jaws, superman, star wars, and indiana jones are arguably the four most famous movie scores, they exist outside of movies, you can hear them anywhere in all sorts of places. and williams did all 4. that is unbelievable.
21:19 one of my favorite details in this movie on why the walk in freezer was open with the wet floor. Is because Hammond left it open when he took out all the ice cream during the power outage and didn’t bother to close the door.
You know, I’ve seen this movie a million times, including the midnight showing in my hometown in 1993 and never once did I question why the freezer was open. Not even once! So many other things I analyzed and picked apart. But never that! Thank you!
Fun fact: Originally this movie was going to have the dinosaurs in stop-motion. Phil Tippett, who just got off finishing RoboCop, had created footage of stop-motion dinosaurs, which he had experience doing from 1985. While Spielberg did like the test footage, because CGI was starting to become the norm, the studio chose that angle instead. They told Tippett, “You’re out of a job.”, but Tippett replied, “Don’t you mean extinct?”, a line which was added in the movie. However, it wasn’t all bad news as Spielberg kept Tippett on the VFX team, as their “dinosaur supervisor”, even winning an Oscar for his help.
Phil Tippett was also the person responsible for the stop motion effects in Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. He also completed a movie that was a passion project for him called Mad God.
@@TheJabbate1 , he also did the effects for Dragonslayer, Willow, RoboCop, Dragonheart, and Starship Troopers. And Mad God was a project that was in production hell for over 20 years.
Yeah, I don't think young people today realize how HUGE this film was at the time. I mean look at every single dinosaur film before this, it's stop-motion, puppets..and reptiles wearing prosthetics. Haha. Nothing looks real. Dinosaurs basically looked the same on screen from 1933 with King Kong all the way up until this film..and then BOOM dinosaurs are on the big screen and look REAL. Just look at T-Rex's pupil dilate! I mean these dinosaurs look as real or even more real than the dinosaurs in films even today. It's astonishing. And computers junk back then. Seeing this as a kid, I believe was a bigger deal than seeing Star Wars as a kid. Nothing beats dinosaurs. Spielberg was the perfect guy for the job because Jaws prepared him for this...along with his right hand magic man John Williams. He somehow made this and Schindler's List at the same time and I can see why it nearly killed him. It's all remarkable. I'd love to see the stop-motion dino clip.
@@wheelmanstan , here a test clip from Jurrasic Park: (ruclips.net/video/E8TdZqQ3KAE/видео.html). And here's one from Phil Tippett's Dinosaur!: (ruclips.net/video/hlaXIRTjNfo/видео.html)
That scene of the kids holding up the plexiglass has a funny story behind it. A rumor formed that the glass wasn’t supposed to break and that the kid’s fear was genuine, but that isn’t the case. The scene was even storyboarded. The origin of the rumor comes from the fact that the plexiglass wasn’t supposed to break off a piece the way it did. It was really raining between scenes, and Rexy’s latex skin was absorbing the water, messing with the weight-based fine tuning of the hydraulics, so her face hit the plexiglass a bit harder than expected, breaking the plexiglass instead of just knocking it in. You can notice that the broken piece goes missing between shots, immediately after Rexy breaks through. It would have made for a more impactful scene, but one of Rexy’s teeth broke off and fell in Joseph (Tim) Mozello’s lap and he couldn’t stop from laughing, so they had to re-shoot the scene with the broken plexiglass.
Worked the Ford booth back when this movie came out. They brought one of the explorers from the movie to the booth. We had to prevent people from touching it but had setup a spot so people could get pictures with it.
@@scottb3034 Yes, The explorers went from event to event in semi trailers. Even had custom popup tents that they parked them under. At first people could sit it them and get pictures taken in them. But unfortunately as people do things were getting broken and such. One person even kicked the lower driving lights breaking them once. So by the time it reached my location they put ropes around so it was look, don't touch then.
@@Jason-hm1sc Okay, I was going to say I remember being able to pose right up next to them/get in the back seat/bench in the Explorer but I wasn't sure if that was Mandela Effect, your remarks helped reinforce that. It really is unfortunate that people do have to ruin a good thing just because they can. Speaking of which I am disheartened with the treatment the series vehicles received on the Universal backlot. I know the Jeeps and some harvester vehicles in TLW were not maintained at all these last 30 years and there is a well-known video on the restoration of TLW trailers in private hands after poor maintenance. I guess they aren't obligated to but Universal could have easily kept them in good physical shape and failed their duty.
Personally I’m just really happy that you appreciate this film that was released 30 years ago! Thank you for your appreciation of this film. Phenomenal reaction of an absolute classic! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I got goats about a year ago and as someone who has had dogs all their life they are remarkably similar in a lot of ways but they are also very easy to care for. Fresh water, some alfalfa, and some things to climb on to keep them busy and they do their own thing and whenever you want to spend time with them they are more than happy for chin or butt scratches. We built a tree house and they have their own jumping platform steps to jump up and they love it. Goats are overall amazing and pretty easy-going animals. My goats even play with our dogs when they are in the mood
Just curious, do they need alot of space? Like, the way a dog needs some long walks now and then to keep happy n healthy, do goats need anything similar? Or are they really that chill? :P
5:45: Brachiosaurus- Arm Lizard 6:02: Parasaurolophus-Near Crested Lizard 7:23: Velociraptor-Swift Thief 10:11: Triceratops -3-Horned Face 11:25: No, Ms. Angelina, Nedry couldn't wait because his getaway vessel was gonna leave soon, so he acted on the 18 minutes he planned for. 13:07: Tyrannosaurus Rex- Tyrant Lizard King ( since this is a girl, we should call it a Tyrannosaurus Regina) 14:25: Dilophosaurus- Dual Crested Lizard One thing I like about dinosaurs are the significance of their names.
There was a proposal that there were more species in the Tyrannosaur family during the time or T. rex than just Tyrannosaurus Rex, and they were called Tyrannosaurus Regina and Tyrannosaurus Impera ( I believe that’s what they were called ) but they were later found to be not different enough and the paper was thus discredited and there’s still just Tyrannosaurus Rex Edit: I’d also like to point out that Dilophosaurus was much different in real life than the movie, but I’m assuming you already knew that since you’re pointing out all these things
It's never really mentioned in the movie, by the reason for the Triceratops being sick isn't that it was pregnant. The scene with the triceratops, and Ellie looking through it's dropping was originally longer. In the shooting script, and the graphic novel adaptation of the movie, Ellie realizes that every few weeks the Triceratops has to swallow stones, which help with digestion. While ingesting these gastroliths the Triceratops would also swallow down some of the poisonous West Indian Lilac berries. It's meant to be an early indicator that Hammond's people don't have the kind of control over nature that they think they have. Also funny that you mentioned Miss Minutes, as it's been confirmed that a large part of the inspiration for the character came from Mr. DNA.
@@nsasupporter7557 Well, I don't know what to tell you. I mean, that's the conclusion Angelina came to. I've seen people argue about it in the comments to other RUclips reactions to Jurassic Park as well, so it does seem to be a relatively common misconception.
@@nsasupporter7557 In the movie Sattler notices a West Indian Lilac plant and asks Dr. Harding about it to which he responds "We know they're poisonous, but the animals don't eat them". The whole reason Sattler searches through the droppings is to find conclusive evidence as to whether the Triceratops had ingested the berries or not, but she specifically says she doesn't find anything conclusive.
My first human memory is literally me watching Jurassic park as a little two or three year old. I had it on VHS for years and rewatched it often as a kid, and I can now point to any time stamp and know where it is in the movie (I tested a friend with similar knowledge and we both knew that 1:24:00 is at the Brachiosaurus scene.)
This film is hands-down a benchmark in Hollywood Blockbusters and one of Steven Spielberg’s greatest films ever. It’s crazy to think that’s it’s been over 30 years since this film came out in theaters and the visuals effects from Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and the Animatronic dinosaurs by Stan Winston still hold up 3 decades later and to think when this came out it remained one of the highest grossing films until James Cameron’s Titanic took that spot 4 years later. Thank you ANGELINA for finally reacting to this iconic movie franchise and big congrats on reaching 200k subscribers 5 days ago and hopefully you react to the rest of the films in the franchise.
The kid who played Tim went on to play a marine in The Pacific a little less than 20 years later. The series itself is brutal and graphic, but his performance is masterful.
As an old Jurassic Park fan watching the clips and be like "Oh that iconic scene! Oh that iconic moment! Oh that scene!..." This movie had soo much moment to remember.
