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regular-article-logo Friday, 22 November 2024

James Cameron talks about his involvement in the documentary series Super/Natural series

The series is currently streaming on Disney+ Hotstar

PTI New Delhi Published 10.10.22, 03:30 PM
James Cameron.

James Cameron. Instagram

Before James Cameron picked up the camera to direct sprawling and culturally-significant films like Titanic, The Terminator and Aliens, the filmmaker said he would spend his time observing nature with a pair of binoculars in his native Canada.

Super/Natural, the Disney+ documentary series on which Cameron serves as executive producer, has been an opportunity for him to explore the same theme in real life. The Oscar-winner said he immediately agreed to work on Super/Natural when National Geographic reached out to him. I

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In the past, Cameron had collaborated with the network on a number of natural history and documentary series such as Deepsea Challenge 3D and season two of Years of Living Dangerously.

“A series like this is my attempt to go back to those wonderful memories as a kid in nature. Now other people get to go out into the field and I sit back in the editing room and send them out to capture all the images because I can't be everywhere at once. But I’m very envious of where they get to go and what they get to do,” said Cameron.

“Then National Geographic told us about this one, which they were developing with the UK-based company Plimsoll Productions, I said that's the one I want to do. This is the one that excites me. And in a way, it's working out those same ideas that I'm working out fictionally in the Avatar films,” the acclaimed director added.

Born in the riverside town of Kapuskasing in Ontario, Canada, Cameron said it was not a single incident that attracted him towards flora and fauna. “I can remember many vivid incidents as a kid. I lived in a suburban neighbourhood in Canada. But two blocks away, the woods started and they went for sort of 20 or 30 miles. I was catching everything from bugs to butterflies, frogs, snakes. I would try to see everything I could see with binoculars. Following bird behaviour and all that.”

Also backed by Cameron’s Earthship Productions, Super/Natural utilises latest scientific innovations and leading-edge filmmaking technology to reveal the secret powers and super-senses of the world's most extraordinary animals, inviting viewers to see and hear beyond normal human perception to experience the natural world as a specific species does.

“Our purpose is not just to entertain but absolutely to teach and to show the wonder, majesty, complexity of nature. Because as a civilisation, we have to modify our behaviour. A lot of these places that our photographic teams were going into are places that are under stress from all kinds of things,” Cameron said.

The filmmaker also said the six-episode series, narrated by Hollywood star Benedict Cumberbatch, takes the audience into the minds of animals.

Citing the example of a creature in the Avatar film universe called Ikran, a mountain banshee with near infrared vision, Cameron said it was often easier for people to believe fiction than truth. “If I created a creature with my designers for Avatar, and I said it could see in infrared or it could process the world five times faster than we can, so they can see each other flying around in the forest at night, you wouldn't blink an eye.”

“But when you think, oh, that's a squirrel or lizard, it's something that we think of as familiar, all of a sudden we're seeing it in a completely different light, literally and figuratively. And I think that's exciting,” he explained.

"Super/Natural is not a classic natural history series with the narrator droning on. We've got Benedict Cumberbatch and he doesn't just narrate it. He acts it. He gets you inside what's happening in a way that I think is very relatable,” Cameron said.

Showrun by Matt Brandon and Bill Markham, the series is currently streaming on Disney+ Hotstar in India.

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