That seatbelt scene in the chopper isn’t just a joke about him having issues with technology, it’s also about the overarching theme of the movie. “Life finds a way.” He takes two “female” seatbelt halves and manages to make something work. Just like all the female dinosaurs on the island.
The amount of time Jane said "Justin!" had me rolling. It is clearly a reflex. Justin must be used he hearing his name a lot by now. Love you guys and your reactions!
To be clear, since I think not a lot of people realize this: Birds don't just come from dinosaurs, they are literally dinosaurs. Specifically they are the Aves group from the Theropoda branch of Dinosauria, the other two branches of Dinosauria being Ornithischia and Sauropodomorpha. Other dinosaurs in the Theropod branch include velociraptors, tyrannosaurus, and dilophosaurus to name a few. So when you're looking at a bird, you are looking at a living dinosaur.
So maybe you can explain this to me. I do believe in dinosaurs ,fyi. But there is no genetic correlation between scaled animals being able to develop feathers. Even today we can't find any tangible evidence of scaled or lizard like animals that have feathers.
It is not entirely clear of Bird relationship, but yes they more or less are descendants. The community I think is still trying to work out whether all Dinosaurs were actually 'birds' per say, or that birds were branch off of the raptor group. Did all dinosaurs have proto feathers, like late Triassic mammals with proto fur, or was it just some groups of therapods.
@@jrus690 It's still pretty new research, but I believe only some of them had feathers. Velociraptors had definitely feathers (due to the fossils being found with feathers), while bigger species such as T rex most likely didn't have feathers. They lived in tropical/warm habitats, and looking at bigger animals compared to smaller animals today, we see the bigger animals having less/no fur, while smaller ones have. Elephants, rhinos and hippos to name a few big animals in warm climates who don't have fur. Giraffes basically being the exception in the group of the biggest land animals. Big birds today are rarely fully feathered as well, Ostriches, marabou stork, cassoways and rheas to name the bigger ones. T rexes were carnivores, while these animals are herbivores, so it could be possible that they had feathers to camoflauge more (like how the biggest land predators today have fur, lions, tigers, bears, wolves etc.) so it's still a possibility that they had feathers, but I personally think it would be too hot for them? when having a big body that produces a lot of heat and loses heat slowly, having a form of insolation would be pointless. I personally believe they had scales with patterns to help blend in, as they weren't loud animals irl
So, if, as you say, birds are living dinosaurs, then it's possible they still carry the DNA of primitive dinosaurs in their genetic profile. Thus, it could be possible, by some as yet developed means, to recreate a primitive species of dinosaur. I'm asking more than assuming, as my knowledge of genetics is only comparable to my knowledge of particle physics, which means, I got nothing. However, I believe what my Daddy used to say, before he left this cold, cruel world, ''In nature, nothing is ever wasted or lost.''
@@Millennial_z396 I’m amazed how some people around my age back then had completely different reactions than I did seeing it in theater as a 6 year old. And as a 6 year old that was never really exposed to any sort of scary/intense movies, I was scared out of my mind whenever T-Rex and the Raptors were on screen.
@@joshnc101 to be completely honest I only wanted the lawyer to get eaten... And before that I watched Blade which makes this look PG you should watch it it's the first real superhero movie marvel did
100%! Two great scenes from two great movies "Welcome to Jurassic Park!" and "I'm the king of the world!" are forever in my memory and in my heart as an example of the pure magic of cinema and real delight. From my childhood till now
OMG YES 😭😭😭 it always makes me tear up too. Another thing that always happens I get this rush all throughout my body and it’s like my body gets hit with a wave of emotions, wonderment/awe/proudness. Just chills. It’s like I’m watching it all over again. And I especially get it even more when I’m watching other UA-cam Reactors react to it. I love Jurassic Park. It’s one of my favorite franchises. This movie will always hold a special place in my heart 🩵💙🩵💙🩵
There were dozens of people currently running that park, but remember, when the storm blew in, they were ordered to evacuate the island. Only essential personnel were allowed to remain (namely, those who were going to get the park approved, the CEO, the head of security, the head computer administrator, and the chief programmer, Nedry).