If you've never read the novel, LET ME TELL YOU. It is amazing from start to finish!!! So glad you enjoyed this classic and shout out to John Williams for a score worthy of being taught in college courses. I teach the "Welcome to Jurassic Park" sequence, so I have a big ol' soft spot for this score. :)
I read the book after I saw the movie and I really liked it. But it was interesting how all the characters were different enough from how they were portrayed in the movie except Ian Malcom felt exactly how Jeff Goldblum portrayed him. Perfect casting.
I got to experience JURASSIC PARK IN THEATERS, a couple of months ago!!!! And it was so cool to experience this movie on the big screen!!! I was born in 1998, so I didn’t get to experience it on the big screen but that have now changed!!!! I LOVE THIS FRANCHISE!!!!! It was for its 30th ANNIVERSARY!!!!
This movie is an absolute masterpiece. It's influence on pop culture, and cinema as a whole is unbelievable. The phenomenal practical effects and groundbreaking cgi, the infiitly quotable lines, and the iconic scenes and characters. One of the greatest films of all time.
After "84 years” you finally are doing a reaction to Jurassic Park @ANGELINA. Thank You and Thank You so much for finally reacting to these movies ANGELINA after 6-7 months of waiting. Hopefully, you wound up reacting to the rest of the movies including the _Jurassic World_ series.
Love this movie. The visual effects are incredible for 1993. Both practical and CGI Fun fact: The Tyrannosaurus (T-Rex) looks very real in the scene when it escapes and attacks them in the vehicles because part of the scene was filmed using a full size animatronic T-Rex. Robo-Rex very cool. 😅 The Velociraptors in Jurassic park are actually much bigger then in reality. The movie version was based on a Velociraptor relative called Deinonychus antirrhopus. Real Velociraptors were only the height of a large turkey but were approx 6 feet long, due to a long tail.
The raptor fact isn't accurate. They were always deinonychus antirrhopus, but for a brief period of time they were also called *velociraptor antirrhopus*. A particular paleontologist had reclassified a bunch of dinosaurs, and while a lot of his ideas were later discarded/disproven (including the recategorization of deinonychus, by the paleontologist in question no less), the book he published those ideas in was one of the main resources Crichton used to write Jurassic Park.
Granted, the JP raptors are slightly bigger than Deinonychus, but while the movie was being filmed, Utahraptors were discovered and were the size of the JP raptors, and there was actual talks of naming them Utahraptor Spielbergi in exchange for research funding but an exact amount couldnt be agreed upon so the deal fell through.
So basically, the "JP raptors were actually Deinonychus and real velociraptors were way smaller" trivia is one of those "no, but also kinda yes, but also no" kind of things where pieces of it are partially right but for the wrong reasons and other parts of it are just wrong.
I got to see this in Theaters this summer for the 30th anniversary in 3D, even taking some friends who had never seen it. And nothing was better than being able to see my all time favorite movie on the big screen like they did when it first released, quoting lines and watching my friends’ reactions. And now we get to see yours! Hope you end up doing the whole series!
I highly recommend the second movie. Also I recommend “The 13th Warrior” based on a book by the same author. And if you ever need a few classic series recommendations I would offer up “Person of Interest” and, “12 Monkeys” which is based on the film which is based on a short french film. It was wonderful to see your reaction and commentary for Jurassic Par, thank you Ange and Rees!
The 13th Warrior is one of my favorites. Another movie adaptation of Crichton's is "Timeline" with Gerard Butler, Paul Walker and Bill Connely. I think it also had David Thewlis
"What color is closest to dinosaurs?" I am so glad you asked. We actually managed to find some fossils so well preserved that even the melanosomes were still on the feather and skin imprints. Two species had a dark reddish brown color, microraptor had iridescent black feathers like a crow, and there was another I forget the name of that had green feathers on it's face.
I love this movie. And it's kinda awesome the despite all the things that makes no sense scientifically, making dinosaurs from dino dns is actually possible. The wooly mammoth is scheduled to be de-extinct in a few years.
@@0okamino I love the idea of cloning a dead animal, and as it grows and becomes conscious it somehow has all the memories and awareness of its dead ancestor 😆 (not to mention the 'talking' part haha)
I didn't see it in theaters during its original run, but it was given a 3D re-release in 2013. Not only is the film a classic and one of Spielberg's best, the 3D conversion was remarkable. The movie wasn't even filmed for 3D, but it looked better than some of the more recent films that were, which makes me believe that Spielberg himself oversaw the conversion process.
I remember seeing this in theaters and having read the book really wondered how this would sneak in with a PG-13 rating as there are many graphic deaths in the book, including the death of an infant child. They really toned down the violence from the source book if you can believe that as a truer adaptation would have certainly been a hard R rating. It makes one wonder how it would have been if someone like Cronenberg had directed it (known for graphic body horror) instead of the more family friendly version we got from Spielberg. One element really left out from the book was the clear indications that there were serious problems with the park rather than the Nedry plot being the main cause of the parks breakdown as it is in the movie.
There _are_ clear problems with the park in the film too, a power cut should really not result in a disaster like that. They just aren't really telegraphed _before_ things go wrong, except for possibly seeing all the electric fences and asking oneself "so, are those strong enough to contain the dinosaurs if the power goes out?"
I saw this in the theater when i was 14. You really cant overstate how revolutionary the effects in this film were, both cgi and practical. Nobody had seen anything like this .
22:26 it's hysterical that you said she rolled a nat 20 here, because they used this exact shot in the D&D movie, during the Themberchaud sequence, definitely as a homage because it's such an iconic shot. I've yet to see anyone notice that in a reaction though lol
1993 was definitely Steven Spielberg’s year. ‘Jurassic Park’ & ‘Schindler’s List’; Two masterpieces in just the one year. Not many directors can do that. My favorite filmmaker of all time❤️
Schindler's List is one of the worst films he's ever made and a philosophical failure as brilliantly pointed out by Kubrick. Jurassic Park is a much better film.
@@FuzzyDlop As much as I love, at least, a few of Stanley Kubrick’s films, I can get more into ‘Schindler’s List’ than I ever could for, at least, half of anything that Kubrick had ever directed. Not bashing Kubrick, by the way. He was a fantastic director. Indeed, one of the all-time greats. I just know that if I have a personal favorite, I pick Steven Spielberg any day. To me, his films had shown me just what magic in the movies looks like. For me, it doesn’t matter what film I see of his, there’s just always some kind of magic to it. At times, one can see it, just as how, at times, one can feel it. It can be in the cinematography, the score, the acting, the dialogue, just about anything. Just my opinion, of course
Surely you'll love this timeless Masterpiece of a film. Jurassic Park was my favorite film of all time. Hope to get to check out the other JP films too 😃🦕🦖
I was 9 years old when I saw this movie and loved every minute of it......that was little over 30 years ago (man I feel old :P) and since then I've seen every single Jurassic Park/World movie day one in the theater (with my sister, mostly.... the only exception being the most recent one). Seeing people who have never seen this movie before is imo just awesome and I definitely recommend you check out the other movies in the series. Also there are only 2 Jurassic Park books, which were written years before their respective movies (Jurassic Park in 1990/the movie in 1993 & Lost World: Jurassic Park in 1995/ the movie 1997) and are very very different from the movies (ie much darker, some characters have different fates than they do in the movies, and there's a lot of science jargon in the books because author Michael Crichton loved injecting real science & medicine into his novels ), so if that sounds interesting I'd also definitely recommend reading the books.
This and its immediate sequel The Lost World were adapted from the Michael Crichton novels of the same name. Steven Spielberg directed Schindler's List while this was being finished
While a great fan of this film (who went to see it in the cinema a ridiculous number of times), I did read the book first and distinctly remember being rather disappointed the first time I saw the film. The book was darker and more frightening. Tonally it was very different but the film grew on me.
The novels are really exceptional. The detail paid to both the real science and the story elements is amazing. They both hold up. Actually, the discussions of chaos are some of the best I've seen anywhere.
I've had goats since I was a kid. I find them very easy to keep. I only have to feed them grass hay when there isn't enough bramble for them to eat in the yard. Goats are very social and should be kept with at least one other goat. Other than that, they need fresh water and a shelter with at least 3 sides. Personally, I have a barn I put mine in at night to keep them safe from predators (coyotes, mostly, but also big cats and bears), and I have a livestock guardian dog who lives with my goats, chickens, and ducks 24/7. My fences are only 4 feet and my goats have never been interested in escaping, but if goats get bored or are tempted, they can be escape artists. Logs or rocks for climbing help with the boredom. They're very smart and can learn tricks and commands, carry packs when camping, and pull wagons.They can also be used for fiber, meat, and milk. I mostly have Nigerian Dwarfs (a small dairy breed known for rich milk), but we had Oberhaslis (a medium/large Swiss dairy breed) when I was a child. There are several breeds available in the US with different purposes and personalities.
