25 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :- An inspiring film doesn't necessarily make you feel good..., 29 November 2007
Author:
ysbrant from Spain
I loved the way EARTH is made. Its photography is unbelievable, editing
it must have been an interesting challenge and Patrick Stewart's voice
over is PERFECT. In addition its music and sound editing make watching
EARTH a profound experience you don't want to miss. You really are on a
journey to where you would probably never-ever end up by yourself.
And although, at first, I was quite surprised by the laughter of the
audience as we see animals in their daily fight for survival, I could
not help laughing myself sometimes. Nature simply seems too impressive
to comprehend.
But, rather than the need to laugh, I left the cinema with a profound
question:"Howcome 200 years of industrial revolution can destroy
natural systems that have been here for thousands and thousands of
years?"
With this question in mind, you'll understand how I felt somewhat
bitter and powerless after seeing EARTH. I felt the immediate need to
change the world, to help all these animals in their struggle, to undo
the changes we have gone through the last centuries and to stop the
global heating at once (all that not being a NGO activist at all!)...
So I immediately visited the website mentioned at the end of the film
to see what I could do to save our -still- fantastic planet (and the
polar bear) from its depressing fate... (www.loveearth.com)
I was a little disappointed to find no direct answers to my questions
there. Yet it was very interesting to find out more about the film and
the struggle its crew went through.
I hope that cutting on my energy-use will do. I don't know how else to
shorten the distance polar bears have to swim to reach land before they
drown or attack animals they cannot beat in their exhausted state...
An inspiring film it is, but I didn't leave the cinema feeling very
happy.
17 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Excellent Film, 28 January 2008
Author:
MarkVanKamp from Netherlands
This was playing at our theater in Amsterdam and the film we wanted to
see was sold-out so we went to this, not knowing anything about it
other than it was a documentary about the planet. We were very happy at
our misfortune as this was a very powerful film about life and the
delicate balance we all share with the rest of the inhabitants of
Earth. This film has some of the most breathtaking photography I have
ever seen in a film and took me places from deserts to oceans to rain
forests and displayed things I have never seen in a film, TV or book!
"Earth" is a film that every student should see before they become
jaded. I will encourage my niece to see this film since she will be
inheriting the planet we leave her. This is also a film to see on a
theater screen or a very big television since the photography is so
powerful and exotic.
24 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :- Superb documentary on the planet Earth, 2 November 2007
Author:
emiptor from Madrid, Spain
You have to see it to believe it! Directors Alastair Fothergill and
Mark Linfield have done a thing really great, it is a 10 out of 10 so I
can not believe that other user of this web had rate it so poor, unless
they were expecting to see just a normal movie, with people, love
scenes, and so on. I am also convinced that this kind of documentaries
are an excellent way to wake up us in order to save our beautiful
planet. Finally, it has nothing to do with Al Gore's documentary-movie
"An inconvenient truth" mainly made of long monologues, painfully and
with "truths" not always accurate, as many scientists have pointed
already.
The best thing you can do on earth is not miss Earth.
17 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :- Stunning footage, but better presented in Attenborough's 'Planet Earth', 8 December 2007
Author:
ruben-154 from Netherlands
I was really looking forward too seeing this movie as it has been
advertised as a must-see movie for people that love movies about
nature. The movie shows different climates and the animals associated
with them by starting at the North Pole and going down south as the
movie progresses. The footage from this movie is often breathtakingly
beautiful and I many times wondered how on Earth they could have taken
some of the shots under water or in the sky. However beautiful, a large
part of the footage I had already seen in the TV series 'Planet Earth',
narrated by David Attenborough. I found Attenborough's narration of
Planet Earth to be much better than the narration of Earth. 'Earth' is
an easier movie. It skips much of the scientific detail that
Attenborough covers in his 'Planet Earth' series. For instance, Earth
will tell you that a tropical sea is an ideal nursery for a young
humpback whale, because there are few predators. Planet Earth will tell
you that a tropical sea is a good nursery, because the water is low in
oxygen and doesn't contain enough nutrients to support very large
animals, like large sharks, etc. To me, that's an important difference.