Yes indeed, skeleton crew. We can assume the kitchen staff made that whole buffet for the park approval visitors and then left, which is why the kitchen is empty and tidy (apart from Hammond leaving the freezer open after grabbing some melting ice cream while the power was off). Some people say that's way too much food for so few people but the point of the park visit was to showcase, so it can be assumed they're providing a sample of every item that will be available on the menu when the park was planned to open.
One of the best parts my favorite of course is the t Rex scene especially knowing that the whole thing was real and those screams were real fear just makes the scene better
The book explains the cloning in more detail. Yes, multiple mosquitos from different parts of the world from different time periods. Basically, once they had a complete DNA strand, by filling in the gaps, etc., they'd literally have to grow it to see what hatched out. Then if it was still not "right," they'd go back, tweak the DNA and try again. So in the book, there were multiple versions of each dinosaur they created, with the more current "version" out in the park. Highly recommend reading the book, it's incredible and a fun read.
sad how many people now, don't even know the entire movie franchise came from a book (and its sequel) and don't even know who the author is either... not knowing of him at all... sighs (michael crighton, the most well-known and/or the best sci-fi writer of the 80s and 90s, with many movies made of his books)
@@redmoonbloodmoon3161 100% One year, he was the NUMBER THREE highest paid entertainer in THE WORLD. Behind George Lucas (prequel era + toys) and Oprah Winfrey.
@@redmoonbloodmoon3161sorry, gotta do it... It's spelled Crichton lol Honestly though, Jurassic Park is simultaneously my favorite movie and my favorite novel. They're different, sure, but I think they're both amongst the best examples of the genre ever made.
😂😂 Jane squealing & hitting her microphone so that it drops right into her face at the exact moment Ray Arnold's arm drops on to Ellie's shoulder & her subsequent squeal, the reaction to both it & to the raptor & then the realization it was just her mike during such an intense part of the movie may have been the best thing I have seen all week..😂😂 "JUSTIN, I'M HOT! I'M HOT..."☠☠🤣 Keep up the great reactions, guys..😉❤✌🏻
Since Justin mentioned it: from what I understand, the "ripple" effect in the cup of water during the T. rex attack went through several iterations, until the effects team finally decided to just thread a guitar string through the car and attach it to the cup. The ripple is produced by a technician plucking the guitar string off-screen. Sometimes the simple solution is the best one; 30 years later and it's still one of the coolest shots ever. :)
Jane: Keeps getting mad at the kids for being scared & screaming Also Jane: AHHHHH!!!!!!! This movie holds a special place in my heart, I had this back on vhs when I was a kid & watched it everyday. In defense of Lex with the light, since I watched this so young I understood her motives, I always saw it as that feeling when you're a kid all alone in the middle of the night during a thunderstorm with no adults around to save you so what do you do when there's a monster outside? You turn on a light to make it go away.
The scene where Grant has trouble buckling up pertains to the theme of the movie. The others seatbelts hook together, like a male and female, so to speak. But Grant has two female pieces, like the dinosaurs in the park. Instead of clipping them together, he tied them into a knot. Like life, he found a way.
This movie was absolutely amazing to experience when I was young. Went to see it twice and then was terrified but it made love movies. This was and still is peak entertainment. I also saw this in theatres when I was like 8 or 9.
My aunt and uncle who did not have children of their own at the time, took me and sister to watch this in theatres (my first ever movie) I was three years old.. lmao! Can never forget the raptors in the kitchen scene engrained in my memory. Nightmares for years.
@@SeeJaneGoTV Surprised you guys watched Camp Cretaceous before reacting to JP, but also glad you liked CC :) Despite being more for kids, CC feels much more like a proper continuation of JP than do the sequel movies. 4 more notes: -1) I hope you saw Minnesotajones261's comment, given how well it answers your cloning questions. -2) In ref to ~4:40, sorry to be the "actually" guy, but that IS how some animals act (specifically, large predators that learn to hunt humans). This is discussed more in the book (see the "Terrible Truth About Velociraptor Hunting On Isla Nublar" video), but the movie still has plenty of context clues in the opening scene + the cow scene. Also, in ref to ~5:40, I get what Jane's trying to say, but to quote a dino museum, "paleontologists don't start digging randomly. They wait until there is an indication on the surface that something of interest is to be found below." -3) That's Parasaurolophus you're trying to say at ~15:50 ;) -4) As BlahBlahWoofWoof12 pointed out, I think you're too hard on Lex & Tim, especially at ~41:00 (Jane screamed every time a dino surprised her, so of course a scared kid like Lex would too) & ~56:20 (that fall could've broken or killed Tim had Grant not caught him, so of course he was scared to jump). BTW, in ref to ~41:00, Rexy didn't smell them b/c the rain washed away their scent.
