Planet Earth is a
2006 television series produced by the
BBC Natural History Unit.
Four years in the making, it was the most expensive
nature documentary series ever
commissioned by the
BBC, and also the first to
be filmed in
high definition.
The series
was co-produced by the Discovery
Channel and NHK
in association with CBC, and was described by
its makers as "the definitive look at the diversity of our
planet".
Planet
Earth was first broadcast in the United Kingdom
on BBC One in March 2006,
and premiered one year later in the USA
on the
Discovery Channel. By June 2007, it had been shown in 130
countries worldwide. The original BBC version was narrated by
David Attenborough and produced
by
Alastair Fothergill. For
Discovery, the executive producer was Maureen Lemire, with
Sigourney Weaver's voiceover replacing
Attenborough.
The series comprises eleven episodes, each of which features a
global overview of a different
habitat on
Earth. At the end of each fifty-minute
episode, a ten-minute featurette takes a behind-the-scenes look at
the challenges of filming the series.
Background
In
2001 the BBC broadcast
The Blue Planet, a landmark
series on the natural history of the world's oceans. It received
critical acclaim, high viewing figures and audience appreciation
ratings and a string of awards. It also became a hugely profitable
global brand, eventually being sold to 150 countries worldwide.
Feedback showed that audiences particularly liked the epic scale,
the scenes of new and unusual species and the cinematic quality of
the series. Programme commissioners were keen for a follow-up, so
Alastair Fothergill decided that the Natural History Unit should
repeat the formula with a series looking at the whole planet. The
idea for
Planet Earth was born, and the series was
commissioned by
Lorraine
Heggessey, then Controller of BBC One, in January 2002.
A
feature film version of
Planet
Earth was commissioned alongside the television series,
repeating the successful model established with
The Blue
Planet and its companion film
Deep Blue.
Earth was released around the world
from 2007 to 2009. There was also another accompanying television
series,
Planet Earth: The
Future, which looked at the
environmental problems facing some of the
species and habitats featured in the main
series in more detail.
Production
Production team
With a budget of
UK£16 million,
Planet
Earth is the most expensive documentary series the BBC has
ever made.
The corporation signed a co-financing deal
with the Discovery Channel and NHK (Japan
’s state
broadcaster), its production partners on The Blue Planet,
to spread the cost of the ambitious project. Under the terms
of the deal, Discovery retained the US rights and NHK the Japanese
rights, while
BBC Worldwide retained
the rights for the rest of the world. Together, the Discovery and
NHK financing amounted to 60–70% of the cost of the series, which
paid for the upgrade to the high-definition format. BBC Worldwide
also funded the additional £7.4 million budget of
Earth,
the feature film.
The production duties were handled by the BBC Natural History Unit
under the leadership of executive producer Alastair Fothergill. The
individual episodes were overseen by six producers: Vanessa
Berlowitz, Mark Brownlow,
Andy Byatt, Huw
Cordey, Jonny Keeling and
Mark
Linfield.
They directed the film crews in the field,
backed up by a team of production co-ordinators and researchers at
the Natural History Unit's offices in Bristol
, England
. In
addition, the supporting team of scientists, guides, fixers,
pilots, drivers and field assistants numbered in the hundreds or
even thousands.
Post-production was carried out
using
BBC Resources' facilities in
Bristol. Investment in new technology enabled the series to be
edited and delivered without using videotapes.
Planet
Earth's distinctive use of satellite imagery and time-lapse effects were provided by design
company Burrell Durrant Hifle, using NASA
photography. The original score was composed and conducted
by
George Fenton, a veteran of
previous BBC natural history documentaries, and performed by the
BBC Concert Orchestra. The
script was written by the producers with input from David
Attenborough, though the US episodes feature different narration
and are slightly shorter in length.
Filming
Production began in 2002 and was completed in autumn 2006, shortly
before the final six episodes went to air. The first year after
commissioning was spent on researching and planning the shoots. To
capture all the footage required by the producers, 71 cameramen and
women filmed in 204 locations in 62 countries on all seven
continents, spending more than 2000 days in the field.
