1
00:00:07,287 --> 00:00:10,916
"Then they came in sight.
Eight bulls galloping along,

2
00:00:11,087 --> 00:00:14,557
"full tilt, heavy set, black, glistening, sinister,

3
00:00:14,727 --> 00:00:17,161
"their horns bare, tossing their heads,

4
00:00:17,327 --> 00:00:20,524
"and ahead of them sprinted, tore, ran and bolted

5
00:00:20,687 --> 00:00:23,918
"the rear guard of the men
and boys of Pamplona."

6
00:00:25,287 --> 00:00:28,882
When I first read Hemingway,
I was a teenager living in Sheffield

7
00:00:29,047 --> 00:00:33,598
and the furthest I'd travelled was
here to Suffolk for the annual holiday.

8
00:00:33,767 --> 00:00:36,998
Something about Hemingway
struck a chord in me.

9
00:00:37,167 --> 00:00:42,685
I think it's because he brought places
to life - places I'd never been to before.

10
00:00:42,847 --> 00:00:48,524
He managed to create a world which, if you
were bold enough, could be your world too.

11
00:00:48,687 --> 00:00:52,441
Not that I was bold.
After two weeks I went back to Sheffield.

12
00:00:52,607 --> 00:00:58,398
But he'd sown the seed
and I just couldn't get him out of my mind.

13
00:01:46,127 --> 00:01:48,641
(LOWING)

14
00:02:01,607 --> 00:02:03,598
Aagh!

15
00:02:09,767 --> 00:02:13,282
(FAINT CROWD NOISE)

16
00:02:37,807 --> 00:02:42,164
This is Pamplona in July
and it's wilder than any dream.

17
00:02:47,727 --> 00:02:51,879
The festival of San Fermiín
used to be an intimate, local affair.

18
00:02:52,047 --> 00:02:55,881
Now, every July,
a vast army of pleasure seekers

19
00:02:56,047 --> 00:03:00,359
invades this modest north Spanish city
to join the celebrations.

20
00:03:10,687 --> 00:03:13,281
There's the man who started it all. Ernest.

21
00:03:14,647 --> 00:03:19,516
It was a Hemingway novel
that first alerted the world to the festival.

22
00:03:21,567 --> 00:03:24,365
And Pamplona has cleaned up ever since.

23
00:03:27,287 --> 00:03:29,642
30 tonnes of glass on the first day alone.

24
00:03:29,807 --> 00:03:31,604
That's a lot of glass!

25
00:03:31,767 --> 00:03:35,282
The invading army is now a multinational force.

26
00:03:35,447 --> 00:03:37,438
Oh, God! We're Australian.

27
00:03:37,607 --> 00:03:41,202
- (PALIN) Are you going to run with the bulls?
- Yeah.

28
00:03:41,367 --> 00:03:44,803
We ran last year, so we know what's going on.

29
00:03:44,967 --> 00:03:48,084
- Were you frightened?
- Yeah, I was.

30
00:03:48,247 --> 00:03:51,398
- He was pissing himself.
- But I was very drunk.

31
00:03:51,567 --> 00:03:55,606
- And to prove our masculinity to women.
- Yeah.

32
00:03:55,767 --> 00:03:57,758
- Prove what?
- Masculinity.

33
00:03:57,927 --> 00:04:03,957
- I'm sure you don't need to prove that.
- He does. He's got a serious problem.

34
00:04:06,607 --> 00:04:09,724
In "The Sun Also Rises", Hemingway wrote:

35
00:04:09,887 --> 00:04:12,924
"The things that happened could
only have happened during a fiesta.

36
00:04:13,087 --> 00:04:17,717
"It seemed as though nothing
could have any consequences."

37
00:04:17,887 --> 00:04:23,644
There are three reasons people run -
the passage to manhood, an aphrodisiac...

38
00:04:23,807 --> 00:04:25,718
An aphrodisiac?

39
00:04:25,887 --> 00:04:29,436
- Oh, yes. Oh, yes.
- Gives a new meaning to "horny".

40
00:04:39,447 --> 00:04:41,165
Not with me.

41
00:04:49,967 --> 00:04:55,200
The tone of the fiesta is set by
the spectacle of the running of the bulls.

42
00:04:55,367 --> 00:04:57,756
(SPANISH COMMENTARY ON TV)

43
00:05:01,327 --> 00:05:05,923
Every day for eight days, they run
from the edge of town to the bullring,

44
00:05:06,087 --> 00:05:09,079
bringing the city to the edge of hysteria.

45
00:05:12,487 --> 00:05:18,642
The bulls are taken to their pens, leaving
the ring to hundreds of amateur bullfighters.

46
00:05:23,087 --> 00:05:25,078
Bulls would be too dangerous,

47
00:05:25,247 --> 00:05:31,322
so frisky cows - their horns taped to avoid
inflicting lethal injury - are let loose.

48
00:05:37,767 --> 00:05:43,160
The cows survive the mock bullfight.
Harming them is heavily frowned upon.

49
00:05:43,327 --> 00:05:48,242
But I can't survive much more myself.
Maybe it's an age thing.

50
00:05:48,407 --> 00:05:52,400
After all, Hemingway was only 24
when he first came here.

51
00:05:54,287 --> 00:05:57,996
And I've got people to meet, places to see.

52
00:06:00,047 --> 00:06:04,404
Spain is the perfect place to set out
on the journey I want to make -

53
00:06:04,567 --> 00:06:08,685
to explore those places
which Hemingway brought to life for me.

54
00:06:08,847 --> 00:06:12,601
But not just to look at them.
To experience the physical side.

55
00:06:12,767 --> 00:06:16,442
To do some of the things
that Hemingway liked to do.

56
00:06:16,607 --> 00:06:19,519
Which could be dangerous.

57
00:06:19,687 --> 00:06:22,155
But I'm game... if you are.

58
00:06:30,407 --> 00:06:35,800
Hemingway was 27 when "The Sun
Also Rises" became his first best-seller.

