Attenborough gives 'family feels' in new show Parenthood

A father lion seen patiently playing with his young cub in the new series
- Published
Sir David Attenborough's latest BBC One series documents how parents from across the animal kingdom sacrifice everything in order to raise their young.
And in the case of the African social spiders, in Namibia, it is quite literally the final sacrifice.
As we discover in Parenthood, the mother spider gives her life for her spiderlings, who, when the time is right, slowly but surely creep up on her and their other elderly relatives en masse and eat them alive... making room for the new generation.
Known as matriphagy, for director Jeff Wilson this moment provided the scene for "the perfect natural history sequence", as well as "the best narration I've ever heard him [Sir David] do."
"David knows exactly what is needed to tell the story," says Wilson.
"It's a story about the ultimate commitment of a parent. How far do you take your parenting commitment?
"I'm not asking any human parents to go that far," he clarifies. "But we all know that if you turn up at the school gates without a snack that you're verging on being eaten by your child anyway!
"So there's a damn good lesson in that."
'Amazed with the wonder'
Capturing such a scene in a "non-intrusive way" requires a huge collaborative effort from a top team of scientists and cinematographers, he adds.
"The spiderlings are about the size of a grain of sugar, and the adults are about the size of your thumbnail. So it's a very small world that you're in."
Wilson warns viewers will be left "shivering with disgust" while also "amazed with the wonder of it all".
Watch: African spider mothers sacrifice themselves to feed their young
Parenthood - not to be confused with the 1989 Steven Martin family comedy film - mines the rich well of universal truisms around parenting, he notes, something that lends itself nicely to storytelling.
Wilson realised the unique angle of exploring parenting in the wild had potential, after previously working with Sir David on another BBC and Silverback Films collaboration called The Mating Game.
The filmmaker was "inspired" by observing "how adaptable other parents" in the wild are, and how alive they are to changes in the natural world.
So he went looking - in jungles, grasslands and oceans - across six continents for where more "lessons could be learned" about parental change, dedication and ingenuity.
"The world is changing for everybody really quickly," he stresses, with a nod to the serious threats caused by climate change.
"We wanted to tap into that idea that there is an uncertain future for both animals and humans.
"How do we adapt to a world that is changing around us? It's so relevant to all of us."
He continues: "As a parent myself I constantly worry, what is the world that my children are going to grow up in?"

Bafta award-winning broadcaster Sir David Attenborough's previous series include The Life Collection, the Planet Earth franchise and The Blue Planet
Aside from the heroically maternal spiders, other potential breakout viral stars of this series include:
Orangutans, external who spend up to a decade teaching and showing their young various behaviours and foods
Boxer crabs who clone an anemone underwater to protect their young, creating weapons so they can protect themselves from predators
Elephant mothers navigating unpredictable waterways with their babies, and the challenges they face to keep their family alive during droughts, deluges and flash floods
An old fish that climbs waterfalls to build nests for its young, while being overtaken by younger, fitter males
A poison dart frog father who carries his tadpoles on his back – one-by-one - up huge trees, from pools on the rainforest lawns to much safer and better ones on the treetops. "It's like watching [US rock climber] Alex Honnold free solo," jokes Wilson

The new series was filmed over three years in 23 countries across six continents
As hi-tech close-up images draw us into their worlds, their stories are also driven along in dramatic, heart-rending fashion by a bittersweet musical score courtesy of British composer Tom Howe (who also worked on Mulan and Ted Lasso).
The series also includes a theme song by Sam Ryder, external, recorded at Abbey Road, which Wilson hopes will become a hit.
All of which brings us back to the show's famous narrator, Sir David, who - at 99 years old - is still providing "special" and "unique" TV moments, his director tell us.
And always in no more than two takes.
"There can be very few people on Earth who have the ability to communicate to an audience from two [years old] to 102, and feel like they're communicating it at their level," says Wilson, who is also series producer.
"And that's not [just] Sir David as we see him on screen, that's Sir David in real life."
He continues: "When you're working with a partner who understands the natural world as well, if not better than you do, that's always exciting."
'Relatable parental dilemmas'

A white headed langur mother and infant hanging out together
Wilson is proud to have been involved in creating what he calls a "generational gift" that parents like him can watch and learn from, alongside their own children.
"I think it's got all the feels - it's got great behaviour, it's got great emotion, it's got great humour, it's got relatable parental dilemmas.
"And it has a nod and a wink towards 'helicopter parenting' and 'snowplow parenting' - all those different terms that we bandy about as to what type of parent you are."
He's equally pleased with having delicately explored "perhaps the most sensitive relationship that is present in the natural world" - that between a parent and their young.
To capture that, he explains, relies on "absolutely top class field work", patiently watching and getting shots in "an observational, non-invasive way."
"You have that extra challenge in parenting," he says. "It's less hard if you're covering a hunt, as more often than not, the animals couldn't care less whether you're there because they're in the zone.
"But in parenting behaviours, you're dealing with something that's very sensitive, and if you get it wrong, you're stepping over a line that you shouldn't.
"So we're very proud of what we've put on screen in that way."
During one such scene, Sir David's famous voice is heard declaring: "Success for all parents has perhaps the greatest of consequences… It ensures the future of life on our planet."
In other words: respect your elders.
Parenthood, which has five episodes, begins at 19:20 BST on Sunday 3 August on BBC One and iPlayer.
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