@@SeeJaneGoTV You're Amazing 💯 love your reaction especially the famous restroom scene where the really mean old weenie lawyer guy selfishly abandoned the poor kids just desperately Scrambling trying to hide sitting on the toilet 😥 Rexy found him anyway 🤭 Cronch HA HA She said YUP that guy's Done goner lol Soo love Her reaction lol hey it was actually kinda funny because he kinda Deserve it for selfishly abandoned the poor kids would you agree with me?
@@SeeJaneGoTV does watching these Jurassic Park movies in a way make both of y'all love birds want 2 play Yu-Gi-Oh! using a Dinosaur Archetype/Theme Deck?
My experience was kinda the opposite. My dad was watching the movie on TV when I was really little, and I walked in during the scene with the Brachiosaurs and the kids in the tree. I really loved dinosaurs, so I wanted to keep watching, but dad must've known the raptor scene was right after, so he said I couldn't. I was pretty disappointed, but considering how I reacted to a bee sting when Dennis the Menace was on, he was probably right to do that.
It doesn't matter how many times 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.
This was the last movie i saw in theaters with my Dad before he died. He was always really interested in Dinosaurs and was like a little kid talking about it afterwards. One of if not my favorite memory in my life.
I was 21 years old when this movie came out, and I loved it! I still love it. It's one of my favorites. Unfortunately, Richard Attenborough Is no longer with us.🥺🥺
We were tough kids in the 90s. Everyone was OBSESSED with this movie. The merch was literally everywhere you looked. Lunchboxes, water bottles, backpacks, folders, pencil cases, hats, T-shirts, books...you name it. This movie is responsible for getting millions of kids into dinosaurs. It's like how J.K. Rowling got kids actually interested in books again. We wanted to learn everything about them, and we did. All the kids knew the names of dinosaurs. I remember doing an elementary school project on Iguanodon, and the picture I drew of it was one of the best pictures I've done to this day. 😂 I was so proud. I got an A on my project, but I was more proud of my effort than the grade. ❤
Yes, this movie was a HUGE hit. $60M budget, $1B box office. These are classified as techno-thrillers. The combined direction and editing are amazing. Your reactions are proof of that. In the theaters audiences jumped up and yelled at the screen. You are in good company. Thank you.
Seeing as Justin asked, the vibrations caused by the T-Rex was done by strumming a guitar string directly beneath the glass. It took them a few different attempts to figure it out, but this worked a treat.
I BEGGED my dad to take me to see this at 10-12 years old or so....one of the greatest experiences of my life. All these years later, that damn theme will make me break out in a grin, eyes wet. John Williams IS the man.
Don’t you ever apologize for screaming. It’s great! I hurt my ribs laughing so hard because that’s what happened the first time I watched it. Watching you and Jane go through it is great joy! 😅
I was a teenager when this came out. I remember all the (well deserved) hype around this movie. Jane's constant jumping was hilarious to watch. I think the most uttered phrase in this reaction was "Frick Justin!"
I was born in '81 so I was 12 when I first saw this in theaters. I have never seen anything that thrilled me like this movie did. To this day, this is the movie I consider the bar for special effects. It's so amazing to me that even to this day, major Hollywood films have questionable CGI when they pulled this off in 1993. You can tell the CGI raptors from the guys in foam suits during the kitchen scene, but the fact that 30 years later it still looks so damn good is such a testament to the time and effort put into every frame of this masterpiece.
@@scipioafricanus5871 Well, considering that most of the dinosaurs here are practical effect animatronics (the brontosaurus/apatosaurus being both CGI & animatronics) and not just CGI makes this film miles better.