I was 18 when this came out in 1993, and I saw it in the theater. It was a big deal for many reasons. In addition to the more obvious reasons, it was one of the first films to have digital sound (DTS). That was marketed heavily. I saw it again in the theater about 10 years ago when it was re-released. (Probably for the 20th anniversary?) It still looked great!
I was 6 when it came out and we all saw it as a family… one of the best movie experiences I’ve ever had. I had the whole set of action figures and the whole base for the action figures
It doesn't matter how many times I've seen Jurassic Park, that scene in the maintenance bunker when the Raptor shows up behind Ellie will always get me with the jumpscare. The dinosaur sounds in this movie were made by combining sounds made by living animals and everyday objects. The Tyrannosaurus rex was a mix of elephant calf vocalizations (roar, snarls and growls) and a dog playing with a rope toy (shaking the Gallimimus to death). The Dilophosaurus was a mix of hawk, swan, howler monkey and rattlesnake. The adult Raptors were a mix of a walrus chest roar and dolphin mating scream, while the hatchling was a mix of owlet and fox kit sounds. The Brachiosaurus vocalizations were slowed down donkey calls, while the sneeze was a mix of a fire hydrant and a whale breathing through its blowhole. The Gallimimus's chief sound effect was made using the recorded calls of a female horse in heat.
Great reaction, Ange! ❤ I really appreciate that you comment on everything about the film: plot, dialogue, music, f/x. And you have do much fun doing it. You are a joy to watch. Please continue with the rest of the JP and JW movies! 😃👍
The Raptors and T-Rex in the novel are much, much more horrifying and scary. It's not conveyed well in the movie, but in the book Malcom explains that basically the only reason they all survived the Rex attack on the cars was because it literally was just playing with them, like a colossal cat. In the book the Rex then pursues Grant and the kids relentlessly through the park until it gets hit with tranquilizer darts and falls asleep. In the film, it shows up at the visitor center because after it grabbed a bite to eat it resumed following the road that Ellie and the others used to escape from it earlier, leading it right to the visitor center.
@@Galiant2010 One of the most interesting paleontological discoveries concerning the Rex is a fondness for plushies, coffee mugs, and t-shirts (though some prefer hoodies).
Seeing this in theaters, was a STRESSful experience. One thing I noticed when it got to the end and we saw the birds was that was the first time all movie that we'd seen a modern animal. It was stepping back into the modern world. There was a degree of relief in it. It would be years later when I would consider that since birds are direct descendants of Dinosaurs with the exception of the mosquito there are no non-dinosaur animals in this film.
I was lucky enough to see this opening weekend when I was 11 years old. I can still remember being in the cinema lobby and the place was packed from wall to wall. My local cinema has 20 screens, and they showed only JP on a staggered schedule that entire weekend and it was still sold out but somehow my dad got hold of 4 tickets for me, my sister, and our two best friends and we went as a foursome. Perfect time, perfect age, perfect effects, perfect cast, perfect movie. Most magical weekend I've ever had at the cinema.
Dinosaur that computer animated movie from the year 2000? Uh… no? How in the world is that considered the best dinosaur movie ever made?? That is a completely forgotten movie… Land Before Time is a better dinosaur movie than that and it holds up way better 😳
The live action dinosaurs were designed and created by Stan Winston Studios. Th visual effects were done by Industrial Light and Magic. The sound effects were done by Skywalker Sound.
13:19 so fun fact, this scene in which the T-Rex crashes through the skylight was not at all scripted in the movie. It was a result of a malfunction for the T-Rex animatronic. So the kid’s reactions are genuine. I wanted to point that out :)
I saw this movie when if first released in the Cinema when I was just 5 years old. 30 years later and it's still my favorite movie of all time. A pure masterpiece.
This movie was so epic I saw it 6 times in theaters as a kid, with different people every time. It was a brilliant use of CGI and animatronics which is a lost art. Literally feeling the steps of the T-Rex as the water ripples is a cinematic experience you can never forget.
Hammond in this movie always breaks my heart. You can clearly see in the film that he made dinosaurs not to threaten mankind, or make a quick buck from them, but he wanted to bring wonder to the world. He wanted to make something his family could be proud to call themselves his family. To see it all turn into a nightmare in front of his eyes…hurts my heart.
Right, he even said it himself… hiring Nedry was a mistake. Nedry ruined him just because he was unhappy with his salary he was getting. But in the novel, Hammond was an asshole who got what was coming to him
I drove through a lightning storm in Texas some years back. And the thrill of the lightning striking a couple hundred yards was so exciting. I Love Storms
This movie even inspired the naming of the Toronto Raptors basketball team. To this day I am still a Raptors fan, and it all started because of this movie haha.
10:40 WHOA, WHOA, HOLD ON! Jurassic Park has been my overall favorite movie since I was a 12-year old boy, I've watched the movie countless times, plus a fair bunch of over-analysing video essays. It has NEVER occurred to me, nor have I ever heard anyone else suggest, that the triceratops' sickness could mean pregnancy. And to be honest, I still don't think that's what the writers were trying to imply. But if they were, that would be one AMAZING bit of foreshadowing!
@@thealexanderllanos According to all of the books, its because the triceratops is eating gastric stones from the ground, and then consuming fallen poisonous berries on the ground as it does so. That is why it happens every 6 weeks.
@@SImrobert2001 i get it, i understand, forgot the every six weeks comment. cinematically though, a pregnancy works better as foreshadowing. i don't recall the berries ever paying off. closes i recall is ellie's poisonous plant comment during lunch.
@@SImrobert2001 I know it wasn't most likely intended like that, and "pregnancy" probably wouldn't even work like that for oviparous lizards. But wouldn't it be nice if it was?
Hi, archaeologists study human cultural remains (structures, middens, campsites, etc.). Paleontologists dig up bones, dino and proto human (if that is still the term, it has been a while).
My in-laws have 3 goats. They. Are. Absolute. Escape. Artists. I swear it. They escape at least 6 times a week. Everything Harry Houdini knew about escaping, I'm sure he learned from goats. They're curious, love climbing, and are very much food motivated.
Watched this movie in theaters when I was 8, I had to beg my parents because they thought it'd be too scary. Fun fact: Grant fidgeting with his seatbelt (both female heads) on the helicopter was foreshadowing what was going to happen with the "dinosaurs" on the island, aka "life finds a way".
YES!!!! MY #1 FAVORITE MOVIE OF ALL TIME! Before Steven Spielberg was picked to direct the film, James Cameron, Richard Donner, Tim Burton, and Joe Dante were considered. Michael Crichton, a close friend of Spielberg's, sold him the rights to the novel. Cameron was upset that Spielberg bought the rights but said in an interview to celebrate the films 25th Anniversary he knew he wasn't right for the job
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Harrison Ford, William Hurt, Robin Williams, Kurt Russell, Sam Sheppard, Alec Baldwin, Michael Douglas, Dennis Quaid, Kevin Costner, Mel Gibson, Dylan McDermott, Tom Sizemore, Jeff Bridges, Nick Nolte, Tom Hanks, and Richard Dreyfuss were considered for Alan Grant. Christina Applegate, Juliette Binoche, Sandra Bullock, Bridget Fonda, Melanie Griffith, Nicole Kidman, Amanda Plummer, Kyra Sedgwick, Uma Thurman, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Wright Penn, Helen Hunt, Laura Linney, Gwyneth Paltrow(Considered for Lex), Julianne Moore, Teri Hatcher, Elizabeth Hurley, Sherilyn Fenn, Heather Graham, Lisa Rinna, Renee Zellweger, Kim Raver, Mariska Hargitay, Jodie Foster, Michelle Pfeiffer, Ally Sheedy, Geena Davis, Daryl Hannah, Jennifer Grey, Kelly McGillis, Jamie Lee Curtis, Linda Hamilton, Sarah Jessica Parker, Joan Cusack, Debra Winger, and Claire Danes(considered for Lex) were considered for Ellie Satler. Johnny Depp, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Bruce Campbell, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, Michael J. Fox, and Bill Paxton were considered for Ian Malcolm. Sean Connery Charlton Heston, Clint Eastwood, Paul Newman, Marlon Brando, Ian Bannen and Jon Pertwee were considered for John Hammond. Bob Hoskins, Jeffrey Jones, Brian Cox and Geoffrey Rush were considered for Robert Muldoon.
Please please please please watch the rest of the trilogy and the Jurassic World series! It's one of my favorite franchises of all time. Rees is a real one. Turkeys are scary! I love that you posted this the day after Turkey Day.
