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David Attenborough's favourite moments

Introduction to this collection

David Attenborough's favourite moments from the last 30 years represent not only memorable personal experiences, but also the diversity of life on our planet and the rapidly changing technological face of broadcasting. From close encounters with some of the world's rarest creatures, to poignant commentary on the state of the planet as a whole, this collection celebrates both an incredible career and the joy of watching wildlife.

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48 video clips in this collection

Dancing dragons

Life

The beautiful, balletic courtship of weedy sea dragons.

Of all the creatures filmed for Life, the weedy seadragon ranked as one of David Attenborough's favourites.

Blue whale breach

The giant of the ocean in all its majesty.

Blue whales are symbolic ocean giants. Yet despite their size and apparent visibility, they've rarely been filmed in any detail and comparatively little is really known about their life and its habits. As Sir David points out, if so little is known about these giants, how much less is known about the myriad smaller creatures of the seas.

Inside the blue whale

The Life of Mammals

The anatomy of the largest mammal ever to have existed.

Everyone has heard of the blue whale, yet they are rarely seen and not often filmed. Sir David's delight at the privileged close up view of one of these ocean giants as it breached right beside him is evident.

Killer whale hunt

A grey whale calf is no match for specialised ocean hunters.

A key sequence from the Blue Planet series, this dramatic and poignant clip showed some extraordinary, and for some shocking, behaviour by killer whales. The challenges were to reflect the long drawn out hunt - it lasted six hours - and to balance an uncensored view of nature with the audience's ability to accept it.

Chimp tricks

The Life of Mammals

David Attenborough learns that you can't teach an old ape new tricks.

Another of the sequences voted as a favourite David Attenborough moment sees Sir David visiting a group of orphaned chimps that are being taught the survival skills needed to live in the wild. As his boat nears the landing point, a surprise greeting party arrives on the scene and right in the boat!

Aping apes

The Life of Mammals

Rescued orangutans give insight into ape development.

David Attenborough spends time with an unusual group of orangutans at Camp Leakey in a sequence that shows some fascinating animal behaviour. These orangs have spent time both in the wild and living alongside humans, and as a result they've developed all kinds of new talents and interests. Their capacity for mimicking behaviour outside their normal experience and then passing it on to their own young illuminates aspects of higher ape and therefore human development.

View all 48 video clips

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