Product Description TURTLE: THE INCREDIBLE JOURNEY is the story of a little loggerhead turtle, as she follows in the path of her ancestors on one of the most extraordinary journeys in the natural world.Born on a beach in Florida, she rides the Gulf Stream up towards the Arctic and ultimately swims around the entire North Atlantic across to Africa and back to the beach where she was born. But the odds are stacked against her; just one in ten thousand turtles survive the journey. She faces many hazards, her siblings are lost in the doldrums of the Sargasso Sea, she comes face to face with creatures of the deep and nearly dies at the hands of fishermen. She travels up north but she drifts from her life current, the Gulf Stream, into dangerously cold waters.When she finally reaches the Azores on the other side of the Atlantic, she sees the greatest celebration of life on the Earth as sperm whale and baitballs explode from the water. But deep and powerful changes are happening in the oceans the fish are disappearing, sea levels are rising, the turtles birthing beach could be washed away and bring a way of life to an end.Then her calling comes, she must return to her beach. When she finally reaches the shores of Florida, 25 years will have passed!Under a million stars, she crawls out of the sea to lay her own eggs and keeps the Turtles Journey alive. Review A solitary long-distance traveler with prehistoric cachet, the loggerhead turtle makes a compelling subject for a nature film, as the spectacularly shot, aptly named Turtle: The Incredible Journey demonstrates, if at times too feverishly. Director Nick Stringer has availed himself of up-to-the-minute technology and old-school storytelling -- the kind with just a touch of anthropomorphizing but, mercifully, no character names -- to capture the arc of the marine reptile's first 25 years. It's a migration from Florida to the North Atlantic, Africa, the Caribbean and back to the place of birth to lay eggs. The film is fact-packed and kid-friendly yet filled with danger; only one in 10,000 turtles completes that round trip. The peril begins the moment the sand-encrusted hatchlings emerge, soft-shelled and toothless, to make their vulnerable scuttle to the sea. Via miniature high-def cameras, the documentary captures their race against predatory crabs with extraordinary immediacy. For the rest of the trip, Stringer creates a composite portrait, seamlessly supplementing his in-the-wild footage with digital effects and studio scenes using rescued turtles. Attempting to amplify the drama but instead calling attention to themselves are an unyielding score and narration that tints toward purple, delivered with mellifluous authority by Miranda Richardson. Yet the film's conservation pitches are subdued; this is no galvanizing doc like The Cove. Charting the peregrinations of one of Earth's elders -- a creature that has navigated the seas for 200 million years, and is now endangered --Incredible Journey makes some missteps, but never falters in showing that the loggerhead's survival matters. --The Los Angeles TimesThe trailer for Turtle: The Incredible Journey promises more excitement than you might suspect could be packed into a story about loggerhead turtles, a plucky seafarer with high mileage. Since it played at the Toronto International Film Festival, where it was in the documentary lineup, the movie has picked up plenty of goodwill and awards. Last year its director of photography, Rory McGuinness, won a wildlife/nature award from the Australian Cinematographers Society. Given the quality of their work, the special-effects wizards who whipped up some visual wow for the movie, including computer-generated imagery, deserve a share of the applause too. The journey of the loggerhead turtle is, by any measure, an amazing life voyage, one that here reaches from the beaches of Florida to the eerie calm of the Sargasso Sea and the watery speedway known as the Gulf Stream before heading to Africa and then the call of motherhood. It s a trip that eats up thousands of miles, takes some two dozen years and is fraught with dangers, though sometimes in the movie that threat may be more imaginary than actual, as when a basking shark, the second largest fish in the world, cruises by with its weird wide mouth open, yawning in water and prey. Armed with little teeth, the basking shark feeds on krill and plankton, but its size and cavernous mouth do make for dramatic viewing. And there s plenty of nail-biting tension in Turtle: The Incredible Journey, including in the melodramatic voice-over by Miranda Richardson, so much that you may find yourself volubly rooting for the animal, or she as Ms. Richardson calls the movie s ostensible single turtle. --The New York TimesIt takes 25 years for a loggerhead turtle to make its way from Florida to the other side of the Atlantic and back again, but it took only two years for resourceful Brit filmmaker Nick Stringer to chronicle the voyage in the visually resplendent Turtle: The Incredible