00:01I remember the first time I met mountain gorillas.
00:07We found a group of females and juveniles in a small peering,
00:12and to my astonishment, they allowed me to approach.
00:18I felt a weight on my feet, and I looked down there, there was little Pablo.
00:24Many people would think it was the most important sequence in that series,
00:28if not actually in my filmed life.
00:35I only knew Pablo as a three-year-old.
00:38By the time he was 18, he broke away to form his own group.
00:44The Pablo Group.
00:47Almost 50 years later, I have the chance to tell Pablo's story,
00:52and that of his descendants who still inhabit those mountain slopes in the Virungus.
01:04Get your rassi.
01:06Teta.
01:07They are the heart of this gorilla family.
01:11But there are others waiting in line.
01:17This is a huge animal.
01:18Just one thumb from his fist could crack your head open.
01:27A newborn is a source of fascination.
01:32A powerful sense of togetherness and belonging is expressed in a chain of tender physical contacts.
01:43There is more meaning and mutual understanding in exchanging the plants of the gorilla than with any other animal I
01:53know.
01:55There is more meaning andproducer.
01:59That I can only see you are the computer.
01:59That's all.
02:01And you can do that for all of us.
02:02But no matter howcks you hold your head open.
02:02There is none in the sky.
02:02There is none of us, but no doubt.
02:02It's impossible.
02:03You are the people who do it.
02:08I am wrong.
02:08I am wrong.
02:09I am wrong.
02:10I am wrong.
02:13You
Comments