This 2005 sequel to "Penguin Baywatch" (which I haven't seen) initially appears to be yet another wildlife documentary featuring a variety of penguin species and the challenges and hardships they face during the short breeding season. The film also features the primary predators that penguins face when leaving the safety of land to seek food out in the ocean, specifically fur seals and leopard seals. What sets this documentary apart from others I've watched is the extensive and graphic footage of penguin predation by the seals. While educational and undoubtedly difficult to film in the wild, it seems gratuitous to linger on the seal thrashing the penguin back and forth to break its neck, shredding it to consume it, then leaving its stripped carcass to sink into the ocean after the scavenging birds have picked it clean. Sure, I get it that nature is brutal and that seals are constantly killing penguins in order to survive, but it really felt like a slasher movie sneaking into our naive selection of this as another penguin nature movie.