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Walking with Cavemen is a 2003 four-part nature documentary television miniseries produced by the BBC Science Unit, [4] the Discovery Channel and ProSieben. [5] Walking with Cavemen explores human evolution, showcasing various extinct hominin species and their inferred behaviours and social dynamics.
The accompanying hardcover book, Wild Down Under by Neil Nightingale, Mary Summerill, Hugh Pearson and Jeni Cleversy, was published by BBC Books on 18 September 2003 (ISBN 0-563-48822-0). The foreword is written by Tim Flannery. In Australia the book was released under the title Wild Australasia.
The series was available as a 3-disc DVD set (BBCDVD1089, released 3 December 2001 and re-released in 2003), including interviews with the production team, a photo gallery and three additional programmes: Making Waves: the making of The Blue Planet (50 mins) Deep Trouble: an ecological documentary (50 mins) Blue: a five-minute theatrical short
Deep Blue is a theatrical version of the 2001 BBC nature documentary series The Blue Planet. BBC Worldwide and Germany's Greenlight Media co-produced the film. Alastair Fothergill and Andy Byatt are credited as directors, and six cinematographers were also credited: Doug Allan, Mike deGruy, Peter Scoones, Simon King, Rick Rosenthal, and Bob Cranston. [4]
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 18 January 2025. Not to be confused with Planet Dinosaur. 2003 American TV series or program Dinosaur Planet Starring Scott D. Sampson Narrated by Christian Slater Composer Dean Grinsfelder Country of origin United States No. of seasons 1 No. of episodes 4 Production Executive producers Jean Raymond ...
A. Absurd Planet; Africa (2013 TV series) Africa: The Serengeti; African Cats; The African Lion; Alaska: Spirit of the Wild; Alien Worlds (TV series) Alone in the Wild
Deep Shock is a 2003 American science-fiction-horror film that debuted as a Sci Fi Pictures TV-movie on the Sci Fi Channel. Its plot concerns an unknown underwater object that disables an American nuclear-powered submarine and attacks a submerged Arctic research complex. The monsters of the movie are giant intelligent electric eels.
The November 2003 world premiere of the movie at MIX was much more abstract in nature, running about two hours. With input from Mitchell, Winter, and co-editor Brian A. Kates, Caouette shot new footage and edited the film down to about 90 minutes for its screening at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival in the Frontier Section.