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THESE DINOSAURS HAD ME ON EDGE!! ACTRESS REACTS to JURASSIC PARK (1993) Movie Reaction

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • One of Spielberg's Classics, today I watch Jurassic Park. Boy, was this film a cinematic ride. I loved this so much and I hope yall will enjoy it too! FULL LENGTH REACTIONS, EARLY-ACCESS TO JURASSIC PARK 2 & 3 VIDEOS: / callmeclariss
    Check out my Reaction Playlists:
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    Copyright Disclaimer: As permitted Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976 US Copyright Office, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, comedy, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. The term and usage of "Fair Use" is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Usage in the context of non-profit, educational, research, news, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
    My name is Clariss and welcome to my channel! I'm an actress, makeup artist, and aspiring filmmaker. I wanted to create a variety channel that allows me to explore and showcase my art. I hope you enjoy the video, I know I've had fun making it. Have a blessed day!ll

Комментарии • 545

  • @callmeclariss
    @callmeclariss  2 года назад +27

    CHECK OUT MY FULL LENGTH REACTIONS ON MY PATREON! MORE DISCUSSIONS! EARLY ACCESS AND EVEN MORE FUN! JURASSIC PARK 2 THE LOST WORLD IS AVAILABLE EARLY ACCESS NOW ON PATREON!!! Go check it out! www.patreon.com/callmeclariss
    Thank you guys soo much for watching and all of your wonderful support!

    • @hamodhossain4261
      @hamodhossain4261 2 года назад

      u latterly cut off 80% of dino scenes and kept more of the talking scene i dont know what is the purpose of watching dino movie reaction if theres no dino scenes .. its actually the more important scenes than the talking scene .. im still gonna give u a (like) for watching but i cannot say im satisfied with the video its just a waste of time if u gonna keep removing dino scenes even they r not so many any way in this movie its only 4-5 dino scenes

    • @desmondedwards8234
      @desmondedwards8234 2 года назад

      You are beautiful

    • @kosminuskosminus6668
      @kosminuskosminus6668 2 года назад +1

      how come u r the only one not doing a reaction to PREY ?
      (its made by disney and is part of the PREDATOR series and its the best predator movie ever and is less then 2 weeks old)

    • @beneficent2557
      @beneficent2557 Год назад

      Lol, Its so obvious you have been to film school.

    • @Nextilia
      @Nextilia Год назад

      What are you acting?? Bad reactions and porn😂

  • @jacobcoleman8250
    @jacobcoleman8250 2 года назад +222

    Fun fact: in real life, T. rex actually had eyesight that rivaled that of modern-day hawks and falcons, with an equally powerful sense of smell and hearing.

    • @adnsaurus
      @adnsaurus 2 года назад +21

      at least the sequel (the lost world) got the smell angle right

    • @autumnteien8672
      @autumnteien8672 Год назад +39

      In the book, they mention that Rexie's poor eyesight was more a result of her genome being combined with Frog DNA. Frog eyesight is hyper-specialized to track small, moving things and very little else, so it kinda makes sense that some of the dinosaurs would have vision issues as a result of being spliced with frogs. I know that was Crichton's explanation for it, and I don't know this 100%, but I THINK there was a deleted scene where this idea was mentioned to Dr. Grant.
      Without that explanation, though, it is SUCH a plot hole. And even without it, smell would still guide Rexie pretty accurately, so...your guess is as good as mine on that one.

    • @frankiek2269
      @frankiek2269 Год назад +7

      Plus, Velociraptors were only slightly below a meter [near 26”] in height. Not the 2+ meters [near 7 ft.] in height portrayed in the movies.

    • @Darkvenom3
      @Darkvenom3 Год назад +7

      @@frankiek2269 I’ll never understand why they called them velociraptors when they were based on the UtahRaptor

    • @frankiek2269
      @frankiek2269 Год назад +2

      @@Darkvenom3 Yeah the Utahraptor [minus feathers] more closely fits the raptors in the movie.

  • @lordwalker71
    @lordwalker71 2 года назад +148

    The storm wasn't originally in the script but they filmed in Hawaii and it was hit by a hurricane during filming and it destroyed some of the sets so the wrote it into the movie, the cast and crew had to hide in their hotels during the storm and apparently Spielberg played games with the kids all night to keep their minds off the storm.
    The scene where the plexiglass glass roof of the SUV falls in on the kids wasn't supposed to happen but the T-Rex malfunctioned and pushed down too hard so that was the kids genuine reaction because they were not expecting it.
    Recently I saw someone point out in the helicopter scene where they are landing that Alan uses the two female ends of the seat belt to tie around himself and they thought it was a nod to the female dinosaurs breeding.

    • @thechad4485
      @thechad4485 2 года назад +33

      Correction on the glass roof part (as the roof caving in was featured in the pre-filming storyboards, it was planned. The animatronic T-Rex micro adjustments were based on the weight of the robot. When the rain was happening, the latex skin started absorbing water, which messed up those pre programmed motions, causing juddering and shaking (Que the behind the scenes clips of the set crew slapping a giant T-Rex robot with towels between cuts to dry it off). During an interview, Joseph Mazzello (who plays Tim) said that the Rex hit the plastic roof too hard, and cracked the plastic, and broke off a Rex tooth, which fell on him, and he started laughing. The cut and prepped for the next take. In the next take, the Rex then fully breaks the cracked plastic on the right side, above their faces, adding to their shocked reactions, which they did keep that take in the film. But that story eventually evolved into a rumor that the roof was never supposed to cave in, but it was. Not calling you out or anything. I’m just a Jurassic Park superfan helping others who love the film learn even more about it (:

    • @DarkheartedMKGames
      @DarkheartedMKGames Год назад +5

      Funnily enough we were meant to see Sam Jackson's death in the film but he was off island at the time when the hurricane hit and for obvious reasons couldn't make it for shooting the scene hence why he's off screened

    • @c.h.9223
      @c.h.9223 Год назад +2

      It is correct that the real hurricane destroyed some sets and they had to change some scenes and they used some shots of the real hurricane (the waves at the coast). But a storm was already in the script before.

    • @manxgirl
      @manxgirl 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@DarkheartedMKGamesI saw a guy on RUclips who claims to have the authentic severed arm and leg of Mr. Arnold (they only used the arm when filming). And "yes" he showed them. But, "no" I don't remember who it was.

  • @mathewdebol923
    @mathewdebol923 2 года назад +225

    I’ve always loved John Hammond’s character. They never try to go the route of the “evil billionaire” willing to sacrifice all to achieve his goal. He’s a kindly old entertainer who’s heart is always in the right place, but goes about things wrong. He never needs comeuppance or redemption, because John never stops being a good man

    • @Dragoncurse4
      @Dragoncurse4 2 года назад +88

      Funny thing is, "evil billionaire" was exactly how he was in the book.
      Which is even more funny when you realize that the movie _did_ go the generic "greedy selfish lawyer" route for Gennaro, but he was actually a good person in the book.

