Critic scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating more favorable reviews.
The wildlife documentary One Life is a visually gorgeous, at times astonishing screen experience. Read full review
The opportunity to see the stunning footage on the big screen is not to be missed, and the narration by Daniel Craig, delivered with James Bond-style drollness, makes it as much fun to listen to as to watch. Read full review
What's before our eyes suggests we share the planet with some amazingly strange beings. Read full review
Nature films don’t come any more spectacular than the BBC’s One Life. Read full review
As much as Daniel Craig's narration can feel tacked-on, it's really secondary to the film's expert camerawork. Read full review
Quite a spectacle, and a nice family outing. Read full review
Daniel Craig makes a decent fist of the narration. But you could also do without its gush about the “incredible journey” all beings on the planet share. Read full review
Beautiful slo-mo, up-close-and-personal cinematography abounds, as does an aggravating desire to turn its many subjects (and their plights to survive) into reflections of mankind. Read full review
The latest production from the BBC Natural History Unit is a typically eye-catching, years-in-the-making chronicle of animal life that is tainted by the urge to anthropomorphize. Read full review