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A scant, observational documentary about various breeds of insect and the unusual ways they go about their business. Produced in tandem by several international film companies, _Microcosmos_ skirts the language barrier by opting for almost no narration - just a short, poetic introduction and a bookended farewell blurb - which leaves plenty of room for the audience to add their own. That’s the way I took it, watching on the couch with family over the Thanksgiving holiday and marveling at how little we know about the tiny worlds beneath our gaze. It's excellent curiosity fodder / conversation starter. I don’t need my hand held for this kind of material. Limited-narrative films like _Baraka_ and _Koyaanisqatsi_ are on my all-timer list. I’ve happily devoured a majority of David Attenborough’s catalog, including at least a dozen viewings of _Planet Earth_. By comparison, _Microcosmos_ is like aimlessly leafing through a glossy nature magazine. Its sharp, detailed visuals are mesmerizing, but that’s pretty much all it has to offer. There’s no segue between subjects or loosely-overlapped chapters, no knowledge or general enlightenment beyond what we can see and surmise for ourselves. In the blink of an eye, it’ll absently bounce from watching a freshly-born butterfly dry its wings to tailing a tumbling dung beetle through the desert. No rhyme, no reason, just pure fickle distraction. This makes for very light, relaxed (if vacant) viewing. Hey gang, let’s go stare at the pretty pictures for a while. Even with the sometimes-ugly subject matter, it’s good for at least that much. Extreme close-ups and careful time-lapses speckle the screen; expert photography that nears the level of those top-notch docus I mentioned above. You’ll get a great idea of what it looks like when a wasp larva seals itself up before undergoing its metamorphosis, but not how or why that change occurs. It just does.