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The documentary was filmed partially on the Kalahari Desert, where Uys first encountered the San people and "fell in love with them". [3] Uys chose a Coca-Cola bottle as the object that the San people would discover and covet in The Gods Must Be Crazy because he felt that the bottle was representative of "our plastic society", and because it ...
The Kalahari Desert is a large semi-arid sandy savanna in Southern Africa extending for 900,000 square kilometres (350,000 sq mi), covering much of Botswana, ...
Set in Botswana and South Africa, it tells the story of Xi, a San of the Kalahari Desert whose tribe discovers an empty Coca-Cola bottle. The bottle brings trouble to the tribe, and Xi is sent out into the unknown world beyond the Kalahari to return the bottle to the Gods by throwing the bottle off the world's end.
While camping in the Kalahari Desert, searching for Africa's roughest, toughest predator, Chris and Martin learn that Chef Gaston Gourmand is planning on serving a mystery animal at his next buffet, with Zach Varmitech as his guest of honor. Now, the Kratt brothers must race to save the mystery animal and learn about the toughest creature which ...
Kalahari Desert scenes were filmed in the Namib Desert, with additional locations at the Shamva Gold Mine outside Harare, and the Sesriem Desert in Namibia. [ 4 ] The original director and cinematographer were Rene Manzor and Paul Gyulay, respectively, but they were fired by Disney two weeks into production. [ 4 ]
This episode features animals from Africa, primarily in the Serengeti, but also the jungles of mid-Africa and the Kalahari Desert. These animals include elephants, rhinos, zebras, chimpanzees, colobus monkeys, meerkats, cheetahs, and lions. The law of survival and the food chain are also emphasized. Jane Goodall and Daphne Sheldrick appear.
The Meerkats, also known as Meerkats: The Movie, is a feature-length 2008 British wildlife fiction film which anthropomorphises the daily struggles of a clan of meerkats in the Kalahari Desert. It was produced by BBC Films , and filmed by the award-winning BBC Natural History Unit .
Eight-year-old Dirkie DeVries (Wynand Uys, credited as Dirkie Hayes), is flying with his Uncle Pete (Pieter Hauptfleisch) and his dog a Cairn Terrier, across the Kalahari Desert in a small plane, piloted by Uncle Pete, who partway into the flight has a heart attack and partially loses control of the plane.