'A real life horror film': Terrified viewers watch from edge of their seats as SNAKES hunting as a pack chase down baby iguana in amazing footage for BBC's Planet Earth II that even shocked Sir David Attenborough
- Astonishing TV showed marine iguanas attempting to outrun racer snakes
- Footage on Fernandina Island labelled ‘the stuff of nightmares’ by viewers
- Hatchlings could be seen emerging from the sand of the Galápagos island
- Crew were said to have been too shocked to film when they saw the snakes
BBC viewers were scared stiff last night by dramatic footage in the long-awaited series Planet Earth 2 that showed dozens of snakes chasing baby iguanas.
The astonishing television which showed marine iguanas attempting to outrun a knot of racer snakes on Fernandina Island was labelled ‘the stuff of nightmares’.
Hatchlings could be seen emerging from the sand of the Galápagos island in the Pacific Ocean in June for what is the snakes’ best feeding opportunity of the year.
Horrifying: The astonishing television which showed marine iguanas attempting to outrun a knot of racer snakes on Fernandina Island was labelled ‘the stuff of nightmares’
On the run: Hatchlings could be seen emerging from the sand of the Galápagos island in the Pacific Ocean in June for what is the snakes’ best feeding opportunity of the year
The footage on BBC1 showed some iguanas outrun the snakes to safety by the sea while others were caught before the snakes wrapped themselves around them.
When the crew saw the snakes for the first time, they were too shocked to film - and host Sir David Attenborough had never seen anything like it either, it was claimed.
Among the millions of viewers captivated by the footage shown at 8pm last night was Olympic rower Will Satch, who described it as a ‘real life horror film’.
He tweeted: ‘Bloody snakes chasing those poor sea swimming iguanas. David Attenborough is exactly what this world needs and plenty of him.’
Sir David's commentary told how the snakes’ eyes are poor, but they can detect movement and are on alert for other iguanas after seeing one.
Viewer Alex Barreto praised the 'absolutely disgusting but incredible footage', while Claire Macmillan expected to have ‘nightmares about those racer snakes'.
Danger: The footage on BBC1 showed some iguanas outrun the snakes to safety by the sea while others were caught before the snakes wrapped themselves around them
On the lookout: Sir David's commentary told how the snakes’ eyes are poor, but they can detect movement and are on alert for other iguanas after seeing one
And Reece Caddick said: 'I will 100 per cent have nightmares about those snakes on Planet Earth. Never thought I would be emotionally attached to an iguana.'
Meanwhile ITN lighting cameraman Matt Freestone hailed the sequence as ‘probably the most brilliantly edited piece of television I've seen in ten years’.
The hotly-anticipated series, which is formed of six parts and follows on from the first Planet Earth in 2006, has taken three years of filming and 117 filming trips.
The first episode focused on island life and used nine filming locations. Next week the show will look at mountain animals including a rare sighting of snow leopards.
MailOnline TV critic Jim Shelley said: ‘One chase scene and narrow escape was more thrilling than anything in James Bond and actually not that different.’
He added that the racer snakes ‘sounded scarier and scary enough without the sight of them hunting in packs, like a scene from Indiana Jones’.
Response: Among the millions of viewers captivated by the footage shown at 8pm last night was Olympic rower Will Satch, who described it as a ‘real life horror film’
And Daily Mail TV critic Christopher Stevens, who gave the first episode of the new series five stars, described last night's sequence as ‘truly edge-of-the-seat’.
He said the predators writhed together 'like a mythical animal with a dozen heads' and 'they looked like animated clay monsters from an old-fashioned horror movie'.
Meanwhile BBC chiefs will be celebrating today after the programme claimed a massive audience of 9.2million and a 36 per cent share of TV viewers.
This made it Britain's most watched natural history programme in more than 15 years - and it was more popular than the first series debut watched by 8.74million viewers.
And it has also been revealed that the series does not feature any penguin deaths because they look too much like humans, so it would upset viewers.
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