The decision to film
Planet Earth in high definition (HD)
was initially regarded by the BBC as a risk. In 2002, the
technology was still largely untested in the field, and Fothergill
was concerned about the difficulties of adapting to the new
cameras. Despite the reservations, the HD cameras proved to be
reliable and even out-performed traditional film cameras in certain
situations. Their high sensitivity allowed the team to film at
lower light levels than film cameras, in dark rainforests for
example. Because tape stock is smaller, lighter, and cheaper than
film, the lengths of shoots were limited primarily by the capacity
of batteries. This improved the chances of capturing interesting
behaviour, and enabled longer aerial shoots.
Panasonic VariCam
HD cameras were used for land-based footage and
Sony HD cameras for aerial sequences. The latter, a
distinctive feature of
Planet Earth, were shot using a
technique borrowed from
Hollywood action films. Mark
Kelem, the aerial cameraman, had previously worked on
Mission: Impossible III and
Black Hawk Down. The
camera was mounted in a device called a
Heligimbal, a
gyroscopically-stabilised housing attached to the
underside of a helicopter and controlled by joystick from inside
the cockpit. The unit was lightweight, enabling
lens with a longer reach to be attached
(up to 40x
magnification). This
enabled him to capture steady images of individual creatures from a
height which prevented the noise of the helicopter from disturbing
them.
TV firsts
One of the producers' aims was to build as much unique footage into
Planet Earth as possible, and the crews succeeded in
filming a number of species, locations and events from the natural
world which had never before been shown on television,
including:
Broadcast details
British television
The episodes are each an hour in length, comprising the main
programme and a 10-minute featurette called
Planet Earth
Diaries which details the filming of a particular event. In
the UK,
Planet Earth was split into two parts, broadcast
in spring and autumn 2006. The first five episodes premiered on
BBC One at 9:00pm on Sundays, beginning on 5
March 2006. The programmes were repeated the following Saturday in
an early evening slot on
BBC Two. Along with
its 2005 dramatisation of
Bleak House, the BBC selected
Planet Earth for its trial of
high-definition broadcasts. The
opening episode was its first-ever scheduled programme in the
format, shown 27 May 2006 on the
BBC HD
channel.
The first episode in the autumn series, "Great Plains", received
its first public showing at the
Edinburgh
International Television Festival on 26 August 2006. It was
shown on a giant screen in Conference Square. The remaining
episodes were broadcast from 5 November 2006 in the same primetime
BBC One slot, following a further repeat run of the spring
programmes on
BBC Four. The autumn episodes
were broadcast simultaneously on BBC HD and were repeated on BBC
Four the following week.
Besides being BBC One's featured "One to Watch" programme of the
day,
Planet Earth was heavily trailed on the BBC's
television and radio channels both before and during its run.
The music
that was featured in the BBC trailers for the series is the track
"Hoppípolla" from the album
Takk... by Icelandic
post-rock band Sigur Rós. Following the
advertisements, interest was so widespread that the single was
re-released. In the USA, the series was promoted using "The Time
Has Come" from
Epic Score, composed by Gabriel Shadid and Tobias
Marberger. The
Australian trailers
initially used "Jupiter: The Bringer of Jollity" from
Gustav Holst's orchestral suite
The Planets, but later reverted to
"Hoppípolla".
US television
On 25 March 2007, the series began its run on American television
on the
Discovery Channel,
garnering massive ratings and critical acclaim. Award-winning
actress and conservationist Sigourney Weaver replaced David
Attenborough as the narrator. It was the most watched show on
Discovery since
The
Flight That Fought Back on 11 September 2005. The show was
broadcast on Sundays in one 3-hour block followed by four 2-hour
blocks, with the episodes shown in a different running order to the
UK broadcast. It was also transmitted in high definition on the
then
Discovery HD Theater at
the same time as its
SD premiere. Edited versions
were later broadcast on
The Science
Channel and
Animal Planet. In the
Discovery Channel version, the
Planet Earth Diaries
segment was retitled
Capturing the Shot.
Other territories
The BBC
pre-sold the series to several overseas broadcasters, including the
Australian Broadcasting
Corporation
, the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, China Central
Television, Germany
's WDR, the
Indian
Discovery Channel,
New
Zealand
's Prime
Television and C1R in
Russia
. The series was eventually sold to 130
countries.
In Canada, the series did not air on the Canadian Discovery
Channel, as it is owned by
CTV and the Canadian rights were
exclusively sold to
CBC.
