David Attenborough brings Planet Earth II to a spectacular end.
Get home safely. Look out for the man-eating leopards.
I imagine this is how residents of Mumbai bid farewell each evening
During the sixth and final episode of Planet Earth II
the big cats venture into the densely populated Indian city under cover of darkness to hun
humans occasionally (averaging eight attacks per year) but usually domesticated pigs.
Using night vision and thermal imaging, cameras caught leopards prowling and stalking their prey
using the noise of the city to conceal their approach
Dazzling white in negative, they looked both beautiful and frightening
especially when a large male came within one pounce of a terrified cameraman
I found myself holding my breath with him, then expelling it, with a whoosh of relief, once the leopard padded off.
Wild animals in cities always look stunning  and thus
there were a succession of striking images here: peregrine falcons dive-bombing among Manhattan’s skyscrapers
hyenas crunching bones in the meat markets of Harar; a million starlings performing spectacular murmurations over Rome.
There were the usual displays of brutality. Catfish preyed on bathing pigeons resembling a miniature remake of Jaws
while the travails of turtle hatchlings disoriented by beach lights was a Pixar tear-jerker in the making.
Monkeys stole the show, though, with langurs leaping across the rooftops of Jodhpur like a parkour chase in a Jason Bourne film.