    • @christopherbowers7236
      @christopherbowers7236 2 года назад +32

      @@Dragoncurse4 the dinner scene in the book is properly chilling, Hammond is brushing off the concerns, talking to henry Wu while eating and theres a parallel between him eating the food and the dinosaurs eating the people. you can just FEEL the cold detachment from the possible consequences

    • @ovyto6267
      @ovyto6267 2 года назад +11

      @@Dragoncurse4 the route with them and the book is the perfect contrast, with both of them being the opposite and it turned out amazing

    • @katpiercemusic
      @katpiercemusic 2 года назад +7

      @@christopherbowers7236 yes. And I kind of love how his character arc ends in the book.

    • @andrewmurray1550
      @andrewmurray1550 2 года назад +8

      Think the only thing missing was his brother Sir David, who should have done a "David Attenborough"-style nature documentary or perhaps being the presenter for the DNA Docu-movie "ride" thing.

  • @BigBWolf90
    @BigBWolf90 2 года назад +54

    The music swelling & the line "doctor Grant my dear doctor Statler, welcome to Jurassic Park" never fails to bring a smile to my face.
    Alan: hey!
    T-Rex: *roars* WHAT!?!?!?

  • @bigdream_dreambig
    @bigdream_dreambig 2 года назад +35

    In terms of physical acting choices, I've always loved how Sam Neill takes off his sunglasses when he sees his first living dinosaur. It's a great communication of how he's in such shock that he has momentarily forgotten how to remove them.

  • @Rainbow.Pegacorn.Cosplay
    @Rainbow.Pegacorn.Cosplay 2 года назад +76

    I love how they used modern animal sounds and everyday objects to make the dinosaur's sounds.
    Adult raptors: Tortoise mating call, walrus chest roar, angry goose hiss and dolphin scream recorded underwater
    Baby raptors: Owlets (baby owls), kits (baby foxes)
    Gallimimus: Female horse in heat
    Brachiosaurus: Slowed down donkey brays the sneeze was a whale breathing through its blowhole(s) mixed with a fire hydrant.
    Dilophosaurus: Hawk, swan, rattlesnake and howler monkey
    Tyrannosaurus rex: Dog playing with rope toy, elephant calf squeal, an alligator's gurgling vocalizations, a tiger's snarl
    Triceratops: Cow, human breathing through a tube
    Bonus content: In an ironic twist, the Tyrannosaurus rex has been my favorite dinosaur since I was a child, even though this movie scared the crap out of me then, and that Raptor popping up behind Ellie Sattler in the maintenance shed is always a BIGTIME jumpscare.

    • @christopherbowers7236
      @christopherbowers7236 2 года назад +2

      IIRC the Tyranosaurus roar was based off a huge metal ungreased crane, if you listen to the roar and thing of two pices of heavy metal (lol) screeching past each other, thats what you get, its sounds otherworldly and huge

    • @singingwolf3929
      @singingwolf3929 2 года назад +3

      The thing that scared me most as a child was the opening scene. Even after I knew it was only a cage on a forklift, I still kept imagining it as a T-Rex for, probably, 2 years. Everything else was just...COOL! Lol.

  • @scottalynch
    @scottalynch 2 года назад +51

    I was working at a theater the summer of 93 and this movie was so big! For an almost 30 years old film I think the effects hold up very well!

  • @shannonoconnell95
    @shannonoconnell95 2 года назад +94

    I find the "6 foot turkey" insult to be hilarious, cuz that would still be terrifying.
    As for the dino accuracy... Well, the designs were very accurate for what we knew at the time, though the Velociraptor is a lot bigger than its real life counterpart, which was actually around the size of a turkey! Funnily enough, Jurassic Park's dilophosaurus is actually smaller than its real counterpart; they were actually around 6ft tall and 20ft long! Not to mention, the neck frill and venom are just artistic license 😆
    **Edit: Evidence shows that the T-rex had amazing binocular vision - even better than ours! And an absolutely stellar sense of smell to boot!

    • @blacktronlego
      @blacktronlego 2 года назад +15

      I bet that kid has never seen a live turkey. They can be intimidating.

    • @hubertboisvertboucher2071
      @hubertboisvertboucher2071 2 года назад +9

      Although since then they discovered fossils of dinosaurs in the same family as velociraptor that were of a size like the ones in the movie, Deinonychus and Utahraptor that is even bigger if my memory's good. Sorta retroactively vindicated ! Haha
      But Dinos of the raptor family probably had feathers (which hadn't been discovered at the time) not as much as birds, but probably enough to radically change their appearances.
      And yeah, even if T-rex couldn't see you, it would probably have been able to smell you well enough to not need to see you. But I think there's no way a predator that size could have thrived with only movement based vision : a big rock in it's path (or a cliff) could mean a broken ankle or leg, could mean no hunting for a while and a beast this size couldn't have lasted long without eating a lot. But the idea was genius to create suspense.
      Edit : Oh and while the long-necked dinosaurs like Brachiosaurus grew surprisingly fast, there is a good chance they would take decades to get to those sizes...Unless maybe Ingen did additional genetic modifications on them...
      Re-edit as I watch the video : Dilophosaurus was one of my favourite, to imagine that the real ones were many times that size...interesting fact : they still don't know what the flanges on the top of their heads were for :P

    • @josephschembri
      @josephschembri 2 года назад +6

      Even regular a turkey is terrifying! Believe me I had a dozen of them they can go realy wild.

    • @Lannisen
      @Lannisen 2 года назад +8

      If I'm not mistaken, the t-rex in the book has an issue with its eyes, and that's why it can only see them clearly when they're moving. They lost that in the film, and made it a species wide thing rather than just that one specific t-rex.

    • @TheMarcHicks
      @TheMarcHicks 2 года назад +6

      Clearly this kid has also never encountered swans or geese before....they're brutal!

  • @walkerlocker6126
    @walkerlocker6126 2 года назад +39

    This was so interesting, I loved hearing your professional input on the acting and directing. This was such a refreshing take on a good ol' classic. Subscribed!

  • @playmo98
    @playmo98 2 года назад +16

    The CGI was incredible for it's time and one thing that makes me love it even more is that it was extremely innovative and much of the techniques that were used here ended up being used in later films! c:

    • @E_l_l_i_e
      @E_l_l_i_e 2 года назад +2

      And this innovation is both a blessing and a curse coz everything is cgi now.

