Leia welcomes you to JURASSIC PARK (1993) Movie Reaction FIRST TIME WATCHING
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- Опубліковано 6 лют 2025
- Jurassic Park is a 1993 American science fiction action film[4] directed by Steven Spielberg, produced by Kathleen Kennedy and Gerald R. Molen, and starring Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, and Richard Attenborough. It is the first installment in the Jurassic Park franchise, and the first film in the original Jurassic Park trilogy, and is based on Michael Crichton's 1990 novel of the same name, with a screenplay by Crichton and David Koepp. The film is set on the fictional island of Isla Nublar, off Central America's Pacific Coast near Costa Rica, where a wealthy businessman John Hammond (Attenborough), and a team of genetic scientists have created a wildlife park of de-extinct dinosaurs. When industrial sabotage leads to a catastrophic shutdown of the park's power facilities and security precautions, a small group of visitors, including Hammond's grandchildren, struggle to survive and escape the now perilous island.
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End Music by: Diego A. R. Delfino
This is a re-release - previous version got BLOCKED
A lot of that going around. This is my first time with you though. Never give up
There's an old Spielberg series from the 80's that's been brought back called Amazing Stories, but the new ones are nowhere near as good as the old series.
Phew. Thought i was having déjà vu!
Thanx for telling us. I thought I was having a bad case of Deja Vu. :)
I'm glad you like JP :) It's my favorite movie! If you haven't already watched it, I recommend JW's Camp Cretaceous series (which, despite being more for kids, feels much more like a proper continuation of JP than the JW movies). Also, if you wanna learn about real dinos (including birds), I highly recommend Darren Naish's "Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved" (the best adult intro to the whole story of dinos) & "Dinopedia: A Brief Compendium of Dinosaur Lore" (the best adult guide to dinos & their cultural impact since the 1970s). P.S. To answer your questions/concerns:
-1:54: There are no good or bad dinos. To quote Dr. Grant, "They're not monsters, Lex. They're just animals."
-26:39: That's actually the T. rex patrolling her territory, hence why she's so loud, similar to songbirds singing & lions roaring while patrolling their territories. She's very quiet when hunting (E.g. When she kills the Gallimimus & the Velociraptor).
"The voice you're hearing is Richard Kiley. We spared no expense."
Would have been funny if they'd gotten David Attenborough 😂
Fun facts I happen to know about the movie:
The whole "movement-based vision" thing was a real theory that some paleontologists had, but which was disproven long before the novel was published. Michael Crichton (the author of the novel) had heard the theory, but didn't realize that it was obsolete, and that's how the T-Rex got movement-based vision in both the novel and the movie. After the novel was published, fans of his wrote him many letters (this was in the era before social media or widespread email) explaining this, so he retconned it in the sequel "Lost World". _That_ novel claimed that T-Rex was full, having just eaten a whole goat, and thus didn't actually _want_ to eat Grant and the kids. She was just curious about them.
Whenever they were filming a scene with anamatronic dinosaurs, they would keep the dinos active and looking around between takes, just to increase the feeling of realism and help the actors stay in character.
In the scene at 51:04, the stunt double wasn't actually supposed to look up at the camera, to keep the audience from realizing that she wasn't Ariana Richards. But she accidentally did so anyway, so they had to digitally replace her face with Richards', in what was one of the earliest (if not _the_ earliest) example of digital face swapping.
I saw this 6 times in theaters as a kid. That's how literally epic it was and still is. When CGI was brand new and blended beautifully with practical effects. Not completely depended on as it is now. I will never forget feeling the steps of the T-Rex as the water ripples in our seats and looking at the people next you...we all felt like we were in the jeep. One of the greatest cinematic experiences in history. Don't forget Spielberg was working on Schindler's List at the same time as this...now that's chaos.
He didn't really work on schindler's list at the same time. He finished filming JP a few weeks early, used that time to do SOME post-production work but quickly moved on full bore to Schindler's list. He had once a week sit-ins with the sound designer Gary Rydstrom and teleconferences with ILM and George Lucas but most of the work was done without him.
That is a major reason he asked to make a sequel to the movie. He felt his full experience was cut off because of Schindler's.
Yes, this is really when we had the best of both. The practical to get the physicality and the CGI to polish the edges and make us believe what couldn't be real was real. The best of both.
