My favo movie off all time! Dont know about you but I cant talk along every sentence in the whole movie. I think ive seen it 100 times and I still love everybit of it!
I’ve seen this movie so many times, but still get such a feeling of dread when Nedry screws up the park and everything starts to shut down. It’s like I know everything that’s going to happen but still get that nervous feeling.
@@dennis-jamesmoynihan7440 I saw the movie when I was real young, about 4 or 5. So in my adolescent ignorance I just assumed any heavy white dude with glasses on TV was the same actor. Then later when I knew better, I saw him on 3rd Rock from the Sun, but assumed it wasn’t him since I had assumed it too much in the past. I said to my dad “ that guy looks like the one from Jurassic Park”, and he replied “ He is”, which blew my young mind since I didn’t yet understand how actors could appear in so many other shows or movies.
I understand if you're a kid, but you can't have a beard and not seen this movie. It came out when I was seven and saw it when I was nine. That's the right age to see it. The movie holds up at any age because it's great, but just as with any movie that has horror elements, you wanna watch it when you can actually get scared. I couldn't even get close to an actual dinosaur until I was a grown man after seeing this
@@bipolarewok i saw this when I was barely 5yrs old ... vhs tape ..living room floor, beanbags, popcorn, blanket, mom and I just having a b l a s t I wanted to become a paleontologist the very next day...but I wasn't smart enough to pass chemistry. So ... I just draw ...as a hobby ...and enjoy the healthy respect and wonder of these marvelous beings.
I saw this on opening night. So many parents brought their little kids to see the great dinosaur movie. The shrieks and screams from the kids was almost painful to listen to
I envy you! I was 12 when it came out and my parents were very strict about ratings, it was PG-13 so I should not see it until I was 13. I wanted to see it so bad that I spent most of my allowance for that whole summer on the movie trading cards at my local sports card shop.
@@Speculativedude hah if it was released pre 1984 it might’ve been rated PG. I’m not sure if it was the very first, but I heard Temple of Doom was the first major PG13 movie. Then again, there was some language in Jurassic Park that may have bumped the rating up, but the again I think the move Patton (1970) was R since PG13 didn’t exist. I think it was GP.
@@Speculativedude oh yea I’m sure, and sorry about those typos at the end of my comment. I meant “ I thought the movie Patton was R but I think it was GP.”
The Sick Triceratops scene is amazing for 3 different reasons. 1. It visually conveys John Hammond's shortsightedness + negligence. He basically had those plants put in the Triceratops area purely because "They looked pretty", not at all taking into account that Triceratops are plant eaters and maybe that plant is poisonous and or bad for the Herbivores. 2. The reactions of the actors were genuine because they were surprised to see it and it looking so real + moving. 3. It looked SO real, that when a photo was taken of Steven Spielberg sitting next to it, people thought he was doing one of those Hunting Trophy photos....People GENUINELY believed....Steven Spielberg killed a Triceratops....within our lifetime.
24:48 That's a Dilophosaurus, from the early Jurassic period 👌 while it's portrayed as quite small in the movie, it was slightly bigger than a horse in real life. As far as we know it wasn't venomous, though it wouldn't need to since it was a top predator in its environment. However, it certainly didn't have the foldable frill😂 It was recently discovered that the crests were thicker and connected to the nasal passages, making it look more like a double-crested Cassowary with sharp teeth, and the crests seemed to have assisted in honking
9:51, I like how Malcolm tries to warn Hammond that you can't contain these Animals as they are Dangerous and will do whatever they can to survive, as well as causing havoc.
To be fair Dinosaurs did have tremendous strength probably more then the average animal we have now days in modern times. Plus with how little they knew about the frogs DNA could cause a serious issue since they probably forgot they could produce eggs asexually. Even if that guy didn't shut down the security system I'm sure they would've lost control due to a unseen population control issue with them at some point
Fun fact Samuel L Jackson was supposed to get a chase and death scene but the set they were supposed to work on got blown away by a real life hurricane.
I've probably seen Jurassic Park a good five or six times in the cinema because each new audience made it feel like I was experiencing the movie for the first time. A good art school friend of mine was starting an illustration production company and commissioned me to create spec storyboards. The one was a scene from the book that never appeared in the movie -- the safari lodge scene. I loved the novel and never thought it would ever be made into a movie. While Jurassic Park was in post production I sent photostats of my storyboard to Amblin as a gift and in return I received a very nice letter from Gerry Molen, a producer on the movie and the actor who played Harding, the vet attending the triceratops. Watching both of your reactions reminded me again how fresh it was to view a movie through new eyes. Thank you.
Wow really that's so awesome to hear and thank you so much for watching along with us! Jurassic Park is hands down one of our favorite movies now and we plan to continue the series!
in his own words But when I saw the film, I realised that I was not the right person to make the film, he was. Because he made a dinosaur movie for kids,and mine would have been aliens with dinosaurs, xenomorphed using dinos as ahost or xenomorphs vs dinos ..Or a totally different aliens with dinosaurs... He never gets specific...
@@Pinkielover pretty sure he was just being metaphhorical. He probably meant that if he made a Jurassic Park movie, it would be a horror film that feels just like Alien but with dinosaur(s) instead of a xenomorph.
Fun fact: Tyrannosaurus in real life was far more terrifying. Its vision was sharper than a hawk's, combined with excellent hearing and sense of smell, so it would track you from miles away. In addition, the feet absorbed the impact of its steps so you wouldn't hear nor feel its footsteps. While it couldn't roar, since no evidence of vocal cords have been found, it could let out low-frequency bellows, sounds you would rather feel than hear.
42:23 -- This is one of the first times (maybe THE first time) that an actor's face was digitally added to a stunt person's body. I think the next two movies in the trilogy are just as much fun as this one.
The first scene of the Rex walking out of the paddock still looks flawless in 2021. That's the magic of good lighting and a proper mix of CGI and animatronics. Spoiler: The shot of the rex walking is CGI, but that's perfectly masked by the high contrast lighting and the rain. All of the close up shots of the head and feet are a life-size animatronic.
5:50 The smaller dinosaurs in that shot are Parasaurolophus, they are herbivores. You haven't seen any meat-eaters yet. It can't be done, certainly not with current technology because you need living DNA to create living creatures. 9:15 You have to feed it to them live, they are hunters and meat-eaters not scavenging carrion-eaters. 11:30 A tropical storm but not technically a hurricane, hurricanes occur in the Atlantic or North America, In the Pacific they are called Typhoons. 16:20 Yes, they look scary but Triceratops are herbivores as well, the book later explains why the Trike is sick, the film just forgets it, it's just a way to separate the characters.
