New York Post

GOING UNDER

‘Blue Planet II’ delves into deep sea life to unearth awesome images

- By MICHAEL STARR

“Blue Planet II” 9 p.m. Saturday on BBC America

B BC America’s “Planet Earth: Blue Planet II” has been generating buzz, and big viewership, for its stunning imagery of underwater life from around the world.

Series executive producer James Honeyborne says that some of those images (and accompanyi­ng audio) would have been impossible to capture five years ago when the series started production.

“There’s been a generation­al shift in science and technology,” Honeyborne says. “There are things we saw and couldn’t have filmed [in 2013]. Camera-sensor technology has moved on a really long way, for example, so we’re able to film in low-light conditions.

“In the first episode we have mobula rays swimming through biolumines­cent plankton at night — we always wanted to film that, but we had to wait for 2016 for the technology to be good enough.”

Like its 2001 predecesso­r, “Blue Planet,” the eight-episode “Blue Planetet II” is narrated by Sir David Attenborou­gh. Its Jan. 20 premiere snared nearly 4 million viewers (across BBC America and four sister networks) watching the BBC’s first-ever series shot in ultra-highdefini­tion. “The move to digital helped us a lot,” says Honeyborne. “For example, we can film half in the water and half out to get a lovely split image. Beforehand, on video, we couldn’t expose above and beneath the surface [of the water] at the same time. The cameras weren’t sensitive enough.

“Now we can film in low-light

conditions,” he says. “We have probes that gobble up tthe light but cameras are now sensitive enough for us to take those probes into the cracks and crevices of the coral reef.” The series has also taken advantage of state-of-the-art audio technology.

“Lots of the cameras we take underwater have microphone­s in them and we’re able to capture sound underwater,” Honeyborne says. “We put microphone­s with cameras on the back of deepdiving sperm whales and you can hear a mother sperm whale as she’s talking in click language to her baby. Then she goes on a dive and starts to use her hunting clicks, which are like submarine sonar. Without those sounds it wouldn’t be such a meaningful experience.”

Viewers have responded to the series’ spectacula­r and, in some cases, unpreceden­ted images — including the episode in which underwater cameras and mikes captured a tusk fish using its mouth to repeatedly (and loudly) bang a clam against coral to break it open for food. “That’s the first moment in the series where you get to look at a fish and start to wonder about its character and intellect and realize maybe there’s more to fish than, perhaps, we previously thought,” Honeyborne says. “We were able to film that because we use a diving system that’s different from scuba: we use rebreather­s, which recycle air and don’t release bubbles, and if you don’t release bubbles you don’t release a startling noise or the bubbles themselves that keep fish on edge. It allows [the fish] to really relax and literally become part of the reef itself.”

The rebreather­s also allowed the “Blue Planet II” divers to remain underwater for four hours at a time (the series encompasse­s 125 expedition­s to 39 countries and roughly 4,000 dives). “That’s 6,000 hours underwater,” Honeyborne says. “This series had to be big in its ambition. What we really wanted to do ... was to connect people to this other world. For many of us the oceans can appear alien, cold, remote, dark, scary and slimy.

“What we wanted to show was that down there are worlds that mirror our own — with creatures that are everyy bit as fascinatin­g g andd sophistica­ted as what wee see on land.” nd.”

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