I love watching people watch this for the first time, it brings me back to when I first saw it.... it is a magical film.
My favorite part of this film was the scene in the kitchen with the two children. The tension lasted quite some time, and the two children really sold that scene.
Spielberg is better with children than any other director.
@@alanfoster6589I think you mean "children are better with Spielberg than any other director."
Credit where it's due. 😊
47:31 I love how they matched the living dinosaur's shadow to the wall mural.
Westworld was a 1973 movie before it was a show. The screenplay was written by Michael Crichton… the same guy that wrote the novel Jurassic Park.
Crichton also directed the 1973 "Westworld". He also created the TV series "E.R."
I think many modern day people are only familiar with the recent Westworld TV series. Therefore they think it's modern and don't realise it was originally from the 70s
I think he wrote Twister too
he also did the old classics (book and movie) ANDROMEDA STRAIN
30:59 "Is that child okay? Are you guys kidding me?!?" Don't worry! Timmy is very resilient! 😁
Based on the 1990 novel of the same name by Michael Crichton.
It was written as an original screenplay in 1983, as it was going to involve a graduate student cloned a pterosaur from prehistoric DNA, but it wouldn't work, so he shelved it for a few years, until he turned it into a best selling novel. It was rewritten several times because it was going to be told from a child's perspective, before it was switched to Alan Grants perspective.
Production began the same day the novel was released.
It would also become one part of an unique triple crown. Crichton was the only person to ever create the #1 movie, TV and book all at the same time. JP, ER and Disclosure. He would do it a second time when the sequel came out.
This movie was the first use of modern CGI that changed the industry (and audiences) forever-and it still holds up 30 years later.
One of the great things about this movie is that they knew most people would know and would want to see a TRex, but they took the time and effort to build up the raptor as being the real threat you should be afraid of.
14:40 you have it backwards. Crichton wrote Westworld before Jurassic Park and wanted to expand on it.
Jurassic Park wasn't originally a Westworld clone either. It was simply a science experiment by a kid.
I think many modern day people are only familiar with the recent Westworld TV series. Therefore they think it's modern and don't realise it was originally from the 70s
Favorite movie of all time. Saw it in theaters when I was three years old and have loved it since. As a matter of fact this movie was the starting force that incouraged me to study paleontology
You might have been confused about the robotic nature of the dinosaurs because many of the shots in this movie were achieved with full sized animatronic dinosaurs. In the fictional universe of the movie and novel, they literally breed the dinosaurs, but in reality land, most were robots. While this is held up as an amazing achievement and leap forward in CG shots (and rightly so), there actually aren’t very many of them. There are only about 50 shots of CG dinosaurs, the rest are done with robotics or even just shoes. For instance, the shot of the raptor feet in the kitchen clicking its toes on the ground is a guy in specially made shoes that look like dinosaur feet.
So amazing that you said "West World" got this idea. Michael Chriton wrote both books! So great call! Thanks for the reaction!
Great reaction Leia like always, What an epic movie love it. When I saw this in the theaters there was NO CONVINCING anyone that dinosaurs were not real. The CGI and effects were so beyond anyone’s imagination. It still holds up decades later.
The part where Dr. Grant sees the dinosaur for the first time always puts a lump in my throat. He's spent his entire life digging up their remains and from that, trying to determine how they lived, hunted, mated, everything. He's even talking to himself going over what he thought he always knew about them. Super powerful and well acted if you ask me!
Here's a fun fact that has been stuck in my head for 30 years.The iconic water cup was actually really difficult to create. They spent weeks trying to figure out how to get the perfect ripples. By accident it was discovered that placing the glass on a guitar and plucking the strings created the ripples, so they ran a guitar string from bottom of the glass to the bottom of the car and plucked it. Perfect ripples. One of those cool super simple solutions that just need someone to think of them. Keep up the good work.
To answer your question, no. John Hammond didn't have any influence over the dinosaurs' behavior. His biggest flaw was his hubris. He believed he had way more control over the situation than he possibly could. It's why he trusted his grandkids to be safe. Even he wasn't hopping in the enclosures with them. He just wanted to be able to claim that he had a bond with the animals. Sometimes I think about some of his choices in the movie and I wonder if they aren't hold overs from the book. His character was irredeemable in the book. Book Hammond was definitely more worried about his IP than his family. But then they hired Richard Attenborough, the most lovable grandpa in Hollywood to play him. I think they rewrote the part after that, but certain things like nixing the lysine contingency just stayed.