59
00:06:37,367 --> 00:06:42,282
He started writing it on a trip
to the Mediterranean city of Valencia.

60
00:06:52,087 --> 00:06:54,885
Hemingway, brought up like me
in sheltered suburbs,

61
00:06:55,047 --> 00:06:59,802
found something in Spain which he lacked -
a hard, passionate way of life.

62
00:06:59,967 --> 00:07:05,325
Nothing embodied this more than the bullfight,
which is what he was going to Valencia to see.

63
00:07:25,127 --> 00:07:28,244
- The bullring is...
- Michael? Michael Palin?

64
00:07:28,407 --> 00:07:31,001
- Yeah.
- How are you?

65
00:07:31,167 --> 00:07:34,239
I'm just doing a bit of film. OK?

66
00:07:34,407 --> 00:07:39,561
The bullring's behind me. In order
to understand more about bullfight...

67
00:07:39,727 --> 00:07:44,084
...bullfighting, I want to try and meet a bullfighter.

68
00:07:44,247 --> 00:07:48,763
- But bullfighting is a very conservative...
- But, Michael...

69
00:07:48,927 --> 00:07:51,521
...very traditional world.
- I know a bullfighter.

70
00:07:51,687 --> 00:07:56,124
- You want me to introduce you to a bullfighter?
- Oh, that's great.

71
00:07:56,287 --> 00:08:00,075
There's a place over there
and he's one of the guys from here.

72
00:08:00,247 --> 00:08:03,364
- Is he going to be fighting here?
- He is.

73
00:08:03,527 --> 00:08:07,361
My friend may have known me
from a show I did 30 years ago,

74
00:08:07,527 --> 00:08:10,485
but he also knows Vicente Barrera -

75
00:08:10,647 --> 00:08:14,003
a local boy and one of Spain's top ten matadors

76
00:08:14,167 --> 00:08:16,727
who's fighting here in two days' time.

77
00:08:16,887 --> 00:08:19,037
- Vicente.
- Robert.

78
00:08:20,327 --> 00:08:22,682
Quiero presentarte a un amigo mio.

79
00:08:22,847 --> 00:08:26,965
Michael Palin.
We're doing a programme about Hemingway.

80
00:08:27,127 --> 00:08:30,642
- We want to know about bullfighting.
- OK.

81
00:08:30,807 --> 00:08:34,846
Why did you decide to become a bullfighter?

82
00:08:36,327 --> 00:08:39,683
It was evident because I think it's...

83
00:08:39,847 --> 00:08:45,285
I think, for me, it's the most important thing
that you can do in your life.

84
00:08:45,447 --> 00:08:48,359
I think that after to be Pope,

85
00:08:48,527 --> 00:08:51,997
I think it's the most important thing you can be.

86
00:08:52,167 --> 00:08:56,319
To be with that animal, so big, so brave...

87
00:08:56,487 --> 00:08:59,638
so strong.

88
00:08:59,807 --> 00:09:01,160
Huge.

89
00:09:01,327 --> 00:09:09,041
And to be there and ha! To be able to see
the bull behind you, so near from you.

90
00:09:09,207 --> 00:09:13,917
When you're in the ring with the bull,
do you respect the bull?

91
00:09:14,087 --> 00:09:16,920
Of course. I think we, the Spanish people,

92
00:09:17,087 --> 00:09:21,922
are the people in the world
who more respect the bull.

93
00:09:22,087 --> 00:09:27,878
For us it's like...
the sacred animal is the brave bull.

94
00:09:28,047 --> 00:09:33,201
But people who find bullfighting cruel would say,

95
00:09:33,367 --> 00:09:38,999
"How can you have something that is sacred
and that you respect and yet you kill it?"

96
00:09:39,167 --> 00:09:42,603
How would you reply to people who say that?

97
00:09:42,767 --> 00:09:45,235
It's very long to explain that.

98
00:09:45,407 --> 00:09:49,480
We are feeding the bull,
we are living all the day with the bull,

99
00:09:49,647 --> 00:09:52,480
we are all the day speaking about the bull.

100
00:09:52,647 --> 00:09:59,280
What can say a person in New York
in an office about the bull? Eh?

101
00:09:59,447 --> 00:10:02,280
He loves the bull and I don't?

102
00:10:02,447 --> 00:10:06,281
I love the bull, not him.
All in Spain you'll find that.

103
00:10:06,447 --> 00:10:08,517
Yes, I understand.

104
00:10:08,687 --> 00:10:14,000
So the moment when your sword goes in
and you kill the bull,

105
00:10:14,167 --> 00:10:17,159
do you feel sort of sad for that?

106
00:10:17,327 --> 00:10:20,876
It's not sad. When you eat fish, are you sad?

107
00:10:21,047 --> 00:10:24,198
You know what is to die?

108
00:10:24,367 --> 00:10:29,760
And the fish brought out of the water
and aagh! That is horrible.

109
00:10:29,927 --> 00:10:35,206
Do you feel sad when you eat fish,
for example, or when you eat this?

110
00:10:35,367 --> 00:10:36,846
- No.
- OK.

111
00:10:37,007 --> 00:10:41,603
- Have you ever been hurt?
- Sure. Many times.

112
00:10:41,767 --> 00:10:45,840
- And you still carry on fighting.
- That's my life.

113
00:10:46,007 --> 00:10:49,795
- And now I'm sorry, but I must go.
- I know. Thank you.

114
00:10:49,967 --> 00:10:53,960
- Appreciate you talking to us.
- Glad to meet you.

115
00:10:54,127 --> 00:10:56,561
(SPEAK SPANISH)

116
00:10:56,727 --> 00:10:59,036
OK. Bye.

117
00:10:59,207 --> 00:11:01,482
- He's a nice guy.
- Yes.

118
00:11:01,647 --> 00:11:05,196
- Not at all violent.
- Is he supposed to be violent?

