DNA Hook

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  • Опубліковано 31 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1 тис.

  • @BDNeon
    @BDNeon 5 років тому +2997

    The thing I loved most about this movie was how it conveyed the feeling that this was a real place going through the dust-up to a grand opening but just not quite there yet. The details like the half-painted walls, the part where Hammond forgot he had lines of his own to say while the show carried on, all those little things added up to convey this amazing scenario to people. That's what I think is Spieberg's true gift, it's the small details.

    • @Ziplinz
      @Ziplinz 5 років тому +178

      That's what makes Jurassic Park more special than any of the other films in the series. It was as if the audience was along for the ride visiting the park for the first time. That interactive feeling is just something that can't be recaptured.

    • @Angie2343
      @Angie2343 4 роки тому +13

      @@Ziplinz Unless you're IN an actual heme park.

    • @noelanderson969
      @noelanderson969 4 роки тому +8

      @@Angie2343 maybe NOT one with a PREHISTORIC THEME!

    • @Angie2343
      @Angie2343 4 роки тому +2

      @@noelanderson969 Exactly.

    • @gootzers87
      @gootzers87 4 роки тому +5

      So well put and most viewers don’t see this, you should check out the UA-cam videos posted of Spielberg making Jaws

  • @gbreeze99
    @gbreeze99 4 роки тому +2216

    This scene is great because it displays Hammond's childlike attitude towards the miracle of science that his employees have achieved, and contrasts with the horrors that await

    • @lify3299
      @lify3299 3 роки тому +9

      Same pfp

    • @saylosrelyks8645
      @saylosrelyks8645 3 роки тому +115

      Hammond is a good guy who just wants to make a dream a reality for so many people but like Dr. Grant said "Some of the worst things imaginable have been done with the best intentions."

    • @mewofforcena
      @mewofforcena 3 роки тому +56

      @@saylosrelyks8645 Hammond genuinely wanted to see how far mankind could go, and to make exploring the mysteries of the world a reality. Behind the hubris, there was love.

    • @jacobmartinelli7496
      @jacobmartinelli7496 3 роки тому +3

      or was that ecstaticness learned (and our age group was likely the children at the time?)

    • @jacobmartinelli7496
      @jacobmartinelli7496 3 роки тому

      @5 Star Detailing LLC but advertising equals communication, if you don't squirrel it away like your secrets.
      ("oh god, what does he mean'-?-." i'm a psychopath.)

  • @apriswajaya
    @apriswajaya 3 роки тому +1016

    I loved this movie when I was a kid. Now, I am a 35 year old adult and loved this movie even more after understanding everything that I missed as a kid (DNA, Cloning, the ethics discussion of building such a park and many things among others). Truly remarkable film, aged just like fine wine

  • @ozairyahya3438
    @ozairyahya3438 3 роки тому +709

    The acting, the cast, the dialogue, the amazing cinematography, the soundtrack, the memories... This film can’t be touched

    • @Biospark88
      @Biospark88 3 роки тому +10

      still my personal GOAT, nothing has been able to top it

    • @SelectiveApathy82
      @SelectiveApathy82 3 роки тому +7

      It can definitely be touched. By the novel. The movie has NONE of Malcom's fantastic, long-winded lectures about chaos theory, unpredictability and attempting to control nature. It is a pale shadow of the brilliant novel. And the novel characters are far more fleshed-out and 3-dimensional. The only thing I like more about the movie is that Hammond is far more likeable and enjoyable than he is in the book.

    • @Biospark88
      @Biospark88 3 роки тому +13

      @@SelectiveApathy82 100%, the movie is amazing but the novel is a ducking masterpiece. Any film based on a book necessarily trims down the source material to fit into 2 hours.

    • @johnnymaximum3828
      @johnnymaximum3828 2 роки тому +1

      @@Biospark88 talk about a low bar

    • @parisbeech2180
      @parisbeech2180 2 роки тому

      Never will be touched

  • @WinstonSmith685
    @WinstonSmith685 3 роки тому +665

    I never noticed before but just before Ellie says "where do you get 100,000,000 year old dinosaur blood?" the camera zooms in ever so slightly on the mosquito trapped in amber on the top of Hammond's cane.

    • @biggsterboy
      @biggsterboy 3 роки тому +31

      Great catch, never saw that either...Spielberg was brilliant!

    • @tribalsam
      @tribalsam 3 роки тому +12

      I just noticed that too watching the clip

    • @aricaric1894
      @aricaric1894 3 роки тому +6

      @@biggsterboy You never noticed.. that basic of a detail?

    • @biggsterboy
      @biggsterboy 3 роки тому +36

      @@aricaric1894 no, it was so basic I was engaged in the other details.

    • @txnmia8613
      @txnmia8613 3 роки тому +3

      @@aricaric1894 any reason why you decided to be a prick?

  • @noncrediblecase341
    @noncrediblecase341 3 роки тому +604

    3:26 I never noticed how Hammond comments on the music of the DNA film of all things, and how he's excitingly talking about the final draft of it with bombastic and dramatic marches and timpani drums and stuff. It goes to demonstrate his borderline childlike take on his project, while Grant, Sattler and Malcolm are far more intrigued with the actual science and philosophical implications behind it.

    • @electron2601
      @electron2601 3 роки тому +10

      I always wonder what that part was.

    • @bursegsardaukar
      @bursegsardaukar 3 роки тому +20

      Child-like perhaps but he definitely has lines he doesn’t cross like what was mentioned in Fallen Kingdom in which he disagrees with cloning humans…

    • @patricks9057
      @patricks9057 3 роки тому +35

      While I don't think it's necessarily good or bad, it's interesting how different his character is in the book. He's still a bit of a whimsical dinosaur enthusiast, but in the books he's money-hungry and excels at salesmanship over all else. For example, in the next scene, he states that he insists on being present when each dinosaur is born. In the books, they complain that he rarely has visited the island and doesn't understand the issues it's facing.