Spielberg was an optimist at heart and wanted a sympathetic Hammond character from the start, he chose Attenborough for that quality afterward.
Also Hammond indirectly had a hand in their behavior in the sense he wanted 'realism' over the public's expected behavior at the time, at least in the novel.
@@scottb3034 I didn't know it was a choice from the start. Thanks for sharing. I still think in the book Hammond didn't have control over their behavior. It's been a long time since I've read it but I do remember that he didn't just want the big flashy dinosaurs going rawr. It's one of the reasons he had compys and if I remember correctly it was kind of thematic that that decision really bit him in the ass. *^_^*. He was selecting traits for growing. It's Jurassic World where they had behavior modification.
@@katpiercemusic That's how Steven and Michael (when interviewed about it) tell it. Michael liked the dark side of Disney and Steven was the eternal optimist and wanted a santa claus Hammond.
I am simply saying that Wu asked him if he wanted to modify the dinosaurs' behavior to meet public perception. Not literal control. Wu was trying to get him to approve the slow, dumb, plodding dinosaurs people knew at the time, not the agile, intelligent animals they really had. Hammond however insisted they leave them because they were the REAL thing, like he wanted. It was a part of the version numbers sub plot in the books that was absent in the movies. They had different versions of the same animal, some of the bred with different animal DNA like reptiles or frogs, etc.
It’s interesting that you mentioned “Westworld” more than once.
The man who wrote the book that this franchise was based on, Michael Crichton, was also responsible for creating “Westworld”.
I’m assuming you were referring to the recent series. “Westworld” actually started as a movie back in 1973, which was directed by Mr. Crichton. You might want to check that out.
47:16 I was looking away from my screen momentarily and I randomly hear "The cake"... followed by... Laura Dern's erm... cake... I had to rewind a few seconds to realise the full context 🤣🤣
😄
🤣🤣🤣
When Alan grabbed the electrical fence while the power was still off, if you look closely, you can probably see that he was actually shaking the wires while pretending to get a shock.
Jeff Goldblum Jurassic Park: "Must go faster..." 🦖
Jeff Goldblum Independence Day: "Must GO FASTER!" 👽
Never gets old
Jeff Goldblum Lost World: "Increase your rate of climb."
24:49 "Find Ned. Check the vending machines. Remember that time he somehow got himself stuck in one?"
This was followed by five more films, a short film and two animated shows on Netflix. This used animatronics and CGI, thanks to the legendary Stan Winston and the effects company Industrial Light and Magic. This was filmed in Hawaii and California
I first saw this movie when it came out in '93. I've seen it countless times since then, but I wish I could see it for the first time again.
Leia, you may recognize her (Laura Dern/Dr. Sattler) if you have watched Star Wars 8: The Last Jedi. She played Adm. Holdo
Steven Spielberg was involved in the 1987 film "Batteries Not Included." There was a 1973 "West World" movie so it came before Jurassic Park.
My #1 favorite movie of all time!
An Adventure 65 Million Years In The Making.
Universal Pictures Presents
A Steven Spielberg Film
JURASSIC PARK.
Originally, the movie was going to have stop motion animated puppets for the dinosaurs, as supervisor Phil Tippett designed some puppets for the film, but when Spielberg showed him VFX footage of a CGI T.Rex, he told him, "Steven, what have you done!? I've become extinct!" As a clever nod, he put the line in the movie when Grant and the others are walking up the stairs in the Visitor Center.
The sounds of the dinosaurs:
Brachiosaurus, elephant, penguin, donkey calls slowed down, and humpback whales. The sounds of it's footsteps are that of California redwoods being cut down. The sound was also used for the T. Rex.
T. Rex, lion roar, tiger roar, baby elephant, koala bear, whales blowhole, crocodiles, and a dog playing with a chew toy.
Gallimimus, Horse cries and bird sounds.
Velociraptor, dolphin cries, walrus bellow, seal barking, human rasps, tortoise mating, and vulture caws.