119
00:11:05,367 --> 00:11:09,724
No. I think there's
an archetypal image of bullfighters

120
00:11:10,727 --> 00:11:14,003
These are good. What are they?

121
00:11:14,167 --> 00:11:16,556
- What you're eating now?
- Yeah.

122
00:11:16,727 --> 00:11:19,639
- Those are bull's testicles.
- Bull's testicles?

123
00:11:19,807 --> 00:11:22,719
- Yes, sir.
- Hm.

124
00:11:25,167 --> 00:11:31,003
Hemingway made sure he knew all about
bullfighting. I decided to start at the beginning.

125
00:11:45,287 --> 00:11:49,439
My tutor at this school for bullfighters
is Fabian, a Mexican.

126
00:11:49,607 --> 00:11:52,917
He's 18 and has seen off 20 bulls already.

127
00:11:55,127 --> 00:12:00,406
What was it like when it wasn't a bicycle
but an actual bull the first time?

128
00:12:00,567 --> 00:12:02,603
- Were you very frightened?
- Yes.

129
00:12:02,767 --> 00:12:06,965
You have fear and you are nervous.

130
00:12:07,127 --> 00:12:10,756
I have fear of the bicycle. That is very serious.

131
00:12:15,247 --> 00:12:18,557
With your hand you put it here, like this.

132
00:12:18,727 --> 00:12:20,877
- That's important?
- Very important.

133
00:12:21,047 --> 00:12:26,280
- Why is that?
- So people can see that you are strong.

134
00:12:26,447 --> 00:12:29,325
(PALIN) Not helplessly scared.

135
00:12:29,487 --> 00:12:35,198
It's a sign of confidence. I don't care
if this bull's coming straight at me. OK.

136
00:12:35,367 --> 00:12:40,487
The horn is passing fairly close to my...
vital bits there.

137
00:12:40,647 --> 00:12:43,957
- Then put it like this...
- And bring it back.

138
00:12:45,527 --> 00:12:49,805
- Like that.
- Is that the aim of a skilful fighter?

139
00:12:49,967 --> 00:12:55,883
To bring the bull's head up to make it
look active, to make it look strong.

140
00:12:56,047 --> 00:12:58,845
Bullfighting is a young man's game.

141
00:12:59,887 --> 00:13:05,280
Even then, Fabian reckons only one
of these 30 apprentices will ever make it.

142
00:13:05,447 --> 00:13:07,881
(FAINT CROWD NOISE)

143
00:13:10,607 --> 00:13:16,000
In Valencia, as in Pamplona, the bullfight
is only one part of a grand fiesta.

144
00:13:16,167 --> 00:13:20,160
Here they have a firework display
unlike any other.

145
00:13:22,327 --> 00:13:25,478
It takes place at two o'clock in the afternoon.

146
00:13:33,287 --> 00:13:36,085
(LOUD EXPLOSIONS)

147
00:13:44,087 --> 00:13:48,080
This is a phenomenon peculiar to Valencia...

148
00:13:48,247 --> 00:13:50,807
(EXPLOSIONS CONTINUE)

149
00:13:51,807 --> 00:13:54,446
This is a phenomenon... Shut up!

150
00:13:54,607 --> 00:14:00,079
This is a phenomenon peculiar to Valencia
and it's a celebration of noise.

151
00:14:00,247 --> 00:14:03,922
Each firework company... Oh, just film it.

152
00:14:05,727 --> 00:14:10,517
In case you didn't catch all of that,
this is what they call "mascletá".

153
00:14:10,687 --> 00:14:15,078
A symphony for explosives,
a competition between firework families

154
00:14:15,247 --> 00:14:19,240
to make a bigger, more beautiful din
than anyone else.

155
00:15:09,007 --> 00:15:11,885
If you like noise, this is the place to be.

156
00:15:12,047 --> 00:15:17,519
Michael Palin, the world eardrum-splitting
finals, Valencia, Spain.

157
00:15:31,327 --> 00:15:34,364
As the pyrotechnic team are hailed as heroes,

158
00:15:34,527 --> 00:15:38,566
I see if there's anything
as unfashionable as peace and quiet

159
00:15:38,727 --> 00:15:41,366
to be found in this city.

160
00:15:41,527 --> 00:15:45,839
I'm in luck. An art-movie house.
That should be empty.

161
00:15:50,487 --> 00:15:53,081
- Uno, por favor.
- Doscientas.

162
00:15:53,247 --> 00:15:55,761
- ¿Doscientas? Gracias.
- De nada.

163
00:15:58,287 --> 00:16:02,246
(EXPLOSIONS AND GUNFIRE)

164
00:16:08,047 --> 00:16:10,686
It's almost as noisy as it is outside.

165
00:16:12,847 --> 00:16:16,601
This is quite a historic film.
It's called "Spanish Earth".

166
00:16:16,767 --> 00:16:20,282
It was written by Hemingway
for the anti-Fascist cause

167
00:16:20,447 --> 00:16:22,756
in the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s.

168
00:16:22,927 --> 00:16:25,077
Hemingway speaks the commentary.

169
00:16:25,247 --> 00:16:29,320
(HEMINGWAY) The counter-attack
is successful. The road is free.

170
00:16:29,487 --> 00:16:33,446
Six men were five, then four were three.

171
00:16:33,607 --> 00:16:36,724
These three stayed, dug in and held the ground,

172
00:16:36,887 --> 00:16:43,201
along with all the other fours and threes
and twos that started out as sixes.

173
00:16:43,367 --> 00:16:46,837
Orson Welles suggested some cuts.

174
00:16:47,007 --> 00:16:51,000
Hemingway didn't like that.
He called Welles an "effeminate theatrical".

175
00:16:51,167 --> 00:16:53,522
Welles called Hemingway "so big, so strong".

176
00:16:53,687 --> 00:16:57,282
- They set to on the screening room floor...
- Sshh!

177
00:16:58,447 --> 00:17:01,757
...whilst the real fighting
took place on the screen.

178
00:17:08,287 --> 00:17:10,847
It's the day of the bullfight.