That, together with Attanborough's far superior voice make Planet Earth
a far better documentary than Earth. Still, however, I think Earth is
worth watching for the beautiful footage and the fact that it's easier
to understand makes it interesting for children too.
21 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :- Second wake-up call to save our planet!, 31 October 2007
Author:
Ken Vandenbussche from Belgium
Just like Al Gore shook us up with his painfully honest and cleverly
presented documentary-movie "An inconvenient truth", directors Alastair
Fothergill and Mark Linfield also remind us that it's about time to
improve our way of life in order to save our beautiful planet. "Planet
earth" is also a wake-up call that the global warming of our planet has
disastrous consequences for all living creatures around the world. Al
Gore showed us the bleak future of planet Earth by presenting hard
facts backed up by documented examples through long yet always
interesting monologues. The creators of this documentary choose a
different yet equally powerful way to accomplish this. They do not
present us with a future representation of what might occur to our
planet if we don't radically change things around, but they rather show
us the genuine beauty of planet Earth in all of its amazing glory. We
see places that we knew that existed but never thought they could be so
beautiful. In this movie, we see a wide array of the most extraordinary
places such as forsaken deserts, giant forests full of fauna and flora
and icy-landscapes as far as the eye could see. And in all of those
immensely different environments, we see the most beautiful animals
trying to survive.
This is exactly the kind of movie that had to be made, in combination
with the one from Al Gore, in order to make us realize that our planet
is too precious to meddle with. The voice-over by Patrick Stewart is
always relaxing and thus very well done although at first it sounded as
though I was watching an X-men movie instead! The cinematography is
probably the most remarkable thing of this documentary. At times: what
you see is so unreal that you tend to forget that a man with a camera
actually had to film all of that delightful footage.
In short: This is definitely a must-see for everyone since it concerns
every single person on this beautiful planet Earth! The truth is: I
never thought our planet was so astonishingly beautiful!
15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :- Good and in parts, 16 November 2007
Author:
simon-1303 from United Kingdom
There is some spectacular, heart stoppingly beautiful photography here
of a range of scenery and animals, from arctic to tropical and
everything in between. The camera techniques are varied and spot on
from close ups to aerial work. Editing is tremendous and the commentary
is spot on too, with just the right tone and some dramatic and telling
facts about our world. Where the film falls down a bit is in trying to
cover and integrate four themes - seasonal patterns, climate change,
individual animal stories and hunter/ hunted interactions across
multiple environments. Eventually it all gets a bit bitty and
disjointed. Overall, well worth seeing especially given the issues
covered but don't expect Oscar material.
14 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :- A masterpiece, 12 February 2008
Author:
gatnom from Germany
This is simply the most astonishing movie you will ever see. I thought
it was just another documentary, but it really is something else. It
doesn't try to teach you anything, it shows you how life works in
nature.
I won't talk about the quality of the pictures, because you obviously
know from other comments it is unmatched.
Earth is funny, tense and sad. It can make you laugh, it can make you
cry. Sometimes both at the same time. This is the first movie that made
me cry, not because you feel sorry for the animals, but because you
come to realise how fragile our planet is and what treasure we were
blessed with, yet we don't appreciate it one bit.
This movie should be shown obligatory in schools. It is the most
wonderful film you will ever see, so go and see it. Who knows, maybe it
is the last time we might see our planet like this...
10/10, but I would easily rate it more if it were possible.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :- Most beautiful (and expensive) documentary ever, 5 November 2007
Author:
Ton van der Velden from Netherlands
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The spoiler warning is for those people who want to see for themselves
what animals and landscapes pass before their eyes, although I don't
mention it in great detail.
