Oceans (2008) Poster

(2008)

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8/10
Alice in Aqualand.
The_Fifth_Echo23 April 2010
Disney introduces a new chapter in its nature films called "Oceans". I wanted to see the film because I wanted to be fascinated and learn more. The movie looked spectacular, I mean they looked way better than some special effects, I've seen from like Transformers, Clash of the Titans. I mean some scenes were utterly breathtaking. Its a shame some people are too busy with work to appreciate Nature's beauty. Although it looked beautiful, it was not perfect. I found that the movie didn't have too much details or informations about the Earth's Oceans and that kind of disappointed me.

Overall I found the movie beautiful and entertaining. 8.0/10
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9/10
What a visual feast!
TheLittleSongbird8 April 2012
I like nature documentaries just as much as the next person, likewise with my sister, and I found Oceans to be visually stunning and fascinating to watch. Oceans contains the best underwater photography I have seen in a long time and the colours are so sharp and vivid. The animals are a joy, ranging to cute to menacing it was fascinating learning about them. The narration while occasionally having the odd overly-sentimental pang, is intelligently written, with a strong emotional impact with me either biting my nails or being moved by some of the events, and Pierce Brosnan's delivery of it is both inspired and understated.

Overall, fascinating and a feast visually. 9/10 Bethany Cox
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8/10
No CG effect could ever replicate nature's beauty
Eternality10 July 2010
There is a sequence in Oceans that blows my mind. A stone crab emerges from the seabed and crawls along. Another follows. And then a few more follow. The camera then trails these creatures as they make their way to somewhere in the middle of nowhere. The stone crabs are joined by more of their own. Suddenly, in an establishing shot that continues to baffle me, the camera reveals what seems like hundreds of thousands of stone crabs in "a great big orgy". The sandy seabed that stretches for miles and miles could not have been more alive.

That is only one of a number of spectacular scenes on show. Another highly memorable sequence shows deft skill in quick cutting as hundreds of predatory birds dive headfirst into the water at startling speeds as the camera captures their assault on small fishes through above water and underwater shots. The latter is quite incredible, and eerily reminiscent of bullets ripping through the water in the Normandy beach scene of Spielberg's Saving Private Ryan (1998).

Jacques Perrin, whose previous film credits famously include acting as the adult Toto in Tornatore's Cinema Paradiso (1988), director of the excellent Oscar-nominated documentary Winged Migration (2001), and producer of Z (1969) and The Chorus (2004), now has Oceans in his resume, a documentary that explores in amazing detail what happens under the sea, bright day or still night, stormy or fine weather. The result is like nature washing over you as you drown in its unrivalled beauty. There is no gasping for air but the taking in of the vitality of life.

Oceans surprisingly works well as "a thriller". In certain sequences, Perrin opts for suspense, such as the one involving baby turtles as they evade hungry birds, making their way into the sea from the shore in their own version of Normandy. Many of them are eaten while the lucky ones try to survive in the big blue ocean. Even though collectively the turtles represent a faceless mass, we fear for each one of them because Perrin focuses on one or two of them at any one time, heightening the sense of vulnerability.

It is not surprising, however, to see Oceans preaching the ecological message. "Save the planet! Save the animals!" become the general plea for viewers to do their part in protecting their only home in this vast universe. But the plea is not as strong and specifically targeted as what is felt in The Cove (2009), the Oscar-winning documentary that secretly chronicles the slaying of hundreds of dolphins by Japanese fishermen in a hidden lagoon, and has now been controversially and unfairly labeled as "anti-Japanese".

Oceans is lightly-narrated. This is a good move as the stunning underwater cinematography is left to do all the talking, or in this context, to speak in silence to the viewer. Perrin films in cinema verite style; his camera is unbiased, objective, and unobtrusive. His use of original music by Bruno Coulais (The Chorus) is also spot on. Very often, the marrying of melody and motion (that of sea creatures) is a joy to experience, alternating between the subtle and the grandeur.

It's weird to say this but Oceans may leave your forearms bruised. Now, you may wonder why. Well, every once in a while, you might just pinch yourself to see if those beautiful imageries are really real or created with a green screen. Of course, no CG effect could ever replicate nature's beauty. Oceans shows why and that's quite something to think about.

