Music
Music
A new nature documentary created by Szabolcs Mosonyi and Erika Bagladi, the makers of Vad Balaton, Vad Kunság and Vad Szigetköz. Breathtaking sequences reveal the river valleys, deep canyons, sunlit crags, misty hillsides and rich wildlife of the North Hungarian Mid-Mountains. The spectacular, widescreen documentary filmed with special techniques (e.g. 4K) introduces the diverse flora and fauna of the North Hungarian forests from the ground to the canopy, in the most intimate ways and uncommon situations.
Music
The Balaton is the biggest shallow water lake in Central Europe. Although vacationers invade its coast every summer, the lake and its surroundings contain almost unbelievable natural treasures. The volcanoes, caves, tufaceous limestone stairs, sandhills and valleys are parts of the European Geopark Network, the moors are water habitats of international significance. Ground squirrels, wildcats, peregrines, ravens, mass-nesting egrets and herons, filber mice going on night adventures, asps doing wedding dance live here. The odd marriage of geology, wildlife and humans created this spectacular landscape.
Music
Not far from Budapest, in the outskirts of Táborfalva, a board stops the arriving: "Keep out! Entry is dangerous and forbidden!" The Forbidden Zone starts here, the second biggest shooting and drill ground in Hungary, where military field exercises have been performed for one and a half century. In spite of the danger and prohibition, the area is densely populated. Many plant and animals species live their secret lives here, some of them being rare creatures that almost completely disappeared from the cultivated parts of the Hungarian Alföld. They are protected by weapons...
Music
Entre el Tisza y el Danubio se encuentra la Gran Llanura húngara. Al drenar los pantanos y reconducir los ríos se produjo un enorme cambio. Casi todo el curso del río Danubio fue reconducido, pero se respetó la forma de algunos meandros que aún mantienen su trazado.
Music
We're at Hungary's western gateway. The landscape is ruled by the representatives of economy: motorways, cities, industrial parks, wind farms, as well as the hydroelectric power plant commissioned exactly 20 years ago. But something hides among them. A giant alluvial fan with small, island-like villages, forests, wetland fields, reed beds, all of which are encircled by countless small and big watercourses and prongs. This inland delta is unique in Europe, and was created by the Danube coming out of the mountains. But today the river is not as free to move as once. Seeing the grip of the built environment, the question arises: Can the wildlife retain its former richness and beauty?