Checkout our reaction to The Lost World! ruclips.net/video/lUJ0x6JC0xY/видео.html As always if you want our Full Length Unedited Reaction to this and future movies! www.patreon.com/Ky_and_Kay
the original novel, written by Michael Crichton and published in 1990, with all the concepts brought in about genetic engineering and chaos theory, pretty much sums up what could happen for those who ask, "Wouldn't it be cool if there was a zoo for dinosaurs?" would it?
My answer is and had always been yes. The problems in Jurassic both the film and book are actually correctable problems even today. If a group with the right motivations got together to do a Jurassic park it wouldn't end like JP at the very least. Especially when you take into consideration we have the warnings from Jurassic park, the book and movie, to use as a guide. That's just how I feel about it is all. It's definitely a great thought experiment.
@@Gradyolson Not really. The warnings in JP blatantly prove how foolishly stupid it is for the human race to tempt fate by "playing God" & defying the natural order by resurrecting a long-since extinct ecosystem into modern civilization. If humanity did bring dinosaurs back to life, we would've caused our own extinction, because the dinosaurs (at least, the meat-eaters) would've eaten every other animal (including us humans) they could get their jaws around or gut their sharpened talons into.
One of my favorite things in life is that 99% of the worlds population bases their knowledge of dinosaurs off this movie. We have zero idea what a TRex actually would have sounded like. Imagine being the sound engineer who had to decide what every dinosaur would sound like.
These two are too precious. When nedry turned off the security they totally nonchalant nailed the plot twist without realizing it. These first time reactions are totally priceless for those of us that have experienced the movie for decades. Kinda like watching your kid hit the ball at a t-ball game. All the warmth.
The whole thing with the amber... there's work being done (as has been for the last few years) using similar-ish techniques to bring Mammoths back to life.
Good reaction, but I highly recommend getting an editor who knows which moments need to be put in. A JP reaction without the Brachiosaur reveal, T-Rex breaking out, and some other moments is borderline criminal.
We’re glad you enjoyed! Unfortunately with RUclips a lot of scenes especially major/important scenes often get blocked due to copy right claims. So on some movies it’s sometimes difficult to keep those scenes in.
I was only 16 years old when I first saw this movie Jurassic Park at the movies for the first time. To this day as an adult I still love watching this movie because this is such a great movie for real.
I would like to mention that the animal in that crate at the very beginning was scared, confused, and probably a little disoriented. Naturally, it panicked and grabbed the first thing it could get its claws on...and so, it happened to be Jophery. That set not only this film in motion but the entire franchise in motion as well. Edit: I would like to add that *Jurassic Park* is my favorite movie of all time. But, I feel like these movies have given the Velociraptors a bad reputation. I'm the guy who's in love with the Raptors and who defends them whenever I can...sometimes, quite aggressively if I'm provoked. And, no, I don't mean "in love" in the romantic sense, in case anyone was thinking that. I mean it in the sense that they are my favorite dinosaurs. Sometimes, I wish I had been there and interacted with the characters and the dinosaurs, especially the Raptors. I have a very vivid imagination, and I can picture the Raptors in so many other films that are completely unrelated to the franchise. I've made up wild and unusual stories involving these lovable dinosaurs. I frequently imagine a few Raptors living with me (I wish that would really happen, by the way) and they (the Raptors) keep trying to boycott Jurassic Park and its sequels for depicting these lovable dinosaurs as "vicious" and "mean". They hate seeing how they're depicted in the films, but they *DID* say that they were merely acting. Once the cameras stopped rolling, the Raptors broke character and were the friendliest, sweetest, and nicest animals to be around. I believe they often had lunch with the cast off-camera in between scenes. There's *NO* way that anyone will change my mind about the Raptors. I love them, they are my favorite dinosaurs, and that's all there is to it.
Currently scientist are able to change the dna of certain birds and give them more dinosaur like features. Eventually they said by 2050 we could have a T-rex.
10:05 Thing is, humans, apes, elephants, felines, canines, all modern mammals exist solely because of the extinction of the dinosaurs. Had the meteor missed, mammals would still be small scavangers living in the shadow of the dinosaurs, because dinosaurs, pterosaurs and marine reptiles already occupied all of the major roles in the ecosystem (grazers, apex predators and so on)
im not an original watcher but this movie continues to be one of if not my most watched movie ever. I remember watching this as a kid so long ago in like elementary and i loved it. From then on ive watched it on multiple platforms from the Netflix on Wii and 3ds, dvd, blu ray, vhs, on those portable dvds, and on my phone so this movie has been with me for so long and I've gotten this far watching this movie. its so refreshing and very entertaining to see people watch this movie for the first time as nothing beats watching this movie for the first time. Keep it up
the ultimate kid's movie in my opinion, I saw it when I saw 12, it was a massive hit, like my star wars, toys and merchandise everywhere, spielberg basically made this film and schindler's list at the same time
@ky and Kay, fun fact. The scene in the car with the rexs head in the car.. the glass wasnt supposed to break like that, so its partly not acted that they were afraid.
This is not true. This is based on a misinterpreted quote, because in one shot the Rex broke the plexiglass in half and even lost a tooth in the process, which was memorable for Tim's actor. The layout of the shot makes no sense whatsoever if the Rex wasn't meant to break through. What was the shot meant to capture, its snout bumping into a barely visible sector of the frame from the worst angle possible? No, it was absolutely intended. There's even storyboards showing the glass being popped in. A simple google search can confirm or deny stuff like this and keep you from spreading misinformation and looking like a fool.
The ones that Dr. Grant talks about "moving in herds" are plant-eaters. They're part of a group of plant-eaters known as Duck-bills, because of their flattened beaks. That particular duck-bill is Parasaurolophus, famous for the enormous crest on its head which was used for communication purposes.
hands down one of the best movies ever made it still stands the test of time nearly 30 years later and I always enjoy seeing people react to it for the first time
i watched a couple reactuions to this movie... and most people seem to cut out the most iconic scene of the movie and so did you. i realized that scene just simply doesnt have the impact anymore on people it used to have when the movie came out. the scene the very first time when we see one of those dinosaurs.... where he turns her head around in the car. that was absolutely mindblowing 1993... there was nothing like that ever shown in any movie before the level of CGI was completely unmatched. people in the cinemas gasped in awe how real those dinosaurs looked. by todays standards its like.. meh... but that was like the moonlanding back then.
