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March of the Penguins


Directed by: Luc Jacquet
Starring: Morgan Freeman (narrator)
Genre:
Documentary
Run Time: 85
min.
Release Date:
July 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
In a place as inhospitable as the
Antarctic, almost the entire
planet will never know the treacherous nature of this continent during
its long winter months. There are no land based mammals that could
possibly survive here ...except for the Emperor Penguins.
Why they still choose to nest here is
a mystery (personally if I were them I'd be sucking down drinks poolside
in Hawaii or something), but nest they do. And they come by their
thousands, leaping out of the chilly ocean and marching (in March)
single-file to their favorite breeding spot, the exact same location
where they were born years before.
They must have an amazing internal
compass.
They hike over 70 miles, never eating
or drinking, just so they can match up with the opposite sex and produce
one egg. And if their egg survives the blistering 80-plus degree below
zero temperatures, the shuffling from one parent's feet to another's,
the bustling and jostling amongst hundreds of other penguins, they might
have a fighting chance. But even if they do survive this, the chicks
still have to evade predator birds and other pitfalls that take lives so
easily in this nearly lifeless land.
Narrated by Morgan Freeman's (10
ITEMS OF LESS) wonderful
voice and filmed in unGodly cold conditions, this documentary deserves
all the praise it has received.
My only beef with the film is that, at
times, it seemed to be too anthropomorphic, using words like "love",
etc. to describe how the parents cared for each other and their chicks.
Whether this is true or not, we'll never know, but what it does do is
get the viewer into these animals' lives very intimately (uh-oh! There I
go, too!)
This is a great, short film that
the entire family can enjoy. And oogling a the cinematography on a big
screen is a major bonus as well.
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Image from March of the
Penguins

DVD cost: $14.99
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Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy:
The Emperor Penguin (Aptenodytes
forsteri) is the tallest and heaviest of all living penguins and the
only one to breed during the winter in Antarctica.
Movie Quote: "They
have wings but cannot fly. They're birds that think they're fish."
Other Actors/Actresses
from March of the Penguins
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