<body><![CDATA[Compiled from the highlights and unseen footage from the BBC documentary series The Blue Planet, this oceanic odyssey takes you from the shallowest coral reefs to the darkest chasms of the deep. But if, as a concerned parent, you thought that Finding Nemo didnΓÇÖt have quite enough educational merit, donΓÇÖt expect much more here. Directors Andy Byatt and Alastair FothergillΓÇÖs film is more emotional than factual. Indeed, Michael GambonΓÇÖs solemn narration recalls William ShatnerΓÇÖs opening monologue to Star Trek. ΓÇ£Sea, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the BBC Natural History Unit...ΓÇ¥ The teeming visual feast and George Fenton's lush orchestral score enable the audience to immerse themselves in a shimmering aquamarine world, some of whose inhabitants have been photographed for the first time. The underwater experience is probably best appreciated viewed through a set of 3-D goggles at an IMAX cinema, but in the likely event that you are not the proud owner of a widescreen television half the size of a football field and big enough to show a life-size whale, you will have to settle for your humble home cinema. This two-disc set contains a<br>50-minute behind-the-scenes documentary that reveals the methods behind this marine magic. ]]></body>