Dilophosaurus, Swan, Rattlesnakes, Hawk, Howler Monkey, and Cicadas.
Triceratops, cow bellowing into a tube.
It made $1 Billion dollars at the box office ($1.6 billion dollars today) against a $63 million dollar budget.
The animatronic Rex actually malfunctioned during the scene where it crashes into the roof of the vehicle, which Spielberg loved so much, he kept in the final cut of the movie.
KY jelly was used for the Brachiosaurus after it sneezed on Lex.
Pretty good except for the fact the movie did not make a billion, it made around 930 million or so on its original two runs in 1993.
The animatronic rex did malfunction. it did not malfunction in that scene and they wouldn't have kept the scene rolling were that the case as that is a lawsuit and perhaps elimination from life for the person involved waiting to happen. What wasn't supposed to happen was the rex was not supposed to lose a tooth and it wasn't supposed to crack a small part of the plexiglass bubble off.
Can't believe someone that likes to call themselves a big fan and it being their #1 fan doesn't understand the T rex part is completely wrong.
@@shainewhite2781
Poor Phil.
The rippling cup up water was done by simply plucking a guitar string underneath the shelf (I'm guessing) where the cup was on. Sound vibration caused the water to ripple.
A lot of people think the takeaway from this movie is "Why we shouldn't bring dinosaurs back from extinction." Umm no. The take away is "How not to run a zoo" When you have such abysmal safety protocols, and zero failsafes, it doesn't matter what kind of dangerous animals you have, shit will go wrong.
This movie, the show ER and the novel Disclosure were all #1 in 1994 in their respective fields. The common thread between all of them is that they were created by Michael Crichton. He pulled off the feat one more time in 1997. No other person in history has ever pulled that off.
Nedry is played by Wayne Knight who is famous for the tv show Seinfeld. When filming his scene with the Dilophosaurus he was afraid he'd get fired from Seinfeld because the dye used in the venomous spit prop of the animal stained his face purple and would not come off. He had to film stuff for Seinfeld shortly after for the 1992-93 season of Seinfeld. Apparently they understood because he remained on the show until it ended in 1998.
Jurassic Park helped revolutionize the effects and filmmaking industry with their CGI and in the process became one of the most technically important films in world history, it however was met with intense resistance during the production since Dennis Muren of ILM was intent on protecting his friend Phil Tippett's (Phil was once an ILM employee) job on the huge production and ILM was cautious about CGI since it hadn't been that extensively tested prior to JP. However Mark Dippe and Steve Williams created a test using Stan Winston's models during their off time at ILM and casually played it while producer Kathleen Kennedy paid ILM a visit. She noticed, was impressed and brought Spielberg in to see it. Needless to say he too was blown away and moved to use CGI instead of stop-motion. In a bout of genuine depression Tippett uttered the line about being extinct which Spielberg used in the movie. When the dust settled, a huge rift in ILM formed between the old school like Muren and the new school like Williams and Dippe that only deepened when they felt Muren stole credit for their work and ambition by taking home an Oscar meant for them. They left the company a few years later.
The first digital facial replacement in film history was used in this movie to replace the stunt double's face when she looked up while hanging from the ceiling above the raptor near the end of the movie.
One of the best cases of foreshadowing ever is in the beginning of this movie. When the helicopter goes to land, Dr Grant's seatbelt has two female ends and no male ends. He ties them together. He found a way!!!!!!!!
@@christophermollan1684 also foreshadowing he did spare expenses
The deadpan camera stare when she says...."not the gift shop"❤😂
Fun fact: the initial scenes of the storm hitting the island was actual footage of a hurricane hitting the island they were filming on.
Thing I miss about this movie.....when you saw it originally in the theater, the T-Rex roars literally shook all the seats in the theater and hurt your ears.....
%100!
Is ironic you mentioned Westworld at the end because that is also a book that was also written by Michael Creighton. Michael Crichton love the idea of humanity making theme parks or things like it and having our technology run away with us.
You stare at him, and he just stares right back and that's when the attack comes, not from the front, but from the sides.