Episodes
1. "From Pole to Pole"
- UK broadcast 5 March 2006, 9.41 million viewers (34%
audience share); US broadcast 25 March 2007
The first episode illustrates a 'journey' around the globe and
reveals the effect of gradual climatic change and seasonal
transitions en route.
During Antarctica
's winter, emperor
penguins endure four months of darkness, with no food, in
temperatures of . Meanwhile, as spring arrives in the
Arctic,
polar bear
cubs take their first steps into a world of rapidly thawing ice.
In
northern Canada
, the longest
overland migration of any animal — over — is that of three million
caribou, which are hunted by wolves, and
one such pursuit is shown. The forests of eastern Russia
are home to
the Amur leopard; with a population of
just 40 individuals, it is now the world's rarest cat. This
is primarily because of the destruction of its habitat, and
Attenborough states that it "symbolises the fragility of our
natural heritage." However, in the
tropics,
the jungle that covers 3% of the planet's surface supports 50% of
its species.
Other species shown include New Guinea
's birds of
paradise, African hunting dogs
in their efficient pursuit of impala,
elephants in Africa migrating
towards the waters of the Okavango Delta
, a seasonal bloom of life in the otherwise arid
Kalahari
Desert
, and 300,000 migrating Baikal teal, containing the world's entire
population of the species in one flock. The
Planet Earth
Diaries segment shows how the wild dog hunt was filmed
unobtrusively with the aid of the
Heligimbal, a powerful,
gyro-stabilised camera mounted beneath a
helicopter.
2. "Mountains"

The Baltoro Glacier in the
Karakoram
- UK broadcast 12 March 2006, 8.57 million viewers (30%
audience share); US broadcast 25 March 2007
The second instalment focuses on the
mountains. All the main ranges are explored with
extensive aerial photography.
Ethiopia
's Erta
Ale
is the longest continually erupting volcano — for over 100 years. On the nearby
highlands,
geladas (the only primate whose
diet is almost entirely of
grass) inhabit
precipitous slopes nearly five kilometres (3 mi) up, in troops that
are 800-strong: the most numerous of their kind. Alongside them
live the
critically
endangered walia ibex, and both
species take turns to act as lookout for predatory
Ethiopian wolves. The
Andes have the most volatile weather and
guanacos are shown enduring a flash blizzard, along
with an exceptional group sighting of the normally solitary
puma.
The Alpine summits are
always snow-covered, apart from that of the
Matterhorn
, which is too sheer to allow it to settle.
Grizzly bear cubs emerge from their den for the
first time in the Rockies, while
Himalayan
inhabitants include rutting
markhor, golden
eagles that hunt migrating demoiselle cranes, and the rare snow leopard. At the eastern end of the
range, the
giant panda cannot hibernate
due to its poor nutriment of
bamboo and one
of them cradles its week-old cub.
Also shown is the Earth's biggest
mountain glacier: the Baltoro
in Pakistan
, which is long and visible from space.
Planet Earth Diaries demonstrates the difficulty of
obtaining the first ever close-up footage of the snow leopards: a
process which took over a year.
3. "Fresh Water"
- UK broadcast 19 March 2006, 8.83 million viewers (32%
audience share); US broadcast 15 April 2007
The fresh water programme describes the course taken by
rivers and some of the species that take advantage of
such a habitat. Only 3% of the world's water is fresh, yet all life
on land is ultimately dependent on it.
Its journey begins as
a stream in the mountains, illustrated by Venezuela
's Tepui, where there is a
tropical downpour almost every day. It then travels hundreds
of kilometres before forming
rapids.
With the
aid of some expansive helicopter photography, one sequence
demonstrates the vastness of Angel Falls
, the world's highest free-flowing waterfall. Its waters drop unbroken for
nearly 1,000 metres (3,000 feet) and are blown away as a
mist before they reach the bottom.
In Japan
, the water
is inhabited by the biggest amphibian, the two-metre long giant salamander, while in the northern
hemisphere, salmon undertake the largest
freshwater migration, and are hunted en route by grizzly
bears. The erosive nature of rivers is shown by the
Grand
Canyon
, created over five million years by the Colorado
River
. Also featured are smooth coated otters repelling mugger crocodiles and the latter's Nile cousin ambushing wildebeest as they cross the Mara River
. Roseate
spoonbill are numerous in the Pantanal
and are prey to spectacled caiman. In addition,
there are
cichlids,
piranhas,
river
dolphins and swimming
crab-eating macaque.