The novel is amazing btw, it makes it feel like such a concrete possibility of happening. I know it's hella clichê to say it, but the novel (first one at least) is better than the movies
Yeah, I’ve never read the novel. But I hear it’s way different from the movie… Hammond is an asshole in the book and he dies, Malcolm dies, the lawyer lives…
this movie was #1 in the world at the same time that the book Disclosure was a #1 Best Seller and the television show ER was the highest rated TV show...all three were created and written by Michael Crichton who did it one other time in 1997. He is the only person in the world to ever achieve this triple crown and he accomplished that feat twice.
Random note from the book because it explains why some dinosaurs had characteristics that WOULDN'T have been with them during their time: The T-Rex was described having vision based on movement because of giving it bullfrog DNA, who only attack prey that moves. The Dilophosaur didn't have the frills let alone the ability to spit venom, as their DNA had spitting cobra in it. (In novel they were portrayed in their actual height, 6 feet tall and 20 feet long without the frills) The actual Velociraptor was only the size of a turkey, but in the novel they were a species relative to them, Deinonychus, who would've been at least 5 feet tall. 😊
Oh my God, how are you just now catching up on all these amazing, iconic movies?! This has been one of my favorites since childhood! But a few years ago, I read the original novel by Michael Crichton and I love that even more! As amazing and epic as this movie is, the book makes it seem small by comparison! Grab a copy when you can! PS Are you saying all white people look alike to you? 😏😂
michael crichton was the sci-fi author of the 90s: Jurassic Park Jurassic Park: Lost World Sphere Terminal Man Eaters of the Dead (his version of part of the Beowulf saga, from Ahmed Ibn Fadlan's telling/perspective) Andromeda Strain Congo and had several of his books turned into movies: Jurassic Park Jurassic Park: Lost World Congo The 13th Warrior (Eaters of the Dead) Sphere Andromeda Strain
Love this movie, saw in the theater four times as a kid. The triceratops was sick because it was picking up the lilac berries when it was swallowing rocks for its gizzard, like modern birds. It was in the book, although the dinosaur stegosaurus. I love that they made Hammond a sympathetic character, he's a straight up villain in the book. I do recommend the novel, but it gets a LOT darker.
Год назад+3
There is no franchise. This is the only one worth it.
A little gem of life for me is learning that every day. Every moment, somewhere on this God graced planet of ours is a person, young or old that is seeing something Like Jurassic Park for the first time and is experiencing such a magic wonder of cinema.
I was 5 when I went to see it. Can't remember much other than the theater so was packed people were sitting on the floor and how amazing it was to go from watching the land before time every weekend to getting to see real dinosaurs lol
The T. Rex teeth as depicted in these movies were a pretty overlooked inaccuracy that belied the real animal's ridiculous bite force, one of if not the strongest ever. In JP they're shown as thin and knifelike, which doesn't really allow for the capabilities of their real teeth, massive conical spikes that could crunch through bones with ease. Just some trivia.
I watched this in our living room with my parents and younger brother when it came out in 1993. I was 5 years old and i watched it through my fingers most of the time. My brother who was maybe 3, loved it, couldn't get enough. I still get nightmares to this day from it lol
Oh my gods I am so excited, this is my FAVORITE movie series of all time! I know a lot of them are not great but there is something about them, that just makes me happy and I can turn off my brain. XD
I heard that it wasn't supposed to break through but they underestimated its power. The rain thing was because the skin absorbed the rain and made it heavier so it got the shakes.
I looooove this soundtrack, it has at least three different themes (or parts of themes) that would be good enough to be the one main theme to any normal movie. I also love how, although it's obviously an adventure/horror movie, Jurassic Park respects its material and is actually really tender towards the dinosaurs. Just an all-time great movie.
Seeing this movie in the cinema at 8 years old was the most magical thing. Spielberg truly bought dinosaurs to life! The effects still hold up today as they mixed in practical effects with CGI that makes everything feel more real.
In the Jurassic Park book, (yeah, there's a book! WAAY different in a lot of stuff, including this one scene), instead of a Triceratops, it was a sick Stegosaurus. Dialogue was pretty much the same. The reason she was sick, though, was that she WAS accidentally eating the poisonous West Indian lilac. However, she wasn't eating it on purpose, just to eat it. She was getting sick every six weeks because certain dinosaurs that had trouble digesting plant matter have an organ called a gizzard just behind the stomach that smashes up the food before it reaches the act of digestion. Think of the way a bird eats. But, in order to help it along, the gizzard needs small stones that are just big enough for the dinosaur (or bird) to eat, but not choke on, to be put in the gizzard to help it mush up the food. And every six weeks, in the book, the Stegosaurus would have to change out the old batteries for new ones, so to say. The old stones would be thrown up and new ones would be swallowed. But, in the process of swallowing the new stones, the dinosaur would have had to get it's head very low to the ground near the lilac and it would accidentally swallow some of the lilac plant root with it. Poor girl didn't know she was making herself sick all that time. If she knew, she'd stop doing that near the lilac plants and swallow her stones somewhere else.
special thanks to my patrons
I would really really like you to react to Ninja Assasin
Ready player one, maze runner Django lone survivor
Steven Spielberg and John Williams are definitely one of the best combinations between director and composer in the history of cinema
jaws, superman, star wars, and indiana jones are arguably the four most famous movie scores, they exist outside of movies, you can hear them anywhere in all sorts of places.
and williams did all 4.
that is unbelievable.
There's them, and then there's Leone + Morricone.
@@CEngelbrecht There's also Miyazaki and Hisaishi...
Miyazaki is too limited and repetitive of a director. Hisaishi is the superior artist between the two.@@alfonsobiggers2452
ET?
21:19 one of my favorite details in this movie on why the walk in freezer was open with the wet floor. Is because Hammond left it open when he took out all the ice cream during the power outage and didn’t bother to close the door.
That's great. I've never heard that one.
You know, I’ve seen this movie a million times, including the midnight showing in my hometown in 1993 and never once did I question why the freezer was open. Not even once! So many other things I analyzed and picked apart. But never that!
Thank you!
Damn. I haven’t even heard Klayton cover that one!
But it was Biden stealing the 🍨
Best line in Hollywood history "John, when the pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the pirates don't eat the tourists"...lol
I always felt like this line could give origin to a great trash B horror movie about pirates animatronics killing people.
All of the damage control your editor runs for you is spectacular. Elevates the comedic factor in your videos.
We love Rees, he's The Man
Definitely deserves a raise. How many is that now?
His disappointment in her mistaking Neil and Jeff was gold 😭❤️
David Attenborough is well known animal expert,Richard being his brother must have loved doing this
I was scrolling through the comments hoping to come across someone saying Richard was his brother!
Is David still alive
@@nsasupporter7557 Yes! He’s quite frail now though.
Dude, I had no idea! Great piece of trivia.
I made the joke once that David did the narration for Prehistoric Planet to make up for his brother making Jurassic Park.
I saw this movie at the premiere in London, was a magical experience. Half of the cast was in the audience and got standing ovations several times.
You're so so lucky! I never got to see it in the theatres! 😢
Wow! The only Jurassic park/ Jurassic world I saw in theatres was Jurassic world lost kingdom
Fun fact: Originally this movie was going to have the dinosaurs in stop-motion. Phil Tippett, who just got off finishing RoboCop, had created footage of stop-motion dinosaurs, which he had experience doing from 1985. While Spielberg did like the test footage, because CGI was starting to become the norm, the studio chose that angle instead. They told Tippett, “You’re out of a job.”, but Tippett replied, “Don’t you mean extinct?”, a line which was added in the movie.
However, it wasn’t all bad news as Spielberg kept Tippett on the VFX team, as their “dinosaur supervisor”, even winning an Oscar for his help.
Phil Tippett was also the person responsible for the stop motion effects in Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. He also completed a movie that was a passion project for him called Mad God.
@@TheJabbate1 , he also did the effects for Dragonslayer, Willow, RoboCop, Dragonheart, and Starship Troopers. And Mad God was a project that was in production hell for over 20 years.
Yes! And his Velociraptors even featured flickering tongues like snakes, which Jack Horner thought was too much
Yeah, I don't think young people today realize how HUGE this film was at the time. I mean look at every single dinosaur film before this, it's stop-motion, puppets..and reptiles wearing prosthetics. Haha. Nothing looks real. Dinosaurs basically looked the same on screen from 1933 with King Kong all the way up until this film..and then BOOM dinosaurs are on the big screen and look REAL. Just look at T-Rex's pupil dilate! I mean these dinosaurs look as real or even more real than the dinosaurs in films even today. It's astonishing. And computers junk back then. Seeing this as a kid, I believe was a bigger deal than seeing Star Wars as a kid. Nothing beats dinosaurs.