    • @hello-ox5rf
      @hello-ox5rf 2 роки тому +14

      @@patricks9057 his focus on the music in this scene, which many seem to find endearing, certainly points to him caring more about marketing than anything else. He's not experiencing childlike wonder at dinosaurs, he is simply excited to show them his presentation and his park.

    • @rattis
      @rattis 2 роки тому +18

      Hammond was based on Walt Disney, who was known to have opinions on even the smallest details concerning both his films and his theme parks.

  • @karlhungus5554
    @karlhungus5554 Рік тому +158

    Seeing this in the theater in '93 was mind-blowing. Even today, it holds up amazingly well.

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Рік тому +3

      yeah much better then super mario bros that was to hard to follow😭

  • @tijtij
    @tijtij 3 роки тому +537

    _"Are these auto ... erotica"_ my eleven year old brain didn't get that joke back in '94

    • @wookieninja8794
      @wookieninja8794 Рік тому +33

      Neither did my 7 year old brain but my 35 year old one is asking why is that in the movie? It doesn't add anything. If he literally just said struggled to say automaton and John finished it it would have accomplished the same thing. Add on this movie was for kids as well because it was pg-13 I believe.

    • @tillbot8
      @tillbot8 Рік тому +65

      ​@@wookieninja8794ah it was funny dont be a debbie downer about it

    • @rock_oclock
      @rock_oclock Рік тому +16

      @@wookieninja8794 The movie is trying to appeal to many generations

    • @DiCasaFilm
      @DiCasaFilm Рік тому

      It added two things: 1) a bit of humor and 2) it shows how clueless and un-technical the lawyer is, further drilling home the point of how humans are not ready for the technology of dinosaur-resurrection. It mirrors the ineptitude of humans as a whole, and is also a subtle semi-foreshadowing of his death scene -in the sense that his "bathroom humor" of the joke slightly foreshadows his bathroom death scene. Thanks for coming to my TED Talk. @@wookieninja8794

    • @darthchowder2023
      @darthchowder2023 11 місяців тому +2

      Mine did.

  • @coryeverett4759
    @coryeverett4759 Рік тому +71

    I always found it fascinating how Hammond doesn’t even focus on the aspect of the miracle of bringing dinosaurs back to life. He’s focused on the tour and musical score on the video. He’s a “showman”

    • @Wasserkaktus
      @Wasserkaktus Місяць тому +1

      No he's showing them the tour because they are on the tour.

  • @TheMt45
    @TheMt45 4 роки тому +1008

    Was John Hammond planning on being there every time they ran this?

    • @leejenkins7184
      @leejenkins7184 4 роки тому +62

      Funny, i just thought that as well.

    • @brandonconstant7226
      @brandonconstant7226 4 роки тому +259

      It could have been a special "VIP" version of the film. Maybe there was an alternate.

    • @TheMt45
      @TheMt45 4 роки тому +181

      @@brandonconstant7226 Very good point, I can see that. This was the pre-opening version for investors, lawyers, scientists, etc, that Hammond was going to meet with.

    • @ShaDHP23
      @ShaDHP23 4 роки тому +7

      Maybe it was a one-a-day thing

    • @noelanderson969
      @noelanderson969 4 роки тому +11

      @@ShaDHP23 actually it was just for that weekend!

  • @drygnfyre
    @drygnfyre 3 роки тому +263

    I always like to imagine an alternate universe where Jurassic Park fixed its issues and opened without further issue. Just imagine Hammond have to stand there all day, every day, reading those lines over and over again. Maybe in the logic of Jurassic World, this happened.

    • @kwl189
      @kwl189 3 роки тому +22

      Unlikely as JW is meant to be set after John Hammond passed away and Masrani came to the helm of the company. In fact in JW, all of the attractions (if you can even call them that…) have peaked in terms of their profitability and attractiveness for consumers and the indo was a shake up to all of that, that went wrong.

    • @KetoCommander
      @KetoCommander 3 роки тому +17

      seeing how many visitors there are in Jurassic world,i would say that there will around thousand of visitors and john will probably get tired saying the same line over and over again,until he pass the job to another employee or something

    • @hunormagyar1843
      @hunormagyar1843 2 роки тому +6

      @@KetoCommander Not sure why he wouldn't just do it with two virtual clones of himself at start, so that he doesn't have to be there.

    • @amauriherrera6022
      @amauriherrera6022 2 роки тому +6

      considering how JW series turned out, I would glardly accept it as an alternate timeline and keep JP, Lost World, and JP 3 as main canon timeline. A man can dream...

    • @danielcollin8227
      @danielcollin8227 2 роки тому +12

      Another example of Jon's lack of vision towards the bigger picture outside of the initial presentation and dramatics.
      He designed this tour and video thinking how entertaining it would be to see the faces of the first group of people watching it, but didn't stop and think about how he'd need to do it every time for the context to work.

  • @supreme2005
    @supreme2005 2 роки тому +87

    This is one of the greatest movies of all time. Not a single one of the sequels even come close to its perfection.

    • @Mac14329
      @Mac14329 2 роки тому +4

      A bit unfair to compare the later films, if you ask me. They weren't meant to come close.

    • @DboyRed
      @DboyRed Рік тому +9

      Number 2 actually wasnt too bad and i put it just behind number 1. After that i truly dont care about the rest

  • @valen123456
    @valen123456 9 років тому +428

    That "don't you mean extinct" quip was supposedly originally said by one of the model/animotronic team after seeing some of the early CGI work. Spielberg liked it so much they threw it in.

    • @noelanderson969
      @noelanderson969 4 роки тому +28

      It was Phil Tippett who said it!

    • @Ragitsu
      @Ragitsu 4 роки тому +8

      @@noelanderson969 They should have cloned him.

    • @Gabronthe
      @Gabronthe 2 роки тому +6

      I imagine many grand jokes and puns were made by the talent in this movie that we'll never know.

