Genre: Documentary
Nonfiction storytelling that documents the real — events, people, and places captured and shaped into narrative without invention.
-
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26 -
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.May 16, '26