Imagine feeling the T-Rex's footsteps in the dark as you see the water ripple...we saw it 6 times as kids in theaters, that's how epic it was. This is still a masterpiece 30 years later because they utilized CGI...and didn't depend on it. Now that's Chaos.
29:41 Fun bit of trivia. When I went to the Hawaiian island Kawaii, I actually sat in the botanical garden where this scene was shot. I even sat at the same tree Sam Niel sat when Alan Grant found the Raptor eggs.
3:21, Laura Dern plays Ellie Satler. Several actors were considered: Kelly McGillis Sean Young Michelle Pfieffer Debra Winger Heather Graham Sigourney Weaver Teri Hatcher Renee Zellweger Gwyneth Paltrow Julianne Moore Elizabeth Hurley Claire Danes.
Claire Danes? She was 14 when this movie was released. Perhaps she was considered to play Lex instead of Ariana Richards. But it seems unlikely to me that she would be considered for the part of a woman in her 20s.
A couple of inaccuracies in the movie. 1) T-Rex is now believed to both smell and see quite well. 2) Velociraptors are actually 3 feet high, not 6 foot high like the movie portrays them. Of course I say this as someone who absolutely loves this movie since the first time I saw it in ‘93.
Just subscribed to your channel love the Jurassic park movies saw this in the theaters as a kid now 43 still one of my favorites....I feel so old now lol
This is my favorite movie of all time! I saw it opening day in 1993 and at that time, they didn’t even show any dinosaurs at all in the preview (just the ominous stomping noise of the t-Rex with the Jurassic Park logo.) We had no idea what to expect. When we actually saw the dinosaurs for the very first time on the huge screen it was the most shocking, phenomenal and amazing things I’ve ever experienced in cinema. Back then CGI was in its infancy and this was light years ahead of its time. Paired with the equally amazing animatronics, sound effects and moving soundtrack, this is the perfect film in my opinion. I love it more than just a movie. It is a cherished memory and experience. ❤️🦕🦖
I can't believe you've guys never seen this! This is literally one of my 7 ALL-TIME favorite movies that became stuck with me forever. I'm so glas you guys checked it out and enjoyed it. :)❤❤❤❤🤗🤗🤗😊😊😊
"Imagine if that happened in real life? They'd get loose and start stepping on people and ripping them apart." Lol that pretty much sums up the franchise.
I love how they used modern animal sounds for the dinosaurs. The Tyrannosaurus rex's sounds were made using sounds recorded from the squeals of a baby elephant, a dog playing with a rope toy (
Magic’s just not the same as everyone who saw this the first time back in the 90’s. Nobody had ever seen or heard anything this real, and to this day IMO the practical effects still make it look the best. Can still remember how I felt as a kid seeing the Rex tear out of the gate.
Fun fact the part where the kids were in the Jeep and the glass roof came down on top of them actually was not in the script the animatronic T-Rex broke through the ceiling and they just kept filming
Fun fact: the scene with the Rex and the car top wasn't supposed to happen exactly like that, so the shock and fear on the kids faces are real. Second fun fact: there was actually 2 of the spitters. The first one that Nedry encounters and gets spit on then a second one that off screen climbed into the jeep since he left the door open.
@@redx3816 According to the movies guide there was a herd of them. But it more than likely just 5 of them. It may not look like it but there was 2 in the scene with Nedry
Your ending questions about what they planned to do with the dinosaurs since the park was canceled- some of that is explained in the next movie, just not for the Isla Nublar dinosaurs specifically. In scripts and canon material, people from Ingen were sent some time later to take count of all the dinosaurs on the island ("Ingen's List"), and the idea of napalming the island was up in the air as well. Fortunately that didn't end up happening, so the Nublar dinosaurs are left alone for the next two movies. The next movie does answer the part about the Lysine Contingency, though. As for the concern about a male dinosaur due to the wild eggs scene, it's not going to be just a singular dinosaur; they were all engineered with more or less the same frog DNA (at least multiple species would have had the west African frog DNA), so if one individual mutated into a male, then other individuals across different species can and will do the same until all the dinosaurs are in a natural balance between male and female (and that means some populations will boom).
hope youse guys hit up the 80s classics too like Aliens, Terminator, Predator, Robocop, The Thing, and Rambo but if youre brave enough The Exorcist : P
42:25 Very first use of "Deep Fake" software, Lexi's stunt double is he body and they filmed her reaction in a safe zone and composited her head on the body
It's not Deep Fake technology though. It's just 3D face replacement. Deep Fakes are done with AI based learning, where the computer "figures out" how to replace a face. This was done by hand by the visual effects artists, though still very impressive!
I am so glad you guys did not waste any time on the intro so many people on these reaction videos waste a lot of time before even getting to the movie I want to see you guys reaction to the movie along with everyone else’s and I am very proud of you guys for doing what you did good job. 😁
Omg as someone who’s seen this movie soooo many times, I literally forget there’s people who haven’t seen it! A lot of people don’t like the sequels but I honestly love all of them tbh. If you suspend your sense of reality, they’re all fun action movies haha
First of all. I love seeing folk react to movies that they have not seen before, especially younger people that were not born when these movies first came out. So first I want to say props to both of you and I enjoyed hearing what you say. But I will admit that I did laugh pretty hard when during the dusting off of the bones scene you said, "That looks like something huge." But it is actually only almost human sized. Not to make fun of you, just kind of funny knowing what it is already.
There was a breed of velociraptor that was around the larger size but it isn't the one in the movie as the extra materials released alongside the movies list the scientific name for the smaller breed. The similar species you're thinking of is Dienonychus, closer to the size of the Raptors in the movies. From what I remember early on their fossils were often mistaken for velociraptors until they found enough evidence to suggest that while they were related in many ways, they were different species. Think like parasaurolophus(the herd at the beginning), edmontonsaurus, and iguanadon. They are all EXTREMELY similar to the point of having almost the same body types and similar environments(from what we can tell), but are still different species and from different parts of the world.
@@Zach_Walker well in the book the raptors are dienychus but when it was made into a movie they thought " velociraptor" sounded more menacing so they changed the namr but kept the body measurement vthe same.
thats the best awesome reaction i ever seen for this movie .. atleast u guys didnt keep cutting off the scenes and fast forward alot like the others do .. u kept all the important scenes .. thank uu
Don’t know if anyone else commented this yet but the scene where the Rex attacks the glass to get at the children, the glass wasn’t supposed to fall onto them and their screams were genuine
This movie was my entire childhood, I am glad you were both able to watch and enjoy! The second one is also a classic, I hope you decide to watch that one soon!
