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| CATEGORY: | Video |
| THEATRICAL RELEASE DATE: | 1999 |
| MANUFACTURER: | Nat'l Geographic Vid |
| MPAA RATING: | NR (Not Rated) |
| FEATURES: | Closed-captioned, Color, NTSC |
| TYPE: | Documentary, Movie |
| MEDIA: | VHS Tape |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
| UPC: | 727994700388 |
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Customer Reviews of National Geographic's The Secret Life of Cats
Do not recommend Thinking this would be a great documentray I could not wait to watch Secret Lives of Cats and I was in for a surprize. The show depicts the cat as a walking murdering doctor Jekel Mr Hyde! Saying how the cat kills wildlife. But in reality most cats catch mice rather birds as According to the World Watch Institute's paper Losing the Strands in the Web of Life: Vertebrate Declines and the Conservation of Biological Diversity, "The leading culprits in the decline of birds are a familiar set of interrelated problems all linked to human activity: habitat alteration, overhunting and overcollecting, exotic species invasions, and chemical pollution of the environment. Habitat loss is by far the leading factor ... ." Feral cats should only be humanely controlled by trapping, neutering, and releasing. Provided proper food and care they live contented lives. Take squirrels for example. I am sure a Squirrel or rabbit do not live to a ripe old age but you do not see people catching them and killing them to save them from a life in the wild? This show says a dead cat is better off! They show you two women clubbing a cat for dinner. One woman catches a cat with a tracking collar ah hello how about doing TNR instead of montoring an unneutered skinny cat pant with fear and hunger, that aussie was a complete dork. I trapped and neutered over 23 feral cats and they are doing just fine, they eat and sleep and leave the birds alone. They rather not waste energy chasing birds and keep the weight for winter. <
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Not what you would expect!
I personally love Natioanl Geographic and its documentaries and I love animals. Otherwise, a very well done film, very well researched, but this one... is not quite just about the secret life of cats and their joyous way of being. It discusses the consequences of pets and their hunting on other species; it discusses pet owner responsibility and its impact on the environment.
My main concern and complaint is that there should have been some labeling to warn the viewer about some less than kind/ rather cruel acts against cats. Not everyone, especially cat lovers, would want to see aborigens hunting cats!
Very nice followup to "Caressing the Tiger"
An excellent cat documentary that follows up, but not directly, on National Geographic's wonderful "Caressing the Tiger." It has a younger feel than thier previous documentary and parents who are interested or have cats might want to review it to decide if their 4th grade and older children might like it.