I like the touch of his death of how he feels peace as it’s known that when you die your brain releases a huge wave of dopamine (which probably eases you into death). I like he added that little touch.
Im not arguing your comment at all i find it fascinating and am genuinely curious if that is actually a well known fact, may i ask where you learned that? Cause if when we die we get a huge endorphin rush thatd be good to know lol
Unfortunatly, i don´t think there is any evolutionary benefit for easing humans or other animals into death. So i am afraid in a situation like this one, our brain will fill us up with adrenalin and force us to experience it 100% conscious, in order to give us any chance of surviving. If we fail to survive, nature doesn´t care anyway.
@@tannerledoux7843 it's both correct and incorrect, your brain releases a lot more chemicals than just dopamine and depends on the person and situation, each are different, hell in some cases some people's brains make them hallucinate and there's even the theory that your brain makes the perfect world for you, though it's just a theory despite the fact that many people try to pass it as a fact, personally when I clinically die for few seconds in both time neither happened, I was aware I just didn't have a single sense and it seemed as time went by a lot slower but that's just my case. Some people are lucky for that to happen others aren't and there are a lot of factors to simply write them down in one comment but you can search it online, personally I learnt that in a my studies to become a physiotherapist.
Next movie will probably be heavily sponsored by Mars bars, the last one nearly had sponsorship decals on the dinosaur's for a cell phone network!. Soon the dinosaur's will look like race cars, kids will say I loved that dinosaur, "which one son", the one that had Redbull written on his tail.
Ah some guys have all the luck. I was born with glass bones and paper skin. Every morning, I break my legs, and every afternoon, I break my arms. At night, I lie awake in agony until my heart attacks put me to sleep.
I love how Michael Chrichton made the raptors in the novels like supernatural creatures. They are as different to us as a lion, tiger, and bear (oh my). Yet, their intelligence and actions are like us. True horror.
What's even more amazing is that in these books, the humans act like prey the entire time. I read them both back in high school, but I don't remember the humans (with the notable exception of the security team in JP) getting weapons and fighting back. Hell, in this situation, a spear may have come in handy, and you can make one of those simply by sharpening a stick, something our ancestors did thousands of years ago. Then again, humans have made many bone-headed decisions in this book and movie series. Like, when those pteranodons flew by the helicopters at the end of JP3, why didn't ships start reacting. Allegedly the US Navy was quarantining the islands. That means keeping things there in addition to keeping things out. The pilots, under normal circumstances, would have called in and notified their home ships. Or their door gunners would have opened up, another thing missing in this movie, despite the helicopters providing overwatch to the landing marines. I could make an entire video ripping holes in the human reactions to Jurassic Park, Lost World, Jurassic Park 3, Jurassic World, and Fallen Kingdom... It just seems the author and producers/directors sap intelligence from humans to give to these dinos.
This is actually one aspect I really hate as it played a big part in humanizing and making dinosaurs overpowered with us barely seeing any of them dying especially in recent films At the end of the day, these are still animals with intelligence no where near humans nor would they have any resistance to weapons. That's why raptors' biggest advantage is ambushing like a jaguar.
Raptor: *snarls* Me: have a Snickers. You’re not you when you’re hungry. *hands over candy bar* Raptor: *turns into a fat little turkey and pecks at the candy bar furiously*
I love the novels, especially Lost World. Malcolm's lectures are fascinating and the violence makes you think what an R-rated Jurassic movie would look like.
The one that stuck with me most was Wu’s death, it was so sudden and brutal, poor guy. The character’s sudden realization about how smart the raptors really were then oof.
Klayton, if you want me to run your little camping trip, there are two conditions: firstly, I'm in charge, and when I'm not around, Dieter is. All you need to do is sign the checks, tell us we're doing a good job, and open your case of Scotch when we have a good day. Second condition: my fee? You can keep it. All I want in exchange for my services is the right to hunt one of the tyrannosaurs. A male, a buck only. How and why are my business. Now if you don't like either of those two conditions, you're on your own. So go ahead, set up base camp right here, or in a swamp, or in the middle of a Rex nest for all I care. But I've been on too many safaris with rich dentists to listen to any more suicidal ideas, OK?
The kill is pretty intense here, but the image of a raptor tucking into a carcass, grabbing a candy bar, and then just thinking "This is amazing! Why the hell are we bothering to eat people?" is just adorable.
In my opinion, the movies never quite evoked the same level of sheer terror that the novels did. This scene got my heart pounding the first time I read it
When he said that, I could only remember Peter Hathaway Capstick's bookd, "Death in the Long Grass", a collection of his own true hunting stories while a game officer in Africa.