Planet Earth
Diaries shows how a camera crew filmed a piranha feeding
frenzy in Brazil
— after a
two-week search for the opportunity.

The Lechuguilla Cave
4. "Caves"
- UK broadcast 26 March 2006, 8.98 million viewers (33%
audience share); US broadcast 22 April 2007
This episode explores "Planet Earth's final frontier": the world of
caves.
At a depth of 400 metres (1,300 ft),
Mexico
's Cave of
Swallows
is Earth's deepest pit cave
freefall drop, allowing entry by BASE
jumpers. Its volume could contain New York City
's Empire State Building
. Equally as impressive, we explore the
otherworldly cenotes of the Yucatán
Peninsula
. Divers appeared to be flying in water as
clear as an air, as they give us a glimpse of the hundreds of
kilometers of these caves which have already been mapped.
Also
featured is Borneo
's Deer Cave
and Gomantong
Cave. Inhabitants of the former include three million
wrinkle-lipped bat,
which have deposited
guano on to an enormous
mound. In Gomantong Cave, guano is many metres high and is
blanketed with hundreds of thousands of
cockroaches and other invertebrates. Also depicted
are eyeless, subterranean creatures, such as the
Texas blind salamander and
("bizarrely") a species of
crab.
Carlsbad
Caverns National Park
is featured with its calcite formations.
Mexico's
Cueva de Villa Luz is
also featured, with its flowing stream of
sulphuric acid and
snottite formations made of living bacteria. A fish
species, the shortfin molly, has adapted to this habitat.
The
programme ends in New
Mexico
's Lechuguilla Cave
(discovered in 1986) where sulphuric
acid has produced unusually ornate, gypsum crystal formations. Planet Earth
Diaries reveals how a camera team spent a month among the
cockroaches on the guano mound in Gomantong Cave and describes the
logistics required to photograph Lechuguilla. Permission for the
latter took two years and local authorities are unlikely to allow
another visit.
5. "Deserts"
- UK broadcast 2 April 2006, 9.23 million viewers (34%
audience share); US broadcast 1 April 2007
This instalment features the harsh environment that covers one
third of the Earth: the
deserts.
Due to Siberian
winds, Mongolia
's Gobi Desert reaches
extremes of temperature like no other, ranging from -40°C to +50°C
(-40°F to 122°F). It is home to the rare
Bactrian camel, which eats snow to maintain
its fluid level and must limit itself to a day if it is not to
prove fatal.
Africa's Sahara is the size of the USA
, and just one of its severe dust storms could cover the whole of Great Britain
. While some creatures, such as the
dromedary, take them in their stride, for others
the only escape from such bombardments is to bury themselves in the
sand.
Few
rocks can resist them either and the outcrops shown in Egypt
's White
Desert
are being inexorably eroded. The biggest dunes
(300 m or 1,000 ft high) are to be found in Namibia
, while other deserts featured are Death Valley
in California
and Nevada
, the
Sonoran
in Arizona
, the deserts of Utah
, all in
the United
States
, the Atacama
in Chile
, and areas
of the Australian outback. Animals are shown searching for
food and surviving in such an unforgiving habitat:
African elephants that walk up to per day
to find food;
lions (hunting
oryx);
red kangaroos (which
moisten their forelegs with saliva to keep cool); nocturnal
fennec fox, acrobatic
flat lizards feeding on
black flies, and duelling
Nubian ibex. The final sequence illustrates one
of nature's most fearsome spectacles: a billion-strong plague of
desert locusts, destroying all
vegetation in its path.
Planet Earth Diaries explains how
the hunt for the elusive Bactrian camels necessitated a two-month
trek in Mongolia.
6. "Ice Worlds"
- UK broadcast 5 November 2006, 6.37 million viewers (24%
audience share); US broadcast 1 April 2007
The sixth
programme looks at the regions of the Arctic
and Antarctica
. The latter contains 90% of the world's ice,
and stays largely deserted until the spring, when visitors arrive
to harvest its waters.
