcha? Botanicool in Stuart Park have gone full Tropical (they're also a plant shop, so it makes sense) and their signature Matcha flavour is mango. It's sweet and delicious, highly recommend stopping in for a try. My other tip is for the long weekenders heading out to Litchfield: did you know you could get fresh scones from the Litchfield Tourist Park? It's the first caravan park on your right if you're heading back towards Batchelor from the waterfalls, and if you ask me, sitting out on their little cafe deck with some scones is the perfect way to enjoy the drive back to reality after a lovely night of nature and no phone service. I highly recommend. LOCALS TIP It's well and truly visitor season, and I am sure one of the most asked questions from visitors is 'where can we see a croc?'. There are, of course, the usual culprits, Crocosaurus Cove, Crocodylus Park, Jumping Crocs – but just because it doesn't have Crocodile in the name, don't discount the Corroboree Wetland Cruises for a great place to see a crocodile. I've seen my fair share of them, and I don't think I've ever seen one as big as the one I saw on this cruise. It's a very relaxing, very easy way to see them in their natural habitats, so if you've got time to drive the 1.5 hours each way, it's definitely worth making a trip of it and stopping into the Bark Hut, Corroboree Tavern or Humpty Doo Hotel for lunch.

News.com.au
01-07-2025
- News.com.au
Jockey Joe Bowditch reveals his passion for diving and underwater exploration for seafood
Jockey Joe Bowditch is equally at home scouring the ocean bed for crustacean delights as he is at top speed aboard a 500kg thoroughbred. Bowditch has ridden more than 1450 winners in a career that has taken him to ride in every state in Australia as well as in Dubai and Hong Kong. Bowditch has forged a place in the Victorian riding ranks in the last few years, consistently punching home winners for a variety of stables. While Victoria has provided Bowditch with a good living on the state's bays and inlets have been a bonanza for the jockey's burgeoning obsession with diving. Bowditch takes every chance he gets to head out in search of the high quality Victorian seafood. 'I get out as often as I can, weather permitting and the races permitting as well,' Bowditch said. 'If the weather is good and I've got the day out, I'm happy to head out. 'A lot of people get water up their nose and start panicking. 'I bought a boat when I was up at the Gold Coast and I didn't even know how to put the boat in the water. 'I got into it that way and a good mate of mine in Adelaide, a horse trainer named Darryl Carrison, he's an abalone diver and he took me out and showed me how to do it. 'I've had a passion for it ever since.' Bowditch doesn't seek abalone as he 'doesn't know how to cook it properly and it ends up like eating a gumboot' but delicacies such as mussels, crayfish and scallops often land in his bag. The 48-year-old doesn't use the whole scuba set-up but dives to the ocean bed using an air hose attached to his boat in which he dives with his cousin's husband, who has become one of his best mates. Melbourne's winter is still no match for Bowditch's desire to dive in the ocean while a weight belt helps the lightweight rider get to the bottom. 'I run off a hook-up, a dive hose, so when we go for crays, we got out for crays, we're in anything between 20 or 30m of water,' Bowditch said. 'If we're chasing scallops, we're in four to six metres of water. 'I've got like a 7mm thick wetsuit so even now in the winter time, if the water was flat and the sun was out, I could still go out and not get cold in that wetsuit. 'My weight belt weighs as much as I do. When I'm out of the water, I'm flat out picking it up. 'Once I get it on and get in the water, I'm able to get down to the bottom. 'It would probably be 20 or 25kg of weight in the weight belt to help me get down to the bottom.' While Bowditch is a vastly experienced diver, he said he still had to be extremely careful to stay safe while indulging in his passion. 'It's dangerous if you don't know what you're doing,' Bowditch said. 'If you come up too quick, you can get the bends pretty easily. 'You can even get the bends in four metres of water because you've still got the nitrogen running through your blood. 'You can either get the bends or getting an air bubble in the brain, which can kill you.' But the development of culinary skills has been a pleasurable by-product of Bowditch's diving experiences. 'I've become a good cook on the barbie,' Bowditch said. 'Just before I went on holidays, I went out and got probably a dozen squid and feed of whiting and flathead. 'I catch plenty of scallops that I've learned about 15 different ways of cooking them. 'I just love it.'

Sydney Morning Herald
27-06-2025
- Sydney Morning Herald
Attenborough's new doco is bringing audiences to tears. One voice has gone completely silent in its wake
In the darkness of the cinema during screenings of Sir David Attenborough's new film, Ocean, it is not uncommon to hear members of the audience weep for what they have lost, or more specifically, what has been taken from them as they looked elsewhere. At 99, Attenborough's voice is still strong, and his capacity to move people with revelations of the astonishing world around them is undiminished. Now there is growing evidence that of the many tens of documentaries he has presented or created over his career, Ocean is having the most immediate impact of them all. 'I believe Ocean will prove to be Sir David's masterpiece,' says Andrew Forrest, the billionaire Fortescue Metals Group chairman, whose Minderoo Pictures provided almost half the film's funding, and who recently attended its world premiere in London last month with Attenborough and King Charles. The film (its full title is Ocean with David Attenborough) focuses on the wonder of our seas, and their centrality to life on earth, and reveals how rapidly they are being pillaged and destroyed by industrial fishing. Of all Attenborough's films, it is his most political. 'We have drained the life from our ocean. Now we are almost out of time,' he says at one point. One particular sequence in the film appears to having a profound impact not only on audiences, but on politicians and policymakers. Having established the extraordinary beauty and complexity of life in the shallow waters of the world's continental shelves, the camera follows the chains of a bottom trawling net to the ocean floor. In the blue-green murk, it is a scene from a horror movie. 'From the surface you would have no idea that this was happening,' says Attenborough in the narration. 'It has remained hidden from view, until now.'