Monsters We Met is a documentary produced by the BBC that later aired as a special on Animal Planet in 2004 (under the title, Land of Lost Monsters) which also included footage from Walking with Beasts and Walking with Cavemen (both also made by the BBC). The show used computer-generated imagery to recreate the life of the giant animals that lived during the last ice age and explains how early humans encountered them. It also features humans as the main reason for the extinction of all great animals.
Episodes
Episode 1: The Eternal Frontier (Montana, United States, North America, 11,000 years ago)
The episode starts with mammoths living during the Ice Age. It also shows how early indigenous Americans became top predators and started hunting them. Early Americans also had to compete with other predators like the Short-faced Bear and the Saber-toothed Cat. They destroyed them by depleting their food supply and making them starve to death. The episode ends with how there were no more extinctions following the Ice Age and that it remained that way until the European colonization.
Episode 2: The Burning (Australia, 65,000 years ago)
It starts by showing how early Aboriginal Australians migrated to Australia. They also hunted the native wildlife, encountering large birds and the giant monitor lizard, Megalania. The reptiles kill two humans and they plan on burning the fields to kill the giant lizard. The episode then ends with how the burning of the forests changed the landscape of Australia.
It starts with the Māori populating New Zealand during the Middle Ages.[5] They encounter the giant moa and start to see that it was harmless. They then discover Haast's eagle, which hunts moas and starts to target them. They then start to steal the moa's giant eggs and go after the adults for food. The program then goes into human evolution and goes over how humans have led to the extinctions of the megafauna and how they are still affecting modern animals. The U.S. version of the program ends with a scene of space and starts to ask the question about the environmental impact of humanity stating "that if we can't live with these monsters, are we monsters ourselves?". The U.K. version ends on the Moai of Easter Island, noting that humans are "capable of such heroic and triumphant achievements" and yet also capable "of inflicting such horror on the natural world."
Reception
The New York Times's Virginia Heffernan praised the show, writing, "The show's supreme naturalism adds polemical heft to its visual hypothesis, (they caught all this stuff on camera, didn't they?), making its account of prehistory seem like much more than a hypothesis. Land of the Lost Monsters looks like reportage; that's what makes it exciting."[6] The author Michael Klossner wrote, "Land of Lost Monsters benefits from excellent animation of the extinct animals and intelligent reenactments".[7]