The moment you said "Long Grass", the whole scene played in my head automatically from memory before your narration... This is indeed a brutal and very memorable death scene! I absolutely love it! That Candy bar scene always gave me the creeps with the "And it was enjoying it" for some reason...
The scariest thing about that sequence is that the only thing he could do was run. He knew he was going to die because not even running can save you. Then the conscious acceptence that his life was ending when it bit into his neck. Chilling.
Smart. Deadly. Neither the biggest nor the strongest by comparison. But they wield a weapon that only a human can appreciate to fear. one from a far more ancient time and despite the startling similarity... a very inhuman weapon- intelligence.
@@FireLordJohn3191 When you realise the clear distinction between intelligence and knowledge. That whole myth about humans being the only "intelligence" worth a damn on Earth becomes shaky at best. On our turf, I guess we come on top. But, assuming such things existed as depicted in those movies, I ain't so sure about our chances on their turf. As our "intelligence" will not be evaluated on the same standards we are used to in our daily lives. We are speaking of an intelligent hunter built by nature to kill efficiently. Not like a bear mind you but more like a lions. Yet, even more overbuilt for the job. If we go back to reality we must also consider that it isn't just our intelligence that made us the dominant species. There was also a good share of luck involved.
I'm damn happy and proud to be one of few people on Earth that has finger with claw from original animatronic Velociraptor made by Stan Winston studio.Knowing I have piece of this beautiful dinosaur from my favorite movie makes my heart warm.
I just recently finished my first read-through of both novels and this kill didn't stick with me half so much as Eddie Carr's. What really got me, though, was how the revelation that Dr. Grant was wrong about the T-Rex's vision played out, even though I knew it was coming. Michael Crichton is an absolute master of dramatic irony in both books and I enjoyed them a lot.
I personally thought that part about dr Grant being wrong about the rex's vision was such a cheap retcon. Almost as cheap as bringing back Ian Malcolm with the only explanation: "dead? Me!? No, no you see, I was only half dead;) )
Eddies death is way crazier to me. He was protecting the kids and was a good guy. Shows that, like the movie version of Eddie, even the good guys are not safe. Plus the fact that Thorne had to watch his friend be dragged through the forest as he followed them. Crazy
Eddie’s death was horrible :,( he is a wuss like me but he felt guilty when he ran away leaving the kids. Honestlyi think that’d be my first instinct too. He was like any fool that just wanted to do his job and get paid and he was literally at the wrong place at the wrong time. And the fact that the juvenile Rex was the one that got him OOF. The scenes before in the car when grant and Malcolm saw something small pass before the big rex came out STILL gives me the chills even though I know it’s the juvenile 😱😂
And Kelly Malcolm as Kelly Curtis. Which is ironic because I was reading Jurassic Park A Visual History, and Spielberg confirmed that Kelly Malcolm is supposed be Kelly Curtis.
@@jashloseher578 Not as annoying as Ben from season 1 of Camp Cretaceous. Ben got better from season 2 onward. But in season 1 he screamed way more then Franklin did in Fallen Kingdom.
Firstly, that was Extremely brutal. Second, I love the Image of a Velociraptor holding a Chocolate bar in his has eating it one Bit at a time. If this was in the film it would be very Iconic.
@@-dodup-5970 no, hes right. People use it way too much and its annoying and unoriginal. Also dumb, overused and overrated. In this one, it doesnt even make sense! He doesnt get the point of the joke hes using. You use that joke when NOBODY is talking about something. But EVERYONE is talking about it. Ridiculous.
@@olly_evansthe only part after the high hide that kept my attention, I have a problem with keeping attention at the ends of books, only jurassic park kept it and that just proves how good it is
One of the best death scenes in the novels. It gave me chills reading it, and likewise your narration was spot on. These narrations of novel excerpts are your best work, Klayton.
Klayton these narrations you do from the novels and absolutely astounding! Would you ever consider doing your own audio books for the JP novels? I'd definitely pay for one from you!
This video popped up in my algorithm one day, and it piqued my interest in the novels that I found myself listening to both of the audiobooks while I worked. I still replay it, thanks to you and also to the JURASSIC TIME channel for posting both audiobooks here on YT. When I first heard that King had to go in the long grass, Ajay's warning sounded off in my mind: "DON'T GO INTO THE LONG GRASS! NOT INTO THE LONG GRASS! "
Your narration was amazing! I felt chills as you talked about how the raptors hunted King and killed him. Very gruesome but one of the most spectacular kills in the book!
I loved this scene because the character buildup showed that he was the only biosyn employee there that seemed to be down to earth or a good human. He had a family and just wanted to live. Without character buildup like that the intensity wouldn’t be there as much and the effect wouldn’t be given off. But since your hoping he lives yet the raptors are getting steadily closer makes it a very good scene. Once he died you just feel stunned and wonder, who’s next?