  • @MrWatchtower
    @MrWatchtower 2 года назад +13

    Fun Fact: I believe them filming the triceratops was the first they ever saw a practical dinosaur on set so the reaction was also genuine. Also, the T-Rex next to the car before seeing the flashlight was the best transition from practical to CGI.

    • @ch4z_bucks
      @ch4z_bucks 2 месяца назад

      Yhh I think that's true. In the book the animal that needs help is a stegosaurus, but I guess they thought it would be too complex or expensive to make compared to a triceratops

  • @hubertboisvertboucher2071
    @hubertboisvertboucher2071 2 года назад +17

    That movie hit me directly in my dinosaur craze when I was a kid. In the first 3 weeks I've pleaded, bribed and tried everything I could to go and see it again....Went at least 5 times. To this day, the score still gives me chills.
    The awe, the wonder at the dinosaurs (and I might say the respect that the sequels seem to have more or less lost) still manage to wake the child in me.

  • @sean.alphonse
    @sean.alphonse 2 года назад +51

    I've always loved this movie because of just how well it portrays a series of choices and seemingly simple actions into a whole butterfly effect catastrophe, though the book is quite a bit different regarding the fate of certain characters, and it gives some extra information that the movie doesn't. The reason the triceratops is sick isn't explained in the movie - but in the book, Sattler and the dino-vet discover that though they haven't been eating the West Indian lilac berries directly, the triceratops swallow stones to help them crush up the vegetation they eat in their stomachs. As they dig up the stones to eat them, they're also inadvertently eating the berries which makes them sick, but only periodically whenever they go to eat more stones. They also go more in depth into Hammond and the creation of the park, the rivalries between InGen and BioSyn (who were paying Nedry to steal the embryos), and in some side stories and spin-offs they go more into depth about how they acquired Isla Nublar from the Costa Rican government (hence all the Spanish) and the way they forced out some of the native people and tore up the island to make the park.

    • @deepermind4884
      @deepermind4884 2 года назад +5

      Domino effect, not butterfly effect. There's a difference.

    • @cybergeek11235
      @cybergeek11235 2 года назад +8

      @@deepermind4884 okay but if a butterfly flaps its wings in china and the resulting typhoon knocks over a series of dominoes....

    • @SSPerfectChaosRCT
      @SSPerfectChaosRCT 2 года назад +3

      @@deepermind4884 granted this is more of a demonstration of Domino effect over Butterfly effect as there are clear and direct correlations and sometimes even causations to each event. But I would still say there's a butterfly element with Nedry. Hear me out: Nedry was supposed to only take 20 minutes and reboot the program so only fences he needed would go off but he didn't make it. That's the chaos element so all the fences ended up going off (such as the raptor fences). Basically you had this Domino effect that honestly should have played out one way, but ended up with another result.

  • @nedzed3663
    @nedzed3663 2 года назад +8

    Jeff Goldblum wasn't playing Dr Ian Malcolm, he was playing Jeff Goldblum as if he himself was in this situation and I love him for it

  • @MostlyAnimatedSketches
    @MostlyAnimatedSketches 2 года назад +10

    The fact that Alan says "Bet you'll never look at birds the same way again" and it comes back at the end when there's a bird flying outside of the helicopter is legitimately one of my favorite details in the film. This movie is full of stuff like that (more iconic detail being the "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth" banner falling in front of the T. Rex), and you really don't get that in the newer films. This is why none of the other films have been as good as this one.

    • @wolfen26
      @wolfen26 2 года назад +2

      And for me its the seatbelt scene in the helicopter. The two ends of the seatbelts that dr grant holds up and ties together are the "female" ends. All the dinosaurs are bred to be female....

  • @kylebrooks338
    @kylebrooks338 Год назад +2

    Oh man I agree on that whole multiple actors and a camera opening everything up. The energy shifts so weirdly once you stick a camera into a scene. I remember my acting classes going well, you’re in the zone but then the teacher brings in a camera and all of sudden people just start over analyzing themselves and get tweaky. Its funny

  • @Wiiggz
    @Wiiggz 2 месяца назад +3

    Fun fact about this movie here in the uk. My local theatre the lyric in Carmarthen was on the brink of being shut down by the local council. The lady running it reached out to Steven Spielberg asking if they could premiere jurrasic park on the same night as the red carpet premiere event in London so they could save the theatre. Steven replied and accepted her special request. Only my local town theatre in Carmarthen, wales and London were showing the movie for the first time. The theatre is still open to this day, although not playing movies any more it’s strictly a theatre for shows. Sky (our local tv provider here) made a sky movie about it called save the cinema, it starred Tom Felton from Harry Potter along with other actors. My little towns claim to fame with this brilliant movie.

  • @jdneilso
    @jdneilso 8 месяцев назад +1

    The part when Alan is looking at the dinosaur for the first time, and he's going through everything he thought he knew about dinosaurs gets me every time. Sam kills that scene. "They're moving in herds...they do move in herds." Chokes me up every time.

  • @kenlangston3451
    @kenlangston3451 2 года назад +14

    I remember seeing this movie a couple of weeks before my 18th birthday with my uncle and my little brother in Austin, Texas. You can’t imagine the goosebumps we all felt seeing the dinosaurs for the first time with the soaring John Williams score.

  • @maxsteel1379
    @maxsteel1379 2 года назад +17

    The shots, frame adjustments all the stuff you said i didn't notice them i was just enjoying the movie like a normal person. But now watching this with you, changed my whole view. I really liked it. And I love that you were explaining how each shots were made and how it's happening in film sets nd the efforts they put to make it perfect is really amazing. ✌️👍❤️❤️❤️🤘😊

  • @eddiehoward7002
    @eddiehoward7002 Год назад +2

    Nedry's death was even more graphic in the book. The book described Nedry holding something by his stomach, only for him to realize in was his own organs.

  • @Berto2K
    @Berto2K 2 года назад +2

    One cool little detail that often goes unnoticed: When the light is shining down on the raptor through the ceiling panel you can see the letters A, C, T, G which are the four basic compounds of DNA: adenine (A), guanine (G), cytosine (C), and thymine (T).

  • @dildev5478
    @dildev5478 Год назад +2

    Your description of the blocking in the trailer scene with Alan, Ellie, and Hammond: instant subscribe. I absolutely want more movie analyses like this. This was so great.

  • @HawkTeevs
    @HawkTeevs Год назад +2

    44:27
    Fun fact: Right here, you can see one of the crew members take out his hand to balance the Velociraptor animatronic. It was literally so top-heavy that someone had to physically hold it down, and the camera just happened to pick them up accidentally.

  • @DAMIENDMILLS
    @DAMIENDMILLS 2 года назад +8

    I love how Hammond assumed the scientists he brought on the island would agree with his idea. Does he not realize that scientists don't agree with each other on everything?

