Format:Colour, Pal Language:English (Original Language) Rating:Exempt Number Of Items:2 Running Time:300 Shipping Weight (lbs):0.2 Dimensions (in):7.1 x 5.4 x 0.6
EAN:5014503192129 ASIN:B000EMI5FG
Release Date:July 17, 2006 Availability:Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
The best nature documentary around!January 4, 2008 Big Cat Week is a brilliant show, and these two series are no exception. You really go in depth into the cat's lives, and experience the ups and downs of what they go through each and every day to survive. You simply become so attached to the cats that the constant action will have you on the edge of your seat all of the way through the series. A definite must!
Great DVD, fantastic viewingJuly 23, 2006 18 out of 19 found this review helpful
I bought this DVD having watched the 2006 Big Cat Week on TV. This is a fantastic DVD with great camera work and the stories are really well told. It brings back great memories of my safari in the Masai Mara, where we were lucky enough to see Kike sitting on a truck and it makes me want to go back there again as soon as possible!
Great DVD, well worth the money!
One of the TV highlights of every year always has me purringJuly 15, 2006 20 out of 20 found this review helpful
The release of this has obviously been timed to coincide with the end of the latest Big Cat week, or if you prefer Big Cat 3. This is a daily drama well worth investing your time in and it's a great shame it's only on our small screens once a year. For anyone unfamiliar with the concept of Big Cat week three presenters follow three sets of big cats around for a week and see what happens. It's that simple, but some of the drama that unfolds is mesmerising and buttock clenchingly tense. Before the end of the first episode you are hooked into caring what happens to these animals and worry almost as much as the presenters, who let me, tell you worry a hell of a lot, every time something seems to be amiss. We follow the pride of lions dubbed the marsh pride because they live near a marsh handily enough with Simon King who is probably the most dispassionate of the presenters. Saba Douglas Hamilton (driving her Big Cat jeep in bare feet) is attached to a leopard called Bella and her cub Chui while Jonathan Scott tracks the cheetahs. Hamilton is passionate and articulate but rarely gets overly emotional which is more than you can say about Scott who spends every episode getting in a right tizzy about something and is weirdly camp with it. The cheetahs though are the most at risk of the three groups so in a way it's understandable. Series one has Scott following Kike trying to raise her litter of cubs , something she has never managed successfully before and for series two he follows up to see how she is getting on. King after following the marsh pride for the first series turns his attention to a couple of lions - Chezah and Sala- for the second while Hamilton stays with Bella for both. There is around 8 hours of footage here, which for the price is a bargain plus there are two additional documentaries centred on Bella and Cheza & Sala. Big Cat Week is one of the TV highlights of the year and in my opinion should be on everyday, or at least as often as the soaps that clog up the schedules like moss in a drainage culvert. Exciting, emotional, nerve-racking, even funny, everything you expect from a soap. The only problem I can envisage is that Jonathan Scott would probably have a nervous breakdown within a month.