Meh, King obviously wasn't on Dodgson's level of pure evil but he's still not a particularly sympathetic character. We only learn of his family when also learning that he is divorced and only sees his kids on the weekends because of how preoccupied he is with his career. Also, after Dodgson tries to murder Sarah by throwing her overboard, King's main concern is about himself and whether there will be an investigation since he witnessed it.
@@drewdrewski4188 to be honest I haven’t read this book in about 3 years, and judging by what just you and I said, I would definitely agree that he doesn’t seem to be the most “root for” type of characters. But I do believe that because of the others that surround him we naturally shift out minds towards his survival over the others. In the end I do remember that just basic human nature of not wishing that fear among any other person, his death was at least still intense to read, especially with the drawn out suspenseful way of Crichton. Overall, I should really read this again, thanks for the reindulgence!
How is it that you are so good at this narration? Every goddamn time! You really capture that tension! I hope that one day, we get an audio drama for the novels!
This is why I love your channel. From a man that has read both novels several times, I thought you were going with either Wu from the original or Eddie from lost world. Soon as you started reading I was like "Oh, I forgot about King" What a brutal segment!
The details are merciless. So close to escaping, only to be struck from behind and ripped into. You are thrust in his shoes and can almost feel the excruciating pain turn into relaxing trance, the surprise of hearing his neck break, and then nothing. It's very immersive and very brutal.
What really got me about King's death was how much Crichton immersed the reader into it. His prose painstakingly detailed how King was feeling in his final moments of life; the searing pain of the raptor's claws on his back, the dream-like, seemingly relaxed state King went into the harder the raptor bit into his neck, ending with his brief surprise upon hearing his neck finally snap and then...nothing. I'm sure other books out there have death scenes this well-written, but so far, Howard King's death in The Lost World still stands as the most brutally detailed one I've ever read.
Dang, I have to go back and re read these books. I forgot how detailed Crichton's books were! Thanks for sharing these moments, your narration and carefully crafted video to go with it are great. Definitely creates some tension as I listen to the scene!
So that's how Owen Grady trained the raptors, he got them hooked up on stashes of chocolate. So that's what a raptor would do with a lifetime supply of chocolate.
Man, you have my heart racing from this! Would love to hear your thoughts on if Crichton's more grisly kills in the JP novels can be brought in full form in the final movie or if they'd need an R-Rating.
You should try your hand an make an audiobook video or videos with Jurassic Park and The Lost World. Your voice gives off the perfect ambience for those books.
The one I remember is the guy in the first one who was distracting the raptors from behind a fence and didn't realize one had jumped onto the roof behind him. The description of the raptors tugging at his slick warm intestines always stuck with me.
Reading this part got me yelling, "Dont go into the long grass! Not into thelo g grass!!!" and hearing the bones snap and the guyz vision caving into Limbo... Gory but great scene :) The suspense grew from suspicious to Intense in a second! Such a fun video and scary scene. :) Fun video! 💙🦖
I read the novel of the lost world Jurassic Park and where I was reading the part where the character gets killed by the tiger striped raptors and this is the most darkest Death in the novel and the most disturbing of it And I love how this novel version shows much dark scenes in the lost world Jurassic Park 🤭😰😨
Thank you so much for bringing that scene to life, it was one of my favorites. This brought back so many memories from reading the books. Awesome video
I was wondering when you’d get to the inspiration of the long grass scene in the movie. One death, but one of if not the most gruesome death in the franchise.
Dude, I would love to have the audio versions of both novels read by you. I love any video where you read passages from the books. Always gets me amped up!
Despite the overall horrificness of the scene, and knowing what comes of it later, I found the raptor who discovered the wonders of candy bars to be the funniest part of the book.
I like the touch of his death of how he feels peace as it’s known that when you die your brain releases a huge wave of dopamine (which probably eases you into death). I like he added that little touch.
Im not arguing your comment at all i find it fascinating and am genuinely curious if that is actually a well known fact, may i ask where you learned that? Cause if when we die we get a huge endorphin rush thatd be good to know lol
It really depends on how you die. It’s definitely not a guarantee.
Unfortunatly, i don´t think there is any evolutionary benefit for easing humans or other animals into death. So i am afraid in a situation like this one, our brain will fill us up with adrenalin and force us to experience it 100% conscious, in order to give us any chance of surviving. If we fail to survive, nature doesn´t care anyway.