45:30 The dinosaurs are genetically engineered to require a certain enzime in order to survive and the park employees have to feed it to them. If they don't get it, they slip into a coma and die. Since the park is abandoned, the assumption is they all died from lack of the enzime.
Interesting story about the Velociraptors in this film. They are portrayed as human-sized, but the REAL Velociraptor was only about as tall as your knee. The Velociraptors in this film are more like its relative Deinonychus from North America (Velociraptor lived in Mongolia) in terms of their size, but even Deinonychus didn't quite get as big as these on-screen raptors. However, shortly after Jurassic Park was released, Paleontologists (scientists who specialize in studying prehistoric life, including Dinosaurs) discovered a new species of Dromaeosaur (the family name for Raptor Dinosaurs) that not only WAS as big as the Raptors shown in Jurassic Park, it was also BIGGER. They named it Utahraptor, and still today, Utahraptor is the largest Dromaeosaur that has ever been found. Michael Crichton (the author of Jurassic Park) stated after Utahraptor was discovered that, if he had known about Utahraptor while he was writing Jurassic Park, he WOULD have made Utahraptor the star of the book, not Velociraptor.
In the novel, Nedry's death is described in pretty gory detail. Obviously, they had to cut to an external view or the film would've gotten an R rating.
I was only six when it came out. I remember practically begging my mom to take me to see it until she relented. My favorite scene has always been the T-Rex breakout.
Actually no, Dr. Malcolm has some good ideas in this movie but to say nature "selected" a specific group for extinction on a global scale is just not how nature works. There are checks and balances, actions and reactions. If meteors impacting the Earth did block out the sun and lead to the death of most life, it wouldn't have been directed only specifically at dinosaurs, but at all living creatures. But what he implies is that nature decided to make dinosaurs go extinct. When we refer to nature, it's just the combined actions of every creature that's alive. Also, life clearly wasn't being steered away from dinosaurs. They had existed for millions of years, far longer than we have. If there hadn't been a global extinction event there would almost certainly be dinosaurs alive today. To act like dinosaurs were just magically deemed obsolete by the rest of life on Earth is pretty ridiculous. Even if they actually had been, obsolete things stay around for quite a while in nature For comparison, sharks have been around at least as long as the dinosaurs we think of if not longer, and they're still doing pretty well for themselves in their habitat. Nature obviously didn't just yeet them out of existence
The book was entirely different from the movie. At the end of the book, as the helicopter is taking off into the sunset, everybody looks back at the island from the windows only to see that the Costa Rican Air Force had arrived and were flying all over the island dropping bombs. They literally blew up the entire island at the end, including the dinosaurs. So, to answer her question, technically no, the dinosaurs were not left on the island at the end.
How do you skip the T-Rex breakout completely? I mean seriously that is one of the greatest cinematic moments in the history of film. And you completely left it out haha otherwise very enjoyable though guys thanks!
find out in the next ones. I have a lot of fun movie ideas in mind I just need to know what genre or actor or subject or setting or theme you want more of or I can list some random ones or whatever.
The fact that Jurassic Park still holds up almost 30 years later really shows the talent all the people involved had.
I literally cry from nostalgia every time i hear that theme.
Same
Me too and I like your post to make 69
Thanks for the likes ahhha now it's 70
You need to get out more! 😂
Very true...take my 117 like
This has been my favorite movie for nearly 30 years now. "It's right up your alley, I guarantee it! 🍾"
28 years ago when the movie came out
"WE SPARED NO EXPENSE!!"
@@fantasticredeye2252 that’s why he said nearly
Jurassic Park has been and always will be my favourite movie of all time since I first saw it at the age of 9 in 2013.
My favo movie off all time! Dont know about you but I cant talk along every sentence in the whole movie. I think ive seen it 100 times and I still love everybit of it!
I’ve seen this movie so many times, but still get such a feeling of dread when Nedry screws up the park and everything starts to shut down. It’s like I know everything that’s going to happen but still get that nervous feeling.
That's what makes this a real thriller.
It’s what makes it a good movie!
Omg me lol
I call him Newman lol
@@dennis-jamesmoynihan7440 I saw the movie when I was real young, about 4 or 5. So in my adolescent ignorance I just assumed any heavy white dude with glasses on TV was the same actor. Then later when I knew better, I saw him on 3rd Rock from the Sun, but assumed it wasn’t him since I had assumed it too much in the past. I said to my dad “ that guy looks like the one from Jurassic Park”, and he replied “ He is”, which blew my young mind since I didn’t yet understand how actors could appear in so many other shows or movies.
How there are still people who have not seen this masterpiece is beyond me
I understand if you're a kid, but you can't have a beard and not seen this movie. It came out when I was seven and saw it when I was nine. That's the right age to see it. The movie holds up at any age because it's great, but just as with any movie that has horror elements, you wanna watch it when you can actually get scared. I couldn't even get close to an actual dinosaur until I was a grown man after seeing this
It’s a damn shame.
@@bipolarewok i saw this when I was barely 5yrs old ... vhs tape ..living room floor, beanbags, popcorn, blanket, mom and I just having a b l a s t
I wanted to become a paleontologist the very next day...but I wasn't smart enough to pass chemistry. So ... I just draw ...as a hobby ...and enjoy the healthy respect and wonder of these marvelous beings.
I saw this on opening night.
So many parents brought their little kids to see the great dinosaur movie.
The shrieks and screams from the kids was almost painful to listen to
I envy you! I was 12 when it came out and my parents were very strict about ratings, it was PG-13 so I should not see it until I was 13. I wanted to see it so bad that I spent most of my allowance for that whole summer on the movie trading cards at my local sports card shop.
@@Speculativedude hah if it was released pre 1984 it might’ve been rated PG. I’m not sure if it was the very first, but I heard Temple of Doom was the first major PG13 movie. Then again, there was some language in Jurassic Park that may have bumped the rating up, but the again I think the move Patton (1970) was R since PG13 didn’t exist. I think it was GP.
@@darknice10 Yeah good point. I think PG-13 is a good mid point now, just annoying that it kept me from seeing JP in theaters. lol
@@Speculativedude oh yea I’m sure, and sorry about those typos at the end of my comment. I meant “ I thought the movie Patton was R but I think it was GP.”
I was one of those little kids, was the same age as Tim. I cried during the t rex scene lol
The Sick Triceratops scene is amazing for 3 different reasons.