SCORE: 8/10 (www.filmnomenon.blogspot.com) All rights reserved!
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Confusion over two versions of "Oceans"
winstonnc-129 July 2011
It's important to note there are TWO versions of this film. Jacques Perrin's original runs 104 minutes and is narrated by Perrin in French. Disney bought the film, cut 20 minutes (much of it critical of human activity endangering the oceans and animal habitats), junked Perrin's spare narration, which lets you wonder at the sights on view, and substituted a gabby but emotionally chilly commentary by Pierce Brosnan.

Perrin's original version is not available in the US, per contract with Disney. The original is available in Europe on DVD and Blu-Ray (but unplayable on most US machines) but it seems to lack English subtitles. So you're pretty much stuck with Disney edition.

The original, however, is to my mind better and much more in line with Perrin's "Winged Migration" than the Disney version. The best that can be said for the US edition is that plays down the "humanizing" of animal life that was an annoy hallmark of Disney's True-Life Adventures of the 1950s.
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10/10
This movie is a definite must-see for children of all ages.
PWNYCNY25 April 2010
First, if you want to watch a movie featuring incredible cinematography, this is the movie to watch. This is the movie that will cause you to ask: "How DID they get that shot?" The ocean is a big place and there's lots to photograph. The denizens of the deep are portrayed in a respectful and almost reverential manner. One scene in which one of the divers is swimming WITH a great white shark was both spectacular and emotional. This is the first movie this reviewer can recall where a great white shark is portrayed as something other than a wanton killer. The majesty of the sea creatures is awe inspiring. They deserve our protection; they must be preserved and they warrant our undivided admiration and respect. Objects for our amusement in captivity and considered a source of food, this movie shows the audience a different side of these sea creatures, a side that we rarely if ever notice or care about, but nevertheless is there. This movie is a definite must-see for children of all ages.
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10/10
Visually stunning, subtle, dreamy
chadelle5 February 2010
Absolutely stunning. Simply the most beautiful underwater imagery I've ever seen. It's hard to remain not too affected when talking about ecology. Here, the off screen speech is quite subtle, not too naive and not boring, because sparingly used, which leaves long lapse of dreamy sequences, without a word. Technically, it's easily one of the best documentary ever made. The camera work and photography are incredible, the montage is very effective, alternating slow and fast paced sequences. The score is not too obtrusive. There is a very striking scene, which reminds me the nautical funerals of Laetitia in "Les Aventuriers" by Robert Enrico, if you see what I'm referring to, you will easily notice it, and I assure this scene will stick to your mind for days... Visually stunning, subtle, very recommended.
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6/10
Much beauty, little information
ingo_schwarze9 March 2010
On the one hand, this movie focuses on showing the unfamiliar, the exotic, the gigantic, the violent, the frightening. Eating and being eaten is among the most frequent activities of the animals in the movie. On the other hand, many images have been selected according to the connotations and emotions they might evoke in the modern urban viewer. Often, these connotations have little to do with the animals being shown or with their behavior. For example, two converging groups of crabs on the sea-floor make you think of attacking armies, and the lonely ice bear passing a gap between two icebergs certainly won't think of a door, a door that *you* are supposed to think of as marking a choice of paths of historical importance. The common aspect of these two pervasive aspects, of the exotic and of the symbolic, is the entertaining effect on the viewer, and that's probably what the movie is ultimately aiming at.

After starting from the explicit question "what are the oceans?", almost nothing is explained, so it's somewhat misleading to call this a documentary. You learn very little about where the animals you see live, how they live, and what is important for them. You learn nothing about how marine life works as a whole, as a set of ecosystems, so the topical question remains unanswered. Even the occasional facts stated remain unexplained - e.g., you learn that most species of large whales travel distances of several thousand kilometers twice a year, but you get no idea why, let alone why some feed near the poles and others in warm waters, just to provide one typical example.

What you learn about ecology and the protection of our environment is mostly old news. Species get extinct, mankind has caused the rate of extinction to grow a lot, diversity is important for ecological stability. Pollution, global warming and industrial fishing contribute to the various problems. Sure, no doubt, but no surprise either.

The film-makers explicitly express their desire that mankind should stop, or at least reduce, the havoc it's causing to wildlife and to our environment. But somehow the style they turned their movie belies their intention. It is well-known by now that you tend to regard with respect and to protect efficiently what you really know: Intimacy is required to care, intellectual understanding is required to find the proper means. This movie gives you neither. The fascination of the exotic and the technical brilliance of the images is not enough. At best it might serve as a teaser to learn more, but that's not what usually happens. When you are shown the exotic, deliberately shown as exotic as possibly, you stare at it in wonder, then get on with your own life.

