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What does the documentary "Our Planet", which won two Emmy Awards, tell us?

When it comes to documentaries on natural themes, everyone will definitely think of "Pulse of the Earth" and "Blue Planet" produced by the BBC. The spectacular frames make people marvel at the magnificence of nature and the power of life.

And "Our Planet", which was broadcast in April last year (2019), presented another visual feast to the audience.

The documentary is produced by Netflix, but the producer is still the BBC's gold medal team Silverback films.

Through cooperation with the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), it took four years and more than 600 staff members, using advanced filming technology, to visit more than 50 countries and regions, from Antarctica to the North Pole, from deserts to rainforests

, from offshore to deep sea, presents us with a multi-dimensional earth ecosystem.

The narrator is David Attenborough, a celebrity in BBC documentaries who is called a "national treasure" by the British.

With breathtakingly beautiful images and David's objective and thought-provoking narration, the documentary won two Emmy Awards - "Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series" and "Outstanding Documentary or Nonfiction Series".

Best Narrator Award".

This documentary has eight episodes, namely "One Planet", "Frozen Worlds", "Jungles", "Coastal Seas", "From Desert to

"From Deserts to Grasslands", "High Seas", "Fresch Water", and "Forests".

At the beginning of each episode, the audience is presented with a picture of the Earth taken from the moon, plus David's voiceover: Just 50 years ago, we finally ventured to the moon. For the very first time, we looked back at our own planet

. Since then, the human population has more than doubed. This series will celebrate the natural wonders that remain and reveal what we must preserve to ensure that people and nature thrive. (Just fifty years ago, we finally landed on the moon. This

For the first time, we are looking back at our planet. Since then, the population has more than doubled. This series will celebrate the natural wonders that exist and reveal what we must protect to ensure that people and nature can thrive.

From this voice-over, the audience can expect that the film will have two themes: natural wonders and environmental protection.

Let’s first take a look at the natural beauty in the film: The polar bear cub carefully follows its mother to hunt seals. They use their sensitive senses of smell and taste to locate the seal. It’s so cute to watch it lift its right hind leg that has not been put down. A little baby

The seal was stared at by the polar bear cub. It heard its mother's call and eagerly wanted to get back into the ice hole dug by her mother.

Flocks of flamingos fly over thousands of mountains and rivers to the salty land where there are no natural predators, lay eggs and hatch their young. Sea otters lie lazily on the water and can easily grab delicious food.

The endangered Arabian leopards are mating. The female leopard keeps roaring and biting the male leopard. This may be the animal's petty sentimentality, haha. The male golden-collared flycatcher invites a backup dancer to help him attract the female bird. He walks in neat steps and finally captures the heart!

In addition to building nests and cleaning the house, the Western Six-line Bird of Paradise also has to show off its excellent dancing skills to win the favor of the female bird.

When salmon move upstream into the river to spawn, Alaskan brown bears are already there waiting for a feast.

Humpback whales travel more than 8,000 kilometers to Antarctica to feed on krill under the sea ice.

Wonderland-like forest interior.

In addition to natural wonders, "Our Planet" is also full of heart-pounding and guilt-inducing scenes.

In the last scene of "The Frozen World", walruses live crowded on land due to the melting of sea ice. Because they are too crowded, some walruses climbed up the cliff with their long tusks, but when they are hungry, they have to

Returning to the sea, due to poor eyesight, the journey down is quite dangerous. If you are not careful, you will fall off the cliff. Some people fall to their death on the spot, while others are unable to move and die slowly.

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In "The Jungle," David spoke slowly and slowly, saying that because the lowland jungle where orangutans rely for survival has decreased by 75%, they will also be on the verge of extinction.

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In the "deep sea", coral reefs have been decimated by human fishing nets ravaging the seafloor, and it will take centuries to recover.

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