Tigers population going up is very recomforting.
The documentary doesn't show any brutal death which is very good.
For decades wildlife documentaries were constantly showing cold death as if it was something interresting to begin with.
This documentary still isn't perfect, I wouldn't say that the image was bad,
but clearly there was some kind of heavy "smoothing" that gave the image an unnatural feeling,
almost like CGI visual, clearly it was missing tiny subtle details from the fur and thing like this.
Another huge mistake, the "attack" scenes, completely killed by slow motion,
you're recording one of the most dangerous and powerful beast on earth,
show it to me, show me the unbelievable power this cat deliver, you're betraying nature by using slow mo.
And the cherry on top, a sadly - disgusting classic in our days.
The almost complete plagiarism and lack of talent for the soundtrack,
which use a mix of stolen bits from well known artist "Enya" notably the track "Orinoco Flow",
and some notes of Samuel Barber - Adagio for strings, very sad from a company like Disney
to tolerate such mediocrity for the content produced and distributed by the brand,
paying real composers for something original would be better honestly, this is very cheap.
The Rig first season is a "huis clos" taking place in a remote atypical location.
Add to that a frightening ambiant, and you have a recipe to create a magnetic envy to watch the show.
And the recipe works for a time, thanks to Iain Glen and Owen Teale holding everything in place really.
The secondary characters sometimes use short sentences that doesn't sound natural,
talking about "big subjects" like it's obvious in only "two words", making scene look unprofessional and not credible.
The show use a lot of computer made scenes,
which is understandable considering the location but the quality used is clearly not the best.
Also if you don't want to watch the show
but want to see the Indian doppleganger of David Mitchell dating a black guy,
seems like the writers got you covered.