I saw this movie at the age of 3. Had nightmares for weeks 😂
Of course when I saw in theaters I was just as blown away as everyone. It was incredible special effects for its time. When they showed the 1st dinosaur I believe I had my mouth agape for 3 minutes. Just incredible film
Great job Leia! 👍🏻👍🏻
Worth noting too is that they inverted the kids' roles for the movie; in the novel, Tim is the older computer expert, and Lex the younger one.
It's also worth noting that in the book hammond is a megalomaniac that only cares about the park(plus his grandkids end up killing him) the lawyer is a muscular ex-marine who actually fights a raptor and survives plus they destroy the island at the end of the book
I was working at McDonald's when this movie came out. McDonald's had a special promotion for this movie a Triple cheeseburger super sized meal deal and collector cups. Back in 1993 is the only time I have known McDonald's to have a triple cheeseburger until recently when they added it to the menu again. The soundtrack to this movie is awesome too.
Love that movie. Great reaction!
You're awesome Leia. And shes the great Laura Dern. Blue Velvet, Wild at heat, Inland Empire
Laura Dern’s father was Bruce Dern (also an actor), who was one of the few on screen villians who killed cowboy legend John Wayne. The movie is “The Cowboys” and is a great watch!
*It doesn't matter how often I've seen Jurassic Park, that scene in the maintenance bunker when the Raptor shows up behind Ellie will always get me with the jumpscare.*
*Side notes:*
*>The dinosaur sounds in this movie were made by combining sounds made by living animals and everyday objects.*
*>The Tyrannosaurus rex, affectionately known as Rexy, was a mix of elephant calf vocalizations (roar, snarls and growls), with koala, lion & tiger sounds and alligator gurgles thrown in and a dog playing with a rope toy (shaking the Gallimimus to death).*
*>The Dilophosaurus was a mix of hawk, swan, howler monkey and rattlesnake sounds.*
*>The adult Raptors were a mix of a walrus chest roar and male tortoise mating call mixed with a dolphin scream recorded with a hydrophone, while the hatchling was a mix of owlet and fox kit sounds.*
*>The Brachiosaurus vocalizations were slowed down donkey brays, while the sneeze was a mix of an active fire hydrant and a whale breathing through its blowhole(s). (There's an "s" in parentheses because depending on whether or not whales have teeth or baleen plates (think of them as biological water filters) in their mouths, whales have either one or two blowholes)*
*>The Gallimimus's chief sound effect was made using the recorded calls of a mare (female horse) in heat, while their movements were inspired by those of ostriches.*
*A good portion of this movie was shot on the Hawaiian island of Kauai.*
*>Whenever I hear Hammond ask "Who's hungry?", my first reaction every time is "Not after hearing the Raptors rip the cow apart."*
*>Lego released 30th anniversary sets in honor of Jurassic Park and the one I have is based on Dennis Nedry's encounter with the Dilophosaurus.*
Great reaction! I saw it after reading the book. If you like to read, I recommend all of Chrichton's book, starting with The Andromeda Strain (1969), which was my introduction to him.
Now you need to see Jurassic World!
Hey Leia you know dang well Spielberg killed a kid in Jaws 😂
He did not. It was the shark that killed him. 😂
Great movie to bring in the new year!
I'm glad you like JP :) It's my favorite movie! If you haven't already watched it, I recommend JW's Camp Cretaceous series (which, despite being more for kids, feels much more like a proper continuation of JP than the JW movies). Also, if you wanna learn about real dinos (including birds), I highly recommend Darren Naish's "Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved" (the best adult intro to the whole story of dinos) & "Dinopedia: A Brief Compendium of Dinosaur Lore" (the best adult guide to dinos & their cultural impact since the 1970s). P.S. To answer your questions/concerns:
-1:54: There are no good or bad dinos. To quote Dr. Grant, "They're not monsters, Lex. They're just animals."
-26:39: That's actually the T. rex patrolling her territory, hence why she's so loud, similar to songbirds singing & lions roaring while patrolling their territories. She's very quiet when hunting (E.g. When she kills the Gallimimus & the Velociraptor).
The T-Rex was my favorite character in this movie ❤ his presence in this film.
Thanks for the video!! See you later!! Stay safe and Happy New Year 🎊🎊🕛🥳🎈🎇🎉
I really appreciate how sharp Leia is. She does not George the plot at all.
