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Product Description As seen on PBS, the award-winning Nature series is the longest-running weekly natural history series on television. Hummingbirds take extraordinary to a whole new level. They are the smallest warm-blooded creatures on the planet, but they are also among the fastest. With wings that beat up to 200 times every second, they are among natures most accomplished athletes, the only birds able to hover, fly backwards, and even upside down. Because hummingbirds live their lives in fast forward, much of their fascinating world is typically lost to human perception. But using cameras able to capture over 500 images a second, the hummingbirds magical world can finally be seen and appreciated. Amazing footage shows these little powerhouses are far more than delicate nectar gatherers they are also deadly predators. And watch as the birds display their elaborate mating rituals, showing off with nose dives that subject them to over ten Gs of force enough to cause an experienced fighter pilot to black out! These tiny marvels dazzle and delight bird watchers all over the world, and NATURE reveals their stunning abilities as they have never been seen before. Academy Award winner F. Murray Abraham narrates. Rating: TV-G. Bonus Features: Behind-the-scenes with filmmaker Ann Prum, and, Deleted Scenes. Review The greatest Nature cinematography on earth. --The New York Times About the Actor F. Murray Abraham is an Oscar-winning actor known for films like Amadeus, Finding Forrester, Mighty Aphrodite, Inside Llewyn Davis and Grand Budapest Hotel. SYNOPSIS - Born on October 24, 1939, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, of Syrian and Italian ancestry, Abraham went on to attend the University of Texas at Austin. He moved to New York City to pursue acting, studying under Uta Hagen, and developed a stage career with Off-Broadway productions. He later added the F to the beginning of his stage name in honor of his father, Frederick, and because he felt his birth name was not distinctive enough. Abraham landed small parts for TV and on the big screen, appearing in a variety of films during the 1970s, including Serpico (1973), The Sunshine Boys (1975), All the Presidents Men (1976), The Ritz (1976) and The Big Fix (1978). He was also noted for being one of the Fruit of the Loom men in the brands series of television commercials. Abraham continued his screen work into the next decade, landing a part in 1983s Scarface. He simultaneously did filming in Prague, portraying noted Italian composer Antonio Salieri in the 1984 feature Amadeus Abrahams gripping performance earned him the Academy Award for Best Actor, as well as a Golden Globe and BAFTA Award. He continued his prolific output over the ensuing years, with roles in films across various genres. He co-starred with Sean Connery and Christian Slater in another period film, The Name of the Rose (1986), and a few years later made an appearance as a prosecuting attorney in The Bonfire of the Vanities (1990). In 1991 he played crime boss Arnold Rothstein in Mobsters. By the mid-1990s, Abraham could be seen in a TV adaptation of the Jules Verne classic Journey to the Center of the Earth (1993) and co-starred with Mira Sorvino and Helena Bonham Carter in Woody Allens Mighty Aphrodite (1995), in which he led the films chorus. 1995 also saw Abraham play gangster Al Capone in both Dillinger and Capone and Baby Face Nelson, and the actor ventured further into sci-fi with roles in Guillermo Del Toros Mimic (1997), which also featured Sorvino, as well as 1998s Star Trek: Insurrection. About the Director Ann Johnson Prum is a producer and cinematographer, known for A Tale of Two Turtles (2004), Luckey (2008) and Nature (1982). See more
My wife and I love hummingbirds! We have three kinds that visit our feeders, Anna's, Black-chinned and Rufous. They are a joy to watch. Until we watched this video, some of their behavior was a mystery to us. We had assumed we were watching territorial disputes between the males and courting between the male and females. We were right! This video captures some amazing footage of hummingbirds doing some amazing things. There are scenes of hummingbirds in their natural habitat and in gardens. There is one scene in particular of many, many hummingbirds in one garden feeding that you've got to see. I wish the video was longer but based on the Behind the Scenes featurette, it was difficult to make.My one and only gripe about this video is the ridiculous assumptions of how the THEORY of evolution influenced these beautiful creatures in their behavior and development. There is no question that micro-evolution exists but the kind of evolution that is discussed in this video is absurd. At any rate, this doesn't ruin the video at all and it's just my opinion. For any hummingbird lover or anyone interested in birds, this is a FANTASTIC video!