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March of the Penguins (2005,
Fr.) (aka Le Marche de l'Empereur)
In the highest grossing nature documentary ever made
(up to its time), Luc Jacquet's Oscar-winner for Best Documentary
Feature, with awe-inspiring visuals of the icy continent of Antarctica,
and beautifully narrated by Morgan Freeman:
- the opening narrated line: ("There are few
places hard to get to in this world. But there aren't any where
it's harder to live") - about the fight for survival by Emperor
penguins, as they live in the center of the harshest place on Earth
- Antarctica
- the miles-long penguin march and their awkward, waddling-walking
when not flopping on their bellies to slide forward on the hardened
snow, to return to the breeding grounds for the mating season, about
70 miles away: ("To get there, they will walk day and night
continuously, sometimes for a week. It is a long, dangerous and seemingly
impossible journey, and some of them will not survive it")
- the clumsy, perilous ballet of handing off eggs (later
hatching chicks) between parents, and the difficult efforts of the
male penguin parent to keep the fragile penguin egg warm to ensure
its incubation over a long period of time: ("As soon as the
egg appears, it is instantly hidden from the cold. The tiny beating
heart within the shell cannot survive much more than a moment's exposure
to the freezing air. From now on, the couple has but a single goal,
keeping their egg alive. The hungry mother must return at once to
the sea to eat. But before she leaves, she must entrust the egg to
its father. Some, young couples perhaps, are too impulsive or rushed.
And within moments, their affair comes to an end. They can only watch
as the ice claims their egg and the life within it. This couple's
partnership is now over. The long march in vain....And now begins
one of nature's most incredible and endearing role reversals. It
is the penguin male who will tend the couple's single egg....it is
the father who will shield the egg from the violent winds and cold")
- the graceful underwater swimming by the female penguins,
who return to the water to eat ("to fill their empty bellies")
- the crowd-pleasing sequence of a young chick reunited
with its mother for the first time: ("To find each other in
the enormous crowd, the penguins must rely on sound, not sight. As
they circle, the returning mothers trumpet loudly and wait for their
mates to call back. The sound is deafening, and yet, somehow, each
of them will hear their mate's song. The couple has found one another.
The mother sees her chick for the first time. And, at last, the family
is together")
The Young Emperor Penguin Chick
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- the view of the adolescent penguin chicks learning
to walk, and then diving into the water -- (in voice-over): "Going
home for the first time"
- the film's final voice-over line: ("And they
will march just as they have done for centuries, ever since the Emperor
Penguin decided to stay, to live and love in the harshest place on
Earth")
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Warming The Penguin Egg
The Penguin Parents
Underwater Swimming
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