Finally, we witness the – Tibetan sky burials. It is graphic but respectful. In a landscape where ground is too hard to dig and trees are too rare to burn, the dead are given to the vultures. It is a profound lesson in ecological balance. Episode 6: Grasslands – Roots of Power The grasslands cover 25% of Earth’s land. Episode 6 of the HUMAN PLANET COMPLETE-Episodes 1-8 showcases the cowboys and hunters of the open plains. In Kenya, we follow the Dorobo tribe as they steal honey from the "killer bee." One man climbs an acacia tree while a swarm attacks his exposed skin. He does not flinch.
Conversely, the episode shows the destruction of the Jiroft Dam in Iran, where mud brick villages crumble. The river provides, and the river takes away. The final episode in the HUMAN PLANET COMPLETE-Episodes 1-8 is the most surprising. It is not a celebration of technology. It is about how ancient survival skills translate to concrete jungles. In Mumbai, India, the "dabbawalas" deliver lunch boxes with a six-sigma accuracy (1 error in 6 million deliveries) using no computers—only color coding. HUMAN PLANET COMPLETE-Episodes 1-8
Specifically, the film follows a family as they build a shelter in a blizzard using only a knife. Within 45 minutes, they carved a house from snow, melt it with a flame to create an ice seal, and sleep comfortably while the wind howls outside at -45°C. Later, we watch a teenager hunt seals by waiting for three hours at a breathing hole. The patience required is superhuman. Finally, we witness the – Tibetan sky burials
However, the most famous sequence in this episode is the – the practice of "horse-hunting" in Mongolia. Children as young as five ride wild stallions. The camera captures a 10-year-old boy who falls off a horse at full gallop, gets dragged, gets back on, and wins the race. In America, this is child abuse. In Mongolia, it is Tuesday. It is a profound lesson in ecological balance
The complete set covers Each episode runs approximately 50 minutes, and when viewed together, they tell one cohesive story: Man is not defined by technology, but by adaptation. Episode 1: Oceans – Into the Blue The series opens where life on Earth began: the Ocean. In the HUMAN PLANET COMPLETE-Episodes 1-8 , Episode 1 sets the bar impossibly high. We travel to Lamalera, Indonesia, where the village hunts sperm whales using hand-thrown harpoons from a wooden boat. This is not sport; it is a spiritual necessity. The sequence is terrifying and beautiful—a 50-foot whale dragging 30 men across the sea.
The episode also features the "shark callers" of Papua New Guinea, men who allegedly hypnotize sharks to pull them from the water. Whether myth or science, the footage is electrifying. Finally, we visit a free-diver in the Philippines who uses his lungs only to fish 30 meters below the surface for 5 minutes. By the end of Episode 1, you realize that the ocean is not a barrier; it is a pantry.