Brian Cox documentary Wonders of Life hits DVD and Blu-ray this March
Yes, it's that time again, to break out your Brian Cox appreciation society scarfs and hats, or whatever it is you throw on when the country's favourite cool scientist appears on the telly. His recent documentary series Wonders of Life is arriving courtesy of BBC Worldwide on 4th March.
Alas details on extras are scarce, all we can tell you is the runtime is around 293 minutes, and the recommended retail price will be £20.42 for the DVD and £25.52 for the Blu-ray.
Synopsis and trailer follow...
This beautiful and definitive series reveals how, 3.7 billion years ago, basic scientific laws gave birth to the most complex, diverse and unique force in the universe, life.
Professor Brian Cox reveals how light, gravity, time, matter and energy became the building blocks of everything, from the smallest microbe on Earth to the biggest galaxy.
Wonders of Life tells the story of the amazing diversity and adaptability of life through the laws that govern it: from the dance of chromosomes as cells divide to the spark of electricity that causes muscles to move.
Visiting spectacular locations including the flooded Taal Volcano on the Philippine island of Luzon, the Australian outback and the Borneo rainforests, it uncovers the secrets of life in the most unexpected locations and poses the question: could the conditions for life be repeated elsewhere in the universe?
Alas details on extras are scarce, all we can tell you is the runtime is around 293 minutes, and the recommended retail price will be £20.42 for the DVD and £25.52 for the Blu-ray.
Synopsis and trailer follow...
This beautiful and definitive series reveals how, 3.7 billion years ago, basic scientific laws gave birth to the most complex, diverse and unique force in the universe, life.
Professor Brian Cox reveals how light, gravity, time, matter and energy became the building blocks of everything, from the smallest microbe on Earth to the biggest galaxy.
Wonders of Life tells the story of the amazing diversity and adaptability of life through the laws that govern it: from the dance of chromosomes as cells divide to the spark of electricity that causes muscles to move.
Visiting spectacular locations including the flooded Taal Volcano on the Philippine island of Luzon, the Australian outback and the Borneo rainforests, it uncovers the secrets of life in the most unexpected locations and poses the question: could the conditions for life be repeated elsewhere in the universe?
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