179
00:17:11,007 --> 00:17:14,363
I take in some of the street life.

180
00:17:14,527 --> 00:17:19,237
Huge papier mâché figures called "fallas"
rise on every corner.

181
00:17:19,407 --> 00:17:23,195
A rich, satirical mixture of fact and fantasy.

182
00:17:23,367 --> 00:17:26,916
(PIPE AND DRUMS PLAY)

183
00:17:43,647 --> 00:17:48,721
Each neighbourhood has spent up to a year
designing and building their fallas.

184
00:17:48,887 --> 00:17:51,640
There are 700 of them all over the city.

185
00:17:51,807 --> 00:17:57,803
In accordance with ancient tradition, they will
all be burnt down at midnight tonight.

186
00:18:19,047 --> 00:18:20,685
(EXPLOSION)

187
00:18:24,207 --> 00:18:27,756
And this being Spain,
any extra noise is encouraged.

188
00:18:27,927 --> 00:18:30,282
(EXPLOSIONS)

189
00:19:31,527 --> 00:19:37,318
The summer days are hot, so bullfights
don't begin until five in the afternoon.

190
00:19:43,367 --> 00:19:46,996
The fights last 2.5 hours
and the seats are concrete,

191
00:19:47,167 --> 00:19:50,125
so cushions are indispensable.

192
00:19:50,287 --> 00:19:55,998
The spectators seem a complete
cross section of the public.

193
00:19:59,727 --> 00:20:04,084
This is Hemingway's classic work
on bullfighting, "Death in the Afternoon".

194
00:20:04,247 --> 00:20:07,364
And he doesn't absolutely defend it at all costs.

195
00:20:07,527 --> 00:20:10,519
He says, "Whoever reads this
can make such a judgment

196
00:20:10,687 --> 00:20:16,000
"when he has seen these things and knows
what their reaction to them would be."

197
00:20:16,167 --> 00:20:18,806
Which is what I'm doing here.

198
00:20:18,967 --> 00:20:22,721
It has some pictures
of Vicente Barreras' grandfather.

199
00:20:22,887 --> 00:20:28,678
Hemingway was critical of his fighting.
We'll see what his grandson can do today.

200
00:20:35,647 --> 00:20:39,117
Three matadors each have to fight two bulls.

201
00:20:42,167 --> 00:20:46,797
Vicente's first bull weighs in at 1,300 pounds.

202
00:20:51,367 --> 00:20:53,961
The bull is weakened by picadors on horseback

203
00:20:54,127 --> 00:20:59,201
and the harpoon-like sticks of the banderilleros
before the matador takes over.

204
00:21:05,527 --> 00:21:08,087
Every move in the ring is dangerous,

205
00:21:08,247 --> 00:21:11,956
but for me this is the least acceptable
part of the fight.

206
00:21:20,807 --> 00:21:24,436
Now it's a contest
between one man and one bull.

207
00:21:24,607 --> 00:21:28,520
Vicente goes close enough
to risk his life out there,

208
00:21:28,687 --> 00:21:32,680
and the closer he goes,
the more his home crowd urges him on.

209
00:21:32,847 --> 00:21:36,522
(CROWD) Olé! Olé!

210
00:21:37,727 --> 00:21:39,080
Olé!

211
00:21:43,327 --> 00:21:45,761
If Vicente survives this bull,

212
00:21:45,927 --> 00:21:51,001
he has another to fight this afternoon,
two more tomorrow - 200 in a season.

213
00:21:52,087 --> 00:21:55,284
For him, facing death is a job.

214
00:21:57,967 --> 00:22:00,925
However much I dislike
the early stages of the fight,

215
00:22:01,087 --> 00:22:03,760
I find it impossible not to be
affected by the atmosphere

216
00:22:03,927 --> 00:22:07,602
as the contest enters
its last and most dangerous stage.

217
00:22:11,847 --> 00:22:14,042
(CROWD) Olé!

218
00:22:19,407 --> 00:22:21,398
Olé!

219
00:22:23,127 --> 00:22:24,924
Olé!

220
00:23:26,087 --> 00:23:29,875
I know better now what drew
Hemingway to the bullfight.

221
00:23:30,047 --> 00:23:35,041
For him, to confront death
was to experience life at its most intense.

222
00:23:35,207 --> 00:23:37,846
For me, well, it's a Spanish thing.

223
00:23:38,007 --> 00:23:43,525
I shall never feel about it the way they do,
and that alone intrigues me.

224
00:23:55,207 --> 00:23:57,801
Midnight on the festival of San José,

225
00:23:57,967 --> 00:24:01,516
and all the effigies so painstakingly constructed

226
00:24:01,687 --> 00:24:04,201
must now be painstakingly destroyed.

227
00:24:21,567 --> 00:24:25,719
It's another way
of facing up to death and decay.

228
00:24:25,887 --> 00:24:28,355
If you can't beat it, join it.

229
00:25:18,287 --> 00:25:22,485
The cycle goes on -
dust to dust, ashes to ashes.

230
00:25:22,647 --> 00:25:28,244
Tomorrow morning, all over Valencia,
they'll sit down to plan next year's festival.

231
00:25:31,207 --> 00:25:35,598
Hemingway's passion for bullfighting
was equalled only by a passion for hunting.

232
00:25:35,767 --> 00:25:40,283
In 1933, this led him almost inevitably to Africa.

233
00:27:06,447 --> 00:27:11,601
These are Hemingway's "green hills
of Africa" - the Chyulu Hills in Kenya.

234
00:27:11,767 --> 00:27:17,285
- Nice climate. Is this as hot as it gets?
- Yeah. This is the hottest time of year.

235
00:27:17,447 --> 00:27:21,235
For Hemingway, to whom
knowing about things was so important,

236
00:27:21,407 --> 00:27:24,444
the expertise and knowledge
of a local guide was vital.

237
00:27:24,607 --> 00:27:27,917
He had a great white hunter
called Philip Percival.