All the same, the movie is clearly worth viewing, simply for the stunning, beautiful images.
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10/10
amazing
inunoaozora7 June 2010
Undescribable movie about wonderful creatures living in the oceans and the surroundings. This movie has superb angles, beautiful scenes, remarkable background music, and deep-meaning little messages. Watching Oceans, our feelings will be touched by the real lives of animals, the events happen to them, and what we - humans - have done to them up till now. It pictures marine life wonderfully.

Mr. Perrin surely is an outstanding director. I can feel the director's love and caring about the ocean and world environment through this movie.

I hope many people could watch this movie. I hope the DVDS are sold throughout the world, cause no doubt I will buy it and watch it again and again with my friends and families. You can also watch it with your children, to acknowledge them to the sea, to expand their horizon about earth, and to give them 'something' that can make them show better care for the future through doings, at least better than us now. Excellent work.
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10/10
Amazing imagery of the Oceans
Freycinet10 February 2010
This movie enthralls you with the most amazing footage ever captured of the oceans that surround us. The commentary is minimalist, mainly a celebration of the diversity of ocean life, though with a warning at the end: we might be destroying much of that ocean life.

There is hardly any narrative, just as there wasn't in Perrins earlier "Winged Migration", but the succession of scenes is well-crafted and breaks in tempo make for a viewing experience with no dull moments whatsoever. The incredible imagery amply assures that.

Cutting-edge camera technology was used for the movie. Remote-controlled electric helicopters hovering over hump-back whales, cameras dragged by speed boats zoom along with fast-swimming sardines and helicopters brave terrible, stormy weather to capture mesmerizing footage of ships crashing through huge waves.

Not to be missed.
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6/10
Great style, but very little substance.
grantss4 August 2015
Great style, but very little substance. The images of underwater scenes and wildlife are amazing, and you can only begin to imagine the efforts it took to capture the footage. Apparently the footage was captured over four years, and you can see why it took so long.

However, the narration is flat, and empty. Pierce Brosnan's voice just seems wrong for the movie: dull, tired. Other than when identifying the animals, the narration is not very informative and quite pointless - full of trite, empty comments. David Attenborough this is not.

The producers could have done a better job by turning the footage over to National Geographic or The Discovery Channel.

Still, it is worth watching. Just sit back and take in the images of the amazing creatures of the sea.
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9/10
Stunning, without being too political
rianty-wahab2 May 2010
This is the kind of documentary movie you want to watch it in the theater.. don't wait for DVD, watch it NOW while it's still in theater. Just relax, enjoy breathtaking view, free yourself from Hollywood special effects or thinking too much about why the plot is so stupid. I recommend front seat than back seat so you can feel 'immersed' into the ocean. I like this movie because 1)the camera work is amazing 2) it covers almost every part of the world's ocean; from Artic, Galapagos, to small but high diversity place in Indonesia sea. 3)It's not over-narrated, nor highly political ambitious. Even tough the narration is less informative and sounds a bit strange because it is translated from French, but I believe the stunning visual needs less speech. I saw few kids not really enjoying the movie and left before it's over, probably because it's too sleepy for them, but hey, your kids can experienced more than Hollywood bullshit for a while.
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7/10
Lovely cinematography but not the most coherent message.
planktonrules19 November 2016
The cinematography of "Oceans" is lovely--much the sort of thing you see in "Earth" and the other David Attenborough films. In other words, this French film is simply gorgeous and offers breathtaking scene after breathtaking scene. You cannot help but admire it. Is this saying it's a must-see or brilliant film? No. While the film looks absolutely stunning and the English language version very soothing thanks to the lovely narration by Pierce Brosnan, it's also a bit of a confusing film. After all, there really doesn't seem to be any real coherent theme to all the clips other than 'we should make sure to save these critters'. So, it bounces from one creature to another but there's really no segue or reason to it other than they live in the oceans. Had they stuck only with sea mammals or fishes it would have made some more sense but the choices of which animals to feature just seemed random. Enjoyable to watch despite all this.
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8/10
A Nutshell Review: Oceans
DICK STEEL15 July 2010
Making its world premiere at last year's Tokyo International Film Festival, Oceans is the latest enviro-documentary to hit the big screens, highlighting that while outer space is touted as the final frontier to be conquered by man, the waters around our land mass hold just as much fascination with the countless of species available in the depths of the ocean. Oceans, by directors Jacques Perrin and Jacques Cluzaud, provide us that glimpse 20,000 leagues under the sea.