@@tannerledoux7843 it's both correct and incorrect, your brain releases a lot more chemicals than just dopamine and depends on the person and situation, each are different, hell in some cases some people's brains make them hallucinate and there's even the theory that your brain makes the perfect world for you, though it's just a theory despite the fact that many people try to pass it as a fact, personally when I clinically die for few seconds in both time neither happened, I was aware I just didn't have a single sense and it seemed as time went by a lot slower but that's just my case. Some people are lucky for that to happen others aren't and there are a lot of factors to simply write them down in one comment but you can search it online, personally I learnt that in a my studies to become a physiotherapist.
Juxtaposed with being CHEWED on.......😊
I love the touch Crichton added with the raptor eating the candy bar
and the look on the raptors face suggesting it was enjoying it.
And that a raptor found a wrapper later in the book. Interesting foreshadowing.
But... Chocolate is bad for animals... Unless they made chocolate not poisonous for dinos to eat too.
Asquri The Kaiju I mean they’re genetic hybrids so maybe they digestive systems are a bit more resilient so they can handle a lil chocolate
@Asquri The Kaiju Chocolate isn't bad for ALL animals. just some common pets like cats and dogs
The reason the jp3 raptors chased the people at the lab is because they saw that they had looted the vending machine
Lol
lol
Owen Bame gay reference
Underrated comment. xD
They be like wait he took da snacks
“Don’t go into the long grass! Not into the long grass!”
god damn it
No unless you're a sauropod
You’d be fine, you’d just cqc the raptors
NOT INS HIGH GRAS
"Dont go into the tallgrass without pokemone!"
Long grass: the high ground of Jurassic park
@David Ziegler GENERAL KENOBI
David Ziegler hello there
I am a fan of the high ground
"You were the trained ones. It was said that you would destroy the Indominus, not join it." - Owen Grady to his pack of raptors.
Kelly: "You underestimate my power."
Raptors are so smart in the Jurassic series, they can work things out, open doors, and like candy bars
Next movie will probably be heavily sponsored by Mars bars, the last one nearly had sponsorship decals on the dinosaur's for a cell phone network!.
Soon the dinosaur's will look like race cars, kids will say I loved that dinosaur, "which one son", the one that had Redbull written on his tail.
But can they understand the complexities of Rick and Morty?
Bjørn in Gulf City what are you talking about there’s no freaking Mars Bar down there
Yes, they have a mind that can develop unlike most animals that can only evolve and focus on instincts
Imagine they could learn how to speak english
Klayton: He was energized by-
My mind: CHOCOLATE!
Klayton: Pure fear.
Chocolate! Chocolate! Choccccaaalllattteeee!!!!!!
@@AndreNitroX ...With or without nuts?
TokuTickler onions
Ah some guys have all the luck. I was born with glass bones and paper skin. Every morning, I break my legs, and every afternoon, I break my arms. At night, I lie awake in agony until my heart attacks put me to sleep.
DURACELL!!!
I love how Michael Chrichton made the raptors in the novels like supernatural creatures. They are as different to us as a lion, tiger, and bear (oh my). Yet, their intelligence and actions are like us. True horror.
What's even more amazing is that in these books, the humans act like prey the entire time. I read them both back in high school, but I don't remember the humans (with the notable exception of the security team in JP) getting weapons and fighting back. Hell, in this situation, a spear may have come in handy, and you can make one of those simply by sharpening a stick, something our ancestors did thousands of years ago.
Then again, humans have made many bone-headed decisions in this book and movie series. Like, when those pteranodons flew by the helicopters at the end of JP3, why didn't ships start reacting. Allegedly the US Navy was quarantining the islands. That means keeping things there in addition to keeping things out. The pilots, under normal circumstances, would have called in and notified their home ships. Or their door gunners would have opened up, another thing missing in this movie, despite the helicopters providing overwatch to the landing marines.
I could make an entire video ripping holes in the human reactions to Jurassic Park, Lost World, Jurassic Park 3, Jurassic World, and Fallen Kingdom... It just seems the author and producers/directors sap intelligence from humans to give to these dinos.
what's supernatural about intelligence?
@@RedneckRapture Well if the movies and novels were completely logical, we would never have fun stories.
This is actually one aspect I really hate as it played a big part in humanizing and making dinosaurs overpowered with us barely seeing any of them dying especially in recent films
At the end of the day, these are still animals with intelligence no where near humans nor would they have any resistance to weapons. That's why raptors' biggest advantage is ambushing like a jaguar.
@@RedneckRapture I always scream grab something!