OMG. Watching Ms. Jane jump and scream “Justin I’m hot” was THE funniest thing I’ve seen in a long time. Mr. Justin is such a patient husband. Y’all are hilarious. 🥰
57:17. This is one of my all time favorite movies. I was waiting for this the moment since Jane was out from the first scene. Thank you for never disappointing. In fact that whole scene was just perfect entertainment. ❤❤❤ This movie as a child was the introduction to the jump scare for me👍🏾
Their reaction to the Ellie vs Velociraptor scene at the maintenance shed 57:18 was literally me when I rewatched it as an adult. It just kept going! They had absolutely NO CHILL 😅
Loved your reaction! The reason there were so few employees was because they were changing shifts, so the current shift had left on a boat to the mainland, and the next shift hadn’t arrived yet. Can’t wait to see more of these movies on this channel!
It's a misconception that herbivores won't hurt people. All wild animals are fully capable of hurting and killing people. More people are hurt in Canada by moose elk and deer than they are by bears cougars and wolves. Number one killer of humans in Africa is a hippopotamus. Large herbivore. If it's a wild animal you show it respect and keep your distance.
Fun fact when the trex came through the car roof. That was the trex anamatronic messing up due to the rain. The look of terror on the kids face was the real deal.
We need a bingo card for Janes reactions. 1. Deafining scream 2. Hold Justin's head 3. Squeeze chest 4. "JUSTIN" 5. Nearly break Justin's hand 6. Hits mic 7. "Why did they do that?" 8. Hands flail in air 9. Canadian words come out like "Gasrh" or "Eh"
I've been watching your reactions for a while now and it never occurred to me that you haven't reacted to any Jurassic Park movies yet. I like how afraid Jane is from the intro. This will be fun. 😄
You guys are watching/have watched Camp Cretaceous?! Awesome! That guy isn’t Kenji’s dad, but he does appear in the show a couple times. Henry Wu, the main guy behind the dino cloning The water tremors in the cups were achieved by attaching piano strings to the bottom of the cups and plucking them. or guitar strings. some instrument string I always assumed Lex was trying to use the light like a laser pointer to lure the rex away, like Alan and Ian do with the flares. I guess I’m the only one after checking online discussions. Best answer I saw is that she’s too afraid to think and doesn’t know what to do, so she looks for anything to do, and finds the flashlight, so she uses it.
This woman nearly pisses herself over a leaf crunching and sobs when a cat dies, but can’t understand how children react to the sight of a giant T. Rex walking around free.
This movie changed how we made movies. Just like Star Wars had done 15 years prior. This was the first movie to use CGI effects to this level. At first the dinosaurs were meant to be stop motion effects. It completely blew people away when they saw it in the cinema. I still remember being sucked into it completely
Most of the dinos in this film are practical effect animatronics mixed with minimal high-quality CGI. The modern dinos, by comparison, are all CGI, so they look faker.
A couple Fun facts about this movie. When the T-rex broke thru the car ceiling, it wasn't actually planned. The crew underestimated the strength of the animatronic and it broke clean through making the kids experience actual terror. When it shows grant digging up a full Raptor skeleton, there are a few inaccuracy's. 1. Raptor fossils have only ever been found in parts of Asia so a full skeleton being in Montana is almost impossible. 2. there is actually no scientific proof that Raptors were pack hunters since any fossils found are single raptors and not in groups. 3. when the kid says a Velociraptor is like a turkey that is actually true only they weren't 6 feet more like 2 feet or whatever an average turkey size might be. you'd could honestly fight one off with a stick. and one last cool fact is, during filming an actual Hurricane hit their location so they filmed it for the storm scenes but sadly due to the storm they lost a lot of set pieces as well as dinosaurs that we never got to see in the film.😟💔
Ah, Paul Hogan in "Crocodile Dundee"... a classic comedy, action and romance film! Jane would love it, I'm sure. 🙂 This was a great film reaction, by the way! Loved it! Like you I loved the fact that Dennis Nedry is an anagram of Nerdy Sinned. A good name for him, lol.
I had to laugh the couple times you referred to the portrait on Nedry's desk calling him "Mr. Rogers"! :) That was J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb!