For those, like me, who are absolutely clueless about the sea creatures other than what can be put on the dining table, you'll be left quite flabbergasted as you observe the various species being featured on screen, without any prompt or subtitle to label just exactly what creature they are. Of course for those who are schooled by Finding Nemo, you're likely to be able to name some of what's featured, just as the noisy young boy sitting beside me was able to, being somewhat of a help.

Aside from the usual gorgeous cinematography featuring schools of dolphins in motion, and plenty of synchronized swimming, with creatures big and small ranging from the giant whales to the newly hatched turtles struggling to make it to the waters before being picked up mercilessly by their predators, this is one documentary that allows you to go up close to these creatures since cameras were planted into the depths of all the oceans of the world.

It doesn't come across as preachy, because it doesn't wear its ecological badge in such an obvious manner at all in its sparse narrative. Instead, it does so very subtly, reminding us that there are others with whom we share this Earth with, and if we continue to plunder and pollute the land and treat the sea as sewage (so is that gaping hole capped by BP already?), then these are the creatures that we will lose in the near future, causing a major upset in the balance of Nature, and who can predict how Nature's wrath will be incurred back on us.

Nature documentaries are no longer made for the small screen, but have some mighty budget to be able to bring quality to the making of such films, serving to entertain and to capture beauty so rarely seen.
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10/10
A visually dreamy and stimulating trip through the beauty, fragility, and power of the ocean
diac22823 April 2010
The masterpiece mini-series Planet Earth ushered a new era of technology and technique of film-making in the world of animal and life-based documentaries. After years of effort and a much heavier budget than your average documentary, Planet Earth set the benchmark for cinematographers and any programming about animals for years to come. Disney enters the mix by attempting to revive the Real-Life Adventure series that delivered Walt Disney multiple Academy Awards and also put the company on the map on yet another type of entertainment. Earth was Disney's first new-generation foray into family-appealing documentaries. Well, this Earth Day we receive what just might become the greatest work of documentary since Planet Earth years upon years ago. Four years in the making, Oceans contains some of the best footage ever displayed on the big screen. While it doesn't educate much in the sense of Planet Earth, the dazzling footage more than makes up for the lack of facts.

In Oceans, we follow the five different oceans of the world and the animals that inhabit it and maneuver around them. Narrated by Pierce Brosnan, the film flows from one creature to another with a backdrop of soothing European instrumental music supporting the images. You'll see the usual lovely whales, dolphins, seals, walruses, but then see creatures rarely before (sometimes never before) seen on film: including blue whales, sheep fish, and much more. Over 50 different locations were used in the filming of this documentary, with some locations obviously requiring weeks to months of patience to deliver the right footage.

Money Shot is a slang term in film which describes a difficult-to-create sequence that tries to sell the film. Let's just say that Oceans has at least a dozen of those. Some things displayed on screen are so magnificent, so beautiful, so mesmerizing, you almost question the authenticity of it all. The cynic in me finds it sometimes hard to believe that the French filmmakers and cinematographers were able to capture footage of whales, sharks, dolphins, and birds all feeding on the same schools of fish at the same time; or come up with footage of dozens of dolphins leaping out of the water and flipping multiple times before landing again. Or even thousands of crabs fighting against each other in the bottom of the ocean. These are just small examples of the incredible moments of nature that you get to see throughout the too-short 85 minutes. There are other examples but I refuse to reveal for the sake of not spoiling; let's just say there's a sequence involving a deadly storm and its capabilities.

In order to fully appreciate and receive the full entertainment value of this beautiful display of nature, you must see it on the big screen. Unlike the previous Disneymentary Earth, Oceans flows very well, is edited much tighter, and doesn't jump all over the place. Then there's the superior soundtrack, superior narration, and superior amount of footage. They range from fearsome, to beautiful; to sometimes even sentimental (the scene with the walrus will water your eyes). Walt Disney would be absolutely proud of this work, even if technically Disney wasn't responsible for the actual film. The overseas team headed by Jacques Perrin (responsible for Winged Migration) deserves all the credit for the effort given and the result.

Bottom Line: Oceans may be a movie merely displaying the beauty of the oceans and what lies underneath, but this film is far too gorgeous for you to avoid. If you have any affection towards nature and the millions of stories carried underneath it, you must see this movie while it has its short run in movie theaters nationwide. The footage is amazing, the images are spectacular, and the overall production is nearly flawless. It is a beautiful documentary for the ages, and hopefully will pave the way for more films with as much effort as this one. With four years to craft the quintessential film about animals, this all paid off magnificently. If you love animals, watching this is a major requirement, not even a recommendation.

