DAILY FILM DOSE: A Daily Film Appreciation and Review Blog: Oceans

Thursday 10 December 2009

Oceans

Oceans (2009) dir. Jacques Perrin and Jacques Cluzaud
Documentary

**

By Blair Stewart

2001's "Winged Migration" was one of the finest nature documentaries made due to an ingenious idea by the filmmakers Jacques Perrin & Cluzard. In order to gain access to the migratory patterns of birds the filmmakers raised them from birth, therefore their subjects weren't shy when the time came to roll camera. Soaring above the continents in an ultralight amongst the company of eagles, the documentary gave a fantastical new perspective of life on Earth.

Now after 5 years of delicate filming another perspective is shown in "Oceans". Plunging deep into the watery two thirds of our planet, the two Jacques strive to bring awareness to the fragile time-bomb awaiting us in the seas, with the North Pacific Gyre (aka "the Great Pacific Garbage Patch") growing to the size of two plastic Texas's while you read this. As brief narration presupposes the question of why man searches the stars when we haven't yet mastered the seas, the cinema alights with creatures from the deep.

Dive-bombing birds blitzkrieg M.C. Escher schools of fish with dolphins cutting through like apparitions of squeaky grey-blue torpedos. An exodus of baby sea turtles from surf to sea under swooping bird-claws becomes an anthropomorphistic reversal of the D-Day invasion, and in the deep crab vs. shrimp becomes a clash of the titans.

The flexibility required to film sea life may have eliminated bulky 70mm , but the subject matter is worthy of the format, especially when the killer whales arrive. What is captured above water is impressive, further down more so, but in some of the more spectacular moments an ugly fact reared its head: C.G.I. The graceful chaos is helpfully sculpted by digital compositors
alongside nature which stings during a number of "too good to be true"moments. This practical decision for entertainment/education value doesn't undermine the film as much as a glaring narrative one wherein Perrin (a famed actor in 50+ years of Euro cinema) and his googly-eyed kid lament for marine life in a space-age museum.

Witnessing the vulnerability of a Dugong in its habitat does much more for my desire to preserve the planet over a close-up of a French brat's tear-ducts. If the film hadn't strayed from its path, "Winged Migration" would have been surpassed. As it remains, "Oceans" is a flawed contender that still demands viewing on the big-screen for the awesome scope of nature.

"Oceans" will be released by Disney in North America in April 2010

2 comments :

r4i said...

I m nt able 2 watch ur movie, coz m living in small city where this types of off bit movies are not releasing. suggest wat 2 do see this movie ?

Alan Bacchus said...

This film will be released by Disney in April 2010, so you should be able to see it then.