    • @mikedupont3585
      @mikedupont3585 2 роки тому +3

      And look how well it aged throughout the Jurassic Park/World movie canon.

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 3 місяці тому +1

      Animatronics are always superior to cgi

  • @arkay238
    @arkay238 2 роки тому +98

    Love how even the cynical Malcolm is momentarily taken in by the whimsy and the genius of what he’s witnessing.

  • @jagpro91
    @jagpro91 3 роки тому +51

    3:44 "Weeelllll, lookie here! Those haaaaard workin' cowpokes you see behind the glass...."
    Seen this movie dozens of times and never noticed this hilariously goofy line Mr. DNA says in the background.

  • @kingkong381
    @kingkong381 3 роки тому +77

    I kind of find it hilarious that the Real John/Screen John interactions suggest that when the park opened he would personally be in the introductory tour to welcome every group of visitors.
    It would be the equivalent of Walt Disney welcoming each guest at Disney World.

    • @Gabronthe
      @Gabronthe 2 роки тому +16

      To be fair Walt Disney did do it.

    • @EricTD1995
      @EricTD1995 Рік тому +6

      Yeah, but John, if the Pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the pirates don't eat the tourists.

  • @chaos9079
    @chaos9079 3 роки тому +602

    "Are... Are these characters auto-erotica?" 😂🤣

    • @theoneitself
      @theoneitself 3 роки тому +37

      What the hell is "auto erotica "? Sounds like XXX

    • @Yabuturtle
      @Yabuturtle 3 роки тому +54

      I was wondering if this was an outtake and they just kept it since he meant to say "animatronics" xD

    • @steadyjumper3547
      @steadyjumper3547 3 роки тому +56

      Funny that the lawyer think that the real people look like machines to him.

    • @DouglasPelo
      @DouglasPelo 3 роки тому +14

      It means self stimulating, in contrast to non-living animatronics.

    • @Mopehome
      @Mopehome 2 роки тому +1

      This guy ... 🤣🤣🤣 clearly at one point he , he wants to smash the female dr. Lol

  • @Natedawg38
    @Natedawg38 2 роки тому +40

    This cast is just so good, they were the OGs but what's really underrated is the costume department. Could you imagine them wearing anything different? The colors used were perfect.

  • @dancutd
    @dancutd 2 роки тому +33

    This scene is a nice touch, and makes Jurassic Park very self aware. The visitors are experiencing the majestic creation of dinosaurs in a theatre setting just like we were when it hit the cinemas in 1993.

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому

      That was my thought too. Especially seeing Grant with the projector beaming over his shoulder

  • @timmyza
    @timmyza 6 років тому +412

    3:45 "Are these characters Auto-erotica?"

    • @gopsdv
      @gopsdv 6 років тому +4

      WW

    • @greywillowgaming2366
      @greywillowgaming2366 5 років тому +50

      No no no no. We have no animatronics here. No. Those people are the real miracle workers of Jurassic Park.

    • @Stalicone
      @Stalicone 4 роки тому +36

      Exactly what you’d expect to hear from a real jerk off...”auto-erotica”.

    • @rckblzr
      @rckblzr 4 роки тому +21

      That's what happens when you don't want to get sued by Disney for saying "audio-animatronic".

    • @timmyza
      @timmyza 4 роки тому +18

      @@rckblzr so instead of saying something like "Automated" you call them masturbators?

  • @tombell5599
    @tombell5599 3 роки тому +73

    The way he says "DINO SOW" kills me

    • @j.vinton4039
      @j.vinton4039 10 місяців тому +2

      Can’t unhear now

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому +1

      Maybe he meant female Dino, like a sow is a female cow (I think)

    • @NM-ue8on
      @NM-ue8on 7 місяців тому +1

      DANA SAWWW

    • @raph1494
      @raph1494 7 днів тому +1

      This comment is too far down the list. Needs a bump up top!

  • @somedipshtinthecomments2507
    @somedipshtinthecomments2507 2 роки тому +248

    Watching as a kid: "Gee, John Hammond seems like a sweet old man."
    Watching as an adult: "Gee, John Hammond seems like a bit of a childish rich idiot."

    • @TheMouseAvenger
      @TheMouseAvenger 2 роки тому +63

      ...who's also a sweet old man. :-)

    • @cbcdesign001
      @cbcdesign001 2 роки тому +70

      In the book he was entirely driven by greed and quite selfish but Spielberg turned him into a sweet old grandpa.

    • @mih_shayan8900
      @mih_shayan8900 Рік тому +13

      In the novel John is not as good as he seems in the movies infact he's way too worse

    • @tucker1012
      @tucker1012 Рік тому +6

      Book Hammond was a menace

    • @goolgepl2112
      @goolgepl2112 9 місяців тому +1

      Sweet old man who also happens to be very unwise

  • @8mmkyle865
    @8mmkyle865 3 роки тому +100

    Just noticed this amazing shot for the first time... when the three of them huddle to together to discuss the cloning process and where Hammond got a full dinosaur DNA sequence, the camera quickly focuses on the amber stone as Hammond walks by. 1:00

    • @maurofoltran5559
      @maurofoltran5559 3 роки тому +6

      nice catch

    • @Supperdude9
      @Supperdude9 Рік тому +6

      And they're discussing the degradation of DNA, and where one would logically get it. At their core, they aren't action heroes. They're scientists, smart people in their respective fields, and even though they are in awe of this place, they still have the wherewithal to think things through.
      That also gives weight to their doubts during their meal later. That they see the potential for disaster, and urge caution. Fears that are only justified later on.

  • @srami004
    @srami004 3 роки тому +322

    When watching this as a child, I thought that there was something weird about John Hammond.
    As an adult, I can't help but see how childish he acts. So reckless, so irresponsible.

    • @jshudo44
      @jshudo44 3 роки тому +84

      He was the “kid who found his own dad’s gun.”

