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DVDs in the Works

Archive for the ‘Documentary’ Category

Birdsong premieres on Masterpiece

Birdsong

Birdsong premieres on Masterpiece this Sunday, April 22nd, at 9pm ET in a two-part adaptation of the Sebastian Faulks novel of illicit love and war. It stars Eddie Redmayne (Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Glorious 39, The Pillars of the Earth) as Stephen, who falls in love with Isabelle (Clemence Poesy – Harry Potter films), the unhappy second wife of an industrialist, during an extended stay as a houseguest in their home. Redmayne’s work in My Week with Marilyn earned him a BAFTA nomination for Newcomer of the Year, and he will be seen as Marius in the much-anticipated film version of Les Miserables coming this Christmas. The cast also includes Matthew Goode (He Knew He Was Right, Brideshead Revisited – 2008) and Richard Madden (Game of Thrones). The DVD will be available this Tuesday, April 25th.

Earth Day: This Sunday is Earth Day, and BBC America is marking Earth Day weekend with a round-the-clock marathon of Planet Earth, the first US airing of the popular, uncut BBC version narrated by David Attenborough. The marathon begins Saturday morning at 6am ET, and finishes on Sunday 9pm ET with The Making of Planet Earth.

Discovery will mark Earth Day with a marathon of Frozen Planet building up to the 8pm ET premiere of “On Thin Ice,” a look at the fragile state of life at the Poles presented by David Attenborough.

Meet the stars of Frozen Planet

Frozen Planet Augmented Reality

Frozen Planet Augmented Reality is now running in all three malls through Sunday, April 22nd:

Short Hills Mall,1200 Morris Turnpike, Short Hills, NJ

Woodfield Mall, 5 Woodfield Mall, Schaumburg, IL

Sunvalley Mall,1 Sun Valley Mall #228, Concord, CA

We’ve been watching live streaming of people stepping into their own Frozen Planet adventures all day, and luckily there are still three days to catch this phenomenon for real if you live in the greater New York, Chicago or San Francisco areas. Since the streaming is live in real time, the best way to share your own experience with family and friends is to give them a call or text shortly before you step onto the iceberg. Bring your camera to capture your own session permanently. We’ve had better luck taking pictures of the screen pictures from a bit of distance, as shown here. The color fidelity tends to suffer in close-up shots of the full screen.

Enter to win the Frozen Planet DVD

Frozen Planet Photo © BBC 2011

Here’s a chance for Americans and Canadians to win a copy of the new DVD release of Frozen Planet, but you must act now because the contest ends tonight at 8pm ET! To enter, just repin on Pinterest.

Attention Shoppers: If you live in the New York, Chicago or San Francisco areas, you can interact with four of the Frozen Planet animal stars – penguins, seals, polar bears, and orcas –through the magic of Augmented Reality from Appshaker. Augmented Reality has to be seen to be believed, but the basic idea is that you can put yourself into a 3D scene and view yourself with the animals on a screen. The event starts tomorrow, April 19th, and runs through Sunday, April 22nnd, at the following shopping malls:

Short Hills Mall,1200 Morris Turnpike, Short Hills, NJ

Woodfield Mall, 5 Woodfield Mall, Schaumburg, IL

Sunvalley Mall,1 Sun Valley Mall #228, Concord, CA

There will also be live streaming so that you can share the excitement with families and friends around the world.

The Killer Apps that made the West

Civilization

After exploring the financial history of the world in his 2009 PBS series The Ascent of Money, Niall Ferguson turns his sites on Civilization: The West and the Rest. The Harvard history professor spins his economic history with a focus on six “killer apps” that propelled the western countries toward world success: competition, science, property, medicine, consumerism, and work. The result is quite provocative, amid the less savory trade-offs for such success and questions as whether the west is finally losing the edge.