Raptor: *snarls*
Me: have a Snickers. You’re not you when you’re hungry. *hands over candy bar*
Raptor: *turns into a fat little turkey and pecks at the candy bar furiously*
A subtle nod, but an appreciated one
Kevin Benoit lmao 😂
Kevin Benoit I would love that to be a snickers commercial that’s sponsored by Jurassic world 3
@@Rubber_Kappa and it's this exact thing. It's PERFECT
Kevin Benoit best thing I’ve ever read
I love the novels, especially Lost World. Malcolm's lectures are fascinating and the violence makes you think what an R-rated Jurassic movie would look like.
I would pay anything to get an R Rated Jurassic Park movie
The one that stuck with me most was Wu’s death, it was so sudden and brutal, poor guy. The character’s sudden realization about how smart the raptors really were then oof.
Yeah same.. . Didn't they drag him away by his guts?
Have yet to see Dominion, but I hope he met a similar end, especially with how they developed his character in the movies.
@@larryfish9272 you aren't going to be happy I fear
@@methos19751 I hope he responds so we can see his response to seeing that film XD
@@no-barknoonan1335 it's been six months.
Klayton, if you want me to run your little camping trip, there are two conditions: firstly, I'm in charge, and when I'm not around, Dieter is. All you need to do is sign the checks, tell us we're doing a good job, and open your case of Scotch when we have a good day. Second condition: my fee? You can keep it. All I want in exchange for my services is the right to hunt one of the tyrannosaurs. A male, a buck only. How and why are my business. Now if you don't like either of those two conditions, you're on your own. So go ahead, set up base camp right here, or in a swamp, or in the middle of a Rex nest for all I care. But I've been on too many safaris with rich dentists to listen to any more suicidal ideas, OK?
Victor Bruant nice you got it right I watched the scene with captions on too!
Rich dentists on safari!, Seemed fitting last year...
*The one with the Pompadoor; Elvis!*
*Guy in Jeep breaks every bone in his body*
@Gerald Boy RIP Roland tembo
The kill is pretty intense here, but the image of a raptor tucking into a carcass, grabbing a candy bar, and then just thinking "This is amazing! Why the hell are we bothering to eat people?" is just adorable.
In my opinion, the movies never quite evoked the same level of sheer terror that the novels did. This scene got my heart pounding the first time I read it
It wouldn't be possible as a pg13
I remember the scene where the guy said Don’t Go Into The Long Grass in the Jurassic series especially The Lost World.
Ajay Sindhu. It's a shame he died in the second Jurassic Park film. I even felt bad for Roland Tembo who lost his best friend.
When he said that, I could only remember Peter Hathaway Capstick's bookd, "Death in the Long Grass", a collection of his own true hunting stories while a game officer in Africa.
“dONt Go InTo tHe lOnG gRaSs!”
@@shainewhite2781, same here partner.
... You know the Malcolm quote at the beginning, it uh... It's kind of chilling how true that one is...
Agreed
How to survive a velociraptor attack:
Give them a snickers bar
DinosaurGirl135M How to survive a raptor attack just close your eyes and wait until you go to heaven
Raptors aren't themselves when they're hungry
The moment you said "Long Grass", the whole scene played in my head automatically from memory before your narration... This is indeed a brutal and very memorable death scene! I absolutely love it!
That Candy bar scene always gave me the creeps with the "And it was enjoying it" for some reason...
It's fucking SCARY. I just sat there like.
"FUCK
I first read _TLW_ when I was 12. That scene in particular was one of my favorites based on that little injection of incredibly believable dark humor.
just like humans.
I loved that shit so much "don't go into the long grass" and the velocorapters where smart enough to know it was gonna work
The scariest thing about that sequence is that the only thing he could do was run. He knew he was going to die because not even running can save you. Then the conscious acceptence that his life was ending when it bit into his neck. Chilling.
One of the best parts of the book! Thanks for telling me to read them, and also... that DAMN narration voice had me moister than an oyster...
-Jacob
MAKE MORE JURASSIC WORLD VIDEOS
@@adstv2311 No♥️
@@Zketchart who asked you?
@@Zketchart bro get outta here clown 🤡
They could Just ask for the candy instead of killing him straight away...
because they are carnivore´s not sugarvore´s
@@cromeforce lol
There not the best human social animals…
Smart. Deadly. Neither the biggest nor the strongest by comparison.
But they wield a weapon that only a human can appreciate to fear.
one from a far more ancient time and despite the startling similarity... a very inhuman weapon- intelligence.
And they like Candy Bars!
Intelligence is a more human quality.
@@FireLordJohn3191 When you realise the clear distinction between intelligence and knowledge. That whole myth about humans being the only "intelligence" worth a damn on Earth becomes shaky at best. On our turf, I guess we come on top. But, assuming such things existed as depicted in those movies, I ain't so sure about our chances on their turf. As our "intelligence" will not be evaluated on the same standards we are used to in our daily lives. We are speaking of an intelligent hunter built by nature to kill efficiently. Not like a bear mind you but more like a lions. Yet, even more overbuilt for the job. If we go back to reality we must also consider that it isn't just our intelligence that made us the dominant species. There was also a good share of luck involved.