    • @srami004
      @srami004 3 роки тому +7

      @@jshudo44 Yup

    • @SelectiveApathy82
      @SelectiveApathy82 3 роки тому +40

      Yup. You can physically clone an animal from 70 million years ago with the amber DNA, but to hope that said cloned animal will *behave* exactly the same way in a modern 20th century environment, with a VASTLY different climate, food sources, insects, water, and bacteria than prehistoric Jurassic times is PURE IDIOCY. The cloned animals have no clue what time period they're in, this would be a terrifying and alien world to them. They will be scared, become extremely aggressive and violent, fall ill, die. Jurassic Park would have failed miserably even if Nedry hadn't sabotaged it.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton 3 роки тому +17

      In the book he gets eaten by the little rat dinosaurs.

    • @Mvp_ryan1
      @Mvp_ryan1 3 роки тому +14

      @@NormAppleton the compies

  • @fabiolean
    @fabiolean Рік тому +7

    "DI NO DEE EN AY" is such an iconic line that I can repeat it to anyone my age without any context to start a conversation about Jurassic Park

  • @WileyCylas
    @WileyCylas 2 роки тому +24

    “…Auto-erotica?” “no animatronics here.”
    how did I miss that after all these years

  • @marioserpico2223
    @marioserpico2223 3 роки тому +22

    3:52 This is a subtle reference to Westworld movie ( _20 years earlier_ ). Fantastic scene

  • @renatox5288
    @renatox5288 7 днів тому

    Thank you Steven, you gave me a unique memory. My childhood was easy, but I remember watching this movie with a giant curiosity and amazement.

  • @LokiTheClever
    @LokiTheClever 2 роки тому +25

    The saddest part isn't the chaos that happens at the park its the fact if cloning has been perfected to the point they can clone dinos from imperfect samples and frog DNA they could probably clone human organs etc which would be WAY more profitable than some dino theme park/zoo

    • @furrykef
      @furrykef 2 роки тому +9

      Well, there's no reason they couldn't do both. Maybe not the same company, but still.

    • @triplehate6759
      @triplehate6759 Рік тому +3

      That actually gets discussed between Hammond and Henry Wu in the book version, at least to the degree of "why authenticate nature when we can make WHATEVER WE WANT?"

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому +3

      Think of the park as a halo product for everything else that can be done with the technology.
      When Audi built the R8, people would got to a dealer to look at it, and the dealer would try selling them an A4

    • @JuanGil-c6n
      @JuanGil-c6n 2 місяці тому

      its not about the money, its about sending a message

  • @Gamerafighter76
    @Gamerafighter76 4 роки тому +212

    I really enjoyed this part.

  • @rg9810
    @rg9810 3 роки тому +16

    "Auto...erotica?"🤣🤣🤣
    Now we all know what that lawyer was spending his salary on.

  • @patrikgagnon
    @patrikgagnon 2 роки тому +13

    Fun fact the type of mosquito they put in the Amber for this movie is an elephant mosquito which made a huge mistake because it's the only species of mosquito that doesn't bite

    • @JuanGil-c6n
      @JuanGil-c6n 2 місяці тому +1

      fun fact, the dinosaurs in the movie weren't real dinosaurs, as those types of dinosaurs haven't been around for at least 100years

  • @ShaDHP23
    @ShaDHP23 4 роки тому +90

    Even at four years old, I knew what that T-rex skeleton meant.

    • @dirkdiggler7391
      @dirkdiggler7391 4 роки тому +2

      What did it mean to you?

    • @ShaDHP23
      @ShaDHP23 4 роки тому +32

      @@dirkdiggler7391 that whatever it was, it was going to come for them on the island.

    • @cindys9491
      @cindys9491 3 роки тому +11

      Definitely foreshadowing

  • @HughGRekshin
    @HughGRekshin 3 роки тому +26

    1:19 when I was a kid I always thought he called it “Mr. Dingaling” lol

  • @DJJamminJimiy
    @DJJamminJimiy Рік тому +10

    So the dinosaurs at Jurassic Park are basically genetically mutated frogs with dinosaur phenotypes enhanced to resemble presumed dinosaur structures?

    • @Taste-k7q
      @Taste-k7q 7 місяців тому

      More like imperfect replicas of dinosaurs, essentially a new type of organism

    • @QuentrixMovies
      @QuentrixMovies 6 місяців тому +2

      Yes. The book goes into great detail about the how first dinosaurs that were cloned looked very different than what people would expect so the genes were constantly manipulated to create dinosaurs that matched the public's expectation and were more "commercial" and marketable.

    • @danielobrian5675
      @danielobrian5675 3 місяці тому +1

      Fun fact, this would most likely be the closest we would ever get to having 'real dinosaurs'. Since the genetic information was lost and replaced by minerals during fossilization, having chimera organisms is the closest thing we could replicate. But chances are they wouldn't even resemble the real animal.

  • @missagente8100
    @missagente8100 3 роки тому +30

    It’s funny because the whole idea for Mr. DNA came from a crew member who was just making sarcastic small talk.

  • @michaelhuynh4953
    @michaelhuynh4953 2 роки тому +8

    So John was planning on being at EVERY viewing of that presentation to interact with his presentation self??

    • @mc5967
      @mc5967 2 місяці тому

      Would have been at most once per day, maybe less

  • @nobodyimportant_23
    @nobodyimportant_23 3 роки тому +26

    That guy needed a face shield to use the VR computer. Good safety culture

    • @lucascoval828
      @lucascoval828 3 роки тому +1

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @djmarsone5209
      @djmarsone5209 3 роки тому

      They have the touch screen?

    • @Zwei4815
      @Zwei4815 2 роки тому +1

      The guy drilling into the amber wasn't wearing safety goggles.

  • @saucemagic
    @saucemagic 3 роки тому +140

    I implore everyone to read the Jurassic novels by Michael Crichton. They really go in depth on how 'fraudulent' this ride was. The real unethical science was done on the separate island.

