New DVD Release - February 2008 - “Beauty…for Survival?”

February 3rd, 2008

Our best-selling “Beauty… for Survival” is now available as a DVD. The film was originally released on VHS in 1995, and was the first in our still growing series of butterflies filmed in the wild, under the title The World’s Butterflies .

It was a very suitable start to the series as it brought together footage on film shot over the previous 20 years in no less than 11 countries.

Read more about it - and order - from our Videos section.

“Beauty…for Survival?”

February 3rd, 2008

“ An ideal film for introducing children, even as young as 5, to some of the science of the natural world, and for stimulating art work and creative writing.”

That’s how a London Primary school teacher described this film.

Originally brought out as a video in 1995 at the beginning of our series on the World’s Butterflies, “Beauty…for Survival?” brought together film (not video) footage from our trips to no less than 11 countries.

Now transferred and re-edited as a DVD, it includes as an option the scientific names of all the 60+ species shown. And the quality of 16mm Kodachrome comes across excellently, backed by the lyrical music written for the film by our friend, Maciek Hrybowicz of Sound Partners Music.

The film opens with a magical view of the huge Tree Nymphs flying in the forest on Penang Hill, Malaysia.

The story examines the role played by a butterfly’s appearance in its struggle to survive, and illustrates the part played by:

hiding with the help of camouflage,
decoy features,
shamming dead, and
mimicry.

“An ideal introduction to the butterfly world for people of all ages” was how the film was described by one commentator.

“From the Library”

On the DVD scenes have been included from Bhutan, Malaysia and Peru.
Buddhist monastery dancing in Thimphu links with a gorgeous specimen of the remarkable Indian Fritillary Hyperbius argyreus, and a long sequence of the Malaysian Rajah Brooke Birdwings Trogonoptera brookiana by the river at Kualah Woh at the foot of the Cameron Highlands, and species in Peru, from the riverside of the Madre de Dios river, in the western Amazon Basin, and higher in the Andes at the well-known forest location of Tingo Maria.

Madagascar - the problems…

October 23rd, 2007

Our 3-week mission to Madagascar in November, with a group from Florida, was a big learning experience. As a warning to others who may suffer the same difficulties, here are the lessons we learnt.

1 Whenever you go seeking natural history, in a third world country, remember that the habitats you have been recommended to visit, will be much more degraded than you expect; more then they were when last visited by you or your contacts.This may well apply even in National Parks

2 If it is butterflies you are after, do not expect the local people, even the guides in National Parks, to be familiar with their habitats. They may be good on birds but butterflies are another matter. In Madagascar, they will be good on lemurs, as the staple tourist attraction. And perhaps birds. But not butterflies.

3 If you are going on an US-led trip, wherever in the world, make sure, before you sign up, that there are no collectors in it. We only learnt 24 hours before setting out that our trip would include collectors. In Madagascar, we had three, which does not make for a happy time for the photographers or filmers, hard as they, and the leader too, may try to make it go.

4 The ethics of collecting ‘for fun’, or ‘for a friend’ need to be spelt out, and in a way that takes all necessary account of the respectable needs of scientific research. We had both kinds of collectors in our group. That there are still people collecting ‘for fun’ could come as a surprise to European butterfly-watchers, but the ethic in the US is a bit different.

Diversity in the Rainforest

July 9th, 2007

Diversity in the Rainforest DVD cover“Diversity in the Rainforest” – our best-selling film of the butterflies of Peru – is now available as a DVD.

As with all our films, the DVD format is “region-free” ie suitable for all parts of the world, including the USA.

The DVD version will be a very noticeable improvement on the existing VHS one. The quality of the pictures and the forest sounds are both much better, and closer to the originals, some of which were in film and others in Hi-8 analogue video.

Read the rest of this entry »

Purchase our videos

April 4th, 2007

This is where you can purchase all our individual videos and special orders. Read the rest of this entry »

Another Award for Cinebutterflies, March 2007

April 2nd, 2007

Latest from the 2007 Missoula International Wildlife Film festival in Montana
“O Que Pasa? What’s Going On Here?” - our 2006 production on the butterflies of the Rio Cristalino Reserve in Brazil – won a Merit Award for Presentation of Information. Read the rest of this entry »

Spreading our wings – India and Sikkim, 2006

April 2nd, 2007

We - Pat and I, that is – were in India in October –November 2006, filming the butterflies and also the high mountains, especially Kanchenjunga and Narsing. Read the rest of this entry »

A new camera for the field trips

April 2nd, 2007

For India, we took the new Canon XL2, superseding the faithful but ageing XL1. Read the rest of this entry »

“O Que Passa? - What’s Going On Here?”

July 12th, 2006

An Introduction to the Butterflies of the Amazon forest

DVD (region-free) £12.50 (exc delivery & VAT)
Click here to purchase

The latest addition to our series on the World’s Butterflies is this DVD of the Amazon rainforest, comprising
- 30-minute film in English and Portuguese versions, including giant otters, a jaguar, bees, beetles, spiders, and an ant-lion
- Many more butterflies – arranged by Family

The film was made in Portuguese to help the education and conservation work at Cristalino, and we hope that many Brazilians, young and old, will be introduced to the fascinating world of butterfly-watching by seeing the film.

Fo the rest of us, it is just what it says: an Introduction to the Butterflies of the Amazon Rainforest.

See the incredible riches of the rainforest on your screen!
Read the rest of this entry »

New distributors - Pemberley Books

July 11th, 2006

Ian Johnson at Pemberely Books has taken over as our main distributor. and all our films can be found at his excellent website www.pembooks.demon.co.uk.

You can mail him at ian.johnson@pemberleybooks.com, and his address is 18 Bathurst Walk, Iver, Bucks, SL0 9AZ.


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