The same person who wrote Jurassic Park also wrote the West World book, that’s why they seem seem similar
14:32 Jurassic Park and Westworld were both written by Michael Crichton.
Roughly six minutes of this movie is c g I. You can pretty much tell when it happens. The rest are full on Animatronic .. This movie is one of the first to actually us cgi. Terminator two was another one back draft, The movie abyss. All were firsts
Well, that was a different reaction, the velociraptor showing up just after Ellie got the power back on. For most reactors, it was a jump scare. Leia just laughs because she knew it was coming.
She’s also one of the few reactors who picked up on Nedry’s sarcasm and doesn’t actually believe that he’s Hammond’s son
Coby the type u wine and dine, Leia more of a Netflix and chill. Im down
Yes, it was based on the book and so was the third movie. That one had a script, they threw it out, and just started filming scenes from the book that were left out of the first movie.
The game for the SNES was a mix of the designs seen in the movie and again added in stuff from the book that was left out of the movie. The book was wildly different from what the movie ended up being. Not to really spoil anything but they REALLY shortened things for the movie, they were stuck on that island for a week.
They weren't stuck on the island for a week. It was I think 3 days
Great reaction well, you know there are lots of these Jurassic Park movies, but the first three have basically the same cast. Some of them are throughout all of them, but basically the first three has had them all and they’ve been like six of them in total so far with more to comethe first three are Jurassic Park Jurassic Park two the lost world in Jurassic Park three is called but the new ones are called Jurassic World so it’s like original theme part of Disneyland and the new one is Disney World except Jurassic Park. Thanks for the fun until next time.
This was not the first monster movie for Arianna Richards (Lexi). She played Mindy in the first movie of the Tremors franchise.
Welcome to Jurassic park 🦕🦖🦕🦎🦕🦖
33:18/Leia, baby girl.... I love how you sing 🎵 Your So Screwed!! 🎶 (You do have a sense of humor!!) 🤣🤣❤️🔥❤️🔥
Leia are you the princess ?❤❤❤❤
Sugarland express was Spielberg's first movie
There are actually two Jurassic Park books by Michael Creighton.
Jean shirt + jean pants = Canadian Tuxedo :)
Whoever is forming these youtube versions needs to remember that if they are flipping the image they need to mirror it so the text isn't backwards on the playback. I've seen this happen multiple times.
Jurassic Park was tough to get thru copyright so the flip is on purpose
14:37 "This is where Westworld got the idea" Funny you should put it that way, since Westworld originated as a 1973 film written and directed by Michael Crichton, the same guy who wrote the novel this film was directly based on which was published 27 years later in 1990. I cannot recommend the novel enough, by the way. Expertly written and handles scientific concepts in a way that gives the readers agency and trusts they'll be able to understand.
Hello Leia Hope you’re doing well🦖Enjoy this Classic movie and have a Nice evening❣️
omg the book is sooooo much better believe it or not lol.
15:34 Dr. Malcolm and Dr. Grant both make good points, but I think this point that Dr. Sattler makes is one the movie should’ve delved into a little more. It points to the kind of detail the average human being is not typically _aware_ of.
Every living thing in the _entire_ natural world lives as part of a connecting sequence of chains between predator and prey called a food web. As time passes, these are invariably subject to _change._
Now the fossil record we have, at any given moment, may _seem_ rather complete, but the fact is that we cannot possibly have hoped to preserve the remains of more than 1% of every species that once lived.
So, consider, every _dinosaur_ that once lived was part of a food web, most of the members of whom have gone extinct but left no _fossils_ behind, so we have no way to _know_ about them. How can we hope to bring dinosaurs back without having _some_ idea how to _account_ for that?
hi gorgeous HAPPY belated NEW YEARS I hope your 2025 will be fantastic 😙💐💖
If Leia watches up to Dominion, make sure she watches the extended version, it's better than the theatrical version
These are amazing robots
Sopielberg has made an amazing number of masterpieces. Are you planning to watch his World War II movies and mini-series? Saving Private Ryan, Schindler's List, Band of Brothers, The Pacific, Masters of the Air? As for science fiction, along with the Jurassic films, ET, and Close Encounters he gave us Minority Report, A.I. Artificial Intelligence, the remake of War of the Worlds, Ready Player One, Under the Dome, and Falling Skies (to offer an incomplete list.)