I went to see this with my cousin in 1993. We were sitting on the middle-right side of the theater. We were just talking about it a few weeks ago, as we just saw the latest Jurassic Park movie.
I was growing up on these Movies. I'm not as old as them of course, I just watched them a lot when I was young, always brings back all those good memories. I even started building an entire Jurassic Park Island in Lego!
To get the concentric ripples in the water glass, they tied a guitar string from the frame of the car to a platform under it. A crew member was under the car, and every time he plucked the string, it sent vibrations into the cup holder and into the cup, causing the perfect ripples. According to a "making of" video I saw, Steven Spielberg was driving along I-5 listening to AC/DC with the volume cranked up, and his rear mirror was vibrating every time the base hit. That was the inspiration for both the mirror vibrating and the water cup. The mirror was easy because it just had to vibrate, but the guy in charge of coming up with the ripples in the cup couldn't make the water ripple the way Spielberg wanted it to. He tried bass in subwoofers, hitting the bottom of the cup, probably a bunch of other things, but nothing worked. One evening at home, he was playing his guitar and for some reason he thought of setting a glass of water on the guitar and plucking the strings, and much to his surprise, there it was, the perfect ripples, so they basically turned the car into a giant guitar.
That entire "Welcome, to Jurassic Park" intro... from the first Brachio, to when grant asks "How'd you do this?".. has given me goosebumps ever since I was a kid 😭 The music, the buildup, all of it just.. 'chefkiss'.
Bro by far my favorite reaction from you guys. Jane being Jane, the Justin counter overload, jane wardrobe change, and even Justin screaming. It was hilarious. Lol
Jane is a MAJOR empath, you are WAY too precious for this world darling. It is so hard watching you be empathetic to EVERYONE. The whirlwind of emotions- ugh. (Except for screaming Lex- LMAO, you both were like “SHUT UP” 😂)- Although it was like you could feel the Dinosaur sneeze. It was a little funny 😂. I hope you are both well, wishing you the best 😊.
I had a little girl try to convince me that she was allowed to watch this on one of my first babysitting gigs. Almost gave in, but then decided she could watch it with her family and not me. After she was asleep, I tried the first 5 minutes, then chickened out.
I love all of the hints of how much this park is held together with gum and paperclips. Guy raising the gate (not automated), underpaying Nedry (and Nedry is their only IT guy for the entire park), chopper having faulty seatbelts, easily escape the information ride, no locks on the vehicle doors, and that is before the dinosaurs escape...
@@christopherbowers7236 Yeah, and even a lot of that - the automated tour vehicles with the Richard Kiley-narrated tour program seem expensive, high tech, and flashy - BUT, they also save having to pay human drivers/tour guides, and let you fit one more paying guest in each vehicle, thereby also reducing the total number of vehicles in the fleet. And the high level of automation in general, using advanced computer systems - expensive up front investment, but it all allows it to be run with minimal staff, saving money over time (Nedry mentions the whole place can be run for up to several days at a time by just a couple people working in the control room, which lets them keep staffing levels in the rest of the park to a minimum). Its all initially impressive stuff that Hammond can boast about, but in reality, is all designed to cut costs once you look deeper. The book goes deeper, of course, the concrete moats around the fences are really just for security theater, they're not deep enough or wide enough to actually contain the dinosaurs when the fences fail, but provide visual reassurance to visitors that there's an extra fail safe. And the lysine contingency is BS, since all animals, humans included, have to ingest lysine from their food, which is readily available throughout the environment. Its just a lie that creates the perception of extra safety, in the hopes that most people will just take it at face value. The lack of locking mechanisms on the tour vehicles is also a simple and obvious safety failing, even if nothing else went wrong, you obviously can't have tourists wandering off on their own when there's dangerous animals around. Hammond intentionally hid the full scope of the IT project, causing Nedry to vastly underbid for it, then held him to his original price quote under threat of using his business connections to ruin Nedry's company if he tried to back out. It went through project creep with constant revisions and scope expansion, Nedry couldn't afford to put any of his own employees on it to assist and had to do it all himself to keep his losses to a minimum. Part of why the system has so many bugs is because Hammond didn't give clear specifications of what was needed and dribbled details out over time and also demanded constant re-dos as his ambitions grew and changed, plus it had to be all done by a single guy.
