马达加斯加(2011)

MadagascarUP:2023-01-20

《马达加斯加》(英语:Madagascar)为英国广播公司与动物星球频道联合制作的自然纪录片,由大卫·爱登堡旁白,2011年2月9日起于英国广播公司第二台及高清台首播,共3集。本片介绍位处印度洋的马达加斯加岛之自然景观及其富饶的野生生态。本片每集皆附上10分钟的《马达加斯加:奇观背后》(Madagascar Diaries),展示摄制队的拍摄手法及技巧。

剧照演员表影评播出时间剧情介绍 结局 主题曲
马达加斯加

评分:9.2 导演:大卫·爱登堡 编剧:
主演:戴维·爱丁保罗夫(解说)
类型:纪录片
片长:59分钟(E01 - Island of Marvels) / 59分钟(E02 - Lost Worlds) / 59分钟(E03 - Land of Heat and Dust) / 59分钟(E04 - Attenborough and the Gi地区:英国
语言:英语
影片别名:
上映:2011-02-09
IMDb:tt1842793

马达加斯加简介

David Attenborough爵士在这个迷人的自然纪录片中讲述在马达加斯加岛上生活的各种不同物种。因为远离非洲大陆,马达加斯加多年来未被发现,它的孤立使之成为进化的温床,本纪录片研究了各种在此陆地上土生土长的动物和植物。
  Sir David Attenborough narrates this fascinating nature documentary series which profiles the variety of different species that live on the island of Madagascar. Because of its distance away from the African continent, Madagascar remained undiscovered for many years and its isolation from man has allowed it to become a hot bed of evolution. This series examines the various different animals and plants that are indigenous to Madagascar and the reason which set it apart from anywhere else on the planet.
  Episode 1: Island of Marvels
  Length: 00:59:02
  Madagascar, the world''s oldest island, broke off from Africa and India and has been on its own for more than 70 million years. In splendid isolation, it has evolved its very own wildlife - more than 80 per cent of it is found nowhere else. And that wildlife is quite extraordinary. In this episode, we reveal the island''s most bizarre and dramatic places, and the unique wildlife that has made its home in each, thanks to the geology and isolation of this Alice-in-Wonderland world.
  The stars are the lemurs, Madagascar''s own primates. A family of indris leaps like gymnasts among rainforest trees; and crowned lemurs scamper around Madagascar''s weirdest landscape, the razor-sharp limestone tsingy, which looks like something from another planet. And sifakas, ghostly white lemurs, move like ballerinas across the forest floor.
  Madagascar''s wildlife is famously strange. Bright red giraffe-necked weevils use their necks to build leaf nests with the complexity of origami. Chameleons stalk the forests, none more intriguing than the pygmy chameleon, the world''s smallest reptile, delicately courting a female in its giant world. The fearsome fossa, Madagascar''s only big mammal predator, looks for a mate - 15 metres up a tree. And in the southern ''spiny desert'', a spider hauls an empty snail shell, 30 times its own weight, up into a bush as a shelter; something never before filmed, and possibly never observed in the wild before.
  At the end of the episode, we go ''behind the camera'', to reveal the challenges of capturing the behaviour of the little-known wildlife of this island. How do you go about filming a rare, secretive lemur that lives in the middle of Madagascar''s biggest lake?
  Episode 2: Lost Worlds
  Length: 00:59:05
  David Attenborough tells the story of one of the most intriguing wild places on earth: Madagascar, a huge island of dramatic landscapes, where the wildlife is strange and unique; some of it has been filmed for the very first time.
  In this episode, we travel deep into Madagascar''s most luxuriant landscape; the rainforests that cloak the island''s eastern mountains. Remote and mysterious, this little-known region of towering peaks and precipitous escarpments is home to over half of all Madagascar''s unique species.
  Narrated by David Attenborough, this second episode showcases an amazing collection of wildlife, many of which have never before been filmed. Cyanide-eating lemurs, cannibalistic frogs, meat-eating plants, cryptic leaf-tailed geckos, tadpole-eating wasps, tunnel-digging chameleons and house-proud flycatchers are just some of the weird and wonderful wildlife featured in this programme.
  Along this coast, every cliff and valley is like a lost world where nature has run riot.
  Amongst the boulders fields of the Andringitra Highlands, a few hardy troops of ringtailed lemurs make their home. More at home in the hot southern forests, these eke out a living at the top of the coldest mountain on the island. To fight the sub-zero cold they have developed thick coats and can only survive the freezing nights by huddling together in rocky crevices. In this high ''desert'', they must eat cacti for moisture.
  But descend just a few hundred metres and it''s a very different world, where dense forests are permanently shrouded in clouds. The Marojejy Massif is the last sanctuary of one of Madagascar''s rarest lemurs, the elusive, ghostly white silky sifaka. There are thought to be only two hundred of these playful and endearing creatures left on Earth.
  Episode 3: Land of Heat and Dust
  Length: 00:58:30
  Madagascar is an island of extremes. While the east is cloaked in soaking rainforest, the west and south is almost a desert. This is a scorching landscape where it might not rain for nine months of the year, and some years not at all. To live here, you have to be a specialist. The animals and plants of the dry southern lands are stranger and more mysterious than on any other part of the island, and their strategies for surviving the dryness are extraordinary.
  Verreaux''s sifaka, a kind of lemur, lives in Madagascar''s ''spiny forest'' where trees have savage spikes, and some drip toxic chemicals. Amongst the bulbous trees of the baobab forests, huge-eyed mouse lemurs, the world''s smallest primates, emerge at night to feed on the sugary droppings of bizarre fluffy bugs.
  When at last the rains come, everything changes. Labord''s chameleon is the shortest-lived land vertebrate in the world. This striking animal lives just 12 weeks from hatching to adulthood. It spent nine months in an egg and has only three months to pack in the rest of its life.
  These animals are all unique to Madagascar, and exquisitely adapted to the island''s seasonal changes. But this is not their only challenge. Much of Madagascar''s extraordinary wildlife is under threat, from hunting and loss of habitat, and none more so than in the south of the island. David Attenborough says, ''We are still unravelling the mysteries of Madagascar''s wildlife. How tragic it would be, to lose it before we''ve even understood it ''.
  Episode 4: Attenborough and the Giant Egg
  Length: 00:58:47
  David Attenborough returns to the island of Madagascar on a very personal quest.
  In 1960 he visited the island to film one of his first ever wildlife series, Zoo Quest. Whilst he was there, he acquired a giant egg. It was the egg of an extinct bird known as the ''elephant bird'' - the largest bird that ever lived. It has been one of his most treasured possessions ever since.
  Fifty years older, he now returns to the island to find out more about this amazing creature and to see how the island has changed. Could the elephant bird''s fate provide lessons that may help protect Madagascar''s remaining wildlife?
  Using Zoo Quest archive and specially shot location footage, this film follows David as he revisits scenes from his youth and meets people at the front line of wildlife protection. On his return, scientists at Oxford University are able to reveal for the first time how old David''s egg actually is - and what that might tell us about the legendary elephant bird.

