Movie Reviews
Film and television reviewed the way I’d want to read them — with a rating that means something, an honest accounting of what works and what doesn’t, and craft notes for writers who want to understand how the machinery operates.
Each review includes a craft notes section for writers — specific observations about structure, character, world-building, and what the film does that you can actually use. Not theory. Technique you can steal.
Nature (14)
Africa (2013)
Attenborough's 2013 six-episode survey of Africa. Three years filming, 24 production teams. Shoebill stork and desert giraffe sequences stand out.
Blue Planet II (2017)
Attenborough's 2017 sequel to The Blue Planet. Seven episodes, 125 expeditions. Grouper-octopus pairs, tusk-fish tools, plastic episode that moved policy.
Cave of Forgotten Dreams (2010)
Werner Herzog's 2010 Chauvet Cave doc. 30,000-year-old paintings. 3D filming. Albino crocodiles coda. Herzog narrates.
Frozen Planet (2011)
Attenborough's 2011 seven-episode polar series. Polar bear hunts, killer whales wave-washing, emperor penguin rookeries. The last great BBC ice document.
Grizzly Man (2005)
Werner Herzog's 2005 Timothy Treadwell doc. Bear researcher killed by bears. Herzog's voice-over commentary. Tape of the deaths exists.
Life on Earth (1979)
Attenborough's 1979 thirteen-episode evolutionary survey. The series that built natural history documentary as a form. Mountain gorilla scene is the peak.
Planet Earth (2006)
Attenborough's 2006 eleven-episode HD landmark. Five years, $25M, 71 cameramen. Snow leopards, great whites, lions hunting elephants. TV as cinema.
Planet Earth II (2016)
Attenborough's 2016 sequel shot in 4K UHD. Marine iguana versus racer snake sequence broke the internet. Stabilized cameras changed nature TV.
The Blue Planet (2001)
Attenborough's 2001 eight-part ocean survey. Four years filming, 200 locations. Deep-sea life nobody had ever seen. The series that justified HD.
The Life of Birds (1998)
Attenborough's 1998 ten-episode avian survey. Mating, migration, song, flight. Bird-of-paradise courtship footage took the BBC two years to capture.
The Life of Mammals (2002)
Attenborough's 2002 ten-episode series on mammalian behavior. Hunting, social order, sex, parenting. The chimp tool-use sequences still the best on film.
The Living Planet (1984)
Attenborough's 1984 sequel to Life on Earth, organized by ecosystem. Twelve episodes from polar ice to ocean trench. The framework every nature series copied.
The Private Life of Plants (1995)
Attenborough's 1995 series using time-lapse to make plants act like animals. Strangler figs, carnivorous pitchers, vines that kill their hosts.
The Trials of Life (1990)
Attenborough's 1990 series tracking animals through twelve life stages. Births, courtships, fights, deaths. Orca-beach sequence is nature TV's bleakest.













