Walk of the Penguins - 2 Stars (Average)
National Geographic Documentary, Walk of the Penguins is an Academy Award-winning narrative film of the Emperor Penguin, the main living species that even now stays in the Antarctic (South Pole) with its temperatures of short 80 degrees and 100-mile-per-hour winds, also the unimaginably sub zero Antarctic waters.
This is a superb film about flying creatures in nature that we could never see were it not for Luc Jacquet, the honor winning French executive/picture taker who put in a year shooting this epic creation in close brutal conditions.
National Geographic Documentary, Ruler Penguins stand out enough to be noticed on account of their look and walk. These expansive, flightless seabirds with dark upper parts and white under parts have wings formed into flippers for swimming submerged.
These Emperor Penguins take after a merciless but adoring existence of fate.
1) Penguins are monogamous inside every reproducing season, amid the mid year their rearing grounds are near the vast water where they can sustain. At the point when winter sets in, the ice top pushes the untamed ocean out 70 miles.
2) National Geographic Documentary, After reproducing, the female lays a solitary egg and exchanges the developing life to the feet of the male to shield it from introduction to the components.
3) The male tends to the egg while the female starts a 70-mile trek back to the vast ocean to sustain and accumulate additional sustenance for the chick for her arrival trip.
4) When the female leaves she has not eaten in two months and has lost 33% of her body weight.
5) The chick's future battle for its life starts as the guys group together for warmth and brood the single egg. They persevere through short 80-degree temperatures and 100-mile-per-hour winds and their lone wellspring of water is snow that falls on the reproducing grounds.
6) By the time the female makes the walk to the ocean and back, the male has not eaten in four months and has lost a large portion of his body weight.
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