简评

马达加斯加因为自然环境与世隔绝,加上气候条件多样,孕育出许多罕见的神奇物种。片子里面主要讲了狐猴、寿带鸟、变色龙、红鹤这几样,还有橡皮虫、残趾壁虎、猢狲木等等。爱登堡爵士的解说慢条斯理,充满爱。

里面有特别特别多奇怪的生物,大的小的,奇形怪状的,看着真是可爱极了,神奇极了。不过让人伤心的依然是,这么苛刻的生存环境,它们都找到了活下来的方式,偏偏这块栖息地又被人类不停地破坏着,哎哟喂……能有哪个地方人不去嚯嚯吗?!

长尾灵猫在11月份交配,一只雌的要轮流和好几只雄的交配,为先后顺序会争的得不可开交,全身黑色叫声像鹅,身长尾长模样却像很瘦的狗,猎物为狐猴,它们都擅长爬树,所以之间的追逐非常激烈。鼠狐猴眼睛很大身体长得非常小,是最小的灵长类。马岛猬身上长得很多刺,身上是黄黑白色有点像刺猬,三周的时候断奶,自己需要觅食。叶鼻蛇的鼻子很长,看上去很古老和别的蛇不一样,行动缓慢,身上长有斑纹与周围的树枝颜色一致。9

老师指着我电脑桌面上的狐猴问我,为什么拿假造的动物做桌面。???想想自己也没知道多少,就借此了解这个神奇的岛屿多一点吧。看了也不大记得住,可动物世界真是百看不厌,循环中。地貌气候与物种的丰富性。纪录片太合适做强度不高的工作时的背景音了,弱情节不揪心,音乐美,从哪都能接起来看,还涨知识。

“David Attenborough爵士在这个迷人的自然纪录片中讲述在马达加斯加岛上生活的各种不同物种。因为远离非洲大陆,马达加斯加多年来未被发现,它的孤立使之成为进化的温床,本纪录片研究了各种在此陆地上土生土长的动物和植物。”