"Earth" is an approx. 90 minute cinema version based on "Planet earth"
which I watched all on BBC TV.The TV version was narrated by David
Attenborough, a captivating commentator, who I had wished had also done
it for "Earth" but it is Patrick Stewart, Star Trek's Captain Picard.
There are regularly shots of the Earth from space so that's may be
appropriate. In any case he has a nice enough and calm voice for it.
There are 12 chapters in which we follow animal life on earth from
North Pole to Antarctica. 3 animal families, polar bear, elephant and
whale, appear in more than one of these parts. Each "chapter" starts
with an indication how far from north pole or equator it is. We see
something of each kind of animal, but only mammals and birds, and some
fish, and some beautiful shots of vegetation, mountains, waterfalls,
deserts and jungle, a near perfect presentation of the variety of life
and landscapes and climates on earth. You get the impression that our
planet is only inhabited by animals: people or villages or cities
aren't in the film, so it's a typical nature documentary, but
breathtakingly shot and accompanied by delightful music. When the film
opened I already knew it would end far too soon for me. It is a family
film, so no brutal killings of any animals. When one is caught by his
hunter the shot ends and in other cases where we see the prey being
caught it's shot in slow-motion which makes it less violent and
watchable for young children (age limit 6 in The Netherlands). No blood
is shed. Some scenes (newly born animals) are really cute and will be
adored by kids. It looks like an ordinary nature film but when you know
how many shooting days it took (4000) and how much money it has cost it
becomes an even more astonishing piece of beauty. It had it's Dutch
premiere yesterday, a month before the actual release, in a cinema of
500 seats, of which 15 were taken. True beauty is rarely interesting
for cinema goers, it seems. As I knew the TV-series I was of course
very curious if my favourite scenes would make it into this movie. Some
didn't, but the most impressive shots (big waterfalls) did, luckily. It
was the first time I ever cried in a nature film.
9 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :- Absolutely stunning, 1 March 2008
Author:
stephane_decker from Luxembourg
I have to say that sometimes "looks" are all that matters, just like
Jeremy Clarkson from BBC has pointed out (not about our earth though,
but he is right anyway).
And when it comes to looks, this movie is such an unbelievably stunning
beauty you will absolutely love what your eyes are about to see.
And then there's the personality of the movie as well, interesting,
with a captivating narrator voice and narrator stories that will touch
your soul as you watch those superbly filmed images.
The movie probably won't affect your lifestyle, ruining these beauties,
but it will certainly remember you how precious our earth we live on
truly is.
This movie deserves it's 10 stars as it is one of the few stylistic
earth documentaries i truly enjoyed.
7 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :- A beautiful and unique planet ... ours! ("ours" means "bear" in French!), 16 October 2007
Author:
(languedemoliere) from France
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This documentary makes you travel all around the globe. It contains
rare and stunning sequels from the wilderness. It shows you how
diversified and how fragile our planet can be. The polar bear's future
is highlighted at the beginning and at the end of it. After all, its
bleak future is closely linked with the consequences of global warming.
This documentary is however a simplistic approach of such a serious
environmental issue. It can nonetheless be easily seen by young
children since it mainly remains descriptive. Scientists might well be
disappointed as it is not a remake of Al Gore's documentary "An
inconvenient truth" but frankly...what a description!!! A question may
then arise: Isn't it worth preserving our world's beauty? Because this
documentary proves that in 2007 such a beauty still exists despite the
different pollutions. By living in towns and cities we tend to forget
that we are part and parcel of this nature. All things considered this
documentary reminds us that we own a common treasure called "EARTH".
Own the rights?
