10 / 10
Blue Planet II is the BBC natural history television series narrated by David Attenborough. The series was produced by the BBC Natural History Unit in Bristol with James Honeyborne and Mark Brownlow as the executive producer and series producer respectively. The series originally aired on BBC One between October and December 2017. The seven-episode series provides thorough documentation of marine environments using technical approaches developed in the sixteen years since the original Blue Planet (2001). Each episode runs approximately sixty minutes. The seven episodes are: “One Ocean,” “The Deep,” “Coral Reefs,” “Big Blue,” “Green Seas,” “Coasts,” and “Our Blue Planet.” The series covers approximately two hundred marine species across forty countries with one hundred twenty-five expeditions. The score was composed by Hans Zimmer, Jacob Shea, and David Fleming.
The series was produced over four years and used technical advances that had become available since Blue Planet’s 2001 production. Submersible technology, camera sensor sensitivity, underwater stabilization, and remote camera deployment had all advanced substantially during the intervening period. Blue Planet II is consistently cited among the major natural history productions of the late 2010s. The closing episode (“Our Blue Planet”) addresses marine plastic pollution, ocean acidification, and climate change impacts on marine systems. The episode’s specific cultural impact has been substantial. The “Blue Planet II effect” entered British policy conversation as shorthand for the series’s influence on subsequent UK government action on single-use plastic restrictions.
The Technical Generation
The series deployed technical approaches that had not been available during Blue Planet’s 2001 production. Crewed deep-sea submersibles had become significantly more capable. The Triton 3300 submersibles used in the production could operate at depths of one thousand meters with film-quality optical viewing windows. Remote underwater camera systems had advanced through multiple generations. Tow camera systems could maintain stable footage of fast-swimming species across extended distances. Underwater lighting systems had improved to support filming at depths previous productions could not effectively illuminate.
The technical improvements produced specific content the original Blue Planet could not have captured. The bait ball sequences in episode four (“Big Blue”) use stabilization technology that the 2001 production lacked. The hydrothermal vent footage in episode two (“The Deep”) uses submersible access that the original production could not arrange. The tool-using tuskfish sequence in episode three (“Coral Reefs”) uses sustained underwater camera presence that the original equipment could not have supported. The technique demonstrates how subsequent productions can substantially extend earlier landmark coverage when technical generations advance. The 2001 Blue Planet remains foundational. The 2017 Blue Planet II adds material that the original production could not have included. Both series have merit.
For Writers
Subsequent work in a field can substantially extend earlier landmark contributions when technical or methodological generations have advanced. Blue Planet II adds content that Blue Planet could not have included. The lesson is that previous excellent work does not foreclose subsequent contribution. Each generation can extend what previous generations established. The strongest work in any field accumulates across multiple contributions rather than emerging from a single definitive treatment. Build the work that extends what previous excellent work established.
The Plastic Pollution Material
The series’s closing episode (“Our Blue Planet”) covers marine plastic pollution in detail no prior natural history series had managed. The episode documents specific plastic impacts on marine wildlife including the pilot whale family carrying their dead calf for sustained periods (the calf had likely died from milk contaminated by plastic toxins consumed by the mother), the albatross chicks fed plastic by parents who mistook plastic fragments for food, and the sustained accumulation of plastic in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
The cultural impact was substantial. The series’s documentation contributed directly to subsequent UK government policy on single-use plastics. The 2018 UK ban on plastic microbeads in cosmetics, the 2018 announcement of plans to extend plastic straw and stirrer bans, and the 2019 Resources and Waste Strategy all cited Blue Planet II as contributing public-awareness context. The “Blue Planet II effect” became a specific term in British policy discussion. The technique demonstrates how documentary work can produce specific policy consequences when the documentation is sufficiently compelling and the broader cultural moment is receptive. The series’s contribution to public understanding of marine plastic pollution exceeded what any specific advocacy organization had achieved through directly political work. The documentary form has specific capacities that direct advocacy work cannot match.
For Writers
Strong documentary work can produce policy consequences that exceed what direct advocacy achieves. Blue Planet II contributed to substantial UK plastic policy changes. The lesson is that the documentary form has specific persuasive capacities. The accumulated documentation of specific harms moves readers and viewers differently than explicit argument does. The reader who sees the consequences engages differently than the reader who reads about them. Document the specific reality. Allow the documentation to carry the persuasive work.
