The BBC series documentary "The Earth Pulses" is on the big screen, and the Emmy Award behind-the-scenes team is making and filming, making a contribution to our planet!
The BBC once produced the documentary photography team of "Blue Planet", and once again assembled and presented this incomparable classic documentary "The Earth Pulses".
From the South Pole to the North Pole, from the equator to the cold zone, from the African grassland to the tropical rain forest, and then from the desolate peaks to the deep sea, countless creatures are presented to the world in an extremely beautiful posture. We saw the ups and downs of the Okavango flood and the living conditions of the surrounding animals, and saw the precious pictures of snow leopards hunting in the heavy snow.
I saw the harsh interdependence of penguins, polar bears, seals and other creatures on the ice sheet, and also saw the magical creatures living in the high temperature environment of the crater in the depths of the ocean. Of course, there are spectacular scenery and peculiar landforms all over the world, selflessly showing their brightest side.
Summarized as follows:
Pascal once expressed his double fears as a human being: on his left is an infinitely vast world, and on his right is an extremely small but still endless world. And people are in the middle, or people feel the absurdity of their position because they realize both at the same time. In fact, these two worlds are the same. It just extends infinitely to the left and infinitely to the right.
I once imagined how a pair of eyes found me if I looked at the earth from outer space. In terms of figure, I am thinner than bacteria, but what if it is as big as the Himalayas? Without the solar system, the earth is just a dot.