Planet Earth | |
---|---|
Genre | Nature documentary |
Narrated by | Richard Kiley |
Composers | Jack Tillar and William Loose |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of episodes | 7 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Thomas Skinner |
Producer | Debbie Glovin |
Running time | 57 minutes (Total 399 minutes approx.) |
Production company | WQED Pittsburgh |
Original release | |
Network | PBS |
Release | January 22 March 5, 1986 | –
Planet Earth is a seven-episode 1986 PBS television documentary series focusing on the Earth, narrated by Richard Kiley.
Planet Earth explores geoscience and how discoveries of the early and mid-1980s were revolutionizing mankind's understanding of the Earth's past, present, and future. It also highlights scientific discoveries not yet fully understood and still under study in the mid-1980s. The series explores the Earth's origins, history, and structure; the forces that operate continually to alter its surface; its oceans; its climate; its natural resources; its biosphere and the effects of life on the physical world; its relationship to the Sun and other bodies in the Solar System; and its possible future in the face of pressures the growing human population places on the natural world.[1]
The BBC used the same title for its 2006 series, but the two series are completely unrelated and quite different in focus and content.
Produced by WQED in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in association with the National Academy of Sciences as the centerpiece for a college-credit telecourse,[1] Planet Earth was filmed over a period of four years on all seven continents and from the ocean bottom to earth orbit.[1] The Annenberg/CPB Project and IBM funded production of the series.[2] It enjoyed success in its original run, airing weekly on Thursday evenings on PBS from January 22 to March 5, 1986.[3]
A companion book to the series written by Jonathan Weiner, also entitled Planet Earth, was published in 1986 by Bantam Books. Both the series and the companion book sometimes are marketed as Our Planet Earth in an attempt to avoid confusion with the 2006 BBC series Planet Earth.
Some footage shot for Planet Earth later also was used in the 1992 PBS series Earth Revealed.
In January 1986, Los Angeles Times critic Lee Margulies praised Planet Earth as "serious, but not dry" and credited it for its vivid filming of natural scenery, use of computer graphics, and achievement of depicting ongoing scientific research of the early and mid-1980s as "challenging, interesting, and worthwhile."[1]
Planet Earth was the co-winner of the 1985-1986 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Informational Series or Special, sharing it with Laurence Olivier - A Life, a multi-part biography of Laurence Olivier that aired on the PBS series Great Performances that season.[3]