  • @ajdomer92
    @ajdomer92 2 года назад +5

    I grew up watching this movie and then acting out being chased by a dinosaur in my backyard. I didn’t read the book until I was about 13. Michael Crichton was brilliant; he created such clear characters and believable science along with amazing action. Plus acting on a set with animatronic dinos would be the ultimate dream (even if my character got eaten).

  • @jksgameshelf3378
    @jksgameshelf3378 2 года назад +4

    There's a show on Netflix called "The Movies That Made Us" (I think that's it) that goes behind the scenes on the making of classic movies, and the episode on this film is really great. It goes into a lot of the backstory on how they created new CGI for the dinosaurs, as well as the making of the giant T-Rex "puppet" by the late legend, Stan Winston.

  • @anishchoudhury8537
    @anishchoudhury8537 2 года назад +24

    It makes me so happy that people are watching Jurassic franchise, the rest of the sequels may not be like the first one but overall it's an amazing franchise and the first one is a masterpiece so I love dinosaurs for many reasons. Some of the dinosaurs shown in the franchise are very inaccurate like velociraptor are very small and with feathers and etc. And new studies changed so many things so things we thought we know about dinosaurs we didn't know in 1990s. Also we will never ever know how dinosaurs actually looked or sounded. I wish I could see one with my own eyes but it's impossible and aah well that's life. Also the vision based on movement is so not true. T rex was actually very smart with powerful sense of smell so yeah next time if you see one, move!

  • @dcemerald70
    @dcemerald70 2 года назад +6

    Jurassic Park is my absolute favorite of the entire saga! I still have memories when I went a local movie theater, and it famous scenes from movies framed on the wall. They had a framed shot of the scene of the T-Rex roaring as the Jurassic Park banner falls. 🦖🖤💛❤️

  • @sharonellis8776
    @sharonellis8776 2 года назад +4

    This movie was so well made, this is why people love it ! Plenty of action, stunts and scary bits. xx

  • @marcusabston6365
    @marcusabston6365 2 года назад +10

    The first T. rex in Jurassic Park has her vision altered because of the frog DNA, if the DNA sequence for her visual abilities wasn't missing than she would see normally just like us and they wouldn't have been able to use that against her.

    • @Enthymene
      @Enthymene 6 месяцев назад

      well... she can see just fine in the rest of the series?

    • @marcusabston6365
      @marcusabston6365 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@Enthymene nope her vision never changes

  • @blacktronlego
    @blacktronlego 2 года назад +14

    3:45 Kids often love dinosaurs because they are very big (at least. some of them are), very scary, but also very dead, so not an actual threat.
    4:40 The dinos are pretty accurate for what they thought at the time. A lot of new discoveries and revised theories have been made since then. They played about with the sizes of some of the dinosaurs.
    44:35 Dogs and cats can sometimes work out how to open doors, more by accident than by design, but I think the raptors accidentally work it out as well.
    The reason this can't be done, quite apart from sorting the DNA in a mosquito's gut, is that you cannot produce a living animal from dead DNA. We have almost complete frozen Mammoth carcasses and a close living relative but we cannot create clone mammoths. I don't know why they picked frogs as the source of the sex-change, many reptiles do it too, some reproduce entirely through females with no male involvement.

    • @ADADEL1
      @ADADEL1 2 года назад +2

      Hmm, can't isn't completely right. To my knowledge (and probably very outdated) the only example of it being done is an extinct species of Spanish mountain goat that was de-extinctioned with another goat as a surrogate womb but died of lung problems a few hours later. As far as I know there is nothing stopping us from doing the same thing with the mammoth except for the expense, lack of interest, and no real surrogate womb. (yes a modern elephant would probably work but that's a lot of time and money on maybes)

    • @chriswhinery925
      @chriswhinery925 2 года назад +2

      @@ADADEL1 I've actually listened to experts talk about this and one of the main issues surrounding de-extincting animals is "is it even ethical to do this when these animals don't have a local niche anymore". Most scientists believe we actually could clone mammoths right now if we wanted to, but where are we going to put them? Where can we introduce a "new" species of enormous animal without it completely knocking the local ecology out of whack? And even if we might set aside a huge tract of land in Canada or Russia for these animals to live, to what end? What good will it do to have them back? The reason they went extinct is because they were adapted to a world that doesn't exist anymore, so should we even bring them back? These are the sorts of questions that are being wrestled with.

    • @manxgirl
      @manxgirl 7 месяцев назад

      They already have plans to somehow bring back the 🦤. They've even picked out where they plan to reintroduce it. I say, if we DO have this kind of technology, go the condor route, that they mentioned in the movie.

    • @blacktronlego
      @blacktronlego 7 месяцев назад

      @@manxgirl Like the Mammoths they have ,whole dodo corpses, but again we have the living animals from dead DNA problem which we would not have with condors. I don't think cloning has ever been tried but various other methods have been tried (not always successfully) to save species from extinction.

    • @djking2609
      @djking2609 2 месяца назад

      Not accurate at all. People have paid for clones to be created from deceased pets. It’s nothing to do with ‘dead’ or ‘living’ DNA. It’s all about damaged or undamaged DNA. If something is deceased, and has been for some time (in a woolly mammoth’s case we’re looking at 40,000 years minimum), then it’s significantly more likely for the DNA to have been damaged through degradation and contamination. DNA has a half life of 500 years, so woolly mammoth remains (even if preserved in freezing ice) would only contain a minuscule amount of DNA for scientists to work with. And it would be very challenging to establish if the extracted DNA comes from the mammoth, or from the bacteria and parasites that attach to remains.
      The point about the mosquito’s gut is also incorrect in that DNA does not survive in Amber specimens. So the entire venture is scientifically impossible as presented in the movie. Scientists have recently attempted (under incredibly strict laboratory conditions) to extract DNA from insects in 40,000 year old Copal, and extracted nothing. Now, 100 million years ago is an incredible distance in time from 40,000 years ago. Scientists also recently attempted to work backwards in regards to DNA preservation in amber. DNA was extracted from an insect in 6 year old Amber! So we can clone spiders from 2014! But the process that made Amber from resin millions of years ago involved intense heat underground, and this is not the correct conditions for ancient DNA preservation.

  • @USCena
    @USCena 8 месяцев назад +1

    This movie is such an amalgamation of such amazing people: Spielberg, Winston, Cundey, Williams, Tippett, etc. You said you really loved the lighting Clariss and you can thank the DP Dean Cundey. Incredible how he's had his hands on such well noted movies: Halloweens 1-3, The Fog, Esacpe from New York, Back to the Future 1-3, The Thing, Big Trouble in Little China, Hook, Death Becomes Her, The Flintstones, Casper, Apollo 13, Flubber, & Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

  • @pasaniusventris4113
    @pasaniusventris4113 2 года назад +3

    i don't know what it is, but spielberg has such a way with directing kids that he makes them totally believable. any of his movies that has a child in it, they act realistically and their speech is somehow not stilted, not stiff, and they just seem authentic. i really enjoy watching anything he directs with kids in it, because they never annoy me, but just act like, well, KIDS.