Snow petrels take
their place on
nunataks and begin to court,
but are preyed on by
South Polar
skuas. During summer, a pod of
humpback whales hunt
krill by creating a spiralling net of bubbles. The
onset of winter sees the journey of
emperor penguins to their breeding grounds,
inland. Their eggs transferred to the males for safekeeping, the
females return to the ocean while their partners huddle into large
groups to endure the extreme cold. At the northern end of the
planet, Arctic residents include
musk oxen,
who are hunted by
Arctic foxes and
wolves. A female
polar bear and her two cubs head off across the
ice to look for food. As the sun melts the ice, a glimpse of the
Earth's potential future reveals a male polar bear that is unable
to find a firm footing anywhere and has to resort to swimming —
which it cannot do indefinitely. Its desperate need to eat brings
it to a colony of
walrus. Although it attacks
repeatedly, the herd is successful in evading it by returning to
the sea. Wounded and unable to feed, the bear will not survive.
Meanwhile, back in Antarctica, the eggs of the emperor penguins
finally hatch.
Planet Earth Diaries tells of the battle
with the elements to obtain the penguin footage and of unwelcome
visits from polar bears.
7. "Great Plains"
- UK broadcast 12 November 2006, 6.72 million viewers (24%
audience share); US broadcast 8 April 2007
This episode deals with
savanna,
steppe,
tundra,
prairie, and looks at the importance and resilience
of
grasses in such treeless ecosystems. Their
vast expanses contain the largest concentration of animal life. In
Outer Mongolia, a herd of
Mongolian gazelle flee a
bush fire and has to move on to new grazing, but
grass can repair itself rapidly and soon reappears. On the Arctic
tundra during spring, millions of
migratory snow
geese arrive to breed and their young are preyed on by Arctic
foxes. Meanwhile,
time-lapse photography
depicts moving herds of caribou as a calf is brought down by a
chasing wolf. On the
North American
prairie,
bison engage in the ritual
to establish the dominant males.
The Tibetan Plateau
is the highest of the plains and despite its
relative lack of grass, animals do survive there, including
yak and wild ass.
However, the area's most numerous resident is the
pika, whose nemesis is the
Tibetan fox.
In tropical India
, the tall
grasses hide some of the largest creatures and also the smallest,
such as the pygmy hog. The final
sequence depicts the African savannah and
elephant that are forced to share a
waterhole with a pride of thirty lions. The insufficient water
makes it an uneasy alliance and the latter gain the upper hand
during the night when their hunger drives them to hunt and
eventually kill one of the pachyderms.
Planet Earth
Diaries explains how the lion hunt was filmed in darkness
using
infrared light.
8. "Jungles"

A Costa Rican tree frog
- UK broadcast 19 November 2006, 7.04 million viewers (26%
audience share); US broadcast 15 April 2007
The next instalment examines
jungles and
tropical rainforests. These
environments occupy only 3% of the land yet are home to over half
of the world's species.
New
Guinea
is inhabited by almost 40 kinds of birds of paradise, which avoid conflict
with each other by living in different parts of the island.
Some of their elaborate courtship displays are shown. Within the
dense
forest canopy,
sunlight is prized, and the death of a
tree triggers a race by saplings to fill the vacant
space.
Fig are a widespread and popular food,
and as many as 44 types of
bird and
monkey have been observed picking from a single tree.
The sounds of the jungle throughout the day are explored, from the
early morning calls of
siamangs and
orangutans to the nocturnal cacophony of courting
tree frogs. The importance of
fungi to the rainforest is illustrated by a sequence
of them fruiting, including a
parasite
called
cordyceps. The mutual benefits of
the relationship between carnivorous
pitcher plants and red
crab spiders is also discussed.
In the Congo
, roaming forest
elephants are shown reaching a clearing to feed on essential
clay minerals within the mud. Finally,
chimpanzees are one of the few jungle
animals able to traverse both the forest floor and the canopy in
search of food. In
Uganda, members of a
150-strong community of the primates mount a raid into neighbouring
territory in order to gain control of it.
Planet Earth
Diaries looks at filming displaying birds of paradise,
focusing mainly on the filming of the
six-plumed
bird of paradise.
9. "Shallow Seas"
- UK broadcast 26 November 2006, 7.32 million viewers (28%
audience share); US broadcast 8 April 2007
This programme is devoted to the shallow seas that fringe the
world's
continents. Although they
constitute 8% of the oceans, they contain most marine life. As
humpback whales return to breeding grounds in the tropics, a mother
and its calf are followed. While the latter takes in up to 500
litres of milk a day, its parent will starve until it travels back
to the poles to feed — and it must do this while it still has
sufficient energy left for the journey.
