Incredible Human Machine
From DocuWiki
Revision as of 06:31, 18 May 2011 (edit) Harry65 (Talk | contribs) (→Technical Specs) ← Previous diff |
Revision as of 16:19, 18 May 2011 (edit) (undo) JumpinS (Talk | contribs) (→General Information) Next diff → |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
== General Information == | == General Information == | ||
- | [[:Category:Science|Science]][[Category:Science]] [[Documentary]] hosted by [[:Category:Andres Williams|Andres Williams]][[Category:Andres Williams]], | + | [[:Category:Health-Medical|Health-Medical]][[Category:Health-Medical]] [[Documentary]] hosted by [[:Category:Andres Williams|Andres Williams]][[Category:Andres Williams]], |
published by [[:Category:National Geographic|National Geographic]][[Category:National Geographic]] in [[:Category:2010|2010]][[Category:2010]] | published by [[:Category:National Geographic|National Geographic]][[Category:National Geographic]] in [[:Category:2010|2010]][[Category:2010]] | ||
- [[:Category:English|English]][[Category:English]] | - [[:Category:English|English]][[Category:English]] |
Revision as of 16:19, 18 May 2011
Contents |
General Information
Health-Medical Documentary hosted by Andres Williams, published by National Geographic in 2010 - English narration
Information
National Geographic: Incredible Human Machine Thirty years ago National Geographic made an amazing programme which broke new ground in science filmmaking and made people look at their bodies in a completely different light. The Incredible Human Machine premiered to amazing ratings and sold like hotcakes in a nascent home video market - and it's still selling on DVD today. But it's definitely time for an update and this is it! Just imagine what we can do now. We'll see images from new medical technologies that will virtually turn us inside-out and expose how we function; down to our very cells; down to the molecular level. In 30 years, medical imaging technologies have advanced by leaps and bounds. Now the imagery is 3D - and even 4D - in incredible, crisp detail. We will reveal the miraculous everyday workings of the human machine - how we eat, breathe and walk on two feet. We are nature's finest specimen and science's greatest mystery; skin, sight, sound, breath, circulation, digestion, muscles, bones, reproduction and the brain are just some of the topics that will be uncovered in ways not previously thought possible. Aerosmith lead singer Steven Tyler's legendary vocal cords give us intimate insight into how we produce sound. At the same time, we will reveal medical mysteries that were previously unsolved: how we smell, see and even process emotion. EMMY Award winner 2010: Outstanding Individual Achievement in a Craft - Writing (Chad Cohen and Arthur Binkowski).
Technical Specs
- Video Codec: XviD ISO MPEG-4
- Video Bitrate: 1468 kbps
- Video Resolution: 720 x 416
- Video Aspect Ratio: 1.731 (16:9)
- Frames Per Second: 25
- Audio Codec: 0x2000 (Dolby AC3)
- Audio Bitrate: 192 kb/s AC3 48000 Hz
- Audio Streams: 2ch
- Audio Languages: English
- RunTime per Part 94.mins
- Number Of Parts: 1
- Part Size: 1.09 GB (1,119 MB
- Source: DVD
- Encoded by: Harry65
Links
Further Information
Release Post
Related Documentaries
- The Incredible Human Body
- The Human Body
- Human Body: Ultimate Guide
- The Incredible Human Journey
- The Body Machine
- The Cell
- DNA
ed2k Links
National.Geographic.Incredible.Human.Machine.XviD.AC3.MVGroup.org.avi (1119.59 Mb) Subtitles: [eng]