  • @leowilliam5576
    @leowilliam5576 2 года назад +6

    I might be wrong (last time I was there was 2015 when I graduated from high school) but I believe the Orlando park still mostly has the original Jurassic Park aesthetic and ride, while over in California they transitioned to reflect the Jurassic World movies. As a nostalgic Floridian I'm definitely biased toward the original.

  • @Miroku2235
    @Miroku2235 Год назад +1

    I love the joke/theory that John Hammond is actually a necromancer. Look how happy he is on the island, surrounded by his power. And he uses the crystal on his cane as a focus for his magic, haha.

  • @jimjam4082
    @jimjam4082 2 года назад +2

    "Chest compressions, Chest compressions, Chest compressions." Ah, Dr Mike would be so proud.

  • @theeLonelyRedPanda
    @theeLonelyRedPanda 2 года назад +2

    In the novel nedry died horribly. He was blinded, the dilo, cut open his belly and all he felt was his body was extremely cold but his intestines in his hands were warm. Then dilo came up behind him bit him on top of his head and then snapped his neck.
    Sam Jackson was gonna have his own scene but a hurricane came and destroyed everything. And fyi the storm scenes spielberg went out and shot that during so it's real live footage from said hurricane.
    The park ranger had he studied their behavior or knew more he would've known it was a trap and the ambush would come from the side.

  • @joelpayne1193
    @joelpayne1193 Год назад +1

    This film was my favourite childhood memories and when I see dinosaur in the film, my mind was blown away by special effects and actors were doing great job to make movies worth it 😊

  • @karmenh8844
    @karmenh8844 2 года назад +3

    Watch them all. They're all so different, but great in their own ways. This 1st one is 1 of my favorite movies I've seen in my life, and will be forever.

  • @TheCkent100
    @TheCkent100 2 года назад +3

    As someone else commented, both "Jurassic Park" and "Westworld" came from the legendary writer Michael Crichton. The hubris of man was often a theme in his books. In fact, much of the discussion over the Chilean Sea Bass dinner was taken directly from the original "Jurassic Park" novel - which I highly recommend, as it contains a subplot completely left out of the movie.
    Another point changed for the movie is that Grant is not romantically involved with Dr. Sattler. She is his graduate student, nothing more. Spielberg changed it because he knew that a romantic interest, even an implied one, would tend to make the film more appealing to a female audience.

  • @WilliamMoses355
    @WilliamMoses355 2 года назад +14

    A number of other people have commented on things like wrong-sized velociraptors, T-rex's binocular vision, and *everything* wrong about the dilophosaurus. So I'd just like to add probably the most obvious thing we've learned about dinosaurs since the 90s, is that a lot of the theropods, especially raptors, had downy feathers for warmth. Which makes velociraptors look even more like a demon-turkey.
    Also, frog DNA seems like an odd choice to replace genetic gaps. A closer relative, like an ostrich or alligator would have a better chance of creating a viable embryo. Of course then the gender swapping thing wouldn't work.

  • @cybergeek11235
    @cybergeek11235 2 года назад +12

    Fun fact: the dinosaur they're calling a velociraptor (which I spelled correctly, come ON firefox) is actually a deinonychus ("die-NON-ick-us"). Raptors were about half the size, but had a cooler and scarier-sounding name, so they got the Hollywood treatment (though to be fair, I'm not sure if that's Crichton's doing or Spielberg's).

    • @cyberdragon5247
      @cyberdragon5247 2 года назад +2

      It was Crichton’s in the book they are referred as velociraptor mongoliensis or the 3 foot dinosaur we all know, however they are portrayed as six feet similar to the movie. However in the novel they refer to deinonychus by its other name velociraptor antirrhopus and is what Grant digs up in Montana.
      I find it strange how Crichton made sure to identify both. He could have easily made the raptors antirrhopus while still using the name velociraptor, but instead made it the clear distinction that it is in fact mongoliensis at the park.

    • @SpiderandMosquito
      @SpiderandMosquito 2 года назад +1

      Funny thing is Crichton worked (second hand accounting this by the way fact check yourself) the paleontologist responsible for deinonychus to get them as accurate as possible and even asked his okay to change the name

    • @MrWatchtower
      @MrWatchtower 2 года назад

      @@cyberdragon5247 Plus Crichton did the screenplay for the movie version so everything was fact checked by himself but ya know Hollywood lol.

  • @SSPerfectChaosRCT
    @SSPerfectChaosRCT 2 года назад +1

    Admittedly, when I was a kid first watching this movie, I understood what Malcolm was saying and even trying to say, but I didn't pick up on *any* of the undertones and how he was tying it all together. One day, about ten years ago, I was watching it randomly and I suddenly picked up on those undertones and it put the whole movie in a different light, starting with Hammond's hubris.

  • @LadyFeline3
    @LadyFeline3 2 года назад +5

    You should definitely give the book a shot if you're interested in the scientific ethics part of the story because that's ultimately what the book is about. The dinosaurs are just the vehicle for the discussion. Also, there are enough differences in the story, and in the characters and their fates, for it still to be interesting/unpredictable for someone who has already seen the movie.

    • @eXpriest
      @eXpriest 2 года назад

      Crichton is less concerned about the ethics and more about proselytizing about how science bad; man's a luddite.

    • @LadyFeline3
      @LadyFeline3 2 года назад +3

      @@eXpriest I admit that it's been a while since I read the book, so I may be misremembering how much was about ethics. And maybe he is a luddite, but as for the 'science=bad', I didn't really get that impression for this particular story. More an impression that we humans tend to be short sighted, and that we never have as much control as we *think* we do, which can lead to big problems in the long run.

    • @eXpriest
      @eXpriest 2 года назад

      @@LadyFeline3 Admittedly it gets worse in his later novels, but the man has always propagated a distinctly anti-science view. Not to say I'm not still I fan, I just disagree with his worldview.

  • @zacharyjoy8724
    @zacharyjoy8724 Год назад +1

    Yeah, I was also a kid when this came to theaters, about 8 or 9. Dad and I went to see it together, and while we loved it, we both agreed that we would have nightmares if we just went home. So we ended up having a double feature that night: we followed this up with Last Action Hero. Seriously. It’s one of my favorite memories.