1. It visually conveys John Hammond's shortsightedness + negligence.
He basically had those plants put in the Triceratops area purely because "They looked pretty", not at all taking into account that Triceratops are plant eaters and maybe that plant is poisonous and or bad for the Herbivores.
2. The reactions of the actors were genuine because they were surprised to see it and it looking so real + moving.
3. It looked SO real, that when a photo was taken of Steven Spielberg sitting next to it, people thought he was doing one of those Hunting Trophy photos....People GENUINELY believed....Steven Spielberg killed a Triceratops....within our lifetime.
24:48
That's a Dilophosaurus, from the early Jurassic period 👌 while it's portrayed as quite small in the movie, it was slightly bigger than a horse in real life. As far as we know it wasn't venomous, though it wouldn't need to since it was a top predator in its environment. However, it certainly didn't have the foldable frill😂
It was recently discovered that the crests were thicker and connected to the nasal passages, making it look more like a double-crested Cassowary with sharp teeth, and the crests seemed to have assisted in honking
To be fair they fully admit in this franchise their appearances aren't very accurate. Lol
My favorite dinosaur
9:51, I like how Malcolm tries to warn Hammond that you can't contain these Animals as they are Dangerous and will do whatever they can to survive, as well as causing havoc.
To be fair Dinosaurs did have tremendous strength probably more then the average animal we have now days in modern times. Plus with how little they knew about the frogs DNA could cause a serious issue since they probably forgot they could produce eggs asexually. Even if that guy didn't shut down the security system I'm sure they would've lost control due to a unseen population control issue with them at some point
This and The Land Before Time are the movies that got me into dinosaurs as a kid. Love this movie.
and this film is the reason why they released so many direct-to-video sequels
Stan Winston Studios designed the live action Dinosaurs, while Industrial Light and Magic created the CGI versions.
Fun fact Samuel L Jackson was supposed to get a chase and death scene but the set they were supposed to work on got blown away by a real life hurricane.
I've probably seen Jurassic Park a good five or six times in the cinema because each new audience made it feel like I was experiencing the movie for the first time. A good art school friend of mine was starting an illustration production company and commissioned me to create spec storyboards. The one was a scene from the book that never appeared in the movie -- the safari lodge scene. I loved the novel and never thought it would ever be made into a movie. While Jurassic Park was in post production I sent photostats of my storyboard to Amblin as a gift and in return I received a very nice letter from Gerry Molen, a producer on the movie and the actor who played Harding, the vet attending the triceratops.
Watching both of your reactions reminded me again how fresh it was to view a movie through new eyes. Thank you.
Wow really that's so awesome to hear and thank you so much for watching along with us! Jurassic Park is hands down one of our favorite movies now and we plan to continue the series!
Originally James Cameron wanted to direct the film, but lost the rights to Steven Spielberg. He even wanted to make it into a Survival Horror film.
in his own words But when I saw the film, I realised that I was not the right person to make the film, he was. Because he made a dinosaur movie for kids,and mine would have been aliens with dinosaurs, xenomorphed using dinos as ahost or xenomorphs vs dinos ..Or a totally different aliens with dinosaurs... He never gets specific...
@@Pinkielover hmmmm love the survival part but not the alien part. That would’ve been weird
@@Pinkielover pretty sure he was just being metaphhorical. He probably meant that if he made a Jurassic Park movie, it would be a horror film that feels just like Alien but with dinosaur(s) instead of a xenomorph.
Maybe once we master the capability of visiting other dimensions/timelines etc, we'll finally see James Cameron's version.
@Ivan Ribeiro Yes, thank you for taking what I already explained in a reasonable manner and making it insulting for no reason. You are very clever.
Fun fact:
Tyrannosaurus in real life was far more terrifying. Its vision was sharper than a hawk's, combined with excellent hearing and sense of smell, so it would track you from miles away. In addition, the feet absorbed the impact of its steps so you wouldn't hear nor feel its footsteps. While it couldn't roar, since no evidence of vocal cords have been found, it could let out low-frequency bellows, sounds you would rather feel than hear.
42:23 -- This is one of the first times (maybe THE first time) that an actor's face was digitally added to a stunt person's body. I think the next two movies in the trilogy are just as much fun as this one.
The first scene of the Rex walking out of the paddock still looks flawless in 2021. That's the magic of good lighting and a proper mix of CGI and animatronics. Spoiler: The shot of the rex walking is CGI, but that's perfectly masked by the high contrast lighting and the rain. All of the close up shots of the head and feet are a life-size animatronic.
5:50 The smaller dinosaurs in that shot are Parasaurolophus, they are herbivores. You haven't seen any meat-eaters yet.
It can't be done, certainly not with current technology because you need living DNA to create living creatures.
9:15 You have to feed it to them live, they are hunters and meat-eaters not scavenging carrion-eaters.
11:30 A tropical storm but not technically a hurricane, hurricanes occur in the Atlantic or North America, In the Pacific they are called Typhoons.
16:20 Yes, they look scary but Triceratops are herbivores as well, the book later explains why the Trike is sick, the film just forgets it, it's just a way to separate the characters.
33:26 Trivia: the electric fence they built in Hawaii is still there to this day
Checkout our reaction to The Lost World! ruclips.net/video/lUJ0x6JC0xY/видео.html As always if you want our Full Length Unedited Reaction to this and future movies! www.patreon.com/Ky_and_Kay
some may disagree but i love longer way better in my opinion
prefer longer reactions, also will you guys be doing all the JP/JW sequels too?
Fun Fact: Tim plays John Deacon (Deaky) the bass player for Queen in the movie Bohemian Rhapsody.
the original novel, written by Michael Crichton and published in 1990, with all the concepts brought in about genetic engineering and chaos theory, pretty much sums up what could happen for those who ask, "Wouldn't it be cool if there was a zoo for dinosaurs?"
would it?
My answer is and had always been yes. The problems in Jurassic both the film and book are actually correctable problems even today. If a group with the right motivations got together to do a Jurassic park it wouldn't end like JP at the very least. Especially when you take into consideration we have the warnings from Jurassic park, the book and movie, to use as a guide. That's just how I feel about it is all. It's definitely a great thought experiment.
@@Gradyolson Not really. The warnings in JP blatantly prove how foolishly stupid it is for the human race to tempt fate by "playing God" & defying the natural order by resurrecting a long-since extinct ecosystem into modern civilization. If humanity did bring dinosaurs back to life, we would've caused our own extinction, because the dinosaurs (at least, the meat-eaters) would've eaten every other animal (including us humans) they could get their jaws around or gut their sharpened talons into.
