Gorgeous scenes of monkeys, bears, lions, and other creatures are featured in the new trailer for BBC America and BBC Studios Natural History Unit’s Mammals. Backed by a reworked version of Coldplay’s “Paradise,” narrator Sir David Attenborough describes what it takes for mammals to survive in the modern world.
“The BBC’s Natural History output has long been a source of joy and wonder to the world and it’s an honour be a part of this stunning new series. It’s a dream come true to assist Sir David Attenborough and his team in their ongoing mission to celebrate the beauty of our planet.” – Coldplay
The six-episode documentary series will premiere this summer on BBC America and AMC+.
“To be bringing together the supremely creative talents of Coldplay and Thomas Farnon, the composer behind the Mammals score, to collaborate on the global hit, ‘Paradise,’ is incredible,” said executive producer Roger Webb.
“The BBC’s Natural History output has long been a source of joy and wonder to the world and it’s an honour be a part of this stunning new series. It’s a dream come true to assist Sir David Attenborough and his team in their ongoing mission to celebrate the beauty of our planet.” – Coldplay
The six-episode documentary series will premiere this summer on BBC America and AMC+.
“To be bringing together the supremely creative talents of Coldplay and Thomas Farnon, the composer behind the Mammals score, to collaborate on the global hit, ‘Paradise,’ is incredible,” said executive producer Roger Webb.
- 3/12/2024
- by Rebecca Murray
- Showbiz Junkies
Coldplay deliver a seismic performance of “Humankind” in the new video for the Music of the Spheres track.
Directed by Stevie Rae Gibbs and James Marcus Haney, the energetic clip opens with the camera taking a sci-fi-tinged journey through the streets of Mexico City that ends at Coldplay’s show at the Foro Sol stadium. The rest of the clip comprises a mix of ebullient, fireworks-filled footage captured during Coldplay’s four sold-out shows at the Mexico City venue earlier this year.
The “Humankind” video is the latest Music of...
Directed by Stevie Rae Gibbs and James Marcus Haney, the energetic clip opens with the camera taking a sci-fi-tinged journey through the streets of Mexico City that ends at Coldplay’s show at the Foro Sol stadium. The rest of the clip comprises a mix of ebullient, fireworks-filled footage captured during Coldplay’s four sold-out shows at the Mexico City venue earlier this year.
The “Humankind” video is the latest Music of...
- 8/17/2022
- by Jon Blistein
- Rollingstone.com
Mumford & Sons shared the video for their latest single “Woman,” starring Yeman Brown and Stephanie Crousillat as a pair of dancers captured on a handheld camcorder. It’s the third single from their 2018 album Delta.
Choreographed by Kristin Sudeikis (and filmed in her Forward Space warehouse in New York), the video came about after Mumford & Sons banjoist and lead guitarist Winston Marshall watched Brown perform an improvised dance routine to Beyoncé’s “Halo.”
“My heart went into my throat and I was quite literally moved to tears,” he told Dance Magazine.
Choreographed by Kristin Sudeikis (and filmed in her Forward Space warehouse in New York), the video came about after Mumford & Sons banjoist and lead guitarist Winston Marshall watched Brown perform an improvised dance routine to Beyoncé’s “Halo.”
“My heart went into my throat and I was quite literally moved to tears,” he told Dance Magazine.
- 6/4/2019
- by Claire Shaffer
- Rollingstone.com
Coldplay is known for their eccentric and artistic music videos that accompany their heartfelt singles. Following suit with their previous clips, their new video for the title track from “A Head Full of Dreams” features the band in a foreign country, this time riding their bikes through Mexico City.
Directed by James Marcus Haney and shot on an 8mm camera, the vintage and grainy looking video begins with a snippet from Charlie Chaplin’s 1940 film “The Great Dictator.” The speech is the same one that plays before each Coldplay show on their current world tour.
“I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be an emperor. That’s not my business. I don’t want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone if possible,” the clip begins and then continues with other bits from the speech. “You, the people, have the power, the power to create machines,...
Directed by James Marcus Haney and shot on an 8mm camera, the vintage and grainy looking video begins with a snippet from Charlie Chaplin’s 1940 film “The Great Dictator.” The speech is the same one that plays before each Coldplay show on their current world tour.
“I’m sorry, but I don’t want to be an emperor. That’s not my business. I don’t want to rule or conquer anyone. I should like to help everyone if possible,” the clip begins and then continues with other bits from the speech. “You, the people, have the power, the power to create machines,...
- 8/19/2016
- by Liz Calvario
- Indiewire
As with many first-person documentaries (those in which the filmmaker is the subject,) the most telling aspects of James Marcus Haney's No Cameras Allowed are its unintentional revelations.
In 2010, Haney was a USC film student in the final stretch before graduation, when his crush on a gorgeous woman helped fuel his goal of crashing Dante's hottest circle of hell, Coachella. (She was attending the festival.)
Accompanied by a friend and a "wacky dude" they met on Craigslist, and armed with cameras and bogus wristbands as press-credential camouflage, Haney reached his goal of sneaking into the event and meeting the woman. But he also filmed footage that would launch his career as a documentarian (for HBO) and freelance photographer.
Haney is of a gen...
In 2010, Haney was a USC film student in the final stretch before graduation, when his crush on a gorgeous woman helped fuel his goal of crashing Dante's hottest circle of hell, Coachella. (She was attending the festival.)
Accompanied by a friend and a "wacky dude" they met on Craigslist, and armed with cameras and bogus wristbands as press-credential camouflage, Haney reached his goal of sneaking into the event and meeting the woman. But he also filmed footage that would launch his career as a documentarian (for HBO) and freelance photographer.
Haney is of a gen...
- 8/6/2014
- Village Voice
James Marcus Haney is a USC dropout who has snuck into nearly fifty music festivals over the past four years by hitching rides via Craiglist, recreating tech-equipped wristbands and walking in through press entrances while covered in countless cameras. Thankfully, he always kept the Canon 5D around his neck on "record" so he could collect footage of his favorite acts like Mumford & Sons, JayZ and Edward Sharpe & the Magnetic Zeros — and the lengths he'd go to see them. Photos The Scene at Coachella 2014 It's all strategically compiled into No Cameras Allowed, the documentary Haney has created that's
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- 7/29/2014
- by Ashley Lee
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
MTV has picked up the distribution rights to No Cameras Allowed, a documentary directed by and starring James Marcus Haney, who turned a penchant for crashing the backstage of rock concerts into a budding career as a rock videographer. Lis Rowinski, who runs motion picture for Fake Empire, the production entity run by Josh Schwartz and Stephanie Savage, is producing the doc along with Matt Barber and Michelle Knudsen. Photos Capitol Music Group Celebrates Banner Year Schwartz and Savage are exec producing along with Haney, frequent Fake Empire music collaborator Alexandra Patsavas, Robyn Demarco, Joshua Vodnoy, Michael Raimondi, Mason Novick
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- 7/29/2014
- by Borys Kit
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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