Spielberg was the perfect guy for the job because Jaws prepared him for this...along with his right hand magic man John Williams. He somehow made this and Schindler's List at the same time and I can see why it nearly killed him. It's all remarkable. I'd love to see the stop-motion dino clip.
@@wheelmanstan , here a test clip from Jurrasic Park: (ruclips.net/video/E8TdZqQ3KAE/видео.html).
And here's one from Phil Tippett's Dinosaur!: (ruclips.net/video/hlaXIRTjNfo/видео.html)
You know a reactor is young when they see Wayne Knight and don't say "Newman!"
That scene of the kids holding up the plexiglass has a funny story behind it.
A rumor formed that the glass wasn’t supposed to break and that the kid’s fear was genuine, but that isn’t the case. The scene was even storyboarded. The origin of the rumor comes from the fact that the plexiglass wasn’t supposed to break off a piece the way it did. It was really raining between scenes, and Rexy’s latex skin was absorbing the water, messing with the weight-based fine tuning of the hydraulics, so her face hit the plexiglass a bit harder than expected, breaking the plexiglass instead of just knocking it in. You can notice that the broken piece goes missing between shots, immediately after Rexy breaks through. It would have made for a more impactful scene, but one of Rexy’s teeth broke off and fell in Joseph (Tim) Mozello’s lap and he couldn’t stop from laughing, so they had to re-shoot the scene with the broken plexiglass.
there we go, finally an accurate telling of the story.
Worked the Ford booth back when this movie came out. They brought one of the explorers from the movie to the booth. We had to prevent people from touching it but had setup a spot so people could get pictures with it.
@@Jason-hm1sc there was a tour right? Because I recall something like that back in the day where I live.
@@scottb3034 Yes, The explorers went from event to event in semi trailers. Even had custom popup tents that they parked them under. At first people could sit it them and get pictures taken in them. But unfortunately as people do things were getting broken and such. One person even kicked the lower driving lights breaking them once. So by the time it reached my location they put ropes around so it was look, don't touch then.
@@Jason-hm1sc Okay, I was going to say I remember being able to pose right up next to them/get in the back seat/bench in the Explorer but I wasn't sure if that was Mandela Effect, your remarks helped reinforce that.
It really is unfortunate that people do have to ruin a good thing just because they can.
Speaking of which I am disheartened with the treatment the series vehicles received on the Universal backlot. I know the Jeeps and some harvester vehicles in TLW were not maintained at all these last 30 years and there is a well-known video on the restoration of TLW trailers in private hands after poor maintenance. I guess they aren't obligated to but Universal could have easily kept them in good physical shape and failed their duty.
The way Nedry died in the book was way more brutal and described in excruciating detail
Also the book (that the movie is based on) is a horror book.
Personally I’m just really happy that you appreciate this film that was released 30 years ago! Thank you for your appreciation of this film. Phenomenal reaction of an absolute classic! ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
So did she ever figure out that Grant wasn’t Jeff Goldblum?
Better than most the movies released in the past 10 years
I got goats about a year ago and as someone who has had dogs all their life they are remarkably similar in a lot of ways but they are also very easy to care for. Fresh water, some alfalfa, and some things to climb on to keep them busy and they do their own thing and whenever you want to spend time with them they are more than happy for chin or butt scratches. We built a tree house and they have their own jumping platform steps to jump up and they love it. Goats are overall amazing and pretty easy-going animals. My goats even play with our dogs when they are in the mood
Just curious, do they need alot of space? Like, the way a dog needs some long walks now and then to keep happy n healthy, do goats need anything similar? Or are they really that chill? :P
How often do they ram anything, if at all? Just curious.
After the dog, the goat is the second animal domesticated by people, some 12,000 years ago.
Gotta make sure your place has a big space then. Doubt they were built for indoors.
@@Musabre I'm no expert, but I would say they need sufficient backyard space as I doubt they're indoor pets.
5:45: Brachiosaurus- Arm Lizard
6:02: Parasaurolophus-Near Crested Lizard
7:23: Velociraptor-Swift Thief
10:11: Triceratops -3-Horned Face
11:25: No, Ms. Angelina, Nedry couldn't wait because his getaway vessel was gonna leave soon, so he acted on the 18 minutes he planned for.
13:07: Tyrannosaurus Rex- Tyrant Lizard King ( since this is a girl, we should call it a Tyrannosaurus Regina)
14:25: Dilophosaurus- Dual Crested Lizard
One thing I like about dinosaurs are the significance of their names.
There was a proposal that there were more species in the Tyrannosaur family during the time or T. rex than just Tyrannosaurus Rex, and they were called Tyrannosaurus Regina and Tyrannosaurus Impera ( I believe that’s what they were called ) but they were later found to be not different enough and the paper was thus discredited and there’s still just Tyrannosaurus Rex
Edit: I’d also like to point out that Dilophosaurus was much different in real life than the movie, but I’m assuming you already knew that since you’re pointing out all these things
And my two favories that we'll see next time, Pachycephalosaurus and Stegosaurus Thicke Headed Lizard and Roof Lizard.
@@3Rayfire A little mistake there, there's no E in Thick :)
It's incredible how well the effects in this movie still stand up
It's never really mentioned in the movie, by the reason for the Triceratops being sick isn't that it was pregnant. The scene with the triceratops, and Ellie looking through it's dropping was originally longer. In the shooting script, and the graphic novel adaptation of the movie, Ellie realizes that every few weeks the Triceratops has to swallow stones, which help with digestion. While ingesting these gastroliths the Triceratops would also swallow down some of the poisonous West Indian Lilac berries. It's meant to be an early indicator that Hammond's people don't have the kind of control over nature that they think they have.
Also funny that you mentioned Miss Minutes, as it's been confirmed that a large part of the inspiration for the character came from Mr. DNA.
I’ve never heard the theory that it was pregnant
@@nsasupporter7557 Well, I don't know what to tell you. I mean, that's the conclusion Angelina came to. I've seen people argue about it in the comments to other RUclips reactions to Jurassic Park as well, so it does seem to be a relatively common misconception.
@@tehdipstick it was sick because it ate the poisonous berries… that’s what they said in the movie as well as the book
@@nsasupporter7557 In the movie Sattler notices a West Indian Lilac plant and asks Dr. Harding about it to which he responds "We know they're poisonous, but the animals don't eat them". The whole reason Sattler searches through the droppings is to find conclusive evidence as to whether the Triceratops had ingested the berries or not, but she specifically says she doesn't find anything conclusive.
My first human memory is literally me watching Jurassic park as a little two or three year old. I had it on VHS for years and rewatched it often as a kid, and I can now point to any time stamp and know where it is in the movie (I tested a friend with similar knowledge and we both knew that 1:24:00 is at the Brachiosaurus scene.)
This film is hands-down a benchmark in Hollywood Blockbusters and one of Steven Spielberg’s greatest films ever. It’s crazy to think that’s it’s been over 30 years since this film came out in theaters and the visuals effects from Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and the Animatronic dinosaurs by Stan Winston still hold up 3 decades later and to think when this came out it remained one of the highest grossing films until James Cameron’s Titanic took that spot 4 years later.
Thank you ANGELINA for finally reacting to this iconic movie franchise and big congrats on reaching 200k subscribers 5 days ago and hopefully you react to the rest of the films in the franchise.
The kid who played Tim went on to play a marine in The Pacific a little less than 20 years later. The series itself is brutal and graphic, but his performance is masterful.
He also appeared in Bohemian Rhapsody as John Deacon
As an old Jurassic Park fan watching the clips and be like "Oh that iconic scene! Oh that iconic moment! Oh that scene!..." This movie had soo much moment to remember.
If you've never read the novel, LET ME TELL YOU. It is amazing from start to finish!!! So glad you enjoyed this classic and shout out to John Williams for a score worthy of being taught in college courses. I teach the "Welcome to Jurassic Park" sequence, so I have a big ol' soft spot for this score. :)
Welcome to Jurassic Park. Hands down one of the most iconic sentences in movie history.
And… “life finds a way” 😉
Not THAT iconic imo 🤔 I love JP, it's one of my favorite movies.
But an "iconic" line needs to have a deeper, 2nd degree meaning to it, doesn't it ?
@@charleslavoie7622meanwhile Terminator: I'll be back
I read the book after I saw the movie and I really liked it. But it was interesting how all the characters were different enough from how they were portrayed in the movie except Ian Malcom felt exactly how Jeff Goldblum portrayed him. Perfect casting.