238
00:27:28,087 --> 00:27:30,157
I have Richard Bonham.

239
00:27:30,327 --> 00:27:37,358
- Have you lived here all your life?
- I'm Kenya born. I've been here 13 years.

240
00:27:39,047 --> 00:27:45,236
Richard Bonham is concerned
not with hunting animals but saving them.

241
00:27:49,167 --> 00:27:54,161
I assume it is safe to go in. What should I do?

242
00:27:54,327 --> 00:27:56,602
Fine. Lovely coat.

243
00:27:57,607 --> 00:27:59,359
Look at that.

244
00:27:59,527 --> 00:28:02,166
We started with four and lost two very quickly

245
00:28:02,327 --> 00:28:07,959
because they were so far down the road
in malnourishment, having been abandoned.

246
00:28:08,127 --> 00:28:11,676
When the female was with him,
you wouldn't be able to get close,

247
00:28:11,847 --> 00:28:17,001
but now she's gone, he's a bit lonely
and you can actually go up and talk to him.

248
00:28:17,167 --> 00:28:22,480
We've gone out of our way
not to let them get too familiar.

249
00:28:22,647 --> 00:28:25,525
- Oh, dear.
- Come on, bad boy.

250
00:28:26,567 --> 00:28:32,164
You can tame them, but as we want them
to go back to the wild... Come on.

251
00:28:32,327 --> 00:28:35,797
Not sure what to do with a half-tame cheetah.

252
00:28:39,407 --> 00:28:42,240
He hates his hindquarters being touched

253
00:28:42,407 --> 00:28:46,116
because when we handle him,
you grab him by the tail.

254
00:28:46,287 --> 00:28:48,278
If you come round to the front.

255
00:28:50,527 --> 00:28:52,518
There we go.

256
00:28:56,167 --> 00:29:00,160
Once you get him by the ear
then he mellows right down.

257
00:29:02,047 --> 00:29:05,517
- Can I just?
- Make gentle movements.

258
00:29:08,487 --> 00:29:10,523
He's not sure about this.

259
00:29:13,727 --> 00:29:15,718
- (GROWL)
- Oh!

260
00:29:17,447 --> 00:29:20,280
- Did he get you?
- Just a flesh wound.

261
00:29:21,327 --> 00:29:23,602
He just patted my leg, really.

262
00:29:23,767 --> 00:29:28,045
But I could see that he wasn't
happy with me. Happy with you.

263
00:29:28,207 --> 00:29:32,200
What will be his fate?
What's going to happen now?

264
00:29:32,367 --> 00:29:37,521
We're waiting for some radio collars.
They'll come in the next couple of weeks.

265
00:29:37,687 --> 00:29:42,715
Hopefully, one day he just won't come back,
spend the night out, make a kill.

266
00:29:42,887 --> 00:29:45,799
- Your achievement is not to see him again?
- Yeah.

267
00:29:54,967 --> 00:30:00,644
Hemingway got very excited when he caught
his first view of Mount Kilimanjaro.

268
00:30:00,807 --> 00:30:06,006
It's not surprising. It's the biggest
single, free-standing mountain in the world.

269
00:30:06,167 --> 00:30:10,718
20,000 feet high, shaped like that,
and it's somewhere in the cloud.

270
00:30:10,887 --> 00:30:14,004
He got excited because you hardly ever see it.

271
00:30:14,167 --> 00:30:18,046
I hope we'll have
the Hemingway experience eventually.

272
00:30:18,207 --> 00:30:22,405
It's there beyond the trees.
Beautiful, beautiful mountain.

273
00:30:22,567 --> 00:30:25,035
Shaped like that.

274
00:30:29,807 --> 00:30:35,803
To equip myself for seeing Africa,
I've actually invested in the Hemingway jacket,

275
00:30:35,967 --> 00:30:40,961
which is produced by the company
that actually produced the jackets he used.

276
00:30:41,127 --> 00:30:43,118
They have a bit about Hemingway.

277
00:30:43,287 --> 00:30:47,997
"He didn't just taste life,
he bit off big chunks and gnawed on it."

278
00:30:48,167 --> 00:30:51,159
The jacket or life? Anyway...

279
00:30:54,727 --> 00:30:59,847
"We started with our 340 bush poplin,
then added a shell pocket.

280
00:31:00,007 --> 00:31:02,316
"Recoil pad.

281
00:31:04,927 --> 00:31:07,919
"Working epaulettes with box stitching.

282
00:31:10,287 --> 00:31:13,359
"Two expandable chest pockets.

283
00:31:13,527 --> 00:31:17,440
"Two huge bellowed cargo pockets for shells.

284
00:31:17,607 --> 00:31:20,644
"And a sleeve pocket for shooting glasses.

285
00:31:22,607 --> 00:31:27,158
"The back has a generous inverted pleat
for extra movement

286
00:31:27,327 --> 00:31:31,320
"and the sleeves roll up
and secure for warmer weather.

287
00:31:34,287 --> 00:31:36,881
"The elastic bands above each cargo pocket

288
00:31:37,047 --> 00:31:41,916
"keep the jacket from interfering
with your mount and swing.

289
00:31:42,087 --> 00:31:45,557
"Roll it up and take it anywhere. Papa did."

290
00:31:51,527 --> 00:31:56,521
Hemingway may have been a walking
munitions dump, but at least he did walk.

291
00:31:56,687 --> 00:32:02,796
60 years on, it's unusual for anyone on safari
to be allowed out of their vehicles.

292
00:32:02,967 --> 00:32:05,800
Is it quite safe to walk out in the open?

293
00:32:05,967 --> 00:32:08,879
I've been afforded a rare chance to roam,

294
00:32:09,047 --> 00:32:14,963
provided I stay close to my expert guides,
Ali and Jackson - a local Masai.

295
00:32:15,127 --> 00:32:19,643
(JACKSON) Some of them don't know
how to run away from any wild animals.

296
00:32:20,727 --> 00:32:23,560
How close is it safe to get to these elephants?