Buy it at AmazonMore at IMDb Pro Discuss in Boards Add to My Movies Update Data
Quicklinks
Top Links
trailers and videosfull cast and crewtriviaofficial sitesmemorable quotesOverview
main detailscombined detailsfull cast and crewcompany creditstv scheduleAwards & Reviews
user commentsexternal reviewsnewsgroup reviewsawardsuser ratingsparents guiderecommendationsmessage boardPlot & Quotes
plot summaryplot synopsisplot keywordsAmazon.com summarymemorable quotesFun Stuff
triviagoofssoundtrack listingcrazy creditsalternate versionsmovie connectionsFAQOther Info
merchandising linksbox office/businessrelease datesfilming locationstechnical specslaserdisc detailsDVD detailsliterature listingsNewsDeskPromotional
taglines trailers and videos posters photo galleryExternal Links
showtimesofficial sitesmiscellaneousphotographssound clipsvideo clipsIMDb user comments for
Earth (2007) More at IMDbPro »
25 out of 30 people found the following comment useful :-

An inspiring film doesn't necessarily make you feel good..., 29 November 2007
Author: ysbrant from Spain
I loved the way EARTH is made. Its photography is unbelievable, editing it must have been an interesting challenge and Patrick Stewart's voice over is PERFECT. In addition its music and sound editing make watching EARTH a profound experience you don't want to miss. You really are on a journey to where you would probably never-ever end up by yourself.
And although, at first, I was quite surprised by the laughter of the audience as we see animals in their daily fight for survival, I could not help laughing myself sometimes. Nature simply seems too impressive to comprehend.
But, rather than the need to laugh, I left the cinema with a profound question:"Howcome 200 years of industrial revolution can destroy natural systems that have been here for thousands and thousands of years?"
With this question in mind, you'll understand how I felt somewhat bitter and powerless after seeing EARTH. I felt the immediate need to change the world, to help all these animals in their struggle, to undo the changes we have gone through the last centuries and to stop the global heating at once (all that not being a NGO activist at all!)...
So I immediately visited the website mentioned at the end of the film to see what I could do to save our -still- fantastic planet (and the polar bear) from its depressing fate... (www.loveearth.com)
I was a little disappointed to find no direct answers to my questions there. Yet it was very interesting to find out more about the film and the struggle its crew went through.
I hope that cutting on my energy-use will do. I don't know how else to shorten the distance polar bears have to swim to reach land before they drown or attack animals they cannot beat in their exhausted state...
An inspiring film it is, but I didn't leave the cinema feeling very happy.
17 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

Excellent Film, 28 January 2008
Author: MarkVanKamp from Netherlands
This was playing at our theater in Amsterdam and the film we wanted to see was sold-out so we went to this, not knowing anything about it other than it was a documentary about the planet. We were very happy at our misfortune as this was a very powerful film about life and the delicate balance we all share with the rest of the inhabitants of Earth. This film has some of the most breathtaking photography I have ever seen in a film and took me places from deserts to oceans to rain forests and displayed things I have never seen in a film, TV or book! "Earth" is a film that every student should see before they become jaded. I will encourage my niece to see this film since she will be inheriting the planet we leave her. This is also a film to see on a theater screen or a very big television since the photography is so powerful and exotic.
24 out of 34 people found the following comment useful :-

Superb documentary on the planet Earth, 2 November 2007
Author: emiptor from Madrid, Spain
You have to see it to believe it! Directors Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield have done a thing really great, it is a 10 out of 10 so I can not believe that other user of this web had rate it so poor, unless they were expecting to see just a normal movie, with people, love scenes, and so on. I am also convinced that this kind of documentaries are an excellent way to wake up us in order to save our beautiful planet. Finally, it has nothing to do with Al Gore's documentary-movie "An inconvenient truth" mainly made of long monologues, painfully and with "truths" not always accurate, as many scientists have pointed already.
The best thing you can do on earth is not miss Earth.