One of my favorite things in life is that 99% of the worlds population bases their knowledge of dinosaurs off this movie. We have zero idea what a TRex actually would have sounded like. Imagine being the sound engineer who had to decide what every dinosaur would sound like.
Darn i'm usually always first to comment haha so excited for this one, also nice you guys upload movies days in a row now keep it up!
Haha I know you are usually first! But thank you so much for your support and watching us! Stay tuned for tomorrow’s movie
We see dinosaurs every day. Birds are dinosaurs.
These two are too precious. When nedry turned off the security they totally nonchalant nailed the plot twist without realizing it. These first time reactions are totally priceless for those of us that have experienced the movie for decades. Kinda like watching your kid hit the ball at a t-ball game. All the warmth.
16:07 what Grant says is true because in an interview he said the Triceratops was his favorite dinosaur. ❤️
The whole thing with the amber... there's work being done (as has been for the last few years) using similar-ish techniques to bring Mammoths back to life.
They say that the technology exists to have elephant mammoth hybrids
Good reaction, but I highly recommend getting an editor who knows which moments need to be put in. A JP reaction without the Brachiosaur reveal, T-Rex breaking out, and some other moments is borderline criminal.
We’re glad you enjoyed! Unfortunately with RUclips a lot of scenes especially major/important scenes often get blocked due to copy right claims. So on some movies it’s sometimes difficult to keep those scenes in.
The best dinosaur movie ever made!!! Thanks for the video!!
I was 4 when I saw this in 1998 and is still one of my favorite movies. DINOSAURS!!!
The movie came out in 1993 which makes it 28 not 22 years.
@@NovaQuinn_007 did you even read my comment? I was 4. When I saw this in 1998.
Jurassic Park is definitely my all time favorite movie.
I wore out my VHS tape as a kid from watching it too much. 😂
Jesus I’m old. My mom took me to see this in the theater. It was freaking awesome
I was only 16 years old when I first saw this movie Jurassic Park at the movies for the first time. To this day as an adult I still love watching this movie because this is such a great movie for real.
litterally my childhood. hope you guy's enjoyed it.
I would like to mention that the animal in that crate at the very beginning was scared, confused, and probably a little disoriented. Naturally, it panicked and grabbed the first thing it could get its claws on...and so, it happened to be Jophery. That set not only this film in motion but the entire franchise in motion as well.
Edit: I would like to add that *Jurassic Park* is my favorite movie of all time. But, I feel like these movies have given the Velociraptors a bad reputation. I'm the guy who's in love with the Raptors and who defends them whenever I can...sometimes, quite aggressively if I'm provoked. And, no, I don't mean "in love" in the romantic sense, in case anyone was thinking that. I mean it in the sense that they are my favorite dinosaurs. Sometimes, I wish I had been there and interacted with the characters and the dinosaurs, especially the Raptors.
I have a very vivid imagination, and I can picture the Raptors in so many other films that are completely unrelated to the franchise. I've made up wild and unusual stories involving these lovable dinosaurs. I frequently imagine a few Raptors living with me (I wish that would really happen, by the way) and they (the Raptors) keep trying to boycott Jurassic Park and its sequels for depicting these lovable dinosaurs as "vicious" and "mean". They hate seeing how they're depicted in the films, but they *DID* say that they were merely acting. Once the cameras stopped rolling, the Raptors broke character and were the friendliest, sweetest, and nicest animals to be around. I believe they often had lunch with the cast off-camera in between scenes.
There's *NO* way that anyone will change my mind about the Raptors. I love them, they are my favorite dinosaurs, and that's all there is to it.
Boy, are you delusional. Raptors were deadly carnivorous creatures. They'd just as soon devour you without a single thought.
It has been 28 years ago since I saw this movie Jurassic Park for the first time.
45:11
I like how it ends with a shot of the pelicans flying, telling us that we should appreciate the dinosaurs that still live among us: the birds
Currently scientist are able to change the dna of certain birds and give them more dinosaur like features. Eventually they said by 2050 we could have a T-rex.
10:05
Thing is, humans, apes, elephants, felines, canines, all modern mammals exist solely because of the extinction of the dinosaurs. Had the meteor missed, mammals would still be small scavangers living in the shadow of the dinosaurs, because dinosaurs, pterosaurs and marine reptiles already occupied all of the major roles in the ecosystem (grazers, apex predators and so on)
im not an original watcher but this movie continues to be one of if not my most watched movie ever. I remember watching this as a kid so long ago in like elementary and i loved it. From then on ive watched it on multiple platforms from the Netflix on Wii and 3ds, dvd, blu ray, vhs, on those portable dvds, and on my phone so this movie has been with me for so long and I've gotten this far watching this movie. its so refreshing and very entertaining to see people watch this movie for the first time as nothing beats watching this movie for the first time. Keep it up
the ultimate kid's movie in my opinion, I saw it when I saw 12, it was a massive hit, like my star wars, toys and merchandise everywhere, spielberg basically made this film and schindler's list at the same time
"Kid's movie" with graphic character death & an appropriate PG rating.
@ky and Kay, fun fact. The scene in the car with the rexs head in the car.. the glass wasnt supposed to break like that, so its partly not acted that they were afraid.
My number 1 favorite movie of all time!!
21:00. Cool fact. The glass roof of the jeep was NOT supposed to break in filming this scene, so those kids' screams...they're real!
This is not true. This is based on a misinterpreted quote, because in one shot the Rex broke the plexiglass in half and even lost a tooth in the process, which was memorable for Tim's actor.
The layout of the shot makes no sense whatsoever if the Rex wasn't meant to break through. What was the shot meant to capture, its snout bumping into a barely visible sector of the frame from the worst angle possible?
No, it was absolutely intended. There's even storyboards showing the glass being popped in. A simple google search can confirm or deny stuff like this and keep you from spreading misinformation and looking like a fool.
The ones that Dr. Grant talks about "moving in herds" are plant-eaters. They're part of a group of plant-eaters known as Duck-bills, because of their flattened beaks. That particular duck-bill is Parasaurolophus, famous for the enormous crest on its head which was used for communication purposes.
hands down one of the best movies ever made it still stands the test of time nearly 30 years later and I always enjoy seeing people react to it for the first time
This movie is so iconic
i watched a couple reactuions to this movie... and most people seem to cut out the most iconic scene of the movie and so did you. i realized that scene just simply doesnt have the impact anymore on people it used to have when the movie came out. the scene the very first time when we see one of those dinosaurs.... where he turns her head around in the car. that was absolutely mindblowing 1993... there was nothing like that ever shown in any movie before the level of CGI was completely unmatched. people in the cinemas gasped in awe how real those dinosaurs looked. by todays standards its like.. meh... but that was like the moonlanding back then.