*they eat candy bar*
Lol animals work together all the time they aren’t “special” and humans aren’t as great as we think
I'm damn happy and proud to be one of few people on Earth that has finger with claw from original animatronic Velociraptor made by Stan Winston studio.Knowing I have piece of this beautiful dinosaur from my favorite movie makes my heart warm.
😮👏👏👏
"Name your price. I can pay anything you ask!"- Seto Kaiba
@@FoolishPrince I would have sold my house as a kid for kaibas briefcase of rare yugioh cards!
Seriously, though; How much did such a thing cost you? I imagine it'd fetch a pretty penny.
You lucky sonuvabitch. Hold that tight, it's a family heirloom in the making, and one worth passing on.
“What would you do for a Klondike bar”
TheBasicGamer lmao
Raptor: *(heavy metal noises intensify)*
I just recently finished my first read-through of both novels and this kill didn't stick with me half so much as Eddie Carr's. What really got me, though, was how the revelation that Dr. Grant was wrong about the T-Rex's vision played out, even though I knew it was coming. Michael Crichton is an absolute master of dramatic irony in both books and I enjoyed them a lot.
I personally thought that part about dr Grant being wrong about the rex's vision was such a cheap retcon. Almost as cheap as bringing back Ian Malcolm with the only explanation: "dead? Me!? No, no you see, I was only half dead;) )
Eddie's made me really, really sad. Knowing that if a certain hot shot know it all had cleaned up after himself, Eddie may have survived.
Eddies death is way crazier to me. He was protecting the kids and was a good guy. Shows that, like the movie version of Eddie, even the good guys are not safe. Plus the fact that Thorne had to watch his friend be dragged through the forest as he followed them. Crazy
Eddie’s death was horrible :,( he is a wuss like me but he felt guilty when he ran away leaving the kids. Honestlyi think that’d be my first instinct too. He was like any fool that just wanted to do his job and get paid and he was literally at the wrong place at the wrong time. And the fact that the juvenile Rex was the one that got him OOF. The scenes before in the car when grant and Malcolm saw something small pass before the big rex came out STILL gives me the chills even though I know it’s the juvenile 😱😂
Oop just realized I got my characters confused 😂 I meant Ed from JP not Eddie from TLW
Yeah king's death was dark af the way the raptors hunted him is haunting
eddies death was really bad too
This is such a dark and terrifying death
Thank you for the ♥️
Dude it was a funny and great death lol
Bro rest in peace Chocolate Bar, that shit got me crying... oh yeah poor guy too
Bryce McKenzie Nothing still tops Nedry's death from the first novel. Wu's death was also pretty bad.
@Max Liston fuck chocolate bar
The fact you used a picture of Franklin for arby is so intelligently funny.
Except Franklin is even more annoying, haha.
And Kelly Malcolm as Kelly Curtis. Which is ironic because I was reading Jurassic Park A Visual History, and Spielberg confirmed that Kelly Malcolm is supposed be Kelly Curtis.
@@jashloseher578 Not as annoying as Ben from season 1 of Camp Cretaceous. Ben got better from season 2 onward. But in season 1 he screamed way more then Franklin did in Fallen Kingdom.
Firstly, that was Extremely brutal. Second, I love the Image of a Velociraptor holding a Chocolate bar in his has eating it one Bit at a time. If this was in the film it would be very Iconic.
I agree, they need to have Blue eat a candy bar in JW3 as a reference to this. ;)
Nobody:
Raptor: *eats candy bar*
Ryan Lewis its not dead u idiot people use it all the time so shut the hell up
Ryan, dude chill. Geez.
@@-dodup-5970 no, hes right. People use it way too much and its annoying and unoriginal. Also dumb, overused and overrated. In this one, it doesnt even make sense! He doesnt get the point of the joke hes using. You use that joke when NOBODY is talking about something. But EVERYONE is talking about it. Ridiculous.
@@YearsOVDecay1 You mad? You sound mad.
@@YearsOVDecay1 You want a snicker? You're not you when you're humgry.
it's very haunting how he gets distant in his last moments
and feels hem self floating away.
makes me sad :(
I don't know what is more disturbing. The guy (Howard King) getting killed like that or the kids just watching calmly...
Learning...
Dr. Malcolm and his morphine fueled monologues.