The coral reefs of
Indonesia
are home to the biggest variety of ocean
dwellers. Examples include banded sea
krait, which ally themselves with
goatfish and
trevally
in order to hunt.
In Western Australia
, dolphins 'hydroplane' in
the shallowest waters to catch a meal, while in Bahrain
, 100,000 Socotra
cormorant rely on shamal that blow
sand grains into the nearby Persian Gulf
, transforming it into a rich fishing ground.
The appearance of
algae in the spring starts a
food chain that leads to an abundant harvest, and
sea lions and
dusky
dolphins are among those taking advantage of it. In
Southern Africa, as
chokka
squid are preyed on by
short-tail stingray, the
Cape fur seals that share the waters are
hunted by the world's largest predatory fish: the
great white shark.
On Marion Island in the Indian Ocean
, a group of king
penguins must cross a beach occupied by fur seals that do not
hesitate to attack them. Planet Earth Diaries shows
the difficulties of filming the one-second strike of a great white
shark, filmed by
Simon King.
10. "Seasonal Forests"

A stand of giant redwoods
- UK broadcast 3 December 2006, 7.42 million viewers (29%
audience share); US broadcast 22 April 2007
The penultimate episode surveys the
coniferous and
deciduous
seasonal woodland habitats — the most extensive forests on Earth.
Conifers begin sparsely in the Arctic but soon dominate the land,
and the
taiga circles the globe, containing a
third of all the Earth's trees. Few creatures can survive the
Arctic climate all year round, but the
moose
and
wolverine are exceptions.
to the south, on the
Pacific
coast of North America, conifers have reached their
full potential. These include some of the world's tallest
trees: the
redwood. Here, a
pine marten is shown stalking a
squirrel, and
great grey owl chicks take their first
flight.
Further south still, in the Valdivian forests of
Chile
, a population of smaller animals exist, including
the pudú and the kodkod. During spring in a European
broad-leafed forest, a
mandarin duck
leads its day-old family to leap from its tree trunk nest to the
leaf litter below.
Bialowieza Forest
typifies the habitat that characterised Europe
around 6000 years ago: only a fragment remains in Poland
and
Belarus
. On a summer night on North America's east
coast,
periodical cicada emerge en masse
to mate — an event that occurs every seventeen years. After
revisiting Russia's
Amur leopard in
winter, a timelapse sequence illustrates the effect of the ensuing
spring on the deciduous forest floor.
In India
's teak
forests, a langur monkey strays too far
from the chital that act as its sentinels and
falls prey to a tiger. Planet Earth
Diaries explains how aerial shots of the
baobab were achieved by the use of a
cinebulle, an adapted
hot air balloon.
11. "Ocean Deep"
- UK broadcast 10 December 2006, 6.02 million viewers (22%
audience share); US broadcast 25 March 2007
The final instalment concentrates on the most unexplored area of
the planet: the deep ocean. It begins with a
whale shark used as a shield by a shoal of bait
fish to protect themselves from
yellowfin
tuna. Also shown is an
oceanic whitetip shark trailing
rainbow runners. Meanwhile, a 500-strong school of
dolphins head for the
Azores,
where they work together to feast on scad mackerel. Down in the
ocean's furthest reaches, some creatures defy classification. On
the sea floor, scavengers such as the
spider crab bide their time, awaiting
carrion from above. The volcanic mountain chain at the bottom of
the Atlantic Ocean also sustains life through the bacteria that
surround its sulphide vents.
There are thought to be around 30,000
undersea volcanoes, some of them taller than Mount Everest
. Their sheer cliffs provide anchorage for
several corals and sponges. Nearer the surface, the currents that
surround these
seamounts force nutrients up
from below and thus marine life around them is abundant.
Off the
Mexican
coast, a large group of sailfish encircle another shoal of bait
fish. The hunters change colour as a message of their
intentions, since an attack could also be fatal to others of their
number. The last sequence depicts the largest animal on Earth: the
blue whale, of which 300,000 once roamed
the world's oceans. Now fewer than 3% remain.
Planet Earth
Diaries shows the search in the Bahamas
for oceanic whitetip sharks.