Looking for Easter basket stuffers? Speaking of consumerism, there are only 22 shopping days until Easter. In addition to the traditional standby of The Beatrix Potter Collection, we have brought in a gorgeous set of enamel Peter Rabbit Dishes and Flatware and for the ballet fans on your list, an enchanting new DVD of The Royal Ballet: Tales of Beatrix Potter.

Tune-in Alert: The much anticipated Frozen Planet series premieres this Sunday, March 18th, on the Discovery Channel at 8-10 pm ET/PT.

Celebrating the Diamond Jubilee

Queen Elizabeth II

Sally Norris © BBC 2012

As Queen Elizabeth II began her Diamond Jubilee tour of the UK today in Leicester, it’s perfect time to introduce two special DVDs in the works. The Diamond Queen is a 3-hour television profile that aired last month. Our British colleagues, who have witnessed a number of jubilees and television retrospectives over the years, were impressed by this series’ unprecedented access to the Queen, and to members of the Royal family, who speak quite candidly in interviews. The Diamond Queen premieres in Canada on CBC News this Saturday, March 10th, at 7pm ET/PT. Broadcast information for the US has not been announced.

The Queen’s Palaces is currently making the rounds of PBS stations, and an episode aired on British Columbia’s Knowledge last night. The series devotes episodes to Buckingham Palace, Windsor Castle, and The Palace of Holyroodhouse in Edinburgh, and relates their fascinating history in relation to the various monarchs who hand a hand in their development. Both DVDs should be available shortly before the Jubilee celebrations, which begin Saturday, June 2nd.

If you’re already thinking of stocking provisions, Darvilles of Windsor has a special Diamond Jubilee tea blend in the works, which we will list soon. In addition to the regal Diamond Jubilee mug we brought in earlier this year, we’ve brought in a more playful mug in the inimitable Dunoon style. Also newly added to the mix is a commemorative tea towel from Ulster Weavers, a holder of the Royal Warrant.

Contest Alert: If series like Planet Earth and the upcoming Frozen Planet have instilled a desire to meet a polar bear up close and personal, The Ultimate Polar Bear Adventure contest is open to citizens of the US and Canada.

A new approach to The Story of Ireland

The Story of Ireland Photo credit: Seamus McCracken © BBC

The last time the BBC made a television series on Irish history was in 1980, fifteen years before the book How Ireland Saved Civilization was published. This time around, Fergal Keane, who hails from Cork, presents Ireland as a world player in an outward-looking (and forward-looking) history, and challenges a number of myths along the way. The image here is the earliest known map of Ireland (c. 150 AD) preserved via a medieval copy of Ptolemy’s Geographia. Contributing to the unique look of the series is Irish artist David Rooney, whose stark woodcuts illustrate 92 events in The Story of Ireland.

Planet Earth in new Special Editions

Planet Earth Special Edition

In 2007 we released the incomparable Planet Earth on DVD and Blu-ray. It was our very first foray into the Blu-ray format, and we admit we’d do a few things differently now. The original Blu-ray was on four BD25 discs; today we’d opt for the higher bit rate capacity of BD50 discs. Also, it was decided for purity’s sake that the Blu-ray would contain only high-def material. Unfortunately, the standard-def material included the remarkable stories in the “Making Of” featurettes as well as the three-part documentary Planet Earth – The Future, and we began to get clamors for those to be added to the Blu-ray.

Among the extras that are new in both the DVD and Blu-ray Special Editions are audio commentaries, isolated music and effects option, and two high-def programs, Planet Earth’s Greatest Moments and Snow Leopard: Beyond the Myth, a 50-minute look at the elusive cat in the mountains of Pakistan. Two standard definition extras, Secrets of the Mayan Underworld and Elephant Nomads of the Namib Desert, were shot at the same time that Planet Earth crews were in the location. Finally, both Special Editions will offer a special sneak peek at Executive Producer Alastair Fothergill’s next blockbuster project, Frozen Planet.