I personally like the second book more than the first one because its all about Ian Malcom
Always cracks me up when Ellie is trying to help block the door..sitting in a place her weight will make absolutely no difference to blocking it haha.
I got to experience JURASSIC PARK IN THEATERS, a couple of months ago!!!! And it was so cool to experience this movie on the big screen!!! I was born in 1998, so I didn’t get to experience it on the big screen but that have now changed!!!! I LOVE THIS FRANCHISE!!!!! It was for its 30th ANNIVERSARY!!!!
I wish this was the universe where Samuel L Jackson is famous for using 'Hold on to your butts' in many of his movies.
This movie is an absolute masterpiece. It's influence on pop culture, and cinema as a whole is unbelievable. The phenomenal practical effects and groundbreaking cgi, the infiitly quotable lines, and the iconic scenes and characters. One of the greatest films of all time.
I was obsessed with dinosaurs long before this movie came out. THEN this movie came out.
@@krisfrederick5001 Same, it was over at that point, my fate was sealed.
💯
After "84 years” you finally are doing a reaction to Jurassic Park @ANGELINA.
Thank You and Thank You so much for finally reacting to these movies ANGELINA after 6-7 months of waiting. Hopefully, you wound up reacting to the rest of the movies including the _Jurassic World_ series.
I grew up with this movie. Will forever cherish the fun and nightmares it gave me. Also made me fall in love with Dinos
Me too, I was 6 when it came out and we saw it as a family. Now I’ve shown my kids
Love this movie. The visual effects are incredible for 1993. Both practical and CGI
Fun fact: The Tyrannosaurus (T-Rex) looks very real in the scene when it escapes and attacks them in the vehicles because part of the scene was filmed using a full size animatronic T-Rex.
Robo-Rex very cool. 😅
The Velociraptors in Jurassic park are actually much bigger then in reality. The movie version was based on a Velociraptor relative called Deinonychus antirrhopus.
Real Velociraptors were only the height of a large turkey but were approx 6 feet long, due to a long tail.
The raptor fact isn't accurate. They were always deinonychus antirrhopus, but for a brief period of time they were also called *velociraptor antirrhopus*. A particular paleontologist had reclassified a bunch of dinosaurs, and while a lot of his ideas were later discarded/disproven (including the recategorization of deinonychus, by the paleontologist in question no less), the book he published those ideas in was one of the main resources Crichton used to write Jurassic Park.
Granted, the JP raptors are slightly bigger than Deinonychus, but while the movie was being filmed, Utahraptors were discovered and were the size of the JP raptors, and there was actual talks of naming them Utahraptor Spielbergi in exchange for research funding but an exact amount couldnt be agreed upon so the deal fell through.
So basically, the "JP raptors were actually Deinonychus and real velociraptors were way smaller" trivia is one of those "no, but also kinda yes, but also no" kind of things where pieces of it are partially right but for the wrong reasons and other parts of it are just wrong.
Sorry for the multicomment rambling, this is just something I'm kinda super into XD
I got to see this in Theaters this summer for the 30th anniversary in 3D, even taking some friends who had never seen it. And nothing was better than being able to see my all time favorite movie on the big screen like they did when it first released, quoting lines and watching my friends’ reactions. And now we get to see yours! Hope you end up doing the whole series!
I highly recommend the second movie. Also I recommend “The 13th Warrior” based on a book by the same author. And if you ever need a few classic series recommendations I would offer up “Person of Interest” and, “12 Monkeys” which is based on the film which is based on a short french film.
It was wonderful to see your reaction and commentary for Jurassic Par, thank you Ange and Rees!
Man, I loved watching the 13th warrior growing up.
The 13th Warrior is such an amazing movie.
The 13th Warrior is one of my favorites. Another movie adaptation of Crichton's is "Timeline" with Gerard Butler, Paul Walker and Bill Connely. I think it also had David Thewlis
@@huntermercier8427 Timeline is another good one. I love how the ending brings everything back to close the loop.
13th warrior is such an underrated movie
"What color is closest to dinosaurs?" I am so glad you asked. We actually managed to find some fossils so well preserved that even the melanosomes were still on the feather and skin imprints. Two species had a dark reddish brown color, microraptor had iridescent black feathers like a crow, and there was another I forget the name of that had green feathers on it's face.
I love this movie. And it's kinda awesome the despite all the things that makes no sense scientifically, making dinosaurs from dino dns is actually possible. The wooly mammoth is scheduled to be de-extinct in a few years.
And if we find out they can talk, I believe the first thing the mammoths will say is “Who turned up the heat?”
@@0okamino I love the idea of cloning a dead animal, and as it grows and becomes conscious it somehow has all the memories and awareness of its dead ancestor 😆 (not to mention the 'talking' part haha)
If it talks, I hope it says "Hi! my name is Manny 🦣
We cant' make dinosaurs from DNA because there is none. Its all stone. Mammoths lives only 10k years ago, and we even have remains frozen in ambler.
I didn't see it in theaters during its original run, but it was given a 3D re-release in 2013. Not only is the film a classic and one of Spielberg's best, the 3D conversion was remarkable. The movie wasn't even filmed for 3D, but it looked better than some of the more recent films that were, which makes me believe that Spielberg himself oversaw the conversion process.
I remember seeing this in theaters and having read the book really wondered how this would sneak in with a PG-13 rating as there are many graphic deaths in the book, including the death of an infant child. They really toned down the violence from the source book if you can believe that as a truer adaptation would have certainly been a hard R rating. It makes one wonder how it would have been if someone like Cronenberg had directed it (known for graphic body horror) instead of the more family friendly version we got from Spielberg. One element really left out from the book was the clear indications that there were serious problems with the park rather than the Nedry plot being the main cause of the parks breakdown as it is in the movie.
There _are_ clear problems with the park in the film too, a power cut should really not result in a disaster like that. They just aren't really telegraphed _before_ things go wrong, except for possibly seeing all the electric fences and asking oneself "so, are those strong enough to contain the dinosaurs if the power goes out?"
I saw this in the theater when i was 14. You really cant overstate how revolutionary the effects in this film were, both cgi and practical. Nobody had seen anything like this .
22:26 it's hysterical that you said she rolled a nat 20 here, because they used this exact shot in the D&D movie, during the Themberchaud sequence, definitely as a homage because it's such an iconic shot. I've yet to see anyone notice that in a reaction though lol
1993 was definitely Steven Spielberg’s year. ‘Jurassic Park’ & ‘Schindler’s List’; Two masterpieces in just the one year. Not many directors can do that. My favorite filmmaker of all time❤️
Schindler's List is one of the worst films he's ever made and a philosophical failure as brilliantly pointed out by Kubrick. Jurassic Park is a much better film.
@@FuzzyDlop As much as I love, at least, a few of Stanley Kubrick’s films, I can get more into ‘Schindler’s List’ than I ever could for, at least, half of anything that Kubrick had ever directed. Not bashing Kubrick, by the way. He was a fantastic director. Indeed, one of the all-time greats. I just know that if I have a personal favorite, I pick Steven Spielberg any day. To me, his films had shown me just what magic in the movies looks like. For me, it doesn’t matter what film I see of his, there’s just always some kind of magic to it. At times, one can see it, just as how, at times, one can feel it. It can be in the cinematography, the score, the acting, the dialogue, just about anything. Just my opinion, of course
@@justaguywhoreallylovescinemaSteven spielberg movies is about adult Man Who still have young heart. Meanwhile kubrick movies is for adult
Surely you'll love this timeless Masterpiece of a film. Jurassic Park was my favorite film of all time. Hope to get to check out the other JP films too 😃🦕🦖
To me, this one was the only good one. Lost World was decent, but all of them sucked after that
The novel is an excellent read, and it's different enough from the movie that you won't be spoiled.
I was 9 years old when I saw this movie and loved every minute of it......that was little over 30 years ago (man I feel old :P) and since then I've seen every single Jurassic Park/World movie day one in the theater (with my sister, mostly.... the only exception being the most recent one). Seeing people who have never seen this movie before is imo just awesome and I definitely recommend you check out the other movies in the series. Also there are only 2 Jurassic Park books, which were written years before their respective movies (Jurassic Park in 1990/the movie in 1993 & Lost World: Jurassic Park in 1995/ the movie 1997) and are very very different from the movies (ie much darker, some characters have different fates than they do in the movies, and there's a lot of science jargon in the books because author Michael Crichton loved injecting real science & medicine into his novels ), so if that sounds interesting I'd also definitely recommend reading the books.
This and its immediate sequel The Lost World were adapted from the Michael Crichton novels of the same name. Steven Spielberg directed Schindler's List while this was being finished
While a great fan of this film (who went to see it in the cinema a ridiculous number of times), I did read the book first and distinctly remember being rather disappointed the first time I saw the film. The book was darker and more frightening. Tonally it was very different but the film grew on me.