Enjoy the movie. Save the oceans.
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Cannot Hold A Candle To BBC's "Deep Blue"
vlevensonnd-121 November 2010
I was looking forward to seeing this, since I've always been a fan of quality nature films, however, I found myself very disappointed with this film. If you have ever seen the truly beautiful, artistic, and utterly poetic nature film "Deep Blue", which came out from the English a few years ago, you are going to see far too many ironic similarities in this Disney production. Yes, they are both ocean films, and there are bound to be similarities, of course, but you will notice that Disney seemed to follow far too closely in their footsteps, even down to whom they chose to narrate (Pierce Brosnan)!! There are several actors one can choose to do a compelling narration - you do not have to choose the very same one. I'm not sure I understand why a company like Disney, who once were the masters of imagination, uniqueness, & fantasy, fail so miserably over these past 2 decades. Also, this film had approximately 1/4 of what "Deep Blue" had. If you want to watch a truly remarkable ocean film, see "Deep Blue", and pass over this one.
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8/10
Spellbinding visual documentary.
MovieGuy10929 November 2011
Jacques Perrin and Jacques Cluzaud direct this documentary about marine life with beautiful images of underwater life. You may see something like this on the National Geographic channel, which downgrades the originality of the picture but Brosnan provides excellent narration and these kind of images never die in our minds and it is always lovely to see them again. The nature curious will certainly find something to love and others should to. It's a relaxing meditation and is perfect for kids or adults. The best part is that the film remains a humble length and resists growing ploys for self-indulgence. Only the unnecessary prologue narrative is a bit annoying. Other than that, a bulls eye.
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6/10
Very interesting topic but very boring
SilverOrlov11 November 2018
No matter how beautiful the whole thing in this film is, in the deathly silence with a few meager cues for almost two hours, no patience is enough without periodic rewinding.
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7/10
Good movie but lacking in focus and structure
PeterRoeder5 February 2011
Great movie with some stunning imagery from the oceans, but, like other reviewers have pointed out, why do we have to see all the sentimental stuff? It didn't help the narrative. The ocean is about the ocean. We go in to see a movie about the ocean. Period. There was a lot of stuff in this movie that was not related to that subject. The beauty of documentarism is precisely that it is different from fiction, therefore I find it lacking in focus to use actors to get a point across. Actors belong in the theater and fictitious movies. But the imagery from the ocean was great. It was just a bit hard to enjoy when, at any moment, they might cut to something else. Anyway, pretty good movie, with some really amazing stuff from the sea.
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10/10
One of the best documentary ever!
eva-beghin7 September 2012
I have been to see this moovie yesterday on a Summer Open air cinema just in the coast of Barcelona in Spain.

It has been wonderful to see this moovie with the sea background and it suggested us a lot of inspiration and moments of wisher. It's marvelous on this days that there is a moovie production oriented to this type of topics that suggested us to take care of ourselves and our environment by giving us the advise we can learn to start thinking in a positive way, from one to one, for really change the current status of things. I always think on a quote H.P. Lovecraft, "The White Ship". "But more wonderful than the lore of old men and the lore of books is the secret lore of ocean".

Beo el film. Peró non ghemo mia capío na roba. Aa fine, i pési...scorexei?
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7/10
Gorgeous but not very cohesive
eddax7 September 2010
Oceans, though a documentary, is also quite a typical French movie in that it is confounding, since the French seem to celebrate the abstract. My reaction at the end of a few French movies has been "WTF."

I initially expected this to be an ecological "save our oceans" movies, but the first half of the movie played more like a "mysteries of the ocean" visual extravaganza in which they showed many creatures and sights I'd never seen before. Gorgeous.

All of a sudden it switches to highlighting the cruelty of man, with many bloody scenes such as live sharks having their fins cut off and being tossed back into the ocean to starve to death. And then it concludes with the expected "save our oceans" spiel, which I have to say is a whole lot less interesting than the rest of the movie. And not very motivating either. At the end of An Inconvenient Truth, I felt like I had to go out to do something to help save the world (I didn't but still), whereas Oceans left me mostly apathetic.

What this movie feels like is a string of visually spectacular clips of marine life, tied together as best they could by its directors into a barely-cohesive documentary. Its messages come across as incidental and unavoidable: "Well since we have these gory/sad clips anyway and since all documentaries about nature have to chastise humans."