Fan Alert: The May 28th issue of Radio Times has revealed the next three Sherlock stories which will make up Season Two. The exact titles are “A Scandal in Belgravia,” “The Hounds of Baskerville” and (oh, no! not yet!) “The Reichenbach Fall.” The cognoscenti are already arguing over who should play Irene Adler, the woman who (as Holmes remarks) “eclipses and predominates the whole of her sex.”

The early 20th century IN COLOR!

The Wonderful World of Albert Kahn (Archives of the Planet)

A century ago French philanthropist Albert Kahn set off on a world tour with his chauffeur Alfred Dutertre. Dutertre had taken crash courses in photography, cinematography and in the Lumiere Brothers’ latest invention, the autochrome process, a fool-proof method that yielded remarkably true-to-color images. Luckily, Khan’s chauffeur was a quick study, and the resulting footage and photos of the diverse cultures they encountered inspired Albert Kahn to build nothing less than an Archive of the Planet. Spanning 22 years (1908-30) in more than 50 countries, his photographers left an unprecedented record of how ordinary people lived all over the world. There are more than 72,000 autochrome plates alone, but the black-and-white film footage brings this amazing era to life in the ten-part BBC series The Wonderful World of Albert Kahn. The onscreen historians are palpably moved by the glimpses into long vanished cultures and nations in transition, and there is much for the amateur genealogist to study as well. Look for the DVD later this year.

We are saddened by the news that Edward Hardwicke (Oppenheimer, Poirot: The Hollow died on Wednesday.  He is best known for the stalwart support he gave to Jeremy Brett’s Sherlock Holmes in his seasons as Dr. Watson from 1984-94. The son of Hollywood actor Sir Cedric Hardwicke, he made his film debut as a child actor in A Guy Named Joe (1943). Click here for the BBC News obituary.

From Giggling Girls to Particle Physics…

As we write, the second episode of Brian Cox’s new science miniseries, Wonders of the Universe, is being queued up for broadcast this Sunday at 9 PM.  That’s why we love working for the BBC—we can make wonderfully escapist science fiction like Doctor Who and wonderfully escapist science programs like this.  His previous series, Wonders of the Solar System, was widely compared to Cosmos, the work of his idol Carl Sagan, and praised for both its beauty and his powerful ability to simplify complex ideas for lay persons like me.  Now he’s tackling something even harder to explain, particle physics.  In the final episode, about light, he visits Luxor to stand at the very spot where Pharaohs greeted the rising sun of the winter solstice, to connect the very complex science of light to a very real human (and historical) experience.  While on the shoot for this scene with The Radio Times he revealed a few interesting tidbits:  he believes we’ll find life on Mars within the decade, he only got a D in math class, and the percentage of  giggling schoolgirls attending  his book-signings is well above the statistical average for professors of physics.

You can catch Wonders of the Solar System on DVD, Blu-ray, and Discovery Science with the same trio of choices awaiting you later this year for Wonders of the Universe.

Finally…Life on Earth

David Attenborough, Life on Earth

This May, David Attenborough will celebrate his 85th birthday.  And we’re doing a bit of early celebrating here, as we’ve finally sorted out the rights situation for his landmark first series, Life on Earth.  As a result, you can expect to see this restored classic on DVD for the first time later this year.  It is one of the longest Natural History Unit series BBC has ever made clocking in at thirteen hours, and its success launched his remarkable series of landmark “Life” programs—from Living Planet (1984) and Trials of Life (1990) to Life in Cold Blood (2008) and First Life (2010, which is also releasing later this year).  Life on Earth looks at all of the earth’s surviving creatures through the prism of evolution, from invertebrates and first forests to primates and man.   A critical and audience smash when it first aired in the UK, BBC eventually sold the show in 100 territories and it was seen by an estimated half a billion people.  Interestingly, to make the series in 1979, BBC spent around a million pounds which wouldn’t pay for a single episode of one of our landmark series today.