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David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979]
 
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David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979]

 Exempt   DVD
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
Price: £8.99 & this item Delivered FREE in the UK with Super Saver Delivery. See details and conditions
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David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979] + The Living Planet [DVD] + David Attenborough - Trials of Life [DVD]
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Product details

  • Format: PAL
  • Language English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Number of discs: 4
  • Classification: Exempt
  • Studio: 2 Entertain Video
  • DVD Release Date: 1 Sep 2003
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (25 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0000AISIQ
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 3,999 in Film & TV (See Top 100 in Film & TV)

Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review

David Attenborough had been a celebrated natural-history presenter ever since Zoo Quest in the 1950s, yet Life on Earth (1979) was something on an entirely different scale. With 150 minutes of the best selected clips from the 13-programme series, this offers a chronological account of the flora and fauna of planet earth over a period of 3,500 million years. Whether recounting the first journey from the sea to the land, the development of insects and flowers, or "The First Forests" and "The Lords of the Air", Attenborough's enthusiasm is infectious. He guides us through "The Infinite Variety" of life from microbes to marsupials, via an unforgettable meeting with mountain gorillas, to conclude with "The Compulsive Communicators", mankind itself. Three years in the making, involving one-and-a-half million miles of travel and featuring some of the most beautiful, breathtaking and ambitious photography then seen on television, Life on Earth was the first natural history blockbuster. It redefined TV by showing that an epic, serious wildlife documentary could be a massive popular success. As such it remains a true television landmark, and paved the way for Attenborough's The Living Planet (1984), The Trials of Life (1990), The Private Life of Plants (1994), as well as The Planets (1999) and Walking With Dinosaurs (1999). --Gary S Dalkin

Amazon.co.uk Review

Life on Earth (1979) is an epic 13-programme series, presented by David Attenborough, offering a chronological account of the flora and fauna of planet Earth over a period of 3,500 million years. Whether recounting the first journey from the sea to the land, the development of insects and flowers, or "The First Forests" and "The Lords of the Air", Attenborough's enthusiasm is infectious. He guides us through "The Infinite Variety" of life from microbes to marsupials, via an unforgettable meeting with mountain gorillas, to conclude with "The Compulsive Communicators", mankind itself.

Three years in the making, involving 1.5 million miles of travel and featuring some of the most beautiful, breathtaking and ambitious photography then seen on television, Life on Earth was the first natural history blockbuster. It redefined TV by showing that an epic, serious wildlife documentary could be a massive success. As such, it remains a true television landmark and paved the way for Attenborough's The Living Planet and further entries in what became known as his "Life" series.

On the DVD: Life on Earth is presented complete in this DVD box set, with a total running time of 715 minutes (13 x 55 minutes). --Gary S Dalkin


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25 Reviews
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44 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The evolution of life on earth ..., 30 Jan 2006
By 
Sally-Anne "mynameissally" (Leicestershire, United Kingdom) - See all my reviews
This review is from: David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979] (DVD)
From the very beginning upto the present day. Over the course of 13 programmes covering:

1) "The Infinite Variety" looks back as far as we can possibly go into the fossil record to the earliest single-celled life forms and the explosion of variety once life really got going in the world's oceans.

2) "Building Bodies" focuses on the evolution of animals with segmented bodies (crabs, lobsters, shrimps etc) and shells (scallops, clams etc) and those brave adventurers who eventually left their shells (slugs, squids, octopus etc).

3) "The First Forests" shows how first plant-life and then animal life found its way out of the seas and onto the land and how they solved the problems of supporting themselves and transferring sex cells out of the water.

4) "The Swarming Hordes" sounds like insects (or arthropods in general) and that's what this episode covers. They were a huge success on land and what they lacked in physical size they made up for in numbers - especially the ants and termites.

5) "Conquest of the Waters" is about the development of the back-boned fish that brought about a whole new wave of adaptation to warm and cold habitats, shallow and deep regions, fresh as well as salt water. And it generated some spectacular predators and ways of evading them.

6) "The Invasion of the Land" -- that should be the second invasion of the land. This time it's our ancestors, the back-boned fish, who clamber ashore. Evolution gradually provided them with all the right bits to crawl and breath and successfully reproduce.

7) "Victors of the Dry Land" follows the progress of evolution from the early amphibians to the dry-skinned reptiles who could mate and breed away from water, laying hard-shelled eggs. They gave rise to the dinosaurs and even after the disappearance of those big fellas, the reptiles are still doing quite well.