The Tool-Using Tuskfish
The series’s third episode (“Coral Reefs”) includes the first thorough footage of tool use in fish. The footage documents a specific orange-dotted tuskfish that uses a coral outcropping as an anvil to break open shellfish prey. The fish carries clam shells in its mouth, swims to a specific coral location, and strikes the shell against the coral repeatedly to crack it. The behavior had been described in scientific literature but had not been comprehensively filmed.
The footage required sustained presence with the specific individual fish. The production crew identified the tool-using individual and maintained underwater filming presence across multiple feeding events. The result was footage that demonstrates tool use in fish with the same level of behavioral documentation that previous Attenborough productions had provided for primate and corvid tool use. The technique extends mammalian and avian cognitive documentation to include fish cognition. The audience reads tool use as a more widespread cognitive capacity than previous documentary work had suggested. The technique demonstrates how thorough documentation can shift broader understanding of animal cognition. Each new taxonomic group documented as cognitively complex expands the scientific and cultural recognition of widespread cognitive capacity across vertebrate evolution.
For Writers
Thorough documentation can shift broader understanding of subjects that specialist research has long covered. The tuskfish tool use had been documented scientifically but the broadcast documentation shifted public awareness. The lesson is that translation from specialist research to public engagement is a specific contribution. Identify research findings in your field that specialists know but general audiences do not. Thorough documentation in accessible form can produce understanding that specialist publication alone cannot achieve.
Craft Note
The hadal zone sequence in episode two (“The Deep”) demonstrates the series’s specific approach to extreme deep-ocean environments. The hadal zone (depths from six thousand to eleven thousand meters) had been almost entirely inaccessible to previous natural history documentation. The Blue Planet II production worked with deep-sea research teams to deploy specialized camera systems at depths previous broadcast natural history had not approached. The footage documents specific deep-sea species including the snailfish (which lives at depths up to eight thousand meters) and the giant amphipods that scavenge on the deep ocean floor. The sequence runs approximately four minutes and represents the first thorough broadcast documentation of hadal-zone species. The audience experiences environments at pressures that would crush most equipment and most organisms. The technique demonstrates how scientific-production collaboration can deliver content that purely broadcast operations could not access. The hadal zone sequence is among the most-cited individual passages on extreme-environment biology in natural history television.
The Verdict
10/10. One of the major BBC natural history productions of the late 2010s and the demonstration that marine documentation can substantially extend across multiple production generations. The technical generation advances, the plastic pollution material, the tuskfish tool use documentation, and the hadal zone sequences all earn the series’s standing. The cultural and policy consequences of the series exceed those of most natural history productions. Watch the complete seven-episode series. Blue Planet II operates as the explicit successor to the 2001 original and as evidence that contemporary natural history programming can produce direct policy outcomes through sufficiently compelling documentation.
FAQ
How many episodes?
Seven episodes covering different aspects of marine environments plus the closing conservation episode. Each episode runs approximately sixty minutes.
How does it compare to the original Blue Planet?
The original (2001) established the template for thorough marine documentation. Blue Planet II (2017) used sixteen years of subsequent technical advances. Both series have merit. The original is foundational. The sequel extends.
Did the series really affect UK policy?
Yes. The “Blue Planet II effect” became a specific term in British policy discussion. The series contributed to subsequent legislation on single-use plastics, plastic microbeads, and broader waste reduction strategies.
Is the tuskfish tool use really significant?
Yes. The footage was the first thorough broadcast documentation of tool use in fish. The contribution extends documented tool use beyond mammals and birds.
How accurate is the marine science?
The basic content remains current. Subsequent research has continued to refine specific details but the series’s content continues to align with marine science understanding.
Who composed the score?
Hans Zimmer with Jacob Shea and David Fleming. The orchestral score continued the approach Zimmer’s team had established with Planet Earth II.
Should I watch this?
Yes. Blue Planet II is required viewing for contemporary marine natural history and for understanding what documentary work can accomplish in policy contexts.