Alright LAST COMMENT I SWEAR. Jon Hammond, the owner of the park, is played by the brother of Sir David Attenborough, the narrator of BBC earth and all that (he’s the British voice you think of in any nature documentary ever). Weirdly fitting in some way.
The scene with the dilophosaurus and Nedry in the car was WAY worse in the books. Dilos are like 20ft tall irl, the movie made them really small. The scene in the book is just haunting. It ends with Nedry realizing he’s blind, standing in the rain and he can’t find where he’s at, and the dilo just keeps hooting like an owl. Then it slashed his guts open and he can feel his own intestines in his hands, it picks him up by his head in its mouth, and he’s praying it’ll be over soon because he knows he’s gonna die. Also, the owner of the park is way way more self absorbed and greedy in the books. He keeps saying “spared no expense” but in reality he cut SO many corners, which is why everything fails so spectacularly. He brings his grandchildren to impress the lawyer and experts, to show “look, these kids LOVE it!” But he’s negligently put them in mortal danger. He also gets eaten in this book, by a bunch of little dinosaurs called compsognathus (you only see them in the next movie). They’re supposed to have something in their saliva that’s like Novocain, so he ends up accidentally sliding down a ravine, and they swarm and attack and eat him, while he can’t even call for help because he’s numbed by the saliva, paralyzed, like 50ft from the road where everybody else is. This movie could have been way more scary. And very much rated R. This is the Spielberg adaptation, with Kathleen Kennedy as the producer, trying to somehow make the story even possible for a kid and adult audience simultaneously. And it’s still scary as hell for the uninitiated.
I love how every reaction to this movie, the reactors say "Why aren't there more people working at this place?", when the movie makes it very clear that the park has been reduced to a ghost crew because of the oncoming storm.
The scene in the helicopter is foreshadowing. He has two female seatbelt connectors, but he ties them together and makes it work. Nature finds a way. 😮
FUN FACT: When Nedry is taking the embryos you can see the names of the. dinosaurs. They missprlled StegOsauruus as StegAsaurus. You'd think somebody in a Spielberg film would have caught that I missed the film when it came out. My girlfriend's (at the time) best friend couldn't believe I hadn't seen it and took me to the theater while my girlfriend was at work. I still remember seeing the T-Rex for the first time.
C’mon y’all. The T-Rex is the #1 most popular dinosaur. We all love the Triceratops but c’mon. A park like this would never make REAL money without predators. It would not bring in as much traffic. The same goes for a zoo. People LOVE to watch predators. It’s just a fact.
Gotta feel sorry for the poor sap who had to climb into the T-Rex's mouth between scenes because there was no other way to drain the water that would pool between the animatronic's head and the synthetic skin. And that thing's head would apparently drop with unexpected force. Like the glass on the car that dropped on the kids was not supposed to break in two the way it did. Those kids almost got sliced when that happened.
Fun fact: the jeep scene when the t-rex smashes thought the roof on to the kids it wasn't surpost to give way on the first hit but it did and it did really scare the kid actors but George liked the shot he kept it in the film
That seatbelt scene in the chopper isn’t just a joke about him having issues with technology, it’s also about the overarching theme of the movie. “Life finds a way.” He takes two “female” seatbelt halves and manages to make something work. Just like all the female dinosaurs on the island.
FORESHADOWING!
Mind… BLOWN!! 🤯
I thought sam neil said that wasn't true and the former was the point of the scene
Female seatbels 😂
@@ReinersBlauerHoden there's 2 ends, like electric cables a "male" and "female" end.
If Jane is screaming, that just means the movie is working as intended. If Justin joins in, that means the movie is putting in extra work. 👍
The amount of time Jane said "Justin!" had me rolling. It is clearly a reflex. Justin must be used he hearing his name a lot by now. Love you guys and your reactions!
To be clear, since I think not a lot of people realize this: Birds don't just come from dinosaurs, they are literally dinosaurs. Specifically they are the Aves group from the Theropoda branch of Dinosauria, the other two branches of Dinosauria being Ornithischia and Sauropodomorpha. Other dinosaurs in the Theropod branch include velociraptors, tyrannosaurus, and dilophosaurus to name a few.