Planet Earth: The Future
The latter episodes were supplemented by
Planet Earth: The
Future, a series of three 60-minute films that highlight the
conservation issues surrounding some of the featured species and
environments. The programmes are narrated by Simon Poland and the
series producer was Fergus Beeley. The series began transmission on
BBC Four after the ninth episode, "Shallow Seas".
Feature film
BBC Worldwide and Greenlight Media
secured financing for a US$15 million film version of
Planet
Earth, to be distributed in several territories. This follows
the earlier success of a theatrical edition of
The Blue
Planet, entitled
Deep Blue.
Earth was directed by Alastair
Fothergill and Mark Winfield; it is of 90 minutes' duration and was
released in autumn 2007.
Reception
Time magazine's James
Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 New TV Series of 2007,
ranking it at #4.
Merchandise
The popularity of the television series around the world translated
into strong sales of associated
Planet Earth merchandise.
In the USA, it became the fastest-selling
DVD in
the Discovery Channel's history, and the
high-definition (HD) discs
generated US$3.2 million in sales in just two months. By the end of
2007, US sales had topped 3 million units, making it the highest
grossing HD title and one of the top ten DVD titles of the
year.
Further details of
Planet Earth's releases on a variety of
media are provided below. In addition, the brand was licensed to
other companies to produce calendars, a board game, jigsaws,
stationery, cards and more.
DVD
A five-disc DVD box set of the complete series (BBCDVD1883) was
released in the UK for
regions 2 and
4 (
PAL) on 27 November 2006 by
2 entertain. It is presented in 5.1-channel
Dolby Digital surround sound and
16:9 widescreen video.
The bonus features include
Planet Earth Diaries (presented
immediately after each episode as for the original TV broadcast)
and
Planet Earth: The Future, (see above). In the USA, two
versions of the same five-disc set were released as a
region 1 DVD on 24 April 2007. The
BBC Warner release retained David
Attenborough's narration from the original British television
broadcasts, but the Discovery Channel edition used the alternative
Sigourney Weaver voiceover.
HD DVD and Blu-Ray
Except for a small amount of extremely hard-to-obtain footage,
Planet Earth was filmed entirely in high definition, and
consequently became one of the first television series to take
advantage of the new HD disc formats.
The series was released in both
Blu-Ray
and
HD DVD formats as a five-disc
region B box set on 12 November
2007. On the fifth disc, the bonus features from the
standard definition DVD set were
replaced by two episodes from the BBC's
Natural World series, "Desert Lions" and
"Snow Leopard: Beyond the Myth", both also presented in high
definition.
In the USA, the series was released as a four-disc set in both high
definition formats, the Blu-Ray version on
single-layer BD-25
discs and the HD DVD set on
dual-layer HD DVD-30 discs. The US
high-definition releases omit the extra disc of bonus features from
the
standard-definition boxed
set.
Both the Blu-ray and HD DVD versions feature high-definition
transfers in
1080p resolution (though they are
labelled as
1080i on the packaging). As for
the standard definition sets, all versions use Attenborough's
narration.
Books
BBC Books has published four books to
accompany the television series:
- Planet Earth: As You've Never Seen It Before, the
official tie-in, was written by Alastair Fothergill with a foreword
by David Attenborough (ISBN 978-0563522126). It was published in
hardback on 5 October 2006 .
- The paperback title Planet Earth: The Making of an Epic
Series by David Nicholson-Lord (ISBN 978-0563493587) revealed
some of the tales from the field during filming expeditions. It was
published on 9 March 2006
- A second paperback, a companion to Planet Earth: The
Future edited by Fergus Beeley and Rosamund Kidman Cox with a
foreword by Jonathon Porritt (ISBN 978-0563539056), was also
published on 5 October 2006.
- A collection of still images from the series was published in a
hardcover volume as Planet Earth: The Photographs by
Alastair Fothergill (ISBN 978-1846073465) on 7 October 2007.
Soundtrack album
On 20 November 2006, a two-disc
soundtrack CD was
released with a compilation of the
incidental music specially commissioned for
Planet Earth. The award-winning score was composed by
George Fenton and performed by the
BBC Concert Orchestra.
References
- Radio
Times: 4–10 November 2006
- (data available for Planet Earth broadcast weeks by
searching archive)
- This information can be found on the back of the American HD
boxed sets
External links