  • @jmaree_official
    @jmaree_official Год назад +1

    One thing that 80s & 90s action/adventure movies did better than today…… SUSPENSE WAS EVERYTHING! They wanted to give you thrills & chills before you even see the monsters or dinosaurs

  • @imuawarriors
    @imuawarriors Месяц назад +1

    imagine a theater full of people watching this in '93... we were astounded....

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 2 года назад +2

    Kelly McGillis, Julia Roberts, Linda Hamilton, Bridget Fonda, Jodie Foster, Nicole Kidman, Melanie Griffith, Brooke Shields, Kyra Sedgwick, Uma Thurman, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Wright Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Geena Davis, Michelle Pfeiffer, Meg Ryan, Genevieve Bujold, Christina Applegate, Kim Raver, Sarah Jessica Parker, Joan Cusack, Debra Winger, Juliette Lewis Helen Hunt, Mariska Hargitay, and Kim Basinger were considered for Ellie Satler.
    Johnny Depp, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Bruce Campbell, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, Bill Paxton and Michael J Fox were considered for Ian Malcolm.
    Sean Connery, Clint Eastwood, Paul Newman, Ian Bannen, Charlton Heston and Marlon Brando were considered for John Hammond.
    Brian Cox, Geoffrey Rush, Bob Hoskins, and Jeffrey Jones were considered for Robert Muldoon.
    The film was a box office and critical success, making $1 billion dollars ($1.8 billion dollars today) against a $65 million dollar budget.
    It won Best Visual Effects, Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing.
    It's still considered to be one of the best Sci-fi movies ever made.
    Here's my ranking for the Jurassic Park series:
    JURASSIC PARK: 9/10
    The Lost World Jurassic Park 2: 8/10
    JURASSIC PARK 3: 6/10
    JURASSIC WORLD: 8/10
    JURASSIC WORLD 2: 7.5/10
    JURASSIC WORLD 3: 7/10.

  • @Alfonso88279
    @Alfonso88279 2 года назад +2

    Wow, she really feels like an actress. It's not like watching most youtubers, the charisma is wild.

    • @callmeclariss
      @callmeclariss  2 года назад +5

      I sincerely appreciate that thank you very much! :)

    • @smdownh9
      @smdownh9 2 года назад

      @@callmeclariss you should react to the show Young Justice on HBO/Max

    • @smdownh9
      @smdownh9 2 года назад

      @@callmeclariss most the dinosaur facts they give are wrong

  • @MrBigPicture835
    @MrBigPicture835 3 месяца назад +1

    I saw this in the movie theater when it first came out, and it really blew my mind.

  • @erikagholston6610
    @erikagholston6610 8 месяцев назад +2

    The music was perfection in this movie.

  • @sca88
    @sca88 2 года назад +1

    As some people already mentioned, the Velociraptor was smaller than depicted. The Utahraptor was bigger and the size of Velociraptors portrayed in the film.

    • @jeffthompson9622
      @jeffthompson9622 2 года назад

      It was a nice coincidence that Utahraptor's discovery was announced between the filming and the release of this movie. I also liked that they considered naming it Spielberg's raptor.

  • @YoureMrLebowski
    @YoureMrLebowski Год назад

    31:41 "she will forever be terrified of flashlights." 🤣🤣🤣
    and dinosaurs.

  • @benofavalon7121
    @benofavalon7121 2 года назад +6

    Great reaction, Clariss! 😊
    As always, love your enthusiasm and your insights.🥰
    This is one of my favourite films from my childhood; I must have been about 9 or 10, when I saw it in the movie theatre with my parents 😃
    Also, Jeff Goldblum just being Jeff Goldblum is always amazing 😄

  • @zhubajie6940
    @zhubajie6940 2 года назад +6

    Probably the biggest technical gripes (from what we've learned since the movie was made or was done for cinematic effect) are that 1. Velociraptor is a turkey size feathered dinosaur, although these are about Utahraptor size which was discovered later 2. Tyrannosaurs had excellent sight and smell. Standing still would make you just an easier meal. 3. There is still controversy on how much and what kind of feathers each specie of dinosaur had e.g. some say T. rex was fully feathered others maybe just when young. Some of this could be explained away that these are not purebred dinosaurs but mixed with DNA from some other species to make up for lost DNA sequences. 4. Most dinosaurs including T Rex didn't roar and large ones probably made infrasonic sounds too low to be heard by the human ear. 5. The Dilophosaurus frill and poison spit verges on the ridiculous and is not based on any science: pure Hollywood fantasy.
    The birdlike and less reptilian aspect of these creatures is accurate with present-day science, however.

  • @cybergeek11235
    @cybergeek11235 2 года назад +6

    Also, the thing you were saying about people being unable to walk and chew gum in front of cameras holds true in other industries as well! I, for example, am a pretty solid coder and typer normally (which I ought to be after sitting in front of computers since I was but a wee lad, several of decades ago). Put me on the spot, though, and I can't find the dang space bar.
    It's a real problem. :-\

  • @sebastienriviere7371
    @sebastienriviere7371 2 месяца назад

    My favorite quote from this movie: "Your scientists were so preoccupied with wether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should." It's the modern version of Rabelais' quote: "Science without conscience is but the ruin of the soul."
    Also when I was in 1st year of biology in college, we have an assignment that was to analyze all scientific errors or impossibilities in Jurassic Park and explain why (or how to correct them if possible). There were a lot of mistakes. But it didn't alter my love for this movie at all.

  • @scottalynch
    @scottalynch 2 года назад +1

    I still say “hold on to your butts” when driving with my family

  • @blueroninstudios
    @blueroninstudios 2 года назад +1

    Rest in peace and thank you to Stan Winston who's artisans in the industry created most of the animatronic dinos that you see in the film.

  • @joek468
    @joek468 Год назад

    My biggest surprise of this movie came 20 something years after when I found out the little boy Timmy was the same actor that played John Deacon, bass player for Queen in the Bohemian Rhapsody movie.

  • @crystalgemgirl731
    @crystalgemgirl731 8 месяцев назад +1

    The rex in the breakout scene was an animatronic and is still my favorite part other than the lawyer getting eaten off the toilet. Rexxy is beautiful.

  • @karlmoles6530
    @karlmoles6530 2 года назад +5

    The CGI in this is better than most modern CGI

    • @Nnvjdj
      @Nnvjdj 3 месяца назад +1

      This iss not cgi

    • @karlmoles6530
      @karlmoles6530 3 месяца назад

      @@Nnvjdj Quite a bit of it is CGI

    • @Nnvjdj
      @Nnvjdj 3 месяца назад +1

      @@karlmoles6530 yes but only very little..main is animatronics

    • @karlmoles6530
      @karlmoles6530 3 месяца назад

      @@Nnvjdj I know but what CGI there is is reallllllly good

  • @Dylan-vd6rz
    @Dylan-vd6rz 2 года назад +6

    The fossil they're digging up that they call Velociraptor isn't an actual Velociraptor outside of the film. Velociraptor was a dog sized predator native to Mongolia and eastern Asia. What Grant is excavating is probably a Deinonychus which was a human sized raptor. Back in the 80s when Crichton was writing the book there was talk about moving Deinonychus into the Velociraptor genus.
    Also all of the animals u see would be thicker. There's a lot of meaty bits between and animals skin and it's bones.
    The carnivores would have some sort of feathering as well. Also the ostrich looking ones would be feathered. The actual dilophosaurus didn't have a frill and didn't spit venom.