    • @hunormagyar1843
      @hunormagyar1843 2 роки тому +22

      Agreed, the Crichton-novels aka the lesser known, even more original Jurassic Park is a great read, and there are numerous differences and left out potential scenes from the film that were great in the book. It is kinda graphic describing certain deaths though.

    • @andermolk2428
      @andermolk2428 2 роки тому +1

      fuck ethics! if we do not progress then we will slide into degradation.

    • @conandoyle1740
      @conandoyle1740 2 роки тому

      @@hunormagyar1843 what exact novel are you talking about ?

    • @hunormagyar1843
      @hunormagyar1843 2 роки тому +1

      @@conandoyle1740 The exact same that he is.

    • @conandoyle1740
      @conandoyle1740 2 роки тому +2

      @@hunormagyar1843 youre talking about the two books?
      I read them there wasnt any gore in them lol

  • @pho.phonic
    @pho.phonic 4 роки тому +38

    This man said auto erotica when he meant to say animatronic.

    • @Neoquaker1
      @Neoquaker1 3 роки тому +8

      That always bugged me even as a kid. If a 12 year old me knows that's wierd, what the fuck is up with that lawyer?

    • @SoapinTrucker
      @SoapinTrucker 3 роки тому

      Ya think? 🙄

    • @Yabuturtle
      @Yabuturtle 3 роки тому +3

      I sometimes wonder if that was an outtake and just messed up the line, but they rolled with it anyway. xD

    • @ohhellyeah2878
      @ohhellyeah2878 8 місяців тому

      Or automatons.

  • @TechnoRain
    @TechnoRain 4 роки тому +44

    02:39 the way Jeff Goldblum came to attention sensing danger

  • @Balgoriusis
    @Balgoriusis 2 роки тому +14

    Imagine working in that lab. Every day bunch of tourists would come and watch you work. Thats a nightmare.

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 Рік тому +2

      Kids screaming and throwing things at the glass

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому +1

      @@SamuelBlack84 oh god. I would tint the glass to a mirror from the lab side, and fully soundproofed

    • @SamuelBlack84
      @SamuelBlack84 9 місяців тому

      @@visionist7 And, feed them to the raptors 😄

    • @HermitKing731
      @HermitKing731 6 місяців тому

      Nothing about this park makes sense. Why an island in central America? Only rich people could go all the way there and Hammond wants everyone to be able to go there?

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 6 місяців тому

      @@HermitKing731 in the sequel it's mentioned that the park was originally under construction in San Diego but the Isla Nublar site was chosen in the end

  • @corndogonastick37
    @corndogonastick37 8 років тому +193

    I'm a 7th grade Science teacher, and I use this clip every year in my Genetics unit so that my students can see how close to reality science fiction can be, and I have them try to explain why this couldn't happen.

    • @24572
      @24572 6 років тому +29

      could you explain why this couldn't happen in reality? I'd like to know more

    • @wilmersandstrom2826
      @wilmersandstrom2826 6 років тому +93

      Not that you asked me, but i can atleast give an answer based on my very limited knowledge. While I'm sure that there are more flaws in it than I know of, but the flaws i can point to are:
      1) The use of blood preserved inside amber. While I don't know if blood could be preserved for such a long periond of time, I do know that the DNA would have degraded within the first millions of years and could there for not be used to clone dinosaurs.
      2) The use of frog DNA to fill the gaps in their DNA. Dinosaurs are much closer related to Birds and Crocodiles than they are frogs, so using frog DNA would likely have caused deformities.
      3) As of right now and especially at the time, we did not possess the knowledge to clone and grow an embryo from it's DNA alone, we would at most require something like the sperm from a male animal that lay eggs similar to the dinosaures, aswell as a female of the species. The sperm, (and eggs from the female), could theoretically be altered with the DNA from the dionsaures to result with an actual dinosaur being created.
      Although I have no knowledge if this has ever been done with any animal species.
      4) We currently do not understand genetics well enough for us to be able to just repair damaged DNA. filling in the holes of missing genes would at best be guess work due to the fact that we don't have any way of reading what genes does what and what genes that are missing to complete the code, so filling the gaps with the right parts would be unlikely to do as easy as the novels and films present it.
      5) Large animals live in symbiosis with other micro organisms and other tiny creatures that make a home out of our bodies, we need these creatures to survive and so would the dinosaurs. However due to the massive time diffrence between us and them, it is likely that many of the species of bacteria, parasites, etc that the dinosaurs lived with are no longer part of our current ecosystem, since containing pre historic strains of micro organisms would be near impossible on an island, while at the same time it would probably not be possible for the animals to live without them, we would, to my understanding have to modify their genetic code so that they are adapted to the organisms today.
      Note that I do not hold any form of education withing genetics or biology, most of this is based off of what i have read and hear online. So please take everything i wrote with a grain of salt.
      I would also like to apologize for my grammer and spelling, as english is not my native tongue.

    • @simonpetrikov3992
      @simonpetrikov3992 6 років тому +1

      Wilmer Sandström you watched Isaac Arthur before?

    • @I_WANT_MY_SLAW
      @I_WANT_MY_SLAW 6 років тому +2

      Because it's a movie.

    • @vexxama
      @vexxama 5 років тому +17

      Micah Winston that’s actually a really good method for teaching sciences. My own teacher did something similar. He’d show us clips of martial arts or sci fi movies and ask us to point out flaws from a scientific standpoint

  • @kennats1654
    @kennats1654 3 роки тому +15

    I always loved how Mr. Dna says dinosawrrrs

  • @happygilmore9309
    @happygilmore9309 4 роки тому +33

    0:51
    The way he said that was fuckin adorable

  • @ElEspectroDeLaMi
    @ElEspectroDeLaMi 11 місяців тому +2

    One of the things I really liked about the book was just HOW much attention was paid to all the amber mines that InGen was buying up all over the world. Someone even shows up to Grant's dig site to ask him why Hammond and InGen would want THAT much amber, and Grant honestly couldn't answer, because he'd only given InGen some theories about how the parental behaviors of certain dinosaur species, but at the time had no idea what InGen was actually getting up to. We see the one amber mine toward the beginning, and this animation explaining the use for the amber, but InGen had a MASSIVE stockpile of amber just to make the species that were currently alive on the islands.

