"Africa" Sahara (TV Episode 2013) Poster

(TV Mini Series)

(2013)

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10/10
Battles in the Sahara
TheLittleSongbird2 January 2018
David Attenborough is nothing short of a national treasure. He may apparently dislike the term, but it is hard to not say that about such a great presenter who has contributed significantly to some of the best programmes (of the documentary genre and overall) the BBC has ever aired/produced.

It is really hard picking favourites, let alone a definite favourite, among what Attenborough has done because he has done so many gems, it is the equivalent of trying to choose your favourite ice cream flavour or your favourite operatic role (for examples) and finding you can't pick. 'Africa' to me though is right up there, so are the likes of both 'Planet Earth' series, 'The Blue Planet', 'Life' and 'Frozen Planet'. It has everything that makes so much of his work so wonderful and deserves everything great that has been said about it.

This may sound like reiteration of what was said before in my reviews in the previous four episodes, but to me it is very hard to think of something new to say for each episode because all of them have the same strengths and 'Africa' is one of those rare consistently great series throughout its six episodes. "Sahara" doesn't disappoint.

Once again as with all of Attenborough's work, "Sahara" first and foremost is a wonderful looking episode. It is gorgeously filmed, done in a completely fluid and natural, sometimes intimate (a great way of connecting even more with the animals), way and never looking static. In fact much of it is remarkably cinematic. The editing is always succinct and smooth and the scenery is pure magic, like a character of its own and majestically photographed. The music score fits very well, never overly grandiose while never being inappropriate.

Like with a vast majority of Attenborough's work and throughout 'Africa', "Sahara" continually fascinates and illuminates, in terms of the facts there was a very good mix of the known ones and the unknown. Because there was such a large breadth and variety of habitats, wildlife, how they adapted to their environment and what was covered, it was so easy to learn so much more about the animals and the undersea habitats, going beyond what we knew about Africa before.

Attenborough's narration helps quite significantly too, he clearly knows his stuff and knows what to say and how to say it. He delivers it with his usual richness, soft-spoken enthusiasm and sincerity, never talking down to the viewer and keeping them riveted and wanting to know more. The closing scenes have honesty and humanity.

The animals are big in personality and wide in range, they are a mix of cute and predatory, which helps give any conflict genuine tension, any fun moments their fun and the emotional moments pathos. How they adapt to their surroundings, their struggles, why they behave the way they do, how nature works and how what the wildlife does affects the environment were all touched upon and made their points subtly, not hammering it home too much (a potential danger with documentaries). It completely succeeds, and brilliantly, at both educating and entertaining.

When it comes to favourite scenes, all 'Africa' episodes have at least one of them. All though are so full of great parts, incredible visuals, emotional impact and fascinating animals and habitats that it is hard picking just one favourite per episode. The same goes with "Sahara". The dung beetle and the silvery ants are filmed beautifully and they have awe-inspiring stories of their own. Best of all is with the plant, it's not everyday one cares for and relates to a plant, "Sahara" manages this.

Nothing's episodic or dull here, it's utterly transfixing and feels like its own individual story with complex emotions and animals we care for in the same way we would a human.

Summing up, animal and habitats battles for survival in the Sahara have seldom been this beautifully filmed, edge of your seat or emotionally complex. 10/10 Bethany Cox
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10/10
Sheer unallayed brilliance
jrarichards16 February 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Start a programme on the Sahara with a heavy fall of snow in the Atlas Mountains affecting the remnant/relict population of Barbary macaques there, and you have incongruity, beauty, animal behaviour, ecology and planetary history all right there. Later, if we need to learn it (for the salutary tale is not or should not be unknown), we learn that the Sahara expanded to its present awesome size raher rapidly just 6000 or so years ago - apparently because of a flukey change in the Earth's rotation.

So "Where does the Sahara come from and how does it operate?" are key considerations in this programme - and mostly one cannot fault its approach in any way. Those wanting to fin out will get much of what they need from the single episode, while of course imbibing a HUGE dose of beauty and majesty, with even a touch of anthropology and ethnography thrown in (David Attenborough is no slouch in these fields, just as he knows his zoology, ecology, geology and environment).

If I felt something was missing - and perhaps there was one thing - it was the fact that the Atlas on the edge of the great desert are matched by the Aïr Mountains in Niger (rising to over 2000 m) and the Hoggar in Algeria (rising to nearly 3000). Presumably these places are too risky to film in, but it would have been wonderful to see them.

Otherwise, we see salt, tiny biodiverse oases, shifting sands, burrowing animals, and so on, and it's highly likely (just as it SHOULD be) that the titanic mini-struggles of desert-adapted silver ants and less-hardy dung beetles will prove as epic as the mating urges of Grevy's zebras and the triumph to inner drive and feat of navigation that is the swallow's crossing of the entire expanse from north to south.

As a trained expert with decades of watching such programmes behind me, I'm still awe-struck by (and lost in admiration for) the mix of artistry, erudition and lightly-injected scientific content that we find in this episode, and in this series.

Love it.
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