This is a movie about the power of water.  There is only music but it is visually splendid all on its own.
The documentary begins with a car zipping straight across Siberia’s Lake Baikal, which 
usually remains frozen January through May. And then the car disappears,
 plunging through the thin ice. Russian filmmaker Victor Kossakovsky 
captures the moment at the world’s oldest, largest, and deepest 
freshwater lake in an astonishing feat of fast-frame-rate cinema that 
showcases the power of water all over the globe. It also placed its 
director and crew into terrible danger.
Which becomes a theme that continues when they get to Greenland just in time to experience large pieces of glaciers to calf off into the water.  Kossakovsky chased stunning images of 
water around the globe. The movie has no narration to explain 
where you are, or what’s going on. 
Kossakovsky improvised locations and shot without a script, trying to 
show the water’s point of view. The effect is hypnotic, haunting, and terrifying. 
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