Everything looks better... on the other side
😂😂😂😂
By far the best part of The Lost World
malcolm high off his mind singing dixie as hes being chased by raptors
@@olly_evansthe only part after the high hide that kept my attention, I have a problem with keeping attention at the ends of books, only jurassic park kept it and that just proves how good it is
Imagine if this is how Ajay died offscreen in The Lost World
;(
Ajay is minor but underrated.
I would cry... Cry worse then I did to Denis nedry's death in the first book. I understand he was the villian but I it was scary
damn dark i would say
@@MrLemon44 How is he the villain?
"And then he realized it was eating a candy bar,and seemed to be enjoying it" 😂😂😂😂
One of the best death scenes in the novels. It gave me chills reading it, and likewise your narration was spot on. These narrations of novel excerpts are your best work, Klayton.
If only the Raptors ate the Snickers first. They were just hangry.
TokuTickler Better?
Ivan Harborg Better!
*Raptor attacks!
Klayton these narrations you do from the novels and absolutely astounding! Would you ever consider doing your own audio books for the JP novels? I'd definitely pay for one from you!
Me : *walks into Tall grass*
Velociraptor : so you have choosen to be eaten
I've never been so scared in my l
Life, that raptor destroyed that candy bar.
This all started over a candy bar.......forget birds,I can't look at candy the same way
The darkest kill in the novels was when the compies ate John Hammond alive, while he's totally unaware of what's happening
Nah it was when the Carnos killed Diego
Trikes: Bork! Bork!
Raptor hidden in the grass: Brok!
Trike: Shut up Greg!
What did I do?!
This video popped up in my algorithm one day, and it piqued my interest in the novels that I found myself listening to both of the audiobooks while I worked. I still replay it, thanks to you and also to the JURASSIC TIME channel for posting both audiobooks here on YT.
When I first heard that King had to go in the long grass, Ajay's warning sounded off in my mind: "DON'T GO INTO THE LONG GRASS! NOT INTO THE LONG GRASS! "
Just finished the Audiobook a few days ago and you're right about this being a brutal one
Your narration was amazing! I felt chills as you talked about how the raptors hunted King and killed him. Very gruesome but one of the most spectacular kills in the book!
I loved this scene because the character buildup showed that he was the only biosyn employee there that seemed to be down to earth or a good human. He had a family and just wanted to live. Without character buildup like that the intensity wouldn’t be there as much and the effect wouldn’t be given off. But since your hoping he lives yet the raptors are getting steadily closer makes it a very good scene. Once he died you just feel stunned and wonder, who’s next?
Meh, King obviously wasn't on Dodgson's level of pure evil but he's still not a particularly sympathetic character. We only learn of his family when also learning that he is divorced and only sees his kids on the weekends because of how preoccupied he is with his career. Also, after Dodgson tries to murder Sarah by throwing her overboard, King's main concern is about himself and whether there will be an investigation since he witnessed it.
@@drewdrewski4188 to be honest I haven’t read this book in about 3 years, and judging by what just you and I said, I would definitely agree that he doesn’t seem to be the most “root for” type of characters. But I do believe that because of the others that surround him we naturally shift out minds towards his survival over the others. In the end I do remember that just basic human nature of not wishing that fear among any other person, his death was at least still intense to read, especially with the drawn out suspenseful way of Crichton. Overall, I should really read this again, thanks for the reindulgence!
Omg yes, I've patiently waited for this video. One of the most disturbing killings IMO
You edited this amazingly, you're a natural storyteller.
I love how the book describes everything so perfectly and listining to it on audio books sends chills down my back
That Malcolm quote at the beginning is hauntingly true.
How is it that you are so good at this narration? Every goddamn time! You really capture that tension! I hope that one day, we get an audio drama for the novels!
Do you remember what happened to the juvenile velocilraptor that nipped one of the adults at a kill when Sara Harding was watching??
This is why I love your channel. From a man that has read both novels several times, I thought you were going with either Wu from the original or Eddie from lost world. Soon as you started reading I was like "Oh, I forgot about King" What a brutal segment!
And I just realized your title was only from lost world. I read the title wrong
When are you going to do a full audio book for the novels?!
Damn your narration was giving me chills. Wanna hear you read the whole book now lmao 😂 great work!
The mighty velociraptor also known as the fast boi
The details are merciless. So close to escaping, only to be struck from behind and ripped into. You are thrust in his shoes and can almost feel the excruciating pain turn into relaxing trance, the surprise of hearing his neck break, and then nothing. It's very immersive and very brutal.
Long grass: Exists
Raptors: *Its free real estate*
Raptors Win. FATALITY
What really got me about King's death was how much Crichton immersed the reader into it.