  • @keonabrown5811
    @keonabrown5811 3 місяці тому +4

    Abbott Elementary brought me here. 😂

  • @MrBaladaum
    @MrBaladaum 3 роки тому +72

    love how the guy pronounces dinoSOUR

  • @vexxama
    @vexxama 3 роки тому +15

    Him missing his first line gets me every time

  • @白髪りす
    @白髪りす 3 роки тому +52

    3:04 damn VR's are already a thing 30 years ago?

    • @jeremysmith54565
      @jeremysmith54565 3 роки тому +1

      Was virtools a VR development (though graphical dev) was a software for developing things like that, not sure if it'd ever be up to that but I dont think now its even in production anymore, used it for immersive systems dissertation I was doing at University was over 10 years ago now

    • @TheDustyShredder
      @TheDustyShredder 3 роки тому +5

      VR imaging was developed for major research corporations back then, and was primarily analog. The controls were attached to analog sensors that relayed the data to the main computer, while the images were sent to a display worn by the user. There was no head tracking back then, so you couldn't plant yourself inside a strand of DNA and simply look or walk around.
      It took those 30 years to bring VR to the consumer market, where it was aimed primarily at entertainment, so it needed to be more advanced. It needed higher frame rates, more advanced processors to handle the higher graphics load, and more memory to handle the program load. There is still no telling where VR will be in the next 10 years, or even the next 30.

    • @zachhoward9099
      @zachhoward9099 7 місяців тому

      Definitely dating myself with the reference but about 30 years ago not that long after Jurassic Park had debuted we had a multilevel shopping mall open in the heart of downtown Indianapolis and one of the top floors had an amazing arcade and the centerpiece at the time were some VR games that even for 1994-5 had some very impressive graphics, the lines for them ran about an hour in length and was like that for about the first 45 days the mall was open and even after for a good year or more you had to wait in line a good 20 min or r half hour to have a turn, that’s how mindblowing VR was for people back then

  • @AnneliesRosseel
    @AnneliesRosseel 3 роки тому +18

    Ian Malcolm really is a rockstar

  • @plaqued9526
    @plaqued9526 3 роки тому +5

    I would argue that this scene is one of the greatest in film history. Because nobody is watching this half way through and leaving.

  • @Comfy_Xu
    @Comfy_Xu 2 роки тому +6

    this movie was so ahead of its time its insane.

  • @huismands
    @huismands 3 роки тому +22

    2:27 "Using sophisticated techniques.."
    You mean drilling a hole and sticking a needle in? Yeah, real sophisticated.

  • @brucechua8889
    @brucechua8889 3 роки тому +26

    In this parallel universe, colonel sanders created dinosaurs.

    • @xeisu_com
      @xeisu_com 3 роки тому +7

      And deep fried them.

  • @TasselledWobbegong
    @TasselledWobbegong 2 роки тому +6

    3:23 The sauropod with Mr DNA's head is the stuff of nightmares.

  • @alexthompson9516
    @alexthompson9516 2 роки тому +12

    I like how relaxed the lawyer is, he's just lovin' it.

    • @fabulousfrance
      @fabulousfrance 2 роки тому +3

      There's a small detail before that. When he snap changes as soon he saw the brachiosaurus. "We'll make a fortune with this park" he became Hammonds brown nose since this moment and it's even became more obvious during the lunch scene, discuting tickets prices already

    • @alexthompson9516
      @alexthompson9516 2 роки тому +1

      @@fabulousfrance I love how Ian Malcolm laughs when he says that, he recognizes as does the audience, the peril, crassness and hilarious irony in that remark.

    • @vevans0009
      @vevans0009 7 місяців тому

      @@fabulousfrance His price assumptions were ridiculous.

  • @DavefromCA2023
    @DavefromCA2023 2 роки тому +2

    @3:53 I never noticed the lawyer asking if the scientists were real or "auto-erotica" LMAO

  • @52BLUE
    @52BLUE 2 місяці тому

    i remember watching this in theatres as a kid and still understanding everything i needed to know to help me sink into the film even more.

  • @tomservo5347
    @tomservo5347 3 роки тому +27

    Lora Dern was gorgeous in this movie.

    • @johndoherty487
      @johndoherty487 3 роки тому

      @vidaa82 JW Dominion?

    • @TeddyRumble
      @TeddyRumble 6 місяців тому

      Laura Dern first came to my attention in "Smooth Talk". Years later, I spoke to a filmmaker who worked on the television play with her. He said he got to chat with her for 20 minutes or so. He was surprised I had heard of the film. I was super jealous.
      My God she was so beautiful. Still is.

  • @pkl8811
    @pkl8811 2 роки тому +5

    I wish I could go back to when the movie first came out.

  • @mrmusickhimself
    @mrmusickhimself 2 роки тому +10

    Richard Attenborough is a legend of film but he was just TOO damn genial, eccentric, and childlike to have pulled off the Novel Hammond. I'm glad they took a different route with his character in the film.

    • @jobolesonihalsasrikaal4029
      @jobolesonihalsasrikaal4029 Рік тому

      I've heard somewhere that book Hammond is angry and he dies by eaten up by small Dino's compies

    • @spinlok3943
      @spinlok3943 5 місяців тому

      It was a smart change to make. In the book he’s just a generic greedy guy who wants money but he’s so much more interesting and nuanced in the movie. He had the best of intentions and wanted to entertain people. But it was misguided.

