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Mask of the Mandrill
Home BEHIND
THE SCENES
Walton filmed in Gabon over the course of an entire year, staying in huts or houses, sometimes camping out. "We spent a lot of time going into the forest to find the mandrills," he says. The troop featured in the film numbers about 80 animals, but Walton also wanted to capture on film the larger troops, which can number as many as 700 animals. "We saw them very briefly, but were never able to film them," he regrets. Still,
it was all well worth the trouble, says Walton. "Getting that close
to a primate that is so secretive and so difficult to film is one of the
most amazing experiences, despite the difficulties. At the end of the
day, when you've filmed these extraordinary creatures, it gives you a
sense of wonder about just how many secrets there are out there in the
forests and remote areas that we never even think of. "It really touches you deep down in your soul. You feel that you've entered a world that is special. It might sound a bit corny, but it is absolutely true that you feel you have been privileged to see that world. And you do wonder whether something like that will stay the way you've seen it. You hope that we as humans will be able to safeguard it in the end. You feel a great responsibility for that."
Mask of the Mandrill
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