His prose painstakingly detailed how King was feeling in his final moments of life; the searing pain of the raptor's claws on his back, the dream-like, seemingly relaxed state King went into the harder the raptor bit into his neck, ending with his brief surprise upon hearing his neck finally snap and then...nothing.
I'm sure other books out there have death scenes this well-written, but so far, Howard King's death in The Lost World still stands as the most brutally detailed one I've ever read.
More of these, please! This video gave me chills.
This is arguably my absolute favorite scene from the books. I don’t know it’s just something about how it is written, it’s just so perfect
I am finally reading Jurassic Park novels thanks to you. Keep up the great work!!
Hi. Edit: your my favorite Jurassic Park RUclipsr.
Dang, I have to go back and re read these books. I forgot how detailed Crichton's books were! Thanks for sharing these moments, your narration and carefully crafted video to go with it are great. Definitely creates some tension as I listen to the scene!
So that's how Owen Grady trained the raptors, he got them hooked up on stashes of chocolate. So that's what a raptor would do with a lifetime supply of chocolate.
I like the way you narrate these Jurassic Park novels
One of my more memorable parts from the novel. You should do a video on 'How Robert Muldoon killed a velociraptor'.
Oh trust me! That's been planned for a loooong time! 🤠
ROCKET LAUNCHA
Man, you have my heart racing from this! Would love to hear your thoughts on if Crichton's more grisly kills in the JP novels can be brought in full form in the final movie or if they'd need an R-Rating.
I think that it would be hard...but I hope they try!
Come on! Do an audiobook reading these books! Please! You do such a great job!
This editing is amazing!!!
I like when he reads that “his terror was extreme” Reminded me of Nedry’s death from the first novel. Both scenes are terrifying.
The raptor eating the candy bar and not sharing it is funny lmao
It’s been three years and why hasn’t he done more of these readings.
You should try your hand an make an audiobook video or videos with Jurassic Park and The Lost World. Your voice gives off the perfect ambience for those books.
This is why you
“Don’t go into the long grass!!”
Said by someone I forgot the name off in the lost world (movie)
Ajay, Tembos hunting partner that vent into the long grass after saying not to, yeaahhhh he died
your dinosaur videos >>>> any other dinosaur videos
seriously, bc of your videos, i’m obsessed again
The one I remember is the guy in the first one who was distracting the raptors from behind a fence and didn't realize one had jumped onto the roof behind him. The description of the raptors tugging at his slick warm intestines always stuck with me.
Reading this part got me yelling, "Dont go into the long grass! Not into thelo g grass!!!" and hearing the bones snap and the guyz vision caving into Limbo... Gory but great scene :)
The suspense grew from suspicious to Intense in a second!
Such a fun video and scary scene. :)
Fun video! 💙🦖
*Looking back at the Lost World...its a masterpiece when comparing it to the Jurassic World...*
I love that quote at the beginning. Modern universities should really take note
Funny fact from the lost world (movie) in 33:57 Ian used the wrong side of binoculars
KURA you are under appreciated right now🗿🗿🗿🗿
Wow...love the way you've added just the appropriate music effects and visuals! I usually just listen to the videos. But this was worth the watch!
I read the novel of the lost world Jurassic Park and where I was reading the part where the character gets killed by the tiger striped raptors and this is the most darkest Death in the novel and the most disturbing of it
And I love how this novel version shows much dark scenes in the lost world Jurassic Park 🤭😰😨
Clayton makes hearing this so much more entertaining and the effects I love it
Man I gotta read these books, holy crap was that dark. I have the Jurassic Park novel somewhere, I gotta find The Lost World at a book store.
This is why I love this series. These intense moments make the franchise something memorable
Hiding a bar of chocolate from your fellow team mates ... clever girl
Thank you so much for bringing that scene to life, it was one of my favorites. This brought back so many memories from reading the books. Awesome video
I was wondering when you’d get to the inspiration of the long grass scene in the movie.
One death, but one of if not the most gruesome death in the franchise.
Dude, I would love to have the audio versions of both novels read by you. I love any video where you read passages from the books. Always gets me amped up!
1:38 NO DON'T GO INTO THE TALL GRASS!!!
The quote at the beginning is eerily accurate, especially when you consider the state of the western world today.
My favorite death in the novels was Nedry's one. Best death I ever read! I... don't know why I just said that.
Dude you should read both books like an audio thing with some of the sound effects you've used brings it to life ^^
Despite the overall horrificness of the scene, and knowing what comes of it later, I found the raptor who discovered the wonders of candy bars to be the funniest part of the book.
Other raptors: fighting over the food.
Raptor in the back:mmm this is good brown food (etc chocolate)
I wish we could get real adaptions of the books.