Sir David Attenborough Returns to Screens With “Kingdom,” A High-Drama Wildlife Epic Five Years in the Making
Sir David Attenborough is set to make a highly anticipated return to British television this weekend with Kingdom, a sweeping new six-part wildlife saga filmed over five years in the heart of Zambia. The legendary broadcaster, whose voice has guided viewers through the natural world for decades, once again steps behind the microphone to narrate what the BBC describes as one of its most ambitious projects in recent history.
The series unfolds in South Luangwa National Park, a vast, wildlife-rich region where four rival animal families live, hunt and battle for survival in an ever-shifting natural order. The production embedded itself in the same location for an extraordinary 1,400 days, marking the longest continuous field presence in the history of the BBC Studios Natural History Unit. The result is a deeply intimate portrayal of life in the wild, captured with patience, dedication and a commitment to telling long-form stories normally impossible in the unpredictable world of wildlife filmmaking.
At the heart of Kingdom are the intertwined fates of four groups: a leopard family, a hyena clan, a wild dog pack and a lion pride. The extended filming window allowed the crew to witness events that would typically be missed by shorter wildlife shoots, offering viewers a rare chance to see these animals evolve, adapt and clash over territory across half a decade. Attenborough’s narration guides audiences through moments of triumph, heartbreak, danger and resilience as each family faces a changing environment and the pressures of rival predators.

The series promises scenes that will resonate with long-time Attenborough fans. Viewers will watch as lion cubs open their eyes for the very first time, capturing an intimate moment few humans ever witness. They will see a pack of wild dogs leap into action in a dramatic rescue mission when one of their own falls victim to a crocodile ambush. A mother leopard will allow her young cubs to sharpen their instincts by practicing on a notably irritated hippo, a rare instance of a big cat giving her offspring a safe but challenging opportunity to develop their hunting skills.
Executive Producer Mike Gunton describes Kingdom as unlike anything the Natural History Unit has attempted before. Reflecting on the sheer scale and emotional depth of the project, he said, “If I had to pick one word to describe Kingdom, it would be ‘intensity’. It’s almost Shakespearean in its feel, and it’s incredibly ambitious in its scale.” Gunton explains that the focus on four families in a single location creates a narrative cohesion that mirrors the complexity of human drama. “It’s a story that speaks across the ages because it focuses on four families in one location all struggling to survive. They’ve got their internal struggles, but they’ve also got struggles against the other rival families. And this creates a really intriguing tapestry of rich stories.”
Gunton’s comparisons to great television dramas underline how deeply the team leaned into the idea of the natural world as a theatre of conflict and connection. “It’s high drama – it’s got a bit of Game of Thrones, it’s got a bit of Succession, but it’s also got a bit of The Lion King,” he said. “But Kingdom also has this wonderful warmth about it. It can be quite a white-knuckle ride at times, but there are also some wonderful moments of beauty and tenderness.”
One of the most striking aspects of the series is its design as a continuous narrative, echoing the structure of binge-worthy contemporary television. Rather than presenting each episode as a standalone documentary, the production team followed storylines across months and years, tracing power shifts, alliances and rivalries in real time. “We’ve tried to construct it as a bingeable continuing narrative,” Gunton explained, emphasising the dramatic pacing and long-form storytelling that distinguish the series from traditional wildlife documentaries.

For Attenborough, whose body of work has reshaped the public’s understanding of the natural world, Kingdom marks yet another exploration of the beauty, brutality and resilience found in wild places. His narration weaves the emotional threads of the story together, lending both gravitas and warmth to footage that captures nature at its most raw and unfiltered.
Kingdom arrives on screens during a golden age of nature programming, yet stands apart due to its unprecedented duration in the field and its deep focus on the complex relationships between four apex families. The Natural History Unit believes viewers will feel the intensity of the drama precisely because the team stayed long enough to witness the kind of turning points that shape generations of animal life.

The series premieres on BBC One at 6.20pm on Sunday 9 November, bringing audiences into a world where survival hangs in the balance and every moment has the weight of a story five years in the making.
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