17 out of 21 people found the following comment useful :-

Stunning footage, but better presented in Attenborough's 'Planet Earth', 8 December 2007
Author: ruben-154 from Netherlands
I was really looking forward too seeing this movie as it has been advertised as a must-see movie for people that love movies about nature. The movie shows different climates and the animals associated with them by starting at the North Pole and going down south as the movie progresses. The footage from this movie is often breathtakingly beautiful and I many times wondered how on Earth they could have taken some of the shots under water or in the sky. However beautiful, a large part of the footage I had already seen in the TV series 'Planet Earth', narrated by David Attenborough. I found Attenborough's narration of Planet Earth to be much better than the narration of Earth. 'Earth' is an easier movie. It skips much of the scientific detail that Attenborough covers in his 'Planet Earth' series. For instance, Earth will tell you that a tropical sea is an ideal nursery for a young humpback whale, because there are few predators. Planet Earth will tell you that a tropical sea is a good nursery, because the water is low in oxygen and doesn't contain enough nutrients to support very large animals, like large sharks, etc. To me, that's an important difference. That, together with Attanborough's far superior voice make Planet Earth a far better documentary than Earth. Still, however, I think Earth is worth watching for the beautiful footage and the fact that it's easier to understand makes it interesting for children too.
21 out of 29 people found the following comment useful :-

Second wake-up call to save our planet!, 31 October 2007
Author: Ken Vandenbussche from Belgium
Just like Al Gore shook us up with his painfully honest and cleverly presented documentary-movie "An inconvenient truth", directors Alastair Fothergill and Mark Linfield also remind us that it's about time to improve our way of life in order to save our beautiful planet. "Planet earth" is also a wake-up call that the global warming of our planet has disastrous consequences for all living creatures around the world. Al Gore showed us the bleak future of planet Earth by presenting hard facts backed up by documented examples through long yet always interesting monologues. The creators of this documentary choose a different yet equally powerful way to accomplish this. They do not present us with a future representation of what might occur to our planet if we don't radically change things around, but they rather show us the genuine beauty of planet Earth in all of its amazing glory. We see places that we knew that existed but never thought they could be so beautiful. In this movie, we see a wide array of the most extraordinary places such as forsaken deserts, giant forests full of fauna and flora and icy-landscapes as far as the eye could see. And in all of those immensely different environments, we see the most beautiful animals trying to survive.
This is exactly the kind of movie that had to be made, in combination with the one from Al Gore, in order to make us realize that our planet is too precious to meddle with. The voice-over by Patrick Stewart is always relaxing and thus very well done although at first it sounded as though I was watching an X-men movie instead! The cinematography is probably the most remarkable thing of this documentary. At times: what you see is so unreal that you tend to forget that a man with a camera actually had to film all of that delightful footage.
In short: This is definitely a must-see for everyone since it concerns every single person on this beautiful planet Earth! The truth is: I never thought our planet was so astonishingly beautiful!
15 out of 18 people found the following comment useful :-

Good and in parts, 16 November 2007
Author: simon-1303 from United Kingdom
There is some spectacular, heart stoppingly beautiful photography here of a range of scenery and animals, from arctic to tropical and everything in between. The camera techniques are varied and spot on from close ups to aerial work. Editing is tremendous and the commentary is spot on too, with just the right tone and some dramatic and telling facts about our world. Where the film falls down a bit is in trying to cover and integrate four themes - seasonal patterns, climate change, individual animal stories and hunter/ hunted interactions across multiple environments. Eventually it all gets a bit bitty and disjointed. Overall, well worth seeing especially given the issues covered but don't expect Oscar material.
14 out of 20 people found the following comment useful :-

A masterpiece, 12 February 2008
Author: gatnom from Germany
This is simply the most astonishing movie you will ever see. I thought it was just another documentary, but it really is something else. It doesn't try to teach you anything, it shows you how life works in nature.
I won't talk about the quality of the pictures, because you obviously know from other comments it is unmatched.
Earth is funny, tense and sad. It can make you laugh, it can make you cry. Sometimes both at the same time. This is the first movie that made me cry, not because you feel sorry for the animals, but because you come to realise how fragile our planet is and what treasure we were blessed with, yet we don't appreciate it one bit.
This movie should be shown obligatory in schools. It is the most wonderful film you will ever see, so go and see it. Who knows, maybe it is the last time we might see our planet like this...
