Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Winged Migration

 
Movies:

Winged Migration

  • Director: Jacques Perrin
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Nature
  • Movie Type: Natural Environments, Animals
  • Main Cast: Jacques Perrin
  • Release Year: 2001
  • Country: CH/ES/IT/DE
  • Run Time: 91 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: G

Plot

While practically everyone is aware of the fact that birds fly south for the winter, and return home in the spring, few are aware of just how arduous the journey can be. Jacques Perrin, a noted actor and film producer in his native France, decided to document this process, using flocks of birds who had been trained to ignore the distractions of his camera crew, and employing a variety of state-of-the-art technology to capture as unobtrusively as possible the flight paths of different birds from around the globe. The result was Winged Migration, a visually dazzling documentary that records the flight of dozens of different birds as they follow their navigational instincts and make the taxing journey to more temperate climates in the fall, all chronicled without the use of narration. The first directorial effort for Perrin, Winged Migration received an Academy Award nomination for Best Documentary. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

An odyssey over three years in the making, Winged Migration certainly is an amazing experience to behold. Its most impressive and moving achievement is its ability to draw the viewer into an almost foreign world, traveling along with a myriad of bird species as they undertake their semiannual migrations over vast distances. Just as MicroCosmos placed the viewer into an ant-sized world where blades of grass loomed like skyscrapers, Winged Migration offers the world through birds' eyes. We're on the ground with them as they interact, look for sustenance, and care for their young; and we're in the air with the birds as they dauntlessly fly high and low above the earth and sea. The film is also a tour of the globe that reveals gorgeous landscapes that most humans never get to see. One of the most unexpected delights of the film is listening to the many and varying voices of these creatures as they communicate with each other; it's almost like a music track all its own. As far as the actual music and score of the film, it is a mixed bag. Some musical choices interact nicely with the visuals, while many are overwrought and distracting. Usually the most effective moments are either without music or accompanied with minimalist compositions.

The thrill of flying with the birds is countered with the depiction of the disasters and impediments that they face on a daily basis. Exhaustion, natural predators, hunters, broken wings, and human factory pollution are among the many obstacles that claim the lives of migrating birds; sometimes less than half of them actually make it to their destinations. One of the most jarring moments in the film is when a gunshot rings out and one of the birds goes limp and falls out of the sky, followed by several more of its companions. The shock of these deaths is joined with the slow realization that another bird is not going to make it out of the industrial waste near a factory, that a baby can be snatched and eaten right in front of its parents' eyes, and that a broken-winged bird is going to become the dinner for a horde of crabs. But these disturbing moments are infrequent, and the main focus of the film is to portray the grandeur of birds in general. Completely unlike the conventional nature documentary, Winged Migration is not about teaching cool facts about mating habits or details about one specific bird. Other than informing us of the distance and path of each bird's migration, there is little else offered to satiate our scientific curiosity. Although there are a few instances in which it would be nice to learn the reasons for certain actions of a bird or where the film cuts away from an enthralling interaction, Winged Migration keeps its focus broad. In this way, the film is very effective in creating an intimate, poetic portrait that conveys the majesty of all birds. ~ Dana Rowader, All Movie Guide

Cast

Jacques Perrin - Narrator

Credit

Danièle Delorme - Associate Producer, Jean-Marc Henchoz - Associate Producer, Yves Robert - Associate Producer, Reinhard Brundig - Associate Producer, Jean Labadie - Associate Producer, Jose Maria Morales - Associate Producer, Karl Baumgertner - Associate Producer, Andréa Occihpinti - Associate Producer, Jacques Perrin - Director, Marie-Josephe Yoyotte - Editor, Jean de Tregomain - Executive Producer, Bruno Coulais - Composer (Music Score), Jacques Perrin - Producer, Christophe Barratier - Producer, Gerard Lamps - Sound/Sound Designer, Philippe Barbeau - Sound/Sound Designer, Paolo de Jesus - Sound/Sound Designer, Laurent Quaglio - Sound/Sound Designer, Jean-Baptiste Benoit - Sound/Sound Designer, Denis Gilhem - Sound/Sound Designer, Jacques Perrin - Screenwriter, Jean Dorst - Screenwriter, Stephane Durand - Screenwriter, Guy Jarry - Screenwriter, Francis Roux - Screenwriter, Michel Debats - Co-Director, Jacques Cuzaud - Co-Director

Similar Movies

John James Audubon: The Birds of America; Fly Away Home; The Life of Birds: The Mystery of Flight; All About Animals: Feathered Friends; National Geographic: Wings Over the Serengeti; ZooLife with Jack Hanna: Feathered Friends; Kestrel's Eye; Crowfilm; Sacred Planet; C'mon Geese; The Wild Parrots of Telegraph Hill; Genesis; Deep Blue; March of the Penguins; Anima Mundi; National Geographic Kids: Animal Holiday; Better Birdwatching in Arizona & New Mexico
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Winged Migration
Top
Winged Migration
Directed by Jacques Perrin,
Jacques Cluzaud,
Michel Debats
Produced by Christophe Barratier,
Jacques Perrin
Written by Jean Dorst,
Jacques Perrin
Starring Jacques Perrin,
Philippe Labro
Distributed by Sony Pictures Classics
Release date(s) 12 December 2001 (France)
Running time 98 min
Language English, French
Budget €23,630,000

Winged Migration (French: Le Peuple Migrateur, also known as The Travelling Birds in some UK releases, or The Travelling Birds: An adventure in flight in Australia), is a 2001 documentary film directed by Jacques Cluzaud, Michel Debats and Jacques Perrin (who was also one of the writers and narrators) showcasing the immense journeys routinely made by birds during their migrations.

The movie was shot over the course of four years on all seven continents. Shot using in-flight cameras, most of the footage is aerial, and the viewer appears to be flying alongside birds of successive species, especially Canada geese. They traverse every kind of weather and landscape, covering vast distances in a flight for survival.

Much of the aerial footage was taken of "tame" birds. The filmmakers raised birds of several species, including storks and pelicans, from birth. The newborn birds imprinted on staff members, and were trained to fly along with the film crews. The birds were also exposed to the film equipment over the course of their lives to ensure that the birds would react the way the filmmakers want. Several of these species had never been imprinted before. Film was shot from ultralights, paragliders, and hot air balloons, as well as trucks, motorcycles, motorboats, remote-controlled robots, and a French Navy warship. Many critics[who?] question if "Winged Migration" is really a documentary at all since there is so much manipulation of the birds and the footage that made it into the final film.

The film states that no special effects were used. On the contrary, while no computer-generated imagery (CGI) was used in the filming of the birds, several entirely-CGI segments augment the real-life footage.[citation needed]

The film's soundtrack by Bruno Coulais was recorded by several Bulgarian vocal groups in Bulgarian, as well as Nick Cave in English and Robert Wyatt. The vocal effects include sequences in which panting is superimposed on wingbeats to give the effect that the viewer is a bird.

The film is dedicated to the French ornithologist Jean Dorst.

Contents

Awards

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.[1]

Images

The filmmakers exposed over 590 miles of film to create an 89-minute piece and roughly two months of filming in one location would edit down to less than one minute of the final film.

References

External links


 
 
Learn More
Deep Blue (2005 Nature Film)
Oceans (2010 Nature Film)
Bruno Coulais (Soundtrack Artist, '80s-2000s)

What is the wing? Read answer...
How can you get wings? Read answer...
What does the wing do? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What has wings?
What are wings for?
Is the sailboat word wing to wing or wing on wing?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Winged Migration" Read more