Journey. Subtly anthropomorphizing its chosen species in traditional nature-doc fashion, this well-lensed primer on one of Mother Nature's more harrowing trips reps fine educational fare for tots and should get by swimmingly in tube, homevid and possible theatrical channels. Opening sequence, set on a Florida beach, crosscuts rather over-dramatically between a newly hatched loggerhead and a predatory crab, immediately establishing the prey-or-be-preyed-upon threat that will characterize the turtle's long journey ahead -- through the Gulf Stream to the Azores, an archipelago nearly 1,000 miles off the coast of Portugal, then back home to lay its eggs. Along the way, a stately supporting cast of whales, sharks, jellyfish and luminescent microbes offer abundant distractions for Rory McGuinness' HD camera. Music is a tad over-insistent, but Miranda Richardson's narration strikes the right note of awe. --Variety
J**D
Should Be Required Viewing For Every Beach Goer
Turtle: The Incredible Journey is no cartoon or kids story. Produced by Seaworld and National Geographic, the quality of this fim, it's photography and story line is first rate. It is an amazing story of survival that should be required viewing for everyone who goes to any beach. Today only 1 in 1000 hatchlings survives to reproduce. At this rate the oldest visitors to our beaches will soon just be a memory. This movie had me rooting for the little hatchling from its emergence from the nest until the end when it returned to lay its eggs only to find the natural habitat it was born in was developed. Buy it and share it! then, think about what you can to do get the sea turtles off the endangered and protected species list.
S**Y
Absolutely amazing, awesome video about the journey of a brave female sea turtle!
My students LOVE this movie. It captivates them and often leaves them on the edge of their seats. I use it every year when studying animal behaviors and adaptations. The sea turtle's journey is unbelievable!
J**Y
Turtle: The Incredible Adventure
I have waited for this movie to be released for must be getting on for a year, the release date kept being delayed.But have finally received it.I adored it, the treacherous journeys these little turtles have to make is incredible I was so very sad to hear that very few of the hatchlings actually make it all all.From the moment they poke their little heads out of the sand they are in imminent danger, I watched a lot of the movie with the hands covering my eyes when it was obvious what was going to happen..Loggerhead turtles are beautiful creatures and they will always have a piece of my heart,A movie to treasure.
R**L
I thoroughly enjoyed this documentary
I thoroughly enjoyed this documentary, as did my six year old. We cried tears of sadness, as well as tears of joy. I recently learned that in fifty years our oceans are said to contain more plastic than fish. Whether this prediction is accurate or not seems irrelevant. The bigger picture, that we are destroying the sustainability of entire ecosystems, is a far more profound ominous warning. So, when my child I learned about the amazing ancestral journey of the loggerhead and the 1:10,000 rate of survival while watching the amazing cinematography in Turtle: The Incredible Journey was invaluable. I hope everyone finds this documentary as breath taking and as impactful as we did.
J**A
Struggling for survival
A superb film, full of beautifully taken pictures, it brought me a better understanding about the different phases of the development of a turtle.If it was used advanced technologies to reach its final quality, it doesn't matter. What is really important is the message behind these pictures, it made me think... Will it be possible that Homo Sapiens will be alone, watching as the principal agent and cause of the destruction of our beautiful planet?
R**Y
Just okay
An interesting documentary but I thought it was going to be more of a story. There wasn’t much character development. It was facts about sea turtles. Sea turtles are great so if you like sea turtles you’ll like it but it’s not really a story with character development or much of a plot. It follows the life cycle of a sea turtle.
P**M
Love this story!
This is a great story about sea turtles and their journey of life. Did you know that only 1 in 10,000 sea turtles live to be breeding age which is 21 years old? The story is cute and the video footage is amazing. It also shows whales, sharks, crabs, and other ocean life but is primarily about the journey of a loggerhead turtle. It should be watched by everyone so they can learn about ocean life.
K**K
They absolutely love watching this
I show this movie every year to my classes as part of our migration/life cycle unit. They absolutely love watching this. From the 'harrowing' opening scene all the way to the end when she returns to start the cycle again. They cheer and Ooh and Ahh every year, which in turns continues to capture my attention for 5 years now.
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