You could make a career out of watching and reacting to Spielberg movies and mini-series. Hope you enjoy whichever ones you choose!
To me this is Spielberg after his peak. He was trying to recapture what he could do a decade earlier. He didn't quite make it.
I am am a super jurassic fan and I LOVED the movies but the jurassic park book was better only because it had so much more detail and scenes, it had an awesome side plot (hopefully not a spoiler?). I 100% recommend you read the first jurassic book!
Ah yes, Jurasstic Park :D
40:08 im not a robot leia, my god!
Happy New Year Popcorn Roulette family🎉🎉
It is always strange to watch things opposite of the original.
Just know that the book is extremely graphic, if this was made exactly as the book, it would've been either R or Unrated
8:00 Dr. Ian Malcolm’s presence in the movie is kind of a mystery. They’re talking about a theme park built on a biological preserve in which they have successfully cloned prehistoric living _organisms._ That makes the value of the endorsement of a paleontologist and a paleobotanist _evident._ Hence the presence of Dr. Grant and Dr. Sattler. Ian Malcolm’s a _chaotician,_ though. What makes _his_ endorsement valuable?
13:58 This scene doesn’t make sense, either. The human race, at present, has _hundreds_ of carnivorous animals in captivity. Every animal kingdom. Carnivorous mammals, reptiles, fish, you name it. Every one of them is perfectly content with _meat;_ not live _prey._ There is no reason it should be different with _raptors._
One thing I can't figure out. How would the scientists separate the dinosaur DNA from the mosquito DNA? Otherwise, wouldn't they just get hybrids instead of just dinosaurs?
Ah! Leia!
Please continue the movie series. thx
the close ups are animatronics, the wide shots with full body are CGI.
good Dinos going rogue... I wanna see that Movie !!
Got 2 underrated Stephen Spielberg movies first BATTERIES NOT INCLUDED a very cute alien human meets story with a great story and happy ending with well known cast
And HOWARD THE DUCK with George Lucas from Star Wars and Lea Thompson the mom from back to the Future and the VERY first official Marvel Movie made before its time so bombed but became a cult classic over the years with a great story
Man, I still hate Lex in that t-rex scene. WHY would you shine a flashlight in her face?
Sometimes people pointing at things will get stuck doing it, and wherever they're looking, what they're pointing will follow, unconsciously.
It's not remotely uncommon. Think about all the people that get scared someone is watching them at night so they turn all their lights on in the house. And those are fully grown adults. How many films are there where people are trying to be sneaky so they walk through dark spaces with a flashlight?
'Enjoyable, Thanks -
just to let you know Leia westworld came out in 1974 and jurassic park in 1993
She probably knows of the remake that came out years back.
@@scottb3034 most likely
If she seems familiar, well, if you saw the movie that sparked some outrage for some reason, you might recognize her from that. I'll give you 2 words that will drive some people absolutely insane... "Holdo Maneuver." -grabs some popcorn and kicks back to watch the poo start flinging.-
A funny little tidbit for ya. When the girl was sneezed on by the dinosaur...it was all staged because it was the actress's birthday on the day of the shoot and the filmed crew wished her a happy birthday by making the dino sneeze on her and the her reaction was all real
I put the novel aside for this, not so much the sequel. I try and come at interpretations as respective works on their merits and this certainly took a different direction. Well marketing has demands and you have to meet them to get the kind of money it takes make something like this. I think it's memorable and impressive. This is stuffed with quoted and to be meme scenes of course. The humans threw me off a bit and I think they made act sort of like cartoon characters. If you flow with it and overlook the logic flubs, well, we're here to watch dinosaurs and they do look awesome.
I paused for about 20 minutes debating the best course of action, While the kids could probably fit through that one hole, Alan couldn't. So, do you shove the kids through and hope a predator doesn't come and then climb or not. Having worked construction most of my life, I have no doubt that I could get over that fence pretty fast and therefor would shove the kids through.
The fact is that dino dns or rather alien is in it! In previous years, non-terrestrial DNA was found frozen in ice at the North Pole! This is not from one of the films, but from the real thing!
A baby's face is eaten off in the first chapter of the book.