297
00:32:23,727 --> 00:32:27,640
Normally you're supposed to walk
about 30 metres apart.

298
00:32:27,807 --> 00:32:31,004
This group of elephants is a very peaceful group

299
00:32:31,167 --> 00:32:36,287
because we are walking very close to them
and they don't run towards us.

300
00:32:36,447 --> 00:32:39,564
- (PALIN) Can they smell?
- Yeah, they smell.

301
00:32:39,727 --> 00:32:45,836
(JACKSON) The wind is blowing towards them.
(PALIN) Yes. One's had a look at us now.

302
00:32:46,007 --> 00:32:49,397
- Is that a female or the male?
- That's a female.

303
00:32:49,567 --> 00:32:53,799
(PALIN) So they've smelt that we're here,
they don't like our smell...

304
00:32:53,967 --> 00:32:58,165
(JACKSON) See how they have their trunks up?
That's how they smell.

305
00:32:59,167 --> 00:33:04,639
Not all animals are potentially threatening.
I've a soft spot for wildebeest.

306
00:33:10,647 --> 00:33:13,241
What's so special about this hill?

307
00:33:13,407 --> 00:33:17,639
(ALl) It's the highest point in the park.
It's an observation hill.

308
00:33:17,807 --> 00:33:22,597
(JACKSON) When you climb up this hill,
you make a lot of exercise.

309
00:33:22,767 --> 00:33:29,764
Hemingway was very keen to get
out of the cars and walk and keep fit.

310
00:33:29,927 --> 00:33:36,196
He said he had to be like the animals and be
able to outwit them by your own physical skill.

311
00:33:37,207 --> 00:33:41,120
- Beautiful view. Look at the elephants.
- Elephant over there.

312
00:33:43,447 --> 00:33:45,438
Yeah. I can see them.

313
00:33:53,527 --> 00:34:00,603
Everything looks very safe
in this park at the moment - the animals.

314
00:34:00,767 --> 00:34:04,965
What I remember from reading
"The Green Hills of Africa"

315
00:34:05,127 --> 00:34:07,960
and these photos here, when he came here,

316
00:34:08,127 --> 00:34:11,881
the animals weren't safe
because of the white hunters.

317
00:34:12,047 --> 00:34:16,757
There's Hemingway
with his collection of trophies.

318
00:34:16,927 --> 00:34:21,205
- What year was this?
- He was quite young. Probably 19...

319
00:34:21,367 --> 00:34:27,203
- 1980s?
- No. 1930s. About 1933.

320
00:34:27,367 --> 00:34:32,316
There he is with a fine beast
he's just killed. What are those?

321
00:34:32,487 --> 00:34:34,921
- Those are oryx.
- Oryx. Yeah.

322
00:34:35,087 --> 00:34:37,601
Do people come to hunt like this now?

323
00:34:37,767 --> 00:34:41,237
Is there any licensed hunting of the animals?

324
00:34:41,407 --> 00:34:44,126
In the national parks, it's not allowed,

325
00:34:44,287 --> 00:34:47,962
but some people will do it in the game ranches.

326
00:34:48,127 --> 00:34:52,962
There are some people who own
private ranches. They still allow it.

327
00:34:53,127 --> 00:34:56,597
I see. You pay your money, you kill the animals.

328
00:34:56,767 --> 00:34:59,201
But he wouldn't be able to do this now,

329
00:34:59,367 --> 00:35:04,236
just walk across the plains with a gun
and shoot anything that's going.

330
00:35:04,407 --> 00:35:09,276
And here's Ernest having disposed
of a lion. Looking suitably dead.

331
00:35:10,287 --> 00:35:13,438
Hunting continued long after Hemingway left,

332
00:35:13,607 --> 00:35:16,724
and the plains are much emptier now
than in his day.

333
00:35:16,887 --> 00:35:21,358
So I've been lulled
into a dangerously false sense of security,

334
00:35:21,527 --> 00:35:25,406
when Ali spots a stroppy-looking herd of buffalo.

335
00:35:25,567 --> 00:35:31,722
(ALl) Buffalo have taken a lot of lives
because they don't give you a warning.

336
00:35:31,887 --> 00:35:37,166
Once they see you coming towards them,
they just look at you.

337
00:35:37,327 --> 00:35:40,444
You can see them looking at us.
They are not happy.

338
00:35:40,607 --> 00:35:44,486
What will they do?
There's one on the end - will he charge us?

339
00:35:44,647 --> 00:35:47,480
He's, er... Yeah.

340
00:35:47,647 --> 00:35:54,086
He's running away. When they run
in a big herd like that, they're afraid of people.

341
00:35:54,247 --> 00:35:59,685
But if it's only one - only one bull or two bulls...

342
00:35:59,847 --> 00:36:03,760
Those are very dangerous
when they come straight to you.

343
00:36:03,927 --> 00:36:07,636
- This one seems to be coming.
- This one is not happy about us.

344
00:36:07,807 --> 00:36:12,483
That's why he keeps on standing behind,
ready to fight.

345
00:36:12,647 --> 00:36:15,957
- He's very, very annoyed.
- He's a bull.

346
00:36:16,127 --> 00:36:23,283
- He's now trying to get more nervous.
- He's certainly making me nervous!

347
00:36:33,887 --> 00:36:37,357
When Hemingway
came back to Africa in the 1950s,

348
00:36:37,527 --> 00:36:40,121
he became honorary game warden

349
00:36:40,287 --> 00:36:44,166
in an area disputed between
the Masai and the Wakamba tribes.

350
00:36:44,327 --> 00:36:49,481
Richard Bonham is now an honorary
game warden in the same area.

351
00:36:49,647 --> 00:36:52,639
He's been told about a group of cattle rustlers

352
00:36:52,807 --> 00:36:57,483
and we're setting out to track them down
with armed rangers.

353
00:36:57,647 --> 00:37:00,764
- Watch out.
- Look out. Head down.

