sooooooo amazing! ! !
So ingenious, it presents a distant world, like another planet.
We wouldn't know how hard the crew was without the 10-minute supplement at the end of each level. It took 2 years to shoot the movement of the sand dunes in the Sahara Desert, and finally it only became a 14s shot; shooting the tropical rain forest, the cameraman’s back was covered with bugs and his clothes were rotten; there is danger at any time, an elephant hitting a big tree, a Buffalo, a poisonous scorpion...
It is in an unimaginable and difficult environment that the BBC presents us with an audio-visual feast, showing us the world of Africa.
After reading it, we are full of awe, both for the work team and for the creatures living in Africa. The Sahara desert has a harsh environment, almost no grass grows. The most tenacious silver ants can only stay in the hot sun for a few minutes at most, and the dung beetles in the desert are worthy of awe. It is such a disgusting environment that nourishes the tropical rain forest on the other end; The grumpy rhino in our stereotype actually interacts intimately and enthusiastically with its companions at night, while giraffes, springboks, turtles, elephants... so many creatures...
The BBC is so good at storytelling, the footage, the post-production soundtrack, the rhythm control, and the lyricism of the final episode... attracts the audience's full attention, is completely carried away by the rhythm, and is interested in watching a group of creatures that seem to have nothing to do with our lives, but there is So many lives exist with us on the earth, and it is someone who is silently protecting them, and it is someone who has gone to great lengths to present them...
Life is far more than the stall in front of me, there is life beyond life.
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