8) "Lords of the Air" is about birds: how scales evolved into feathers, providing insulation as well as a means of flight - not to mention the opportunity for male birds to show off with spectacular displays of their extravagant plumage and fabulous colours.

9) "The Rise of the Mammals" looks at the small furry, shrew-like creatures that arose while the dinosaurs where still dominating the planet. These humble little animals really came into their own when the dinosaurs became extinct, evolving into all the mammalian forms we know today, including us.

10) "Theme and Variation" considers the relatedness of animals to their ancestral line, for example the bats, the whales and dolphins, the marsupials, the ant-eaters, the primates etc.

11) "The Hunters and the Hunted" examines what happened when climate changed and forests shrank. Animals adapted to life on the open plains. Herds of grazers were stalked by carnivores, 'bloody in tooth and claw'.

12) "Life in the Trees" traces the progress of the small animals with dextrous little hands and forward looking eyes, that took to life in the trees. They evolved into lemurs, monkeys and apes. At some point, some of them came down and found they could make a good living on the ground.

13) "The Compulsive Communicators" is about us. Our ancestors came down from the trees, found their dextrous hands and forward looking eyes jolly useful for making a go of ground-level existence as well. Curiosity, sociability and communication abilities provided all sorts of advantages and led us to what we are today.

And finally, there's a special feature: "Wild Track with Tony Soper". David Attenborough is interviewed by Tony Soper about the making of "Life on Earth".

I watched the Life on Earth series on the television years ago and it made a great impression on me. And now I've watched it again on DVD over the course of a fortnight and enjoyed it just as much as the first time. Yes, it's true that filming technology was less sophisticated when this was made, but it was ground-breaking in its time and David Attenborough's style and presentation is unbeatable. This is still excellent.

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51 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Still amazing after 25 years, 18 Jan 2004
This review is from: David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979] (DVD)
First broadcast way back in 1979, Life on Earth remains the single most impressive achievement in the history of wildlife film-making.

The series offers a broad overview of the whole history of life, beginning with the very earliest cells and leading right up to the appearance of man, using footage of various living plants and animals from around the world to illustrate each major episode in the story. For anyone with an interest in nature, and who would like a good introduction to evolutionary biology that is both stunning and superbly explained, you can do no better than this incredible series.

It is true, as many reviewers have pointed out, that the content of this DVD shows some signs of age. This is inevitable when you remember that it is separated from us by 25 years of filming technology and scientific knowledge. Most noticeable to me is that the colour print is not as rich and vivid as a contemporary film, but then again the clarity of the pictures remains remarkably good with only a few short sequences seriously falling below par when compared with a recent film such as Life of Birds. For example, there are some underwater shots in one of the episodes that can't really hold a candle to the crystal clear material that we're treated to in the Blue Planet. The onwards march of scientific research means that, very occassionally, some of the information in the films might be considered out of date, but this is rare. Finally, there were no computer graphics to speak of 25 years ago and some of the animated sequences that are used in particular to illustrate features of ancient, long extinct lifeforms do look very dated. If the series were to be remade today then it would be augmented with much more sophisticated reconstructions.

However, when all of this is said and done, the two essential elements of this series still never fail to impress. These are the presentation of David Attenborough - always clear, authoritative and compelling - and, of course, the wildlife photography itself.

It is first and foremost to David Attenborough and the BBC that we owe our thanks for the fact that most British people's impression of the natural world about them includes many of the creatures and environments with which we are familiar today. If all we were fed was the kind of cutesy baby animals and crocodile baiting fare of the Disney variety then the effect that this might have had on environmental awareness and charitable giving to green organisations can only be guessed at. And besides, given that the spectacle and drama of the best wildlife films is often far better than most of what you see on TV and down the cinema, we would also have lost a great source of entertainment. Even if this kind of thing were all that the licence fee was spent on, it would still be worth every penny.

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37 of 38 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The greatest wildlife and natural history documentary ever, 4 Sep 2003
This review is from: David Attenborough - Life on Earth [DVD] [1979] (DVD)
In January 1979, I was 6 years old when the BBC first aired Life on Earth. I was hooked from the first episode and have recorded the series on video from repeats.

After bombarding the BBC for the last 4 years about when the full series was going to be released on DVD, they have finally done it.

This series was ground breaking and sparked my interest in the natural world, which I'm just as keen on today. The footage shot from all over the earth was brilliant and the natural progression of the story of evolution was very informative and interesting. David Attenborough is the greatest communicator of the natural world in television. T

The photography editing and story telling is so good that you could sit through all 13 episodes back to back.

Watch and be amazed at the rich diversity of life this world has to offer.
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