354
00:37:05,807 --> 00:37:10,278
A long way from anywhere,
the truck suddenly pulls to a halt.

355
00:37:15,727 --> 00:37:19,879
- What have they seen?
- We've got a report of a snare line here.

356
00:37:20,047 --> 00:37:23,323
We're gonna go down and see if it's still there.

357
00:37:29,287 --> 00:37:33,678
See how these trails are coming up
through these hills?

358
00:37:33,847 --> 00:37:37,760
(PALIN) Yes. This is where the animal
would normally come anyway?

359
00:37:37,927 --> 00:37:40,725
(BONHAM) You're funnelled into this.

360
00:37:45,007 --> 00:37:49,046
- He's got something there.
- What's he found?

361
00:37:49,207 --> 00:37:51,767
There's a snare line up there.

362
00:37:51,927 --> 00:37:56,682
- Do the rangers normally carry rifles?
- Out on patrol, all the time.

363
00:37:56,847 --> 00:38:02,285
The game would be coming up or going down
and they're blocked by this fence.

364
00:38:02,447 --> 00:38:04,881
The game moving pretty swiftly?

365
00:38:05,047 --> 00:38:09,996
Sometimes, but they don't
have to be moving fast to get caught.

366
00:38:10,167 --> 00:38:15,082
- What happens?
- It would just come through like this.

367
00:38:15,247 --> 00:38:18,319
- Then it would get caught.
- Oh, God. Yeah.

368
00:38:18,487 --> 00:38:21,923
- Then it would just pull.
- And it tightens up.

369
00:38:22,087 --> 00:38:27,366
That's not a particularly good example.
The more it struggles, the tighter it becomes.

370
00:38:27,527 --> 00:38:31,566
- The poachers finish them off?
- That's the horrible thing.

371
00:38:31,727 --> 00:38:36,517
- Sometimes they leave it for 24 hours.
- So it's a long?

372
00:38:36,687 --> 00:38:40,885
If it's round the neck, it's quite quick,
but if it's the leg...

373
00:38:41,047 --> 00:38:46,724
- Are the poachers around now?
- I wouldn't be surprised.

374
00:38:46,887 --> 00:38:53,360
Are they armed? Your rangers, as I say,
have rifles. What do the poachers?

375
00:38:53,527 --> 00:38:58,555
They're not armed with firearms,
but they've got bows and poisoned arrows.

376
00:38:58,727 --> 00:39:03,039
And one of their poisoned arrows,
would that be fatal?

377
00:39:03,207 --> 00:39:05,960
Curtains. Minutes, literally.

378
00:39:06,127 --> 00:39:09,278
Have you ever had
a close encounter with a poacher?

379
00:39:09,447 --> 00:39:12,883
I haven't, but these guys
have had arrows shot at them.

380
00:39:13,047 --> 00:39:15,356
Luckily no hits.

381
00:39:16,407 --> 00:39:22,198
OK. Shall we get this thing knocked down?
They get a bonus for every snare they get.

382
00:39:43,047 --> 00:39:47,040
A group of Masai coming down
from the hills has information.

383
00:39:47,207 --> 00:39:51,803
Masai cattle have been taken -
probably by Wakamba raiders.

384
00:39:51,967 --> 00:39:54,481
- Have they seen anyone?
- Yeah. Poachers.

385
00:39:54,647 --> 00:40:00,165
Between 12 and one, they crossed
this valley and went over the hills.

386
00:40:00,327 --> 00:40:03,524
- So we just missed them.
- Right.

387
00:40:08,247 --> 00:40:12,684
- They weren't carrying any meat.
- No. Bows and arrows?

388
00:40:12,847 --> 00:40:17,204
No. They were carrying miraa -
a natural stimulant that grows here,

389
00:40:17,367 --> 00:40:19,358
which they also sell.

390
00:40:19,527 --> 00:40:24,601
- Are you going to follow these guys?
- Yeah. We'll go and see what's going on.

391
00:40:24,767 --> 00:40:27,759
(SPEAKS MASAl)

392
00:40:37,407 --> 00:40:39,398
How does the poison work?

393
00:40:39,567 --> 00:40:41,842
Some poisons are a blood coagulant

394
00:40:42,007 --> 00:40:45,682
and then you've got Adenium
which is a heart attack.

395
00:40:45,847 --> 00:40:48,566
Now we've got to go quietly

396
00:40:48,727 --> 00:40:53,721
because there's a cave over this hill
and there might be people in there.

397
00:40:53,887 --> 00:40:55,206
OK.

398
00:41:03,127 --> 00:41:07,359
- There are some drying racks and a fire.
- That's their fire?

399
00:41:10,207 --> 00:41:14,405
Not waiting for us, are they,
with a warm cup of tea?

400
00:41:14,567 --> 00:41:16,558
If only.

401
00:41:18,647 --> 00:41:21,241
0ut in the open I felt reasonably safe.

402
00:41:21,407 --> 00:41:25,446
Scrambling down into this dark hole,
much less so.

403
00:41:25,607 --> 00:41:27,916
I feel my voice getting higher.

404
00:41:28,087 --> 00:41:32,638
- This their fire?
- Yes. It's reasonably fresh.

405
00:41:32,807 --> 00:41:36,197
How many of them would be here, do you reckon?

406
00:41:36,367 --> 00:41:39,962
Normally they're in gangs of five to ten.

407
00:41:40,127 --> 00:41:45,759
They need people to carry the meat.
See these racks? That's where they dry the meat.

408
00:41:45,927 --> 00:41:51,126
- And bones of... What's that?
- Probably a hartebeest.

409
00:41:51,287 --> 00:41:56,042
- What does this mean? Are they near?
- They're a long way ahead of us.

410
00:41:56,207 --> 00:41:58,596
Really? What a relief.

411
00:42:06,007 --> 00:42:08,601
I'm not surprised cattle go missing.

412
00:42:08,767 --> 00:42:13,238
Even large herds
are often only guarded by young boys.

