Kevin Bachar

Filmes

Os Tubarões Mais Perigosos
Director
Dizem que o tubarão-branco é aterrorizante, mas o explorador Jacques Cousteau deu ao galha-branca oceânico o título de “tubarão mais perigoso do mundo”. Será que ele tinha razão?
The Inhabitant
Writer
Como qualquer outra adolescente, Tara está apenas sobrevivendo ao ensino médio – mas seu pai e sua mãe parecem estranhamente distantes. Em meio a uma onda de assassinatos horríveis com machados, Tara tem avistamentos de entidades aterrorizantes, forçando-a a questionar sua própria sanidade e ancestralidade chocante.
Tubarões vs. Embarcações
Director
Existem muitos vídeos virais de tubarões atacando barcos. O Dr. Mike Heithaus e a doutoranda Sara Casareto investigam as causas desses confrontos.
Sharks of Hawaii
Producer
Quase 40 espécies de tubarões vivem nas águas quentes das ilhas vulcânicas do Havaí, incluindo tubarões de ponta branca de recife, tubarões de Galápagos e tubarões-tigre.
Tubarões vs. Golfinhos
Writer
Tubarões e golfinhos compartilham o oceano há milênios, mas só agora os cientistas começaram a entender a complexa relação entre tubarões e golfinhos.
Sharks Vs Dolphins : Face Off
Director
Sharks Vs Dolphins : Face Off
Writer
Animal House: The Inside Story
Executive Producer
Documentary about the making of Animal House
Tsunami - Killer Wave
Producer
The globe learned on December 26, 2004, that tsunamis can bring death and devastation to the world's coastlines. The product of undersea earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, tsunamis can race across oceans at more than 500 miles an hour, leaving a huge wake of destruction when they hit shore. Because it is difficult for scientists to predict how large these massive waves can be, tsunamis are one of the least understood of nature's forces, and one of the most dangerous. With insight from some of the scientific community's foremost researchers, and vivid accounts from past tsunami survivors, Tsunami: Killer Wave depicts nature at its most extreme, profiles the efforts being made to curb its effects, and illustrates the financial, physical and emotional toll it can leave on its victims.
Hindenburg
Producer
The National Geographic Society explores the mysterious and dramatic Hindenburg explosion of May 1937 in Lakehurst, New Jersey, USA. The Hindenburg was the largest German Zeppelin that carried passengers, crew, luggage, mail, and a heavy loaf duel. Much like the Titanic, it was revered for its size as well as lavish accommodations. It had made ten round trips between Germany and the United States before its demise.