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Our Planet: Netflix warns animal lovers to skip ‘distressing’ death scenes in David Attenborough documentary

The streaming service is giving viewers the chance to fast forward upsetting scenes

Jacob Stolworthy
Thursday 11 April 2019 02:26 EDT
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Our Planet Official Trailer Netflix

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Days after defending a controversial scene in David Attenborough’s new documentary series Our Planet, Netflix has issued a warning to animal lovers about particular scenes they should skip.

In the wake of a scene considered “distressing” by many viewers, the streaming service posted a series of time codes to Twitter, writing: "Here are some moments animal lovers may want to skip.”

Some of these moments to occur over the nature show’s eight episodes include fish getting stuck in nets and killer whales eating a penguin.

The moment that left many viewers initially distraught is part of the second episode, Frozen Worlds, and focuses on a large group of walruses in northeast Russia, some of which can be seen plummeting to their deaths.

According to Attenborough’s narration, the more than 100,000 walruses are left gathering on a single beach ”out of desperation”, because their natural habitat, the sea ice, has moved to the north.

Producers of Our Planet have presented the scene as a painful illustration of the impact of climate change – and Netflix waded in on the controversy, assuring those concerned that it worked with a Russian biologist who has experience working on that particular coastline for 35 years.

“Under these conditions, walruses are a danger to themselves,” Attenborough says before the documentary shifts its attention to a group of walruses who have scaled an 80-meter (262-foot) cliff, in search of “space of rest”.

The segment highlights that walruses have poor eyesight out of water, but can feel the presence of the other animals at the bottom of the cliff – and are left looking for a way to return to the sea in order to search for food.

A walrus is then shown half-jumping, half-falling down the cliff, painfully bouncing against the rocky surface. Several other animals follow suit, suffering the same tragic fall.

“In their desperation to [return to the sea], hundreds fall from heights they should never have scaled,” Attenborough narrates.

The sequence ends with close-ups of the walruses’ still bodies lying at the bottom of the cliff.

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