Imagine feeling the T-Rex's footsteps in the dark as you see the water ripple...we saw it 6 times as kids in theaters, that's how epic it was. This is still a masterpiece 30 years later because they utilized CGI...and didn't depend on it. Now that's Chaos.
29:41 Fun bit of trivia. When I went to the Hawaiian island Kawaii, I actually sat in the botanical garden where this scene was shot. I even sat at the same tree Sam Niel sat when Alan Grant found the Raptor eggs.
Great reaction as always love your channel keep it up guys!
Thank you very much means a lot!
3:21, Laura Dern plays Ellie Satler. Several actors were considered:
Kelly McGillis
Sean Young
Michelle Pfieffer
Debra Winger
Heather Graham
Sigourney Weaver
Teri Hatcher
Renee Zellweger
Gwyneth Paltrow
Julianne Moore
Elizabeth Hurley
Claire Danes.
Claire Danes? She was 14 when this movie was released. Perhaps she was considered to play Lex instead of Ariana Richards. But it seems unlikely to me that she would be considered for the part of a woman in her 20s.
A couple of inaccuracies in the movie. 1) T-Rex is now believed to both smell and see quite well. 2) Velociraptors are actually 3 feet high, not 6 foot high like the movie portrays them.
Of course I say this as someone who absolutely loves this movie since the first time I saw it in ‘93.
Just subscribed to your channel love the Jurassic park movies saw this in the theaters as a kid now 43 still one of my favorites....I feel so old now lol
Everything about this movie is so fantastic from the score to the phenomenal acting definetly one of my all time favorite movies.
This is my favorite movie of all time! I saw it opening day in 1993 and at that time, they didn’t even show any dinosaurs at all in the preview (just the ominous stomping noise of the t-Rex with the Jurassic Park logo.) We had no idea what to expect. When we actually saw the dinosaurs for the very first time on the huge screen it was the most shocking, phenomenal and amazing things I’ve ever experienced in cinema. Back then CGI was in its infancy and this was light years ahead of its time. Paired with the equally amazing animatronics, sound effects and moving soundtrack, this is the perfect film in my opinion. I love it more than just a movie. It is a cherished memory and experience. ❤️🦕🦖
I can't believe you've guys never seen this! This is literally one of my 7 ALL-TIME favorite movies that became stuck with me forever. I'm so glas you guys checked it out and enjoyed it. :)❤❤❤❤🤗🤗🤗😊😊😊
"Imagine if that happened in real life? They'd get loose and start stepping on people and ripping them apart."
Lol that pretty much sums up the franchise.
I love how they used modern animal sounds for the dinosaurs. The Tyrannosaurus rex's sounds were made using sounds recorded from the squeals of a baby elephant, a dog playing with a rope toy (
Magic’s just not the same as everyone who saw this the first time back in the 90’s. Nobody had ever seen or heard anything this real, and to this day IMO the practical effects still make it look the best. Can still remember how I felt as a kid seeing the Rex tear out of the gate.
Fun fact the part where the kids were in the Jeep and the glass roof came down on top of them actually was not in the script the animatronic T-Rex broke through the ceiling and they just kept filming
Fun fact: the scene with the Rex and the car top wasn't supposed to happen exactly like that, so the shock and fear on the kids faces are real.
Second fun fact: there was actually 2 of the spitters. The first one that Nedry encounters and gets spit on then a second one that off screen climbed into the jeep since he left the door open.
Yeah because the water messed up all the the measurements
@@jksteezy5218 The rain messed up the animatronics yup.
@@SilentZombie isla nublar was home to 5 of dilophosaurus
@@redx3816 According to the movies guide there was a herd of them. But it more than likely just 5 of them. It may not look like it but there was 2 in the scene with Nedry
Everytime I see that T-REX Howl, I feel exhilarated :) So good :)
Feeding something that's dead isn't always the most suitable way, since many animals won't touch something that's dead unless it's a scavenger.
Your ending questions about what they planned to do with the dinosaurs since the park was canceled- some of that is explained in the next movie, just not for the Isla Nublar dinosaurs specifically. In scripts and canon material, people from Ingen were sent some time later to take count of all the dinosaurs on the island ("Ingen's List"), and the idea of napalming the island was up in the air as well. Fortunately that didn't end up happening, so the Nublar dinosaurs are left alone for the next two movies. The next movie does answer the part about the Lysine Contingency, though.
As for the concern about a male dinosaur due to the wild eggs scene, it's not going to be just a singular dinosaur; they were all engineered with more or less the same frog DNA (at least multiple species would have had the west African frog DNA), so if one individual mutated into a male, then other individuals across different species can and will do the same until all the dinosaurs are in a natural balance between male and female (and that means some populations will boom).
I took my son to see this movie when he was 3 years old. It scared the hell out of him. Had to take him out briefly for him to calm down
Quite a memory.
Must have been annoying for u lol
@@LilSpookyyy yeah but was my fault for thinking that he could handle it. He's much older now and is as brave as they come
hope youse guys hit up the 80s classics too like Aliens, Terminator, Predator, Robocop, The Thing, and Rambo but if youre brave enough The Exorcist : P
Oh yes we plan too! The Thing is actually our next upload and will be up shortly!
The music in this was some of the best
This movie is the reason I Haven’t allowed any of my homes doorknobs to not be anything but round ones
42:25 Very first use of "Deep Fake" software, Lexi's stunt double is he body and they filmed her reaction in a safe zone and composited her head on the body
It's not Deep Fake technology though. It's just 3D face replacement. Deep Fakes are done with AI based learning, where the computer "figures out" how to replace a face. This was done by hand by the visual effects artists, though still very impressive!
I am so glad you guys did not waste any time on the intro so many people on these reaction videos waste a lot of time before even getting to the movie I want to see you guys reaction to the movie along with everyone else’s and I am very proud of you guys for doing what you did good job. 😁
Omg as someone who’s seen this movie soooo many times, I literally forget there’s people who haven’t seen it! A lot of people don’t like the sequels but I honestly love all of them tbh. If you suspend your sense of reality, they’re all fun action movies haha
First of all. I love seeing folk react to movies that they have not seen before, especially younger people that were not born when these movies first came out. So first I want to say props to both of you and I enjoyed hearing what you say. But I will admit that I did laugh pretty hard when during the dusting off of the bones scene you said, "That looks like something huge." But it is actually only almost human sized. Not to make fun of you, just kind of funny knowing what it is already.