It's not a bad watch if you're into nature documentaries but you're ambivalent, you might as well stay home and watch The Discovery Channel.
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4/10
Is it real or is it CGI? .
lite_fuzz20 March 2011
An earlier review made me chuckle: "...every once in a while, you might just pinch yourself to see if those beautiful images are really real or created with a green screen. Of course, no CG effect could ever replicate nature's beauty."

Tell that to the 57 crew for the film credited with one of the following: -digital artist -digital compositor -digital effects artist -head of CG environment Mikros -head of render farm -head of software -head of VFX studio -matte painter -modeling/texture artist -render farm operator -rotoscope artist -visual effect supervisor -visual effects coordinator -visual effects producer -visual effects production assistant -visual effects supervisor
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Outstanding!
dtucker8623 April 2010
Another great achievement from Walt Disney Studios. I had loved Earth, their outstanding documentary from last year and thus eagerly anticipated this film. If you are going to see one movie this year make it Oceans. This is why we go to the movies. An absolutely fascinating, breath taking, thrilling experience for the whole family. Seven tenths of our earth is ocean and even in this age of advanced technology there is still so much we don't know about the silent world beneath the waves. This movie bravely tackles that mystery. It makes us realize how in many ways us humans are so small and insignificant in the scheme of things, we only share three tenths of the earth. I love the part where they show the sea lions and animals feasting on each other (a dog eat dog world ha ha). The two parts of the movie that stood out for me are the ones involving our foolishness in polluting the ocean and killing its creatures (they even show it from space) and the shot at the end of the diver and the great white shark swimming together. Narrator Pierce Brosnan makes an eloquent speech about the importance of man and animals co existing together. I consider Oceans to be the best film I have seen this year and hopefully they will remember it at Oscar time!
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10/10
One of the Best Nature Documentaries Ever!
brenttraft25 April 2010
Disney's "Oceans" is quite simply one of the best nature documentaries ever made.

I watch quite a few nature documentaries on TV and DVD but "Oceans" still had quite a few things I had never seen before. The photography is outstanding.

The narration was by Pierce Brosnan was good but the dialog could have been more informative. The music was pleasant and rarely intrusive.

Although I watch many nature documentaries at home, it was nice to see it on the big screen. It really puts you in the environment. And since I don't scuba dive or travel around the world, it is the closest I will ever be to actually seeing these amazing creatures.

Do yourself a favor and see "Oceans" while it is still in the theaters.
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6/10
Possibly the last glimpse of our oceans as they were
bburns1 July 2010
I like French-produced nature documentaries. I thoroughly enjoyed "Winged Migration", and I liked "March of the Penguins" even more. But I didn't much care for "Oceans". And in the wake of the recent disaster in the Gulf of Mexico, I was more depressed by all the pretty pictures than enthralled.

The first thing you need to know about "Oceans" is that it's not for all ages. It is specifically geared towards grade-school and preschool children. If you've had a 7th grade biology class, you won't be learning anything new. And it has the annoying habit of the old Disney nature docs of assigning cute human traits to sea animals.

Another annoying aspect was Pierce Brosnan's ethereal high-pitched, half-whispered narration. It made me wonder how anyone thought this guy was an action star.

But I would recommend letting your kids see this one. If they're under 12, they might actually learn something. And to those not born yet, you can show it and say "This is what our oceans looked like before human greed and willful ignorance ruined it." But to present-day adults, this is an unintentionally depressing bore of a movie. 6 out of 10.
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8/10
Enjoyable without being unnecessarily depressing
Ric-76 May 2010
I was looking for a movie that would be interesting without extremely unpleasant scenes. I don't deny the current various environmental challenges. I just don't think a reinforcement of my extremely green views by viewing tragic scenes is something I want to pay money to endure.

The plight of the hatchling sea turtles was dealt with by Tennessee Williams in Suddenly Last Summer (1959). No surprise. Unpleasant, but not surprising. That's just a law of nature. It's been going on since Darwin's day, and probably long before.

The challenge to the polar bears presented by global warming was not just a law of nature, and it was something I was grateful the filmmakers did not explore. I know what's going on. It's tragic. I can't deny it: I just don't want to watch it.

Though I will probably be dead long before the worst occurs, I don't have to waste extra minutes of my life worrying about what will happen if no one younger than I am gets some idea of what has to be done.

This was an absolutely beautiful, breathtaking, ultimately heartbreaking Disney nature documentary. I loved it a lot.
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