  • @B27-o2c
    @B27-o2c Рік тому +2

    As a kid, I recognized the animation of the miners getting to the Amber as being similar to Rugrats. They must have used the same animation studio.

  • @crewalpha
    @crewalpha 2 роки тому +2

    "Are these characters auto...erotica?" lol!

  • @Heart.SoulfulIndian
    @Heart.SoulfulIndian 2 роки тому +2

    Nothing like the first time I saw this in a cinema hall. Iconic !!

  • @Sly-Moose
    @Sly-Moose 3 роки тому +3

    Autoerotica?! 😂 Bad lawyer! **Bonk**

  • @diegobert4033
    @diegobert4033 11 місяців тому +1

    I just noticed the little animated character narrating is also used at the queue in Velocicoaster in Universal. They put it up on a screen to give riders instructions to use the lockers before getting on the ride.
    Neat.

  • @LoveFor298Yen
    @LoveFor298Yen 3 роки тому +87

    3:56 “autoerotica” hahaha

    • @olorin1710
      @olorin1710 3 роки тому

      😯

    • @fullmentalalchemist3922
      @fullmentalalchemist3922 3 роки тому +1

      Searched for this

    • @Fixxate
      @Fixxate 3 роки тому

      @@fullmentalalchemist3922 mistake

    • @steed3902
      @steed3902 2 роки тому

      ​@@Fixxate or an attorney figuring out hot to increase his billable hourly rate!

  • @PERSEUS-NIOR
    @PERSEUS-NIOR 11 місяців тому

    I just ADORE when John tells his guests to say hello to the John on screen...its the little things, the childlike curiosity and wonder possessed by this elderly gentleman, one of the many reasons why John Hammond is one of the most iconic characters ever, it was brillaint move to make him kind as opposed to his greedy and vile novel counterpart, since the novel is darker so absolutely yes the evil hammond works for the novel but since the movies are more optimistic the kind hearted hammond works like a charm

  • @relaxationstation7634
    @relaxationstation7634 2 роки тому +7

    0:05
    In ALL the year of me watching this movie I never noticed dude is wearing a full suit and then shorts on the bottom... WHAT IS THAT?!

  • @FucTrump
    @FucTrump Місяць тому +1

    Genius writing really: They knew they would have to keep the audience engaged during the hugest exposition dump imaginable....just have a cartoon explain everything.

  • @williesenpaifitness
    @williesenpaifitness 3 місяці тому +9

    I’m here because of an Abbott episode 😂😂

  • @BritneyStinson
    @BritneyStinson 11 місяців тому

    I could imagine seeing this in the theatre and then going to a theme park and having a similar experience, like they perfectly encapsulated that era of theme park ride. some of which are still around, like living with the land in epcot. its not all the dissimilar. i love those old school rides

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому

      I had the experience in 2007 at Jurassic Park in Universal Florida

  • @michaelw9192
    @michaelw9192 2 роки тому +3

    After all these years I finally see where Microsoft found its stupid idea for that damn paper clip for their Word app.

  • @TheBfutgreg
    @TheBfutgreg Рік тому +2

    "Are...are these characters....uhhh auto...auto erotica?"
    "Nonono....(JEEZ....dodged a bullet there) we have no animatronics here now, those people are the real miracle workers of Jurassic.....p....*trails off*"
    *Lawyer man reconsiders career choice....MFW no Prehistoric PussAY!!!.... D:*

  • @benhamilton1156
    @benhamilton1156 2 роки тому +6

    Movies like JP got me interested in the fundamentals of genetic engineering. When I watched the UNDERWORLD movies, I was prepared for the genetic science applied to these movies.

  • @stuffthings9618
    @stuffthings9618 Рік тому +2

    Mr DNA was a great visual way of explaining the DNA concept that was a bit complicated (for the layman) in the book.

  • @chrisfromsouthaus2735
    @chrisfromsouthaus2735 3 роки тому +20

    2:00 It's taken me 28 years to realise that they used honey in this clip

    • @praisebetevin2082
      @praisebetevin2082 3 роки тому +1

      You may got the amber but I got the HUNNY.

    • @Locadel2003
      @Locadel2003 2 роки тому +2

      It’s not Honey😂😂😂

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 9 місяців тому

      I always thought it was maple syrup and always wanted pancakes 🍁🥞

  • @chrisecal7464
    @chrisecal7464 3 роки тому +2

    No one talks about how this movie like Jurassic World for the time period it was in 1993 showcases technology that wasn't available then but is subtle enought that it makes sense
    -self driving cars
    - tvs in said cars
    -virtual reality displays

  • @ethanyushanadventures
    @ethanyushanadventures 3 роки тому +4

    I love it when the DNA guy says "dinosaurs" What accent is it?

  • @viborgvee8399
    @viborgvee8399 2 роки тому +1

    Weird how Attenborough‘a Scottish accent kept peeping through unexpectedly, like when he said “Nr DNA!” and “Correct!?” when discussing the system shutdown.

  • @charliedallachie3539
    @charliedallachie3539 5 років тому +112

    As a kid I was always confused with this scene.

    • @ElZilchoYo
      @ElZilchoYo 4 роки тому +22

      I thought the concept of blood in a preserved mosquito was really easy to get. I remember digging in my garden to find a ball of preserved amber. Never did obviously.

    • @LuciusVulpes
      @LuciusVulpes 4 роки тому +7

      But as an adult it makes a lot of sense, even if it's not actually possible.

    • @charliedallachie3539
      @charliedallachie3539 4 роки тому +2

      @IWatchWeirdVideos yea it makes sense now, back then I just saw train sounds and dinosaurs (at 4-5)

    • @charliedallachie3539
      @charliedallachie3539 4 роки тому

      @@LuciusVulpes it could be, there was talk of doing what they did for the woolly mammoth. For dinosaurs yea it’s difficult because it’s there’s no DNA 🧬 to extract

    • @micahgoldson1253
      @micahgoldson1253 4 роки тому +10

      Charlie Dallachie It’s essentially impossible. You’d need a mosquito to consume lots of blood, then happen to get stuck in amber, assuming the blood and amber aren’t contaminated. You’d then need to differentiate the DNA from that of the mosquito, assuming that too much of it hasn’t degraded after millions of years. And filling in the gaps with frog DNA isn’t as easy as it seems, frogs are different from dinosaurs. But let’s assume all that works out - you’d only have the DNA of a single dinosaur.