So when you're looking at a bird, you are looking at a living dinosaur.
My favourite dinosaur currently alive is either the marabou stork, the shoebill stork or the bearded vulture.
So maybe you can explain this to me. I do believe in dinosaurs ,fyi. But there is no genetic correlation between scaled animals being able to develop feathers. Even today we can't find any tangible evidence of scaled or lizard like animals that have feathers.
It is not entirely clear of Bird relationship, but yes they more or less are descendants. The community I think is still trying to work out whether all Dinosaurs were actually 'birds' per say, or that birds were branch off of the raptor group. Did all dinosaurs have proto feathers, like late Triassic mammals with proto fur, or was it just some groups of therapods.
@@jrus690 It's still pretty new research, but I believe only some of them had feathers. Velociraptors had definitely feathers (due to the fossils being found with feathers), while bigger species such as T rex most likely didn't have feathers. They lived in tropical/warm habitats, and looking at bigger animals compared to smaller animals today, we see the bigger animals having less/no fur, while smaller ones have.
Elephants, rhinos and hippos to name a few big animals in warm climates who don't have fur. Giraffes basically being the exception in the group of the biggest land animals. Big birds today are rarely fully feathered as well, Ostriches, marabou stork, cassoways and rheas to name the bigger ones.
T rexes were carnivores, while these animals are herbivores, so it could be possible that they had feathers to camoflauge more (like how the biggest land predators today have fur, lions, tigers, bears, wolves etc.) so it's still a possibility that they had feathers, but I personally think it would be too hot for them? when having a big body that produces a lot of heat and loses heat slowly, having a form of insolation would be pointless.
I personally believe they had scales with patterns to help blend in, as they weren't loud animals irl
So, if, as you say, birds are living dinosaurs, then it's possible they still carry the DNA of primitive dinosaurs in their genetic profile. Thus, it could be possible, by some as yet developed means, to recreate a primitive species of dinosaur. I'm asking more than assuming, as my knowledge of genetics is only comparable to my knowledge of particle physics, which means, I got nothing. However, I believe what my Daddy used to say, before he left this cold, cruel world, ''In nature, nothing is ever wasted or lost.''
Jane: *has panic attack through entire movie*
Eleven-year-old me, seeing it in the theater: Girl, same. 😂
Five year old me watching this for the first time: EAT THE PEOPLE!!! EAT HIM, EAT HIM!!!!
And on top, THX surround sound was new, so that made it extra scary
@@MadamMonchimonchinot new, but still recent
@@Millennial_z396 I’m amazed how some people around my age back then had completely different reactions than I did seeing it in theater as a 6 year old. And as a 6 year old that was never really exposed to any sort of scary/intense movies, I was scared out of my mind whenever T-Rex and the Raptors were on screen.
@@joshnc101 to be completely honest I only wanted the lawyer to get eaten... And before that I watched Blade which makes this look PG you should watch it it's the first real superhero movie marvel did
The "Welcome to Jurassic Park" scene will always fill my eyes with tears. It's just perfection.
100%! Two great scenes from two great movies "Welcome to Jurassic Park!" and "I'm the king of the world!" are forever in my memory and in my heart as an example of the pure magic of cinema and real delight. From my childhood till now
OMG YES 😭😭😭 it always makes me tear up too. Another thing that always happens I get this rush all throughout my body and it’s like my body gets hit with a wave of emotions, wonderment/awe/proudness. Just chills. It’s like I’m watching it all over again. And I especially get it even more when I’m watching other UA-cam Reactors react to it. I love Jurassic Park. It’s one of my favorite franchises. This movie will always hold a special place in my heart 🩵💙🩵💙🩵
@@arcturus3368lol Titanic
Me too
"When dinosaurs ruled the world" banner falls in front of the T-Rex at the end. That's perfection.
There were dozens of people currently running that park, but remember, when the storm blew in, they were ordered to evacuate the island. Only essential personnel were allowed to remain (namely, those who were going to get the park approved, the CEO, the head of security, the head computer administrator, and the chief programmer, Nedry).
Yes indeed, skeleton crew.
We can assume the kitchen staff made that whole buffet for the park approval visitors and then left