
How to watch Ocean with David Attenborough on Disney+
Ocean With David Attenborough was released in cinemas to mark the renowned naturalist and TV presenter's 99th birthday and includes a sequence where the camera follows a bottom trawl, where nets are dragged with a metal beam across the seabed to catch fish.
As the iron chains travel across the ocean floor they can be seen bulldozing through the habitat, stirring up silt which releases carbon and scooping up species indiscriminately.
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The footage is thought to be the first time the process has been filmed in such high quality, showing the scale of destruction caused by trawling.
Sir David can be heard saying that 'very few places are safe' from the damaging fishing method, which occurs daily across vast swathes of the world's seabeds.
In the clip, he also highlights how trawlers, often on the hunt for a single species, discard almost everything they catch.
'It's hard to imagine a more wasteful way to catch fish,' he notes.
While bottom trawling and other forms of destructive fishing are allowed in UK waters, conservationists have long been campaigning for a full ban across all marine protected areas.
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The impacts of bottom trawling and dredging are largely hidden from public view and are carried out without the knowledge of what marine life is being destroyed.
Ocean looks to spotlight how human actions are leading to the collapse of the ecosystem.
The film also hopes to highlight the need to protect nearly a third of the oceans so they can recover from overfishing and habitat destruction, secure food for billions of people and tackle climate change.
Sir David also highlights the destruction from coral bleaching and shares inspiring stories from around the world, delivering the message that taking collective action will provide the opportunity for marine life to recover.
'If we save the sea, we save our world,' he says.
Toby Nowlan, Keith Scholey and Colin Butfield, who directed the film, said: 'Collaborating with David Attenborough to deliver this powerful message is a dream come true for us as filmmakers and storytellers.
'We hope that sharing this unprecedented look at bottom trawling will bring greater awareness to the reality of what's happening beneath the waves and inspire audiences to protect the world around us.'
Enric Sala, National Geographic Pristine Seas founder and executive producer of the film, said: 'I couldn't think of a more crucial time for this film to be available to a global audience.
'For the first time, people can see the destruction of bottom trawling unfold in front of their eyes — the heavy nets dragging across the ocean's precious floor and killing everything in their wake.
'I hope the film makes people all over the world fall in love with the ocean and inspires them to protect it.'
Ocean with David Attenborough is available to watch in UK cinemas now across various dates and time slots.
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However, if you'd like to watch the film from the comfort of your own home, here's how you can.
Ocean with David Attenborough will be available to watch on Disney+ from Sunday, June 8, so to watch the film you will need a Disney+ account.
The series will also be available to watch on Sunday at 8pm on National Geographic UK.
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Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
David Attenborough fans gush over 'stunning' new 'Parenthood' series which sees 99-year-old naturalist explore the lives of animal parents
David Attenborough fans have gushed over the presenter's 'stunning' new 'Parenthood' series which delves into the unique lives of animal parents. The incredible documentary, narrated by 99-year-old Sir David, explores both the highs and lows of animals raising their young in the wild. The first episode of the beloved broadcaster's new five-part series aired on Sunday, August 3, with viewers taking to social media to express their utter delight at the insightful programme that left them 'blown away'. A fascinating clip from the show captures Attenborough's team as they attempt to build up a relationship with the unique silverback gorillas and their infants. Described by Max Kobl, cinematographer for the show, as 'probably the most powerful of all primates', Sir David, narrating, warns that 'it isn't going to come easy' for the film crew as they attempt to get close to the sneaky gorillas. 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Metro
4 hours ago
- Metro
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Telegraph
4 hours ago
- Telegraph
David Attenborough's new series will haunt your dreams
Arachnophobes should avoid David Attenborough 's new wildlife documentary, Parenthood (BBC One) at all costs. Even if you don't mind spiders, this might haunt your dreams. In Namibia, an African social spider shares a nest with her 50 sisters. They hunt in perfect unison, advancing and pausing like an arachnid version of granny's footsteps. That is skin-crawling enough, but much worse is to come. This is a series about parenthood, you see, and the mother spider who has raised her 30 spiderlings makes the ultimate sacrifice to help them grow: exhausted from the strain of feeding her young, she mimics the vibrations of a distressed prey insect. They descend en masse and eat her. Her cousins do the same – that's 1,000 spiderlings turning on their mothers and aunts, and devouring them. These scenes come with crunchy sound effects and horror film music. There's probably a lesson in here somewhere about Gen Z destroying the generation that gave them everything, but let's move on. The rest of the episode is cuter. A Western lowland gorilla cradling an adorable newborn baby. Lion cubs in the Kalahari Desert. Some fluffy owl chicks do their best to fend off a roadrunner (as a child raised on Looney Tunes, I'm not sure I ever gave thought to the fact that roadrunners are real birds, so it was interesting to see one). Attenborough even throws in some poo jokes as the camera focuses on a hippo's behind in a river in Tanzania. Kids will love this bit. If you've not seen it yet, perhaps switch off the programme after this point, before you get to the spider matricide. Don't want to give the children ideas. Those scenes aside, there is nothing here we haven't seen before – or that's how it feels, anyway. We've been spoilt over the years by top-quality nature programming. It has the obligatory 'how we made it' section at the end, once a novelty but now standard. And something else we've experienced before: while the programme tells us that footage of a female boxer crab is shot on an Indonesian reef, a tiny note online reveals that it was partly shot in a 'specialist filming tank', as were other underwater scenes from later episodes. The BBC says there are good reasons for this – the fragility of the reef, and the challenges of filming such tiny creatures – but it's still not giving viewers the full picture. The series is mostly family fare, and more anthropomorphised than the landmark shows that remain Attenborough's high-water mark. Scenes of an owl inspecting a burrow are set to jaunty music and likened to humans checking out a new property. A female boxer crab is referred to as 'a supermum'. At 99, Attenborough's work is in providing narration rather than trekking around the world to see the animals in the wild. But there is no edge of frailty to his voice. In fact, he sounds decades younger than his age. Now that AI can clone and mimic how a person sounds, it wouldn't surprise me if someone does that with Attenborough after he's gone; generating his tones to give future wildlife documentaries a touch of class.