Cinematography 20:48 - Apr 25 with 1381 views | 2Thomas2Bowles | I'm watching BBC4 Wild Ireland Amazing Cinematography almost every frame is a wonder , worth watching (catch up) if you are in to photography. | |
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Cinematography on 23:11 - Apr 25 with 1332 views | MrSheen | Missed it unfortunately. Any Kerry coast? | | | |
Cinematography on 01:01 - Apr 26 with 1314 views | smegma |
Cinematography on 23:11 - Apr 25 by MrSheen | Missed it unfortunately. Any Kerry coast? |
Yes and Clare. I agree it was beautifully filmed and an amazing documentary/travelogue. Scenes of humpbacks and dolphins, gannets and puffins were incredible. Some of the sunset scenes were gorgeous but annoyingly some were too dark to see the real beauty. | | | |
Cinematography on 02:41 - Apr 26 with 1299 views | Boston | Thanks for the tip, very enjoyable. | |
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Cinematography on 07:24 - Apr 26 with 1266 views | 2Thomas2Bowles | Glad you enjoyed it. I was thinking wow I'd love a print of that, then the next scene then the next and so on. | |
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Cinematography on 08:34 - Apr 26 with 1232 views | hopphoops | I caught the end of it, and agree it was absolutely stunning. Is it really that beautiful over there, or rather is it possible to get to these places and find yourself alone on a sunny day? It seems to good to be true. | |
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Cinematography on 09:34 - Apr 26 with 1214 views | 2Thomas2Bowles |
Cinematography on 08:34 - Apr 26 by hopphoops | I caught the end of it, and agree it was absolutely stunning. Is it really that beautiful over there, or rather is it possible to get to these places and find yourself alone on a sunny day? It seems to good to be true. |
Well clearly the cinematographer knew his stuff with lighting and would have used filters and all sorts but you still have to have the subject matter, the birds, animals, whale and dolphins and so on were pretty amazing filming. The BBC do it better than anyone else and that was up there with the very best IMO. Would be pretty hard to get anywhere close yourself without the vantage points they had. [Post edited 26 Apr 2017 9:39]
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Cinematography on 09:39 - Apr 26 with 1205 views | robith | I recently turned from someone who thinks BBC4 is important but never watches, to an avid viewer. I must be old now. Wild Ireland is tops | | | |
Cinematography on 09:43 - Apr 26 with 1200 views | 2Thomas2Bowles | BBC3 on line do some good doc's Channel4 too. | |
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Cinematography on 09:48 - Apr 26 with 1195 views | Brightonhoop |
Cinematography on 09:34 - Apr 26 by 2Thomas2Bowles | Well clearly the cinematographer knew his stuff with lighting and would have used filters and all sorts but you still have to have the subject matter, the birds, animals, whale and dolphins and so on were pretty amazing filming. The BBC do it better than anyone else and that was up there with the very best IMO. Would be pretty hard to get anywhere close yourself without the vantage points they had. [Post edited 26 Apr 2017 9:39]
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Saw one earlier this month and it was stunning. There are some wonderful parts on the west coast if you find the time. And whilst some of it is skewed with filters etc (you'll never get that deep rich red with the sun still so high in the sky but they clearly needed to move on before sunset so got the filters out) it was very cleverly done. The cameraman is credited equally as the presenter which is rare. And you get a sense of them just dawdling along and getting lucky, stopping and filming, which is wonderful. A very fine place on this earth. | | | |
Cinematography on 10:06 - Apr 26 with 1171 views | MrSheen | There are some awesome clifftop walks near where I go in Kerry where you look down at the birds way beneath you, but you would need to be on a boat at the bottom (if you dare) to get anywhere near them. Rarely anyone around. Irish people don't do outdoors! | | | |
Cinematography on 10:29 - Apr 26 with 1156 views | Konk |
Cinematography on 09:39 - Apr 26 by robith | I recently turned from someone who thinks BBC4 is important but never watches, to an avid viewer. I must be old now. Wild Ireland is tops |
BBC4 is great, but not as good as Cbeebies, which I'm pretty much relying on for my son's education. The BBC is a genuinely great institution and I wish politicians would leave the fu ckers alone. In terms of aging, I occasionally catch myself watching Countryfile... | |
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Cinematography on 10:49 - Apr 26 with 1142 views | Dorse |
Cinematography on 10:29 - Apr 26 by Konk | BBC4 is great, but not as good as Cbeebies, which I'm pretty much relying on for my son's education. The BBC is a genuinely great institution and I wish politicians would leave the fu ckers alone. In terms of aging, I occasionally catch myself watching Countryfile... |
Bloody Countryfiles, stalking the meadows with their vile perversions. Lock 'em up, I say. | |
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Cinematography on 10:59 - Apr 26 with 1128 views | Mick_S |