  • @TJSaw
    @TJSaw 2 роки тому +2

    0:08 A great shot full of serious foreboding if ever there was one. Love it!

  • @simpleman1546
    @simpleman1546 3 роки тому +6

    "Virtual reality", well it took me 20+ years to get that.

  • @S0nyToprano
    @S0nyToprano 3 роки тому +5

    Dr. Ellie Sattler with glasses… just unbelievably beautiful and so cute.

    • @TeddyRumble
      @TeddyRumble 6 місяців тому

      They should have gotten married between JP 1 and 2, and had a bunch of kids.

  • @thetheorizermoore7476
    @thetheorizermoore7476 3 роки тому +12

    The frog lizard and bird hybrid dna is what made the dinosaurs different from the fossil counterpart ancestors

    • @TeddyRumble
      @TeddyRumble 6 місяців тому

      Birds...are dinosaurs

  • @MrJuanito931228
    @MrJuanito931228 2 роки тому +2

    What I don't understand is, why couldn't they fill the gaps with Avian DNA? Why amphibians specifically? I mean by 1993, it was already being accepted that birds are dinosaurs.

  • @jmorlar2852
    @jmorlar2852 3 роки тому +7

    I have never understood why they just chose frog DNA to complete the sequence interruptions they spotted in dinosaur DNA chains.
    I am not a geneticist, however to my knowledge there are many other still living reptiles which genetic features are likely to be closer to dinosaurs'. Crocodiles for instance are often regarded as "living fossils".
    Maybe Nedry was right about Hammond getting cheap on everything...

    • @robertwizzy666
      @robertwizzy666 2 роки тому +3

      I think the idea is to fetch an "ancestor" species, seeing how amphibians came before dinos. Using reptile dna might be similar, but it also means more changes were set in stone. I think the idea is something akin to stem cells. Im sure it makes no sense in real science, but thats it i think,

  • @milademjayy
    @milademjayy Рік тому +1

    *the first one of every movie is alwasy the BEST ONES!!*

  • @Diego_Aracena_Kovacevic
    @Diego_Aracena_Kovacevic 2 роки тому +4

    3:48 The lawyer looks at the ceiling but in the next shot he talks to John by looking forward.

  • @S-Fan2006
    @S-Fan2006 Рік тому +1

    3:11 - And to think that it was actually the frog DNA that lead to unauthorised breeding in Jurassic Park. This is perfect foreshadowing and helps show that, in filling in the DNA gaps, InGen lost more control of the dinosaurs than they might’ve had they taken the proper precautions with the frogs they were using to fill the DNA sequence gaps.

  • @BigNick504
    @BigNick504 2 роки тому +4

    The music for this film was a 10/10

    • @spinlok3943
      @spinlok3943 5 місяців тому +1

      I love how John Williams composed essentially Loony Tunes music for this.

  • @Accel_Lex
    @Accel_Lex 2 роки тому +2

    When I watched it for the first time I thought the John from the screen was actually interacting with the John on stage. Only now I see it was a recording. 😂

  • @samuraishinobi
    @samuraishinobi 4 роки тому +36

    This whole idea actually makes sense to the point where it can be possible to create dinosaurs again.

    • @Gamerafighter76
      @Gamerafighter76 4 роки тому +17

      But is it really a good idea to play God?

    • @noelanderson969
      @noelanderson969 4 роки тому +10

      But NOT to make money off it!

    • @mzmuzo678
      @mzmuzo678 4 роки тому +27

      The Problem is, that the Dinosaur DNA even in mosquitos, is too much damaged today.

    • @armitx9
      @armitx9 4 роки тому +27

      You are so preoccupied with whether or not you could, you don't stop to think if you should

    • @armitx9
      @armitx9 4 роки тому +15

      @@mzmuzo678 they explain it in the movie bro, of course it's not 100% intact so they make up the difference with frog DNA

  • @TheUltimatePositionOfPower
    @TheUltimatePositionOfPower Рік тому +1

    Wow, never realized the lawyer called the scientists "auto erotica" 😂😂😂

  • @ghostaccountlmao
    @ghostaccountlmao 4 роки тому +4

    I saw this movie 100 times as a kid, and it wasn't until I was 8 or 9 on my 101st viewing I paid attention as hard as I could and realized how they got Dino DNA.

    • @Aristocratic13
      @Aristocratic13 4 роки тому +2

      Same. At 4yrs old when this film came out on VHS I didn’t understand jack lol

  • @nomoreheroes1718
    @nomoreheroes1718 Рік тому +1

    Dude had VR w/ out the goggles. 😂

  • @transvestosaurus878
    @transvestosaurus878 4 місяці тому +3

    3:06 we have this now! And we're curing diseases with it!

  • @PKAC972
    @PKAC972 2 роки тому +1

    If anyone ever wondered why is not done in real life the answer is that, inside the mosquito's belly the blood was digested, therefore the DNA was destroyed.

    • @edrick106
      @edrick106 2 роки тому

      And even if it wasn’t digested, it would deteriorate quickly

  • @GustavoLopez-hp8zz
    @GustavoLopez-hp8zz 2 роки тому +4

    I always though mosquitoes in the Cretaceous period would have been the size of a falcon. I mean everything was bigger back then.

    • @jordonez42
      @jordonez42 2 роки тому +1

      No, insects only reached such sizes millions of years before during the Carboniferous. There was more oxygen in the atmosphere and as insects get their oxygen through their skin, they were able to grow much larger on land