10/10, but I would easily rate it more if it were possible.
7 out of 9 people found the following comment useful :-

Most beautiful (and expensive) documentary ever, 5 November 2007
Author: Ton van der Velden from Netherlands
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
The spoiler warning is for those people who want to see for themselves what animals and landscapes pass before their eyes, although I don't mention it in great detail.
"Earth" is an approx. 90 minute cinema version based on "Planet earth" which I watched all on BBC TV.The TV version was narrated by David Attenborough, a captivating commentator, who I had wished had also done it for "Earth" but it is Patrick Stewart, Star Trek's Captain Picard. There are regularly shots of the Earth from space so that's may be appropriate. In any case he has a nice enough and calm voice for it. There are 12 chapters in which we follow animal life on earth from North Pole to Antarctica. 3 animal families, polar bear, elephant and whale, appear in more than one of these parts. Each "chapter" starts with an indication how far from north pole or equator it is. We see something of each kind of animal, but only mammals and birds, and some fish, and some beautiful shots of vegetation, mountains, waterfalls, deserts and jungle, a near perfect presentation of the variety of life and landscapes and climates on earth. You get the impression that our planet is only inhabited by animals: people or villages or cities aren't in the film, so it's a typical nature documentary, but breathtakingly shot and accompanied by delightful music. When the film opened I already knew it would end far too soon for me. It is a family film, so no brutal killings of any animals. When one is caught by his hunter the shot ends and in other cases where we see the prey being caught it's shot in slow-motion which makes it less violent and watchable for young children (age limit 6 in The Netherlands). No blood is shed. Some scenes (newly born animals) are really cute and will be adored by kids. It looks like an ordinary nature film but when you know how many shooting days it took (4000) and how much money it has cost it becomes an even more astonishing piece of beauty. It had it's Dutch premiere yesterday, a month before the actual release, in a cinema of 500 seats, of which 15 were taken. True beauty is rarely interesting for cinema goers, it seems. As I knew the TV-series I was of course very curious if my favourite scenes would make it into this movie. Some didn't, but the most impressive shots (big waterfalls) did, luckily. It was the first time I ever cried in a nature film.
9 out of 13 people found the following comment useful :-

Absolutely stunning, 1 March 2008
Author: stephane_decker from Luxembourg
I have to say that sometimes "looks" are all that matters, just like Jeremy Clarkson from BBC has pointed out (not about our earth though, but he is right anyway).
And when it comes to looks, this movie is such an unbelievably stunning beauty you will absolutely love what your eyes are about to see.
And then there's the personality of the movie as well, interesting, with a captivating narrator voice and narrator stories that will touch your soul as you watch those superbly filmed images.
The movie probably won't affect your lifestyle, ruining these beauties, but it will certainly remember you how precious our earth we live on truly is.
This movie deserves it's 10 stars as it is one of the few stylistic earth documentaries i truly enjoyed.
7 out of 10 people found the following comment useful :-

A beautiful and unique planet ... ours! ("ours" means "bear" in French!), 16 October 2007
Author: (languedemoliere) from France
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
This documentary makes you travel all around the globe. It contains rare and stunning sequels from the wilderness. It shows you how diversified and how fragile our planet can be. The polar bear's future is highlighted at the beginning and at the end of it. After all, its bleak future is closely linked with the consequences of global warming. This documentary is however a simplistic approach of such a serious environmental issue. It can nonetheless be easily seen by young children since it mainly remains descriptive. Scientists might well be disappointed as it is not a remake of Al Gore's documentary "An inconvenient truth" but frankly...what a description!!! A question may then arise: Isn't it worth preserving our world's beauty? Because this documentary proves that in 2007 such a beauty still exists despite the different pollutions. By living in towns and cities we tend to forget that we are part and parcel of this nature. All things considered this documentary reminds us that we own a common treasure called "EARTH".
Add another comment
Related Links