![]() ![]() As well as some of the more grisly footage although there's a limit to how much you want to see of that. "There was so much good footage that we couldn't tell the story of just one iguana so we found a way of using all the great chase moments. Of the traumatic scene in question, which has since become an overnight viral phenomenon, he elaborated: "With the iguanas and snakes sequence we really wanted to set up the feeling that something wasn't quite right when the first iguana pops out, so as to make the first wide shot, when the snakes start creeping up on him, really stand out. The first episode of 'Planet Earth II,' the sequel to BBC's acclaimed documentary miniseries, aired Sunday. John Carpenters 'Escape from New York' is a true-blue cult classic among (male) movie fans of a certain age (old, like me), but the goofy follow-up, 'Escape from L.A.,' didnt exactly strike the same gold-mine. On Africa I cut a sequence with fighting giraffes in the style of a Western, in The Hunt we did a wild dog hunt like a car chase in a Bourne film." A heart-pounding video of a lizard escaping a minefield of snakes is going viral. "I really like to find a genre that fits with a sequence if I can, as it's a subliminal way to ease people into a new story. The narration can provide some of this, but you don't want to make the pictures just wallpaper for the commentary. The heart-pounding footage was released as part of BBC's Planet Earth. ![]() Also timing, be it for comedy or thrills. A lizard's high-energy escape from half a dozen snakes is being hailed as possibly the greatest scene in documentary history. ![]() Snoop has now narrated the moment in his own amazing way. Filmed on Fernandina Island in the Galpagos, the Galpagos racer ( Philodryas biserialis) is a slim, fast-moving, mildly venomous snake that reaches lengths of up. "But cutting wildlife films are like cutting silent movies, it's all about action/reaction. Fans of David Attenborough’s popular documentary series will remember an intense chase-scene involving a lizard and a snake. This jaw-dropping scene aired as part of the new series of the BBC’s flagship natural history programme, Planet Earth II, and seems to have captured the imagination of millions. ![]()
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