    • @scottb3034
      @scottb3034 Год назад +1

      Actually Deinonychus is likewise too small. It is actually probably Achillobator which WAS found while crichton was writing the novel in 1989. It wasn't named for 10 years but it was speculated to be a velociraptor since it was also found in Mongolia. Crichton kind of cobbled together what he thought worked from each genus. The size of achillobator, the name of Velociraptor and the location of Deinonychus.
      What you say about Deinonychus is true though. Gregory Paul was a paleoartist source for the novel and movie (he even made artwork for the film that was used in the movie) and he had an idea to lump similar genus under one senior genus to simplify classification of species. He did that with Deinonychus being lumped into the more senior velociraptor genus. So what you say is technically right but Crichton more likely used the undescribed Achillobator for the animal size.

    • @potatoman5742
      @potatoman5742 Год назад

      Cmiiw, from what i know, during the making of Jurassic Park, there was a new dinosaur founded in the Velociraptor genus, and it was named Utah Raptor, and it it said that Spielberg took inspiration from it and put on the movie, however the name would probably more catchy with Velociraptor so he kept it that way.

  • @markmorningstar5374
    @markmorningstar5374 Год назад +1

    Hey, Clariss. I love your commentary at 5:30 + about the little trailer. This is why most cinematography schools (not necessilarily acting schools) revert to iconic movies like 12 Angry Men and The Caine Mutiny (courtroom scene with Humphry Bogart's complete breakdown of character...close-up of his face with maniacal eyes and sweat), camera angle, depth of focus, and lighting...lighting...lighting! The scenes in 12 Angry Men were shot without cuts within a scene...so great. I don't see much of that in any movies today. Do you? I had a close friend at University (UNLV) in 1980 who was a cinematography major, so we went to see oh so many movies in the theatres, and would comment to each other during the movies.
    You also mention at 12:00 + about the Barbasol, putting it on the pie. Just an aside...the pie fight in "The Great Race" (1965) set the world record for number of pies used (with real cream filling, not Barbasol!) and still holds the record today...58 years later!

  • @user-ex9ti7ds3m
    @user-ex9ti7ds3m 2 года назад

    This was my first movie. My mom set me in the carrier in front of the tv when this was on and it stopped my hours of crying.

  • @horrorandanime1990
    @horrorandanime1990 Месяц назад +1

    Spielberg definitely created some of the best movies of all time

  • @alistairgrey5089
    @alistairgrey5089 2 года назад +10

    One of my favorite sayings regarding "playing God" is this: "If it's such a sin to play God, why did he leave his tools laying around?"
    As for the accuracy of this movie, it's wrong in almost every aspect of science. DNA cannot survive for that length of time even in amber, T-Rex does not see based on movement and it has a great sense of smell, the velociraptors are way too big to be velociraptors and are way too smart, and a lot of the dinosaurs are portrayed wrong as in many of them would have feathers of some variety.

    • @Spinoerin
      @Spinoerin 2 года назад

      yes but wen wee look at the year it made not that much

    • @Dinoslay
      @Dinoslay 2 года назад +1

      Regarding the quote in your first paragraph, it’s just like the metaphorical tree in Eden. As Adam or Eve you may freely choose to access the hanging fruit that God placed within your reach but are you fully prepared to face the consequences that accompany that choice? There’s a price for the use of tools.

    • @alistairgrey5089
      @alistairgrey5089 2 года назад

      @@Dinoslay yes. Even if you are religious God gave man dominion over the earth and all things in it. To give us dominion over all things would mean that we are not restricted to discover and use God's wonders. Playing God cannot be a sin unless God lied about our role on earth.

  • @toastedfroglegs
    @toastedfroglegs 2 года назад +1

    i read the book Jurassic Park recently and it was so good! made me appreciate the movie more!

    • @toastedfroglegs
      @toastedfroglegs 2 года назад +1

      i think the current research suggests that trexs had such a good sense of smell it wouldnt matter if they could see you or not, they know youre there.

  • @domidium
    @domidium Год назад

    Recently, it was discovered that the T rex was actually a stealthy hunter despite it's enormous size and tremendous weight. This is due to it's padded feet to absorb the shock of impact with the ground. So, while it's a very cool and suspenseful effect, you wouldn't actually hear any booming footsteps, or see any water ripples. The T rex would be able to get up close to you, and you wouldn't notice until it was too late...

  • @clownzzz4837
    @clownzzz4837 2 года назад +1

    He 'sparred no expense' except where it counted. He sparred the expense of not paying Dennis more - the one guy who literally controlled the whole park. Not saying Dennis wasn't a sleaze but just think of the people and the money Hammond would have saved had he just paid a bit more.
    Great reaction.

    • @rebeccaclementz3756
      @rebeccaclementz3756 11 месяцев назад

      In the novel, Hammond lied about how hard the job was when he hired Nedry. Nedry was very underpaid for the amount of work that needed to be done and he should have had a couple of assistants also.

  • @TheMarcHicks
    @TheMarcHicks 2 года назад +1

    We have no way of knowing what the T-Rex's vision is based on. In the book, Alan Grant discovers it entirely by accident.

  • @Sherman1fan
    @Sherman1fan Год назад

    26:00 Scenes for Jurassic Park, Kong Godzilla were filmed at Kualoa Ranch Park in Hawaii. You can go there to see the actual props and locations used.

  • @DraylianKaiju
    @DraylianKaiju Год назад

    Fun movie trivia: to get the rings in the cup of water that Spielberg wanted, the physical effects department ran a bass guitar string from the cup of water through the car down to the ground where a p.a. was plucking the string....and that's how they got that shot 🤔🤓👍

  • @Hiraghm
    @Hiraghm 2 года назад

    "In war, everything is simple. But the simplest thing is difficult" - Clauswitz (I think...)
    Your comment about how difficult it is to act in front of the camera reminded me of that quote... simple... but difficult.

