‘Secrets of the Penguins’ NatGeo Doc Uncovers ‘Astonishing’ New Behavior

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By Karla T Vasquez

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When you think of mysterious animals, the penguins are probably not remembered. Beautiful, intriguing creatures are the centers of countless films and TV shows, Fictional And Real-worldAnd a major in the zoos and aquariums. However, it is seen that we still have to learn a lot about the new documentary of National Geographic Penguin’s privacyThe

“As we start filming we begin to see things that have never been portrayed before,” Wildlife cinematographer and National Geographic Explorer Barty Gregory told me Zoom. “Before this project, I thought I knew the penguins. I was very wrong.”

The three-episode series provides the intimate appearance of their struggle to survive the life of various penguins and rapidly changed planets. We see their bold Antarctic storms, tracks across the desert and even walking on the streets of Cape Town. For the first time on camera, we hope the parents use the ice ball to practice the fine art of laying eggs in each other. We also observed that the galpagos penguins also stole the fish from the pelvic chit to flow to the hunting process. More than 70 scientists and filmmakers have spent two years of travel to the world to capture these rare and breathtaking moments.

“What comes back from the field teams is usually wonderful and often scientifically attractive, ‘Oh, we have never seen before,” renowned Titanic and Avatar director and Ocean Explorer James Cameron, who has been the executive manufacturer of the Secrets of Penguin’s Secret.

The documentary that describes Blake Lively premiered on National Geographic on April 20 premiered 8 ET (5 PM PT) and started to flow from April 21 to the flow of Plus and Hulu – just before the day of the world.

Emperor Penguin Chhanas jumped from the sandy edge of an iceberg in the sea.

Emperor Penguin Chhanas jumped from the edge of the iceberg for their first swim in Antarctica’s Atka Bay.

National Geographic/Berty Gregory

There is a scene in particular. In the first footage, several hundred emperor penguin rocks gathered 50 feet above the sea above an Antarctic Cliff. “What’s going on here on earth?” Gregory loudly surprised. “I have only seen the emperors jumping from the ice of the sea and it is several legs, the highest. Of course, they can’t think about leaving there.”

But they are. Suddenly, a bold penguin jumped – and it made it unsatheled. Other knives followed the case, jumped in the bottom of the ice water. National Geographic The rare moment has shared Last year in a teaser video, which went viral.

“I mean, you can’t script the more crazy moments to finish the opening episode,” Gregory, who had held the lip with the drone, told me. “A completely new behavior, crazy for watching and stuff-motif sensitive roller coaster of your face.”

A group of African penguins crossing a road in Simon.

A group of African penguins crossing a road in Simon, South Africa.

National Geographic/Andress Cardona Cruise

The right place, the right time, the right equipment

The key to capturing all the rare moments in Penguin’s privacy is time.

Gregory says, “Time with animals on the field, time with animals,” “This is how you get things that no one has ever seen before and you don’t film it nicely.”

Generally, he notes that the shoot of wildlife lasts about four to six weeks. However, it took 274 days to shoot in the first phase of the series alone, he said. Overall, the team was filmed in two years for footage capture for the three -year episode documentary.

The drones were the main tool for filming. Technical improvement such as extended aircraft and more powerful zoom lenses can easily capture rare moments from a distance. They can ride in the air longer, waiting for the special moments to be revealed, as jumps.

“This was only possible because of the drones,” Gregory said. “I was walking in the air for hours and hours and hours, constantly, every half hour, the battery changed again, and for that moment I needed to stay in the air that they all started to jump. I couldn’t film that behavior without drone.”

A person with a yellow and gray coat laughs at the camera while performing the Antarctica film.

Antarctica’s Atka Barte Barty Gregory Illustration.

National Geographic/Ben Join

Antarctic was kept in a freezer to see how the cameras will hold before going into the cold. The cables that were easily snapable were changed for more durable materials.

“Photography in natural history actually pushes the photography industry, photography equipment,” Cameron says. “We’re not in a comfortable studio; we’re out in several hostile zones.”

However, Cameron, who has produced the Secrets of the Whales and the Secrets of the Himaants, as well as the Eastern National Geographic Series, as well as a number of deep sea documentaries, saying that these nature-based productions are especially meaningful to him.

“People always ask me, ‘Did you go to the deepest place in the sea so you can find some new animals so you can create an alien for the avatar?” “Cameron laughed.” That’s the other way: I made the avatar so I had enough money to go to search. Shoes are on the other foot there – their point connection is incorrect “”

Penguin's privacy

An adult Gentu Penguin stands at his residence with his two youths.

National Geographic/Berty Gregory

Penguins reveals what about our planet

There is a common theme that covers the privacy of penguins: climate change. We see the knife navigating the broken sea that they threaten to pull them down before searching for suitable homes before they are ready to swim.

“You cannot study penguins without shaking against climate change,” Cameron says. ” “We touch it, we will mention it in passing it, but we are not here to defeat it over the head, because I think the goal of the series is to accept a new generation, especially the audience and making a feeling of love and amazement for their nature.”

Since some penguins live in the marginal coastal environment, he mentions and polar regions are especially affected by climate change, the obvious reality in this documentary is more obvious than the previous ASONS Tu of this series.

Gregory pangwin’s privacy ended at the ends and in our interview to the dangers of our changing environment.

“Penguins are incredibly strong, elastic, adapted animals, but they are living on the right edge of their existence and” Our penguins should be careful they are very nice and they feel warm and obscure inside us, but they need a healthy planet, and we need a healthy planet, like penguins. ” Our success is complex with the success of Penguin. “

See also: Titanic becomes digitally cloned in this new National Geographic Documentary



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