Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Animal World is a 1956 American documentary film that was produced, written and directed by Irwin Allen. The film includes live-action footage of animals throughout the world, along with a ten-minute stop motion animated sequence about dinosaurs .
Dr. George McGavin looks at how and why animals swarm together. George McGavin (narrator/presenter) Spider House: 2014 Alice Roberts looks at the complex lives of spiders and tries to understand why so many people have a fear of them. In a bid to cure her own fear, she spends a night in a house full of spiders. Alice Roberts (presenter)
Robert J. Flaherty's 1922 film Nanook of the North is typically cited as the first feature-length documentary. [1] Decades later, Walt Disney Productions pioneered the serial theatrical release of nature-documentaries with its production of the True-Life Adventures series, a collection of fourteen full length and short subject nature films from 1948 to 1960. [2]
Bambuti (film) BBC Atlas of the Natural World; BBC Wildlife Specials; Bear Country (film) Bears and Man; A Beautiful Planet; Beetle Queen Conquers Tokyo; Being Caribou; The Best of Walt Disney's True-Life Adventures; Bestiaire; Bill Oddie Goes Wild; Birds Do It, Bees Do It; A Blank on the Map; Blue Planet (film) Borealis (2008 film) Born to Be ...
The Animals Film presents a survey of the uses of animals in factory farming, as pets, for entertainment, in scientific and military research, hunting, etc. The film also profiles the international animal rights movement. The film incorporates secret government footage, cartoons, newsreels, and excerpts from propaganda films.
After an animated introduction about the history of extinct species (e.g. the quagga, the great auk and the dodo) it has gone to 60 countries and territories (including Turkey, Spain, Germany, Poland, Australia, Borneo, Chile, Spitzbergen, New Zealand, Papua New Guinea, India, Java, United States, and Peru) on all continents and to the most famous national parks.
Babe (film) Babe: Pig in the City; Beavers (film) The Best of Walt Disney's True-Life Adventures; The Black Cat (1981 film) Bow Bow; Bringing Up Baby; Brothers of the Wind; Built for the Kill; Burning Bright (film)
The film refers to the Baiji and the Hawaiʻi ʻōʻō as recent examples of extinction (although both of these species are still believed by some to be extant), and identifies the Amphibian extinction crisis, the overfishing of sharks for shark fin soup and as bycatch, among others, as current causes for concern.