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Home»Netflix»Gorilla Story Review: David Attenborough’s Most Personal and Emotional Film Yet
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Gorilla Story Review: David Attenborough’s Most Personal and Emotional Film Yet

Williams MBy Williams MApril 19, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read
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Picture Credits: Netflix

When David Attenborough shows up with a new documentary, it is hard to resist watching. The British biologist is now approaching 100, and whatever he still manages to create at his age deserves to be embraced. With Gorilla Story, Attenborough chooses a subject that clearly sits close to his heart. This time, there are no sweeping nature shots paired with overwhelming music, but rather an intimate, deeply personal story.

The documentary’s starting point dates back about fifty years. At the time, Attenborough traveled to Rwanda to film gorillas for Life on Earth. Those images have since become iconic, especially the moment when a young gorilla climbs onto him.

In Gorilla Story, he reflects on that experience. He revisits old memories and follows the descendants of the same gorilla group. He speaks about it the way someone talks about an old friend they have not seen in years. Yes, he is now 99. You can feel it. Not because he comes across as fragile, but because there is a layer of reflection in everything he says. It feels as if he, too, realizes that stories like these do not go on forever.

Less spectacle, more emotion

Anyone expecting another visual spectacle may not fully get what they are looking for here. This documentary is deliberately small in scale. Calm. Almost restrained. But that restraint works surprisingly well. You get a glimpse into the lives of the gorillas as they truly are. Sometimes beautiful, sometimes brutally harsh. Dominant males challenge each other. Tension within the group. Younger animals searching for their place. This is the unforgiving reality of nature.

At the same time, the softer side is just as present. An older female gorilla holds the group together. Quiet moments amid all the unrest. It gives the whole story a sense of humanity.

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A Gorilla Story: Told by David Attenborough. Cr. Amy Thompson / Silverback Films / Netflix

Attenborough carries it all

The documentary feels deeply personal. Attenborough does not just talk about what he sees, but also about what he feels. About a gorilla named Pablo. About looks that say more than words ever could. Moments like these give the documentary weight without making it heavy.
This is not the most groundbreaking work of his career. You will not find revelations here that turn everything upside down. That is not what this documentary is trying to do. Instead, it feels like something he truly wanted to make. Something he still needed to tell.

There is a quiet sense of melancholy throughout. As a viewer, you realize you are watching someone who has spent a lifetime telling stories, and that this may be one of the last. One can only hope the man continues for years to come.

A small story with a lasting impact

Gorilla Story is not a documentary that overwhelms you. It is one that slowly settles in. It invites you to watch, to listen, and to pause for a moment in admiration of Attenborough. The passion and emotion come through clearly.
It is an intimate portrait. Of gorillas, yes. But above all, of a man who has dedicated his entire life to understanding the natural world. Strangely enough, that is exactly why it works, and exactly why this documentary is so well worth watching.


MVP

David Attenborough is the reason to watch Gorilla Story. The subject clearly means a great deal to him, and that passion runs through everything he says. It is remarkable how a group of gorillas can shape someone, move them, and continue to affect them so deeply decades later. Attenborough is a rare gem, and one we should value while we still can.


Verdict

Gorilla Story is not groundbreaking, but anyone with even a hint of admiration for Attenborough and his long-standing body of work will find an intimate and moving portrait of a man who has dedicated his life to nature. The documentary differs greatly in tone from his other work, yet that does not make it any less worth watching. If you have any respect for the British biologist, this is a compelling eighty minutes well spent.

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