Yanick Gentil

Most Popular Yanick Gentil Trailers

Total trailers found: 8

700 Sharks (Gombessa 4, Genesis) Trailer (2016)

01 January 2016

Originally, in 2014, Laurent Ballesta had just one precise objective: to unravel the mystery of groupers.

700 Sharks Trailer (2018)

09 June 2018

Gombessa Expedition 4 Laurent Ballesta went to observe a gathering of thousands of groupers during the full moon of June 2014 (Le mystère mérou) in the southern pass of the Polynesian atoll of Fakarava, where he discovered a pack of over seven hundred grey sharks.

The Deep Med Trailer (2020)

12 September 2020

The Mediterranean. Because people have been travelling there for thousands of years, it is believed to be without secrets.

The mysteries of Mont La Pérouse Trailer (2021)

12 February 2021

160 km southwest of Reunion Island, just a few dozen metres beneath the surface of the Indian Ocean, lies the peak of an underwater volcanic structure known as Mont La Pérouse.

Antarctica, in the footsteps of the Emperor Trailer (2016)

23 February 2016

Gombessa Expedition 3 Protected by an international treaty Antarctica has been spared the effects of hunting and fishing.

The Grouper Mystery Trailer (2015)

11 July 2015

In French Polynesia, there is a place where every year, thousands of groupers gather in secret followed by hundreds of sharks… The photographer, diver and biologist Laurent Ballesta, with his team, wanted to better understand what motivates these fish to wait until the exact day of the full moon to spawn all at once! With the help of researchers from the CNRS of Moorea, they dived and conducted numerous experiments to study and witness this unique phenomenon.

Le grand cirque des marées Trailer (2025)

17 December 2025

The foreshore as you've never seen it before! War, survival, and marine ballet: in a Microscomos-style odyssey with sumptuous images, this documentary takes a close-up look at the aquatic world at low tide and its colorful creatures.

The Coelacanth, a dive into our origins Trailer (2013)

02 November 2013

Gombessa Expedition 1 To dive for the Coelacanth is to go back in time. In 1938, when it was known only as a fossil, a Coelacanth was discovered in South Africa in a fisherman's net.