Product Details
March of the Penguins (Widescreen Edition)

March of the Penguins (Widescreen Edition)
Directed by Luc Jacquet

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Widescreen DVD

Product Description

Documents the courtship of penquins, as they journey through the Antarctic in search of a mate.
Genre: Documentary
Rating: G
Release Date: 29-NOV-2005
Media Type: DVD


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #4381 in DVD
  • Brand: FREEMAN,MORGAN
  • Released on: 2005-11-29
  • Rating: G (General Audience)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: AC-3, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish, French
  • Dubbed in: Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 80 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
March of the Penguins instantly qualifies as a wildlife classic, taking its place among other extraordinary films like Microcosmos and Winged Migration. French filmmaker Luc Jacquet and his devoted crew endured a full year of extreme conditions in Antarctica to capture the life cycle of Emperor penguins on film, and their diligence is evident in every striking frame of this 80-minute documentary. Narrated in soothing tones by Morgan Freeman, the film focuses on a colony of hundreds of Emperors as they return, in a single-file march of 70 miles or more, to their frozen breeding ground, far inland from the oceans where they thrive. At times dramatic, suspenseful, mischievous and just plain funny, the film conveys the intensity of the penguins' breeding cycle, and their treacherous task of protecting eggs and hatchlings in temperatures as low as 128 degrees below zero. There is some brief mating-ritual violence and sad moments of loss, but March of the Penguins remains family-friendly throughout, and kids especially will enjoy the Antarctic blue-ice vistas and the playful, waddling appeal of the penguins, who can be slapstick clumsy or magnificently graceful, depending on the circumstances. A marvel of wildlife cinematography, this unique film offers a front-row seat to these amazing creatures, balancing just enough scientific information with the entertaining visuals. --Jeff Shannon

From The New Yorker
The French wildlife filmmaker Luc Jacquet spent more than a year chronicling the course of an emperor-penguin colony in Antarctica, and what he discovered was a touching, self-sacrificing ritual of parenthood. Trekking for miles through stunning ice-castle landscapes, Jacquet frames the penguins' mating cycle-from courtship through the birth and raising of their newborns-as a severe and forbidding ballet that demonstrates the true meaning of survival and determination. Narrated by Morgan Freeman. -Bruce Diones
Copyright © 2006 The New Yorker


Customer Reviews

Stunning5
This movie was incredible and is a must see for anyone who cares about nature at all.

The lengths that the filmakers went through to capture this footage is astounding and paid off well. It is relatively low-key and the narration adds to this sense. Nothing outrageous or over the top like you sometimes hear on various nature shows. Freeman just relays the story perfectly an the visuals of the movie carry so much.

Stunning landscapes and to see the penguins and how they behave - their mating patterns, aring for their young and just the shear numbers and community all moving across the land and huddling together. Simply amazing.

A powerful film that I watch from time to time and never get tired of viewing.

"MARCH OF THE PENGUINS"; EXCELLENT DOCUMENTARY FOR THOSE WHO ARE EARTH-CONSCIOUS!5
March of the Penguins (Widescreen Edition)

This documentary is, along with "An Inconvenient Truth", one of the most powerful movies for appreciate the beauties on Earth and to gain conscience on this problem (global warming) who threats our permanent home in the Universe. Also, with the service Amazon.com gave me (merchandise in brand-new condition, prompt and secure delivery, trusted name, etc.), I don't have complaints at all. Take my advice and buy this movie; remember "March of the Penguins" won an Academy Award for best documentary and with the outstanding voice of Morgan Freeman as narrator, even this feature beautifully shot in the Antarctica, this docu-movie is worth to get it, specially if you're a Earth lover. Enjoy it!

Good film3
This film has even inspired a political controversy, with Right Wing advocates claiming that the annual `monogamy' the male and female engage in supports their view that the nuclear family unit is ordained by God, and that Emperor penguins are proof of `Intelligent Design', even though they are clearly marvelous products of adaptive development. Gay rights activists have countered the Right's claims by noting that female penguins often steal the chicks of other females if theirs dies, and that lower animals do not feel human emotions like love, but merely act instinctively, sometimes engaging in same sex sexual play- which is not `homosexuality', which would imply that penguins are sexually turned on my male humans. Much of this misinterpretation of penguin behavior, as presented in this film, seeped over into the fawning critical reception of this film. Indeed, while the film is enjoyable, it is so only a Disney/Pixar level, for it almost plays out like one of those computer animated films, not a real nature documentary.
Yes, the penguins suffer through conditions that would kill humans in seconds, seventy mile treks across ice, male and female sharing of the caring of the egg and chick, both of which would freeze if not for a warm parental pouch to crawl into, huddling for warmth in 125 mile per hour winds at -80° Fahrenheit, months of starvation, but these are not the makings of drama, because true drama requires conscious actors. Yet, many reviews of the film contain terms like `lovemaking', `bravery', and `fortitude', only further confusing the boundaries between fiction and reality, even as the film never focuses on an individual bird nor couple, the way most documentaries do, knowing that is the way to emotionally invest a viewer in a story. Instead, this film merely relies on the cuteness of the penguins, and especially their fuzzy chicks., who, by summertime, will be abandoned by both parents, and left to fend for themselves for four years, before they return again to their birthing grounds, to give birth to the next generation of their kind.
Cinematographers Laurent Chalet and Jerome Maison do get some incredible pictures, especially those underwater shots of agile female penguins swiftly trying to outswim a seal that's out to eat them, as they try to fatten up on small fish, squid, and krill, to bring back and feed their chicks. Yet, the Emperor penguins transcend this film's limitations. They are silly looking yet beautiful creatures: their black and white feathers are so densely packed they resemble the gloss on fine china, and the orange marks near their pates are so rich in color they dazzle in the blinding white of the ice, but the dull classical (or New Age?) musical score by Alex Wurman is one of the few aspects of the film that has rightly and universally been panned. Supposedly the original French version of the film had much more contemporary and apropos music by Emilie Simon.
Regardless, while March Of The Penguins may be solid enjoyable kiddy fare, no adult should expect to be much enlightened, for the natural and documentary parts of this `nature documentary' seem to have been CG'd to death. Check out PBS or cable tv for more science-based nature films. Spin, Marlin, spin.