David Attenborough’s Wild Isles review: ‘Life on Earth meets Wind in the Willows’

This is ‘beautiful, extraordinary, wonder-inducing’ television

David Attenborough’s Wild Isles
Sir David Attenborough on Skomer Island in Wales 
(Image credit: Alex Board/SIlverback Films/BBC)

Presented on location by the 96-year-old David Attenborough, Wild Isles gives Great Britain and Ireland “the full bells-and-whistles Planet Earth treatment”, said Carol Midgley in The Times. And the results are “breathtaking”. The series doesn’t always make for comfortable viewing – the killing starts barely six minutes in, with a “poor seal pup being tossed around and set upon by a pod of killer whales”. But we then move on to “eagles, dormice and badgers. Oh, and more killing.” Some viewers “won’t be as blown away” by this series as they were by, say, Planet Earth II’s “jaw-dropping scenes from the Galápagos”, but “as with all these films, the effort that has gone into it is first-class”.

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