PG-13 ruin the Blockbuster movie. Because of this movie, every studios only cares to produce PG-13 movie
The novels are really exceptional. The detail paid to both the real science and the story elements is amazing. They both hold up. Actually, the discussions of chaos are some of the best I've seen anywhere.
YES! I’m so glad that you’re reacting to all these classic movies! You should do it more often!
I love how you mistake Sam Neill for Jeff Goldblum but immediately recognize Wayne Knight from Toy Story 2. ❤
"EVERYONE LOOKS THE SAME"
And that's why Angie is the perfect person to react to Dunkirk.
Always love your reactions! So full of over the top energy!!!
Yes! Please continue the rest of the franchise with the other films! You will love them all! 🙂🦖🤯
I've had goats since I was a kid. I find them very easy to keep. I only have to feed them grass hay when there isn't enough bramble for them to eat in the yard. Goats are very social and should be kept with at least one other goat. Other than that, they need fresh water and a shelter with at least 3 sides. Personally, I have a barn I put mine in at night to keep them safe from predators (coyotes, mostly, but also big cats and bears), and I have a livestock guardian dog who lives with my goats, chickens, and ducks 24/7.
My fences are only 4 feet and my goats have never been interested in escaping, but if goats get bored or are tempted, they can be escape artists. Logs or rocks for climbing help with the boredom. They're very smart and can learn tricks and commands, carry packs when camping, and pull wagons.They can also be used for fiber, meat, and milk.
I mostly have Nigerian Dwarfs (a small dairy breed known for rich milk), but we had Oberhaslis (a medium/large Swiss dairy breed) when I was a child. There are several breeds available in the US with different purposes and personalities.
First movie I saw in theaters at 4 years old. Set a really high bar!
I was 18 when this came out in 1993, and I saw it in the theater. It was a big deal for many reasons. In addition to the more obvious reasons, it was one of the first films to have digital sound (DTS). That was marketed heavily.
I saw it again in the theater about 10 years ago when it was re-released. (Probably for the 20th anniversary?) It still looked great!
I was 6 when it came out and we all saw it as a family… one of the best movie experiences I’ve ever had. I had the whole set of action figures and the whole base for the action figures
It doesn't matter how many times I've seen Jurassic Park, that scene in the maintenance bunker when the Raptor shows up behind Ellie will always get me with the jumpscare.
The dinosaur sounds in this movie were made by combining sounds made by living animals and everyday objects.
The Tyrannosaurus rex was a mix of elephant calf vocalizations (roar, snarls and growls) and a dog playing with a rope toy (shaking the Gallimimus to death).
The Dilophosaurus was a mix of hawk, swan, howler monkey and rattlesnake.
The adult Raptors were a mix of a walrus chest roar and dolphin mating scream, while the hatchling was a mix of owlet and fox kit sounds.
The Brachiosaurus vocalizations were slowed down donkey calls, while the sneeze was a mix of a fire hydrant and a whale breathing through its blowhole.
The Gallimimus's chief sound effect was made using the recorded calls of a female horse in heat.
Great reaction, Ange! ❤ I really appreciate that you comment on everything about the film: plot, dialogue, music, f/x. And you have do much fun doing it. You are a joy to watch. Please continue with the rest of the JP and JW movies! 😃👍
The Raptors and T-Rex in the novel are much, much more horrifying and scary. It's not conveyed well in the movie, but in the book Malcom explains that basically the only reason they all survived the Rex attack on the cars was because it literally was just playing with them, like a colossal cat.
In the book the Rex then pursues Grant and the kids relentlessly through the park until it gets hit with tranquilizer darts and falls asleep. In the film, it shows up at the visitor center because after it grabbed a bite to eat it resumed following the road that Ellie and the others used to escape from it earlier, leading it right to the visitor center.
Of course, the Rex actually just wanted to visit the gift shop, and it’s a coincidence they all ended up in the same place. 😉
@@0okamino She just wanted a raptor plushie chew toy.
@@Galiant2010 One of the most interesting paleontological discoveries concerning the Rex is a fondness for plushies, coffee mugs, and t-shirts (though some prefer hoodies).
Seeing this in theaters, was a STRESSful experience. One thing I noticed when it got to the end and we saw the birds was that was the first time all movie that we'd seen a modern animal. It was stepping back into the modern world. There was a degree of relief in it. It would be years later when I would consider that since birds are direct descendants of Dinosaurs with the exception of the mosquito there are no non-dinosaur animals in this film.
I was lucky enough to see this opening weekend when I was 11 years old.
I can still remember being in the cinema lobby and the place was packed from wall to wall.
My local cinema has 20 screens, and they showed only JP on a staggered schedule that entire weekend and it was still sold out but somehow my dad got hold of 4 tickets for me, my sister, and our two best friends and we went as a foursome.
Perfect time, perfect age, perfect effects, perfect cast, perfect movie.
Most magical weekend I've ever had at the cinema.
Yay! As a young teen I went to see this movie 4 times at the movie theatre - And I still love it so much!! Perfect performances direction and score!!
This and Disney's Dinosaur hold up as the best Dinosaur movies ever made!
Dinosaur that computer animated movie from the year 2000? Uh… no? How in the world is that considered the best dinosaur movie ever made?? That is a completely forgotten movie… Land Before Time is a better dinosaur movie than that and it holds up way better 😳
Land Before Time holds up way better than Dinosaur 2000
The live action dinosaurs were designed and created by Stan Winston Studios.
Th visual effects were done by Industrial Light and Magic.
The sound effects were done by Skywalker Sound.
All titans in their respective fields
13:19 so fun fact, this scene in which the T-Rex crashes through the skylight was not at all scripted in the movie. It was a result of a malfunction for the T-Rex animatronic. So the kid’s reactions are genuine. I wanted to point that out :)
This is a misnomer and explained in another comment. It was supposed to break in.
I saw this movie when if first released in the Cinema when I was just 5 years old. 30 years later and it's still my favorite movie of all time. A pure masterpiece.
This movie was so epic I saw it 6 times in theaters as a kid, with different people every time. It was a brilliant use of CGI and animatronics which is a lost art. Literally feeling the steps of the T-Rex as the water ripples is a cinematic experience you can never forget.
my mouth dropped open when I saw this video posted. so glad you finally got around to watching it! It my favorite movie of all time
Hammond in this movie always breaks my heart.
You can clearly see in the film that he made dinosaurs not to threaten mankind, or make a quick buck from them, but he wanted to bring wonder to the world. He wanted to make something his family could be proud to call themselves his family.
To see it all turn into a nightmare in front of his eyes…hurts my heart.
Right, he even said it himself… hiring Nedry was a mistake. Nedry ruined him just because he was unhappy with his salary he was getting.
But in the novel, Hammond was an asshole who got what was coming to him
I drove through a lightning storm in Texas some years back. And the thrill of the lightning striking a couple hundred yards was so exciting. I Love Storms
pls watch scream 1996 its my favourite movie
This movie even inspired the naming of the Toronto Raptors basketball team. To this day I am still a Raptors fan, and it all started because of this movie haha.
10:40 WHOA, WHOA, HOLD ON! Jurassic Park has been my overall favorite movie since I was a 12-year old boy, I've watched the movie countless times, plus a fair bunch of over-analysing video essays. It has NEVER occurred to me, nor have I ever heard anyone else suggest, that the triceratops' sickness could mean pregnancy. And to be honest, I still don't think that's what the writers were trying to imply. But if they were, that would be one AMAZING bit of foreshadowing!
Kinda annoyed to admit it, especially being old enough to say I watched it opening weekend as a teen, but dang it...... i think she's right.
@@thealexanderllanos According to all of the books, its because the triceratops is eating gastric stones from the ground, and then consuming fallen poisonous berries on the ground as it does so. That is why it happens every 6 weeks.
@@SImrobert2001 i get it, i understand, forgot the every six weeks comment. cinematically though, a pregnancy works better as foreshadowing. i don't recall the berries ever paying off. closes i recall is ellie's poisonous plant comment during lunch.
@@thealexanderllanos it does, but its clearly not the intention.
@@SImrobert2001 I know it wasn't most likely intended like that, and "pregnancy" probably wouldn't even work like that for oviparous lizards. But wouldn't it be nice if it was?
Hi, archaeologists study human cultural remains (structures, middens, campsites, etc.). Paleontologists dig up bones, dino and proto human (if that is still the term, it has been a while).
A Steven Spielberg classic for sure. It’s definitely the best movie to watch if you wanna watch a bunch of dinosaurs and/or Jeff Goldblum.
