Sir David Attenborough narrates this critically acclaimed series that dives deep into the marine environment of Planet Earth. Although two-thirds of the world's surface is covered with water, scientists know less about the oceans than they do about the surface of the moon. This limited series travels from various coasts to the poles to examine watery denizens ranging from the gigantic blue whale to microscopic coral polyps.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.9/10
IMDb: 9.0/10
TMDB: 8.4/10
Created by
Alastair Fothergill
Production
Discovery, BBC, BBC Television Centre
Cast
David Attenborough
Where to watch
Discovery +
Curator Review
Verdict
A landmark nature documentary and one of the defining BBC wildlife series. It combines spectacular underwater cinematography with clear, patient storytelling, making the ocean feel vast, strange, and emotionally immediate. If you like premium factual TV that is as immersive as it is informative, this is essential viewing.
Best for
nature documentary fans
viewers who enjoy David Attenborough narration
fans of cinematic, prestige nonfiction
people interested in oceans and marine life
family viewing with educational value
Skip if
you want scripted drama or fast plot turns
you dislike slower, observational storytelling
you prefer modern, heavily stylized documentary editing over classic BBC natural history pacing
Overview
The Blue Planet is a major achievement in television natural history. It helped set the template for the modern prestige wildlife series: grand scale, meticulous science, and images that make familiar ecosystems feel newly alien. The ocean setting gives it an especially strong sense of discovery, since so much of what it shows was still relatively unfamiliar to mainstream audiences at the time.
Worth noting
What makes it endure is the balance between spectacle and clarity. Attenborough’s narration is calm and authoritative without flattening the wonder, and the series moves from coastlines to deep sea with real dramatic shape. It is more observational than sensational, which gives the best episodes a timeless quality.
Bottom line
As a limited series, it is complete and satisfying on its own. Later ocean documentaries may be more technically advanced, but this remains one of the essential starting points for anyone interested in the genre, and a strong example of BBC natural history at its peak.