Cinematography on 10:29 - Apr 26 by Konk | BBC4 is great, but not as good as Cbeebies, which I'm pretty much relying on for my son's education. The BBC is a genuinely great institution and I wish politicians would leave the fu ckers alone. In terms of aging, I occasionally catch myself watching Countryfile... |
Me too!!! | |
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Cinematography on 11:20 - Apr 26 with 1117 views | Metallica_Hoop | BBC4 is it's best channel by miles. The Last Kingdom is also rather excellent again. | |
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Cinematography on 11:23 - Apr 26 with 1111 views | robith |
Cinematography on 10:29 - Apr 26 by Konk | BBC4 is great, but not as good as Cbeebies, which I'm pretty much relying on for my son's education. The BBC is a genuinely great institution and I wish politicians would leave the fu ckers alone. In terms of aging, I occasionally catch myself watching Countryfile... |
Countryfile? Woah mate, I said I'd gotten old, not become a Tory | | | |
Cinematography on 11:38 - Apr 26 with 1098 views | CliveWilsonSaid | Yes loved this program too. Thought the camera work was incredible and the sound. Also the presenter Colin Stafford Johnson was exellent. Brilliant having him simply rowing up the coast. | |
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Cinematography on 13:04 - Apr 26 with 1050 views | Boston |
Cinematography on 08:34 - Apr 26 by hopphoops | I caught the end of it, and agree it was absolutely stunning. Is it really that beautiful over there, or rather is it possible to get to these places and find yourself alone on a sunny day? It seems to good to be true. |
It really is that beautiful over there and you will often find your self all alone....trouble is there are only half a dozen days a year that are sunny. | |
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Cinematography on 13:10 - Apr 26 with 1041 views | Tonto | I think just about everyone can agree, that when it comes to Natural History TV documentaries, the BBC leads the world. And by some distance. It really annoys me that on Discovery channel docs, they spend the first 5 minutes after every add break recapping what's previously been shown. And the cinematography isn't a patch on the BBC | |
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Cinematography on 15:38 - Apr 26 with 1003 views | Boston |
Cinematography on 13:10 - Apr 26 by Tonto | I think just about everyone can agree, that when it comes to Natural History TV documentaries, the BBC leads the world. And by some distance. It really annoys me that on Discovery channel docs, they spend the first 5 minutes after every add break recapping what's previously been shown. And the cinematography isn't a patch on the BBC |
Well, they do have a never ending supply of your money to play with. | |
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Cinematography on 03:33 - May 1 with 822 views | MrSheen | I've just got round to watching this. Fantastic stuff, though he had access to places that are completely out of bounds to the rest of us. I've lived near Richmond Park for twenty years and never seen the stags going at each other like he showed! The Macgillicuddy Reeks area from Killarney to Waterville is an enormous natural space, hardly inhabited at all. This is the Bolus Head walk near my place that looks out over the Skelligs. http://walksireland.com/?p=440 [Post edited 1 May 2017 3:34]
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Cinematography on 16:07 - May 2 with 718 views | Brightonhoop |
Cinematography on 03:33 - May 1 by MrSheen | I've just got round to watching this. Fantastic stuff, though he had access to places that are completely out of bounds to the rest of us. I've lived near Richmond Park for twenty years and never seen the stags going at each other like he showed! The Macgillicuddy Reeks area from Killarney to Waterville is an enormous natural space, hardly inhabited at all. This is the Bolus Head walk near my place that looks out over the Skelligs. http://walksireland.com/?p=440 [Post edited 1 May 2017 3:34]
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There was some footage somewhere of a Stag in Richmond Park chasing a fella up a tree, very funny, not for the bloke obviously. I used to photograph them during the season, September I seem to recall, but the golden rule was to stand downwind of them, if the Stags perceive you as competition they will come after you, as the bloke up a tree found lol. | | | |
Cinematography on 18:19 - May 2 with 692 views | Boston |
Cinematography on 03:33 - May 1 by MrSheen | I've just got round to watching this. Fantastic stuff, though he had access to places that are completely out of bounds to the rest of us. I've lived near Richmond Park for twenty years and never seen the stags going at each other like he showed! The Macgillicuddy Reeks area from Killarney to Waterville is an enormous natural space, hardly inhabited at all. This is the Bolus Head walk near my place that looks out over the Skelligs. http://walksireland.com/?p=440 [Post edited 1 May 2017 3:34]
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Saw a few slags around Richmond Station once or twice. | |
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