Congrats on 200k ! You're quite entertaining and it's well deserved. :)
My in-laws have 3 goats. They. Are. Absolute. Escape. Artists. I swear it. They escape at least 6 times a week. Everything Harry Houdini knew about escaping, I'm sure he learned from goats. They're curious, love climbing, and are very much food motivated.
Watched this movie in theaters when I was 8, I had to beg my parents because they thought it'd be too scary. Fun fact: Grant fidgeting with his seatbelt (both female heads) on the helicopter was foreshadowing what was going to happen with the "dinosaurs" on the island, aka "life finds a way".
YES!!!!
MY #1 FAVORITE MOVIE OF ALL TIME!
Before Steven Spielberg was picked to direct the film, James Cameron, Richard Donner, Tim Burton, and Joe Dante were considered. Michael Crichton, a close friend of Spielberg's, sold him the rights to the novel.
Cameron was upset that Spielberg bought the rights but said in an interview to celebrate the films 25th Anniversary he knew he wasn't right for the job
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Harrison Ford, William Hurt, Robin Williams, Kurt Russell, Sam Sheppard, Alec Baldwin, Michael Douglas, Dennis Quaid, Kevin Costner, Mel Gibson, Dylan McDermott, Tom Sizemore, Jeff Bridges, Nick Nolte, Tom Hanks, and Richard Dreyfuss were considered for Alan Grant.
Christina Applegate, Juliette Binoche, Sandra Bullock, Bridget Fonda, Melanie Griffith, Nicole Kidman, Amanda Plummer, Kyra Sedgwick, Uma Thurman, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Wright Penn, Helen Hunt, Laura Linney, Gwyneth Paltrow(Considered for Lex), Julianne Moore, Teri Hatcher, Elizabeth Hurley, Sherilyn Fenn, Heather Graham, Lisa Rinna, Renee Zellweger, Kim Raver, Mariska Hargitay, Jodie Foster, Michelle Pfeiffer, Ally Sheedy, Geena Davis, Daryl Hannah, Jennifer Grey, Kelly McGillis, Jamie Lee Curtis, Linda Hamilton, Sarah Jessica Parker, Joan Cusack, Debra Winger, and Claire Danes(considered for Lex) were considered for Ellie Satler.
Johnny Depp, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Bruce Campbell, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, Michael J. Fox, and Bill Paxton were considered for Ian Malcolm.
Sean Connery Charlton Heston, Clint Eastwood, Paul Newman, Marlon Brando, Ian Bannen and Jon Pertwee were considered for John Hammond.
Bob Hoskins, Jeffrey Jones, Brian Cox and Geoffrey Rush were considered for Robert Muldoon.
The Jurassic Park series still holds up to this day as some of the best movies ever made.
Please please please please watch the rest of the trilogy and the Jurassic World series! It's one of my favorite franchises of all time.
Rees is a real one.
Turkeys are scary! I love that you posted this the day after Turkey Day.
The novel is amazing btw, it makes it feel like such a concrete possibility of happening. I know it's hella clichê to say it, but the novel (first one at least) is better than the movies
Yeah, I’ve never read the novel. But I hear it’s way different from the movie… Hammond is an asshole in the book and he dies, Malcolm dies, the lawyer lives…
this movie was #1 in the world at the same time that the book Disclosure was a #1 Best Seller and the television show ER was the highest rated TV show...all three were created and written by Michael Crichton who did it one other time in 1997. He is the only person in the world to ever achieve this triple crown and he accomplished that feat twice.
Random note from the book because it explains why some dinosaurs had characteristics that WOULDN'T have been with them during their time:
The T-Rex was described having vision based on movement because of giving it bullfrog DNA, who only attack prey that moves. The Dilophosaur didn't have the frills let alone the ability to spit venom, as their DNA had spitting cobra in it. (In novel they were portrayed in their actual height, 6 feet tall and 20 feet long without the frills)
The actual Velociraptor was only the size of a turkey, but in the novel they were a species relative to them, Deinonychus, who would've been at least 5 feet tall. 😊
Oh my God, how are you just now catching up on all these amazing, iconic movies?! This has been one of my favorites since childhood! But a few years ago, I read the original novel by Michael Crichton and I love that even more! As amazing and epic as this movie is, the book makes it seem small by comparison! Grab a copy when you can!
PS Are you saying all white people look alike to you? 😏😂
michael crichton was the sci-fi author of the 90s:
Jurassic Park
Jurassic Park: Lost World
Sphere
Terminal Man
Eaters of the Dead (his version of part of the Beowulf saga, from Ahmed Ibn Fadlan's telling/perspective)
Andromeda Strain
Congo
and had several of his books turned into movies:
Jurassic Park
Jurassic Park: Lost World
Congo
The 13th Warrior (Eaters of the Dead)
Sphere
Andromeda Strain
If you’re interested, I highly recommend you reading the book. It’s more horror kinda unlike the movie but also still good.
I love this movie but the novel is far richer in characterization, plot and detail.
Love this movie, saw in the theater four times as a kid. The triceratops was sick because it was picking up the lilac berries when it was swallowing rocks for its gizzard, like modern birds. It was in the book, although the dinosaur stegosaurus. I love that they made Hammond a sympathetic character, he's a straight up villain in the book. I do recommend the novel, but it gets a LOT darker.
There is no franchise. This is the only one worth it.
A little gem of life for me is learning that every day. Every moment, somewhere on this God graced planet of ours is a person, young or old that is seeing something Like Jurassic Park for the first time and is experiencing such a magic wonder of cinema.
I was 14 in 1993 when I saw this movie in the cinema together with my parents and my 12 year old brother. What an experience!
I was 5 when I went to see it. Can't remember much other than the theater so was packed people were sitting on the floor and how amazing it was to go from watching the land before time every weekend to getting to see real dinosaurs lol
The T. Rex teeth as depicted in these movies were a pretty overlooked inaccuracy that belied the real animal's ridiculous bite force, one of if not the strongest ever. In JP they're shown as thin and knifelike, which doesn't really allow for the capabilities of their real teeth, massive conical spikes that could crunch through bones with ease. Just some trivia.
Please give the Star Trek franchise a chance. 🖖
I watched this in our living room with my parents and younger brother when it came out in 1993. I was 5 years old and i watched it through my fingers most of the time. My brother who was maybe 3, loved it, couldn't get enough. I still get nightmares to this day from it lol
Oh my gods I am so excited, this is my FAVORITE movie series of all time! I know a lot of them are not great but there is something about them, that just makes me happy and I can turn off my brain. XD
RIP Richard Attenborough (yes, David's brother) as John Hammond.
The part where the T-rex attacks the kids with them screaming was actually real, because the T-rex was an animatronic and the rain messed it up.
I heard that it wasn't supposed to break through but they underestimated its power. The rain thing was because the skin absorbed the rain and made it heavier so it got the shakes.
I looooove this soundtrack, it has at least three different themes (or parts of themes) that would be good enough to be the one main theme to any normal movie. I also love how, although it's obviously an adventure/horror movie, Jurassic Park respects its material and is actually really tender towards the dinosaurs. Just an all-time great movie.
I see Angelina reacting to movies:
*I sleep*
Angelina reacts to Jurassic park:
*I AWOKE*
I love your interactions and quips with Reese, it's hilarious and we need more
Seeing this movie in the cinema at 8 years old was the most magical thing. Spielberg truly bought dinosaurs to life! The effects still hold up today as they mixed in practical effects with CGI that makes everything feel more real.
In the Jurassic Park book, (yeah, there's a book! WAAY different in a lot of stuff, including this one scene), instead of a Triceratops, it was a sick Stegosaurus. Dialogue was pretty much the same. The reason she was sick, though, was that she WAS accidentally eating the poisonous West Indian lilac. However, she wasn't eating it on purpose, just to eat it. She was getting sick every six weeks because certain dinosaurs that had trouble digesting plant matter have an organ called a gizzard just behind the stomach that smashes up the food before it reaches the act of digestion. Think of the way a bird eats. But, in order to help it along, the gizzard needs small stones that are just big enough for the dinosaur (or bird) to eat, but not choke on, to be put in the gizzard to help it mush up the food. And every six weeks, in the book, the Stegosaurus would have to change out the old batteries for new ones, so to say. The old stones would be thrown up and new ones would be swallowed. But, in the process of swallowing the new stones, the dinosaur would have had to get it's head very low to the ground near the lilac and it would accidentally swallow some of the lilac plant root with it. Poor girl didn't know she was making herself sick all that time. If she knew, she'd stop doing that near the lilac plants and swallow her stones somewhere else.