413
00:42:22,247 --> 00:42:28,516
Meanwhile, their teenage brothers prepare
to go through painful rites of passage.

414
00:42:31,527 --> 00:42:36,965
In this village - or "boma" as the Masai
call it - a special festival is being held

415
00:42:37,127 --> 00:42:42,918
to celebrate a circumcision which has
just been carried out on a 13-year-old boy.

416
00:42:48,807 --> 00:42:52,641
Was he circumcised
by someone within the village?

417
00:42:52,807 --> 00:42:56,482
- Somebody come from outside.
- Yeah. Was it painful?

418
00:42:56,647 --> 00:43:00,560
Yes. Extremely painful
because they put a knife straight on his body.

419
00:43:00,727 --> 00:43:03,878
Are you supposed to bear this
without making any noise?

420
00:43:04,047 --> 00:43:06,641
You're not supposed to move.

421
00:43:06,807 --> 00:43:11,198
You're not supposed to wipe your eyes.
You just stay still.

422
00:43:11,367 --> 00:43:13,483
- Absolutely still.
- Yeah.

423
00:43:13,647 --> 00:43:16,002
How long is he going to be in there?

424
00:43:16,167 --> 00:43:20,001
He's going to be in pain about two weeks,

425
00:43:20,167 --> 00:43:24,399
but within five days
he'll start walking around the village.

426
00:43:26,047 --> 00:43:30,643
Through his pain, the boy is nursed
by his mother and grandmother,

427
00:43:30,807 --> 00:43:35,358
who feed him a special mixture
of milk and cow's blood.

428
00:43:41,007 --> 00:43:46,525
Then he will be a warrior, like his friends
who have already gone through the ceremony.

429
00:43:46,687 --> 00:43:49,599
I asked them what being a warrior involves.

430
00:43:49,767 --> 00:43:55,876
If somebody come in our land
without any permission or any reason,

431
00:43:56,047 --> 00:43:59,164
these people are about to... kill.

432
00:43:59,327 --> 00:44:01,921
- Kill? Really?
- To kill.

433
00:44:02,087 --> 00:44:04,965
- We asked permission. Don't kill us.
- Yeah.

434
00:44:05,127 --> 00:44:08,597
Do you also go out and hunt animals
with your spears?

435
00:44:08,767 --> 00:44:13,477
Yeah. If a lion come in this boma
to catch us, we are subject to kill them.

436
00:44:13,647 --> 00:44:16,241
What is this made of, this paint?

437
00:44:16,407 --> 00:44:22,198
This can be used
only to show the beautifulness

438
00:44:22,367 --> 00:44:24,927
on the ceremony like this now.

439
00:44:25,087 --> 00:44:29,877
It's to make you look beautiful?
Who is the most beautiful here?

440
00:44:30,047 --> 00:44:34,996
- We are all beautiful, except you.
- That's not fair!

441
00:44:35,167 --> 00:44:37,635
(CHANTING)

442
00:45:00,607 --> 00:45:07,524
That was a great party, and their settlement
looks out over Kilimanjaro, so you have a...

443
00:45:08,647 --> 00:45:14,563
...a wonderful view of the clouds
that almost permanently shroud Kilimanjaro.

444
00:45:21,527 --> 00:45:25,361
The great thing about Africa
is that you can't hurry anything,

445
00:45:25,527 --> 00:45:30,521
so I might as well go back to the lodge
and settle down with a good book.

446
00:45:34,807 --> 00:45:38,197
"Now, being in Africa,
I was hungry for more of it.

447
00:45:38,367 --> 00:45:44,158
"The changes of the seasons, the rains
with no need to travel, the discomforts,

448
00:45:44,327 --> 00:45:47,717
"the names of the trees,
the animals and the birds.

449
00:45:47,887 --> 00:45:51,357
"To know the language
and have time to be in it."

450
00:45:53,167 --> 00:45:56,045
It's the discomforts I find the worst.

451
00:45:56,207 --> 00:45:58,880
0h, well. Grin and bear it.

452
00:46:02,127 --> 00:46:07,838
Welcome to my facilities. As you can see,
the sense of place is everywhere.

453
00:46:08,007 --> 00:46:11,636
The elephant's-trunk toilet-roll holder.

454
00:46:11,807 --> 00:46:14,275
The Masai lavatory brush.

455
00:46:17,167 --> 00:46:19,635
The zebra toilet mat.

456
00:46:19,807 --> 00:46:23,356
And the hand-carved turtle toilet seat.

457
00:46:25,167 --> 00:46:29,638
All adds up to the total
"Out of Africa" lavatory experience.

458
00:46:42,047 --> 00:46:45,562
Ah, peace, perfect peace.

459
00:46:50,127 --> 00:46:52,595
Oi! You! Clear off!

460
00:46:55,647 --> 00:47:00,277
Then, at first light next morning,
the unexpected suddenly happened.

461
00:47:00,447 --> 00:47:04,838
That is quite a rare sight.
That's the summit of Kilimanjaro.

462
00:47:05,007 --> 00:47:08,920
You can see the snow
where the carcass of a leopard was found,

463
00:47:09,087 --> 00:47:13,000
which gave Hemingway the idea
for "The Snows of Kilimanjaro".

464
00:47:13,167 --> 00:47:16,762
So feast on that.
The real Kilimanjaro, not a prop.

465
00:47:16,927 --> 00:47:19,521
I'll leave you with it for a moment.

466
00:47:36,007 --> 00:47:40,046
"The Snows of Kilimanjaro"
ends with the dream of a dying man

467
00:47:40,207 --> 00:47:43,085
flying out of a storm towards the mountain.

468
00:47:43,247 --> 00:47:47,160
"There ahead, all he could see,
as wide as all the world,

469
00:47:47,327 --> 00:47:50,046
"great, high and white in the sun,

470
00:47:50,207 --> 00:47:53,517
"was the square top of Kilimanjaro.

471
00:47:53,687 --> 00:47:57,680
"And then he knew
that there was where he was going."