  • @maybetoby
    @maybetoby Год назад

    Nice Corridor Crew name-drop 👍
    As a kid, I was speechless and in awe during that T.Rex scene
    I loved HISHE's Jurassic Park video, especially the part about Sam Jackson surviving lol

  • @ILikeCHEEZ9
    @ILikeCHEEZ9 2 года назад +1

    The movement based vision sounds interesting but when you take two seconds it also implies that it cant see trees, rocks, sleeping dinosaurs, or even the animals they hold in place for it to eat. It was just a weird way to rationalize having the characters not get torn to bits when faced with a trex

  • @philr5367
    @philr5367 2 года назад +2

    I literally learned so much after watching your video. Thank you!

  • @tfpp1
    @tfpp1 2 года назад

    47:44 - I've seen this movie a bunch of times but I've never noticed this before: When T-Rex throws the Velo against the skeleton, it's a skeleton of T-Rex, then T-Rex stands in place of the skeleton with the same pose, as if to say "I'm REAL, bitches, rawr!!" LOL

  • @sammilbauer9252
    @sammilbauer9252 Год назад

    The score for this movie is so magical. I love it so much. One of Williams' best.

  • @scoutravenson3641
    @scoutravenson3641 Год назад

    9:05 Excellent points, loving this commentary it’s taking me back to my high school videography classes.
    May I add, Hammond is also the only one in a light color wardrobe, Ellie and Alan are wearing darker colors, they’re unified and he’s the odd man out even in this.

  • @jamilstubbs941
    @jamilstubbs941 10 дней назад

    15:21-17:12 Best introduction in CGI history one of my favorite movies of all time. Clariss

  • @VictoryandHope
    @VictoryandHope 2 года назад +1

    There are so many moments in this where your voice could be used for tiktoks xD

  • @TheAngelOfDeath01
    @TheAngelOfDeath01 5 месяцев назад

    What I find to be the absolutely greatest feat of these actors is that THERE IS NO DINOSAURS THERE... they are imagining the dinosaurs in their MIND as they are acting. Brilliant stuff!
    You should read the book, Clariss. It's far more intense and frightening.

  • @imuawarriors
    @imuawarriors Месяц назад

    when you first see the island, that is the Na Pali coastline of the island of Kauai in Hawaii... other scenes were filmed on O'ahu (Kualoa Ranch)...

  • @scottalynch
    @scottalynch 2 года назад +1

    Goldblum says the “must go faster” line in Independence Day too

  • @Daybit97
    @Daybit97 2 года назад

    I love how you explained screenplay and screenwriting here.

  • @johnbarrett4846
    @johnbarrett4846 2 года назад

    Fun fact. I saw this 3 times at the cinema, one of them on acid. Ah those were the days...man lol

  • @ruthdeckman9781
    @ruthdeckman9781 2 года назад

    I just found your channel. I just love hearing the point-of-view of an actress. Some of the things you brought up were interesting to learn.

  • @shainewhite2781
    @shainewhite2781 2 года назад +1

    MY #1 Favorite Movie Of All Time!
    Before Spielberg took over the project, James Cameron, Richard Donner, Tim Burton and Joe Dante were considered.
    Harrison Ford, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Kevin Costner, Michael Douglas, Tom Hanks, Sam Shepard, Pierce Brosnan, Nick Nolte, Kurt Russell, Jeff Bridges, Richard Dreyfuss, Michael Biehn, Dylan McDermott, Tom Selleck, Robin Williams, Tom Sizemore and William Hurt were considered for Alan Grant.

  • @BigBoyElectricToys
    @BigBoyElectricToys 2 года назад +4

    Loved this reaction! Keep up the great work and I look forward to seeing more

  • @SleepySloth2705
    @SleepySloth2705 Год назад

    The way Nedry dies in the book is a lot more brutal:
    The Dilophosaurus blinds him with the venom, clamps its jaws on his head, and proceeds to crush his skull like an egg. It managed to do so because it is of accurate size in the book (about eight feet tall).
    Side note: the Tyrannosaurus having poor vision is exclusive to the book and films, because in real life it had vision sharper than that of an eagle

  • @MichaelScrip
    @MichaelScrip Год назад

    My favorite fun fact: there are only 14 minutes of dinosaurs on-screen in this movie... but only 6 minutes of that is CGI. The rest are practical puppets and animatronics. That's why so many of the shots still look great today. The other JP movies relied too heavily on CGI and I don't think they look as good as this. I saw this movie 3 times in the theater when it came out. It's one of my all time faves!

  • @drakke125Channel
    @drakke125Channel 2 года назад

    6:40 love the discussion here. The actor has to be 'one' with the set, with the 'scene' of the script, book, or movie, which means they are 'one' with their co-actors too, as well as the supporting staff who may be doing other things like special effects or lighting, etc, because you have to 'imagine' yourself in a specific scene that looks a lot different after being edited by technology in the actual movie.

  • @McKamikazeHighlander
    @McKamikazeHighlander 2 года назад +1

    30:40
    GRANT: His vision is based on movement"
    Clariss: "...Is that true?!"
    Absolutely not. Tyrannosaurs had a high degree of binocular field of view and as such had excellent depth perception as a result of their forward-facing eyes. This myth came from the book in which some of the animals, like the frogs with which they shared DNA, reacted strongly to moving objects but not so much to non-moving objects. Now, if this is what Grant meant, it would only apply to Hammond's T. Rex and not the real ones (who had no frog DNA in them). But we know Grant was referring to actual historical T. Rex because he mentioned this to the kid at the start. So, once again, Hollywood took something well thought out and just threw it into the script where it didn't belong. Bit of a boo boo

  • @sleepines
    @sleepines 2 года назад

    i was 3 when the movie came out but i watched it when i was a bit older xD and after that i kept rewatching it over n over again

  • @stephaniehundley6792
    @stephaniehundley6792 2 года назад

    Your reaction to Jeff Goldblum posing was great, made me crack up! Keep up with your reactions, you’re doing great, love your channel!

  • @ArgonTheAware
    @ArgonTheAware 2 года назад

    As much as you love Jeff Goldblum then you would like to know that he used the line "must go faster" in the movie Independence Day also when ha and Will Smith were escaping the alien mothership Plus A 25ft (7.6m) statue of Hollywood actor Jeff Goldblum has appeared next to London's Tower Bridge.
    The monument depicts the Jurassic Park star reclining, open-shirted, in a recreation of his famous pose from the 1993 dinosaur blockbuster.
    In 2018 It was unveiled to mark 25 years since the release of Steven Spielberg's sci-fi extravaganza, in which Goldblum played Dr Ian Malcolm.

  • @WULDORI
    @WULDORI 6 месяцев назад

    15:21 This was a landmark scene. Up until Jurassic Park, the cgi technology for realistic skin didn’t exist. Dinosaurs were either cel animated, stop-motion clay or live puppetry. Everyone in the movie theater felt just like the characters on the screen; like they were seeing a real life dinosaur for the first time.