IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
A baby pufferfish travels through a wondrous microworld full of fantastical creatures as he searches for a home on the Great Barrier Reef.A baby pufferfish travels through a wondrous microworld full of fantastical creatures as he searches for a home on the Great Barrier Reef.A baby pufferfish travels through a wondrous microworld full of fantastical creatures as he searches for a home on the Great Barrier Reef.
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- 4 nominations total
Rose Byrne
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A view into a fascinating world with really impressive visuals. Has just the right running time as well. Some genuinely bizarre and scary creatures can be observed in great detail.
The sudden turn to tedious moralism towards the end leaves a sour taste though. Using the identifikcation with and sympathy for one single fish might work as a manipulation technique for children, but is much too blunt for adults. Surely the authors know that there are other factors except human misbehaving that influence the development of reefs.
I would recommend to turn off the movie after the snail chase scene.
The sudden turn to tedious moralism towards the end leaves a sour taste though. Using the identifikcation with and sympathy for one single fish might work as a manipulation technique for children, but is much too blunt for adults. Surely the authors know that there are other factors except human misbehaving that influence the development of reefs.
I would recommend to turn off the movie after the snail chase scene.
Thought this was going to be an ani-kid's show. Thank you for showing me what I'll never be able to see in real life. Here in the North the coral reefs aren't talked about over coffee. CBC Quirks and Quarks is likely where we learned about their ill health - for lack of better term.
It's fine with me if there was an "agenda" here; after all, many documentaries have them.
This film shows one aspect of the many diverse eco-systems on this mind-blowing planet, each of which is intrinsically linked to all the others. It's not a Super Hero Fantasy show. It's a real reality show even if they may have 'shopped' the main character for clarity and continuity. I'll be watching this again. It's beautiful.
It's fine with me if there was an "agenda" here; after all, many documentaries have them.
This film shows one aspect of the many diverse eco-systems on this mind-blowing planet, each of which is intrinsically linked to all the others. It's not a Super Hero Fantasy show. It's a real reality show even if they may have 'shopped' the main character for clarity and continuity. I'll be watching this again. It's beautiful.
I'm not sure why this documentary was made. It's not really about a pufferfish named Puff (cute but not very imaginative); nor is it really about corals; though both are featured prominently.
The film is beautiful to look at, no doubt. But there just isn't all that much new information or even interesting information to justify another documentary about global warming.
Best that I can say is that this was a good idea that was not well executed.
The film is beautiful to look at, no doubt. But there just isn't all that much new information or even interesting information to justify another documentary about global warming.
Best that I can say is that this was a good idea that was not well executed.
10Roma73
Stunning visuals. I watched this with my 9 year old daughter and we both loved it. Loads of cute little creatures 😉. And with a short but clear warning and explanation what us humans are doing to (future) sea life.
10cgtam
This new fascinating film is SO underrated, found in Netflix's "kids" section. Photo pic looks like it's for kids but it's a true Wondor world of essential incredible microscopic life on Great Barrier Reef, and relevant to all reefs. The breathtaking colors, details, & film quality are exceptionally lovely, exceeding BBC earth at times using latest tech.
Narration is told mainly from a colorful tiny puffer fish's point of view & how he must survive in a thriving reef. One is quickly engaged & developes empathy for this adorable tiny newly hatched fish, & ALL magnificent micro organisms that create & surround his ocean world.
Majority of Film presents stages of struggle & humor for puffer fish and many weird & wonderful tiny micro lives surviving the reef world in stunning fascinating manner. Then it becomes heartbreaking as viewers see results of a warming ocean from climate change, the destruction of corals & billions of lives within.
This film is proof NOT to take our seas for granted as humanity continues to act despite decades of widespread hard science. Narration delicately teaches, not preaches, & allows viewer to decide the issue of adverse climate change affects by showing time lapse destruction of a once vibrant reef beyond imagination, then its death - the ocean's foundation, building blocks for all life including humanity. It motivates one to care , protect & think about hidden biodiverse ecosystems that benefit all humans.
For those critics desiring original eye opening docu film with true under cover scenes & causel science, displaying insatiable human greed fueling global mass commercial slaughter of all sea life since 1920s, unenforced laws, real culprits of plastic ocean poisoning, its sea life incl ppl who eat them- watch Netflix's "Seaspiracy". That docu also shows how consumers daily choices can stop secret greed based "unseen" plunder that threatens humanity's health & future.
Narration is told mainly from a colorful tiny puffer fish's point of view & how he must survive in a thriving reef. One is quickly engaged & developes empathy for this adorable tiny newly hatched fish, & ALL magnificent micro organisms that create & surround his ocean world.
Majority of Film presents stages of struggle & humor for puffer fish and many weird & wonderful tiny micro lives surviving the reef world in stunning fascinating manner. Then it becomes heartbreaking as viewers see results of a warming ocean from climate change, the destruction of corals & billions of lives within.
This film is proof NOT to take our seas for granted as humanity continues to act despite decades of widespread hard science. Narration delicately teaches, not preaches, & allows viewer to decide the issue of adverse climate change affects by showing time lapse destruction of a once vibrant reef beyond imagination, then its death - the ocean's foundation, building blocks for all life including humanity. It motivates one to care , protect & think about hidden biodiverse ecosystems that benefit all humans.
For those critics desiring original eye opening docu film with true under cover scenes & causel science, displaying insatiable human greed fueling global mass commercial slaughter of all sea life since 1920s, unenforced laws, real culprits of plastic ocean poisoning, its sea life incl ppl who eat them- watch Netflix's "Seaspiracy". That docu also shows how consumers daily choices can stop secret greed based "unseen" plunder that threatens humanity's health & future.
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- Puff: Rạn San Hồ Kỳ Diệu
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