Actually velociraptors were quite small. These are actually a diff raptor called deino -something or other.
There was a breed of velociraptor that was around the larger size but it isn't the one in the movie as the extra materials released alongside the movies list the scientific name for the smaller breed. The similar species you're thinking of is Dienonychus, closer to the size of the Raptors in the movies. From what I remember early on their fossils were often mistaken for velociraptors until they found enough evidence to suggest that while they were related in many ways, they were different species. Think like parasaurolophus(the herd at the beginning), edmontonsaurus, and iguanadon. They are all EXTREMELY similar to the point of having almost the same body types and similar environments(from what we can tell), but are still different species and from different parts of the world.
@@Zach_Walker well in the book the raptors are dienychus but when it was made into a movie they thought " velociraptor" sounded more menacing so they changed the namr but kept the body measurement vthe same.
@@jonathonfrazier6622 Oh ok. Thanks. Its been years since I read it so I forgot that detail.
I grew up with this, I love it.
Elle was limping/ dragging her leg like that, because in a scene cut for time she tripped over Arnold’s leg and twisted her ankle
I thought it was because she held the door against the raptor with her legs
@@jonunya1163 hey as I said the scene was cut, so if that’s what you wanna believe go for it!
4:14, Wayne Knight Plays Dennis Nedry. Charlie Sheen and Emilio Estevez were considered for the role
Luckily the role went to Newman.
thats the best awesome reaction i ever seen for this movie .. atleast u guys didnt keep cutting off the scenes and fast forward alot like the others do .. u kept all the important scenes .. thank uu
Don’t know if anyone else commented this yet but the scene where the Rex attacks the glass to get at the children, the glass wasn’t supposed to fall onto them and their screams were genuine
FUN FACT: scientists are thinking in bringing back from extinction a prehistoric animal, the Mammoth. It looks like it's possible. 🧐
They've also been saying this for decades lol I remember them talking about it when I was a kid
Yes, watch them all. They r all good in different ways.
Welcome to Jurassic Park
This movie was my entire childhood, I am glad you were both able to watch and enjoy! The second one is also a classic, I hope you decide to watch that one soon!
This quickly became one of our favorite movies we definitely plan to! Thanks for watching along with us
I've seen this multiple times. And it just never gets old.
45:30 The dinosaurs are genetically engineered to require a certain enzime in order to survive and the park employees have to feed it to them. If they don't get it, they slip into a coma and die. Since the park is abandoned, the assumption is they all died from lack of the enzime.
Interesting story about the Velociraptors in this film. They are portrayed as human-sized, but the REAL Velociraptor was only about as tall as your knee. The Velociraptors in this film are more like its relative Deinonychus from North America (Velociraptor lived in Mongolia) in terms of their size, but even Deinonychus didn't quite get as big as these on-screen raptors. However, shortly after Jurassic Park was released, Paleontologists (scientists who specialize in studying prehistoric life, including Dinosaurs) discovered a new species of Dromaeosaur (the family name for Raptor Dinosaurs) that not only WAS as big as the Raptors shown in Jurassic Park, it was also BIGGER. They named it Utahraptor, and still today, Utahraptor is the largest Dromaeosaur that has ever been found. Michael Crichton (the author of Jurassic Park) stated after Utahraptor was discovered that, if he had known about Utahraptor while he was writing Jurassic Park, he WOULD have made Utahraptor the star of the book, not Velociraptor.
In the novel, Nedry's death is described in pretty gory detail. Obviously, they had to cut to an external view or the film would've gotten an R rating.
I was only six when it came out. I remember practically begging my mom to take me to see it until she relented. My favorite scene has always been the T-Rex breakout.
Actually no, Dr. Malcolm has some good ideas in this movie but to say nature "selected" a specific group for extinction on a global scale is just not how nature works. There are checks and balances, actions and reactions. If meteors impacting the Earth did block out the sun and lead to the death of most life, it wouldn't have been directed only specifically at dinosaurs, but at all living creatures. But what he implies is that nature decided to make dinosaurs go extinct. When we refer to nature, it's just the combined actions of every creature that's alive. Also, life clearly wasn't being steered away from dinosaurs. They had existed for millions of years, far longer than we have. If there hadn't been a global extinction event there would almost certainly be dinosaurs alive today. To act like dinosaurs were just magically deemed obsolete by the rest of life on Earth is pretty ridiculous. Even if they actually had been, obsolete things stay around for quite a while in nature
For comparison, sharks have been around at least as long as the dinosaurs we think of if not longer, and they're still doing pretty well for themselves in their habitat. Nature obviously didn't just yeet them out of existence
once you get started watching this series, you can't stop until you've seen them all!
Yes of course we loved this one so much we definitely plan on finishing them all!
both of these reactors are so cute and they both seem nice.
Thank you so much!☺️
Great reaction guys. I adore the original trilogy and would love to see your reaction to JP 2 and 3. They're weaker but I still love them
Why didn't you include your reaction to that Trex chasing the Jeep scene? Haha
The book was entirely different from the movie.
At the end of the book, as the helicopter is taking off into the sunset, everybody looks back at the island from the windows only to see that the Costa Rican Air Force had arrived and were flying all over the island dropping bombs. They literally blew up the entire island at the end, including the dinosaurs.
So, to answer her question, technically no, the dinosaurs were not left on the island at the end.
Which makes the forced book sequel probably even more confusing, even if it was just a rehash of the Sir Arthur Conan Doyle novel more than likely.
If you were wondering why Ellie was walking weird it's because when she went to push open the gate the Raptor attack is so jammed her leg
Why pretty much all filmmakers decided to stop using practical effects like in these movies, which look way better than CGI, is beyond me.
That's not what happened. Practical effects were heavily used for many years after this, including its first two sequels.
How do you skip the T-Rex breakout completely? I mean seriously that is one of the greatest cinematic moments in the history of film. And you completely left it out haha otherwise very enjoyable though guys thanks!
find out in the next ones. I have a lot of fun movie ideas in mind I just need to know what genre or actor or subject or setting or theme you want more of or I can list some random ones or whatever.
Awesome! Will you do any of the sequels?