UN JOUR SUR TERRE (one day on earth), the time to watch this film is October 23, maybe I will watch it again tomorrow or the day after. I was attracted by his poster and his name even before the film was released.
The following text is not a film review, I just want to share this documentary with you, and I hope more people can embrace our lovely planet through this film.
We set off from the North Pole and waited for a long polar night. A black nose was exposed in the dazzling ice and snow. The polar bear finally rubbed out of the snow, and didn't want to walk at all. Switching to the distant view, the languid look elicited the audience's first laughter. Wait a minute, she's not alone. Every move of the 2 baby bears is hilarious (it's all to blame for how the mother bear chose this difficult place).
The narrator, Anggun, started a parent-child tour with the North Pole as a distance reference, as if he was telling a story to a child. There are wild duck parent-child groups, African elephant parent-child groups, whale parent-child groups, reindeer parent-child groups, etc. With music, we have experienced migration, foraging, separation, and capture. . . .
Because of the lens, we may not be unfamiliar with many corners of the earth; also because of the lens, we will find that our earth can't be photographed completely; and because of the lens, many wonderful clips can only be understood by watching them.
However, these pictures of the earth, I don’t want to see them only in the camera in the future. . .
The film finally replays a group of shots before the mother polar bear died. She swims forward alone in the ocean, swimming very slowly, because there is no food, the camera gradually zooms out, the broken ice floats, and only a white spot is seen. Moving slowly, it was like a baby elephant lost alone in the desertified grassland, burying its head and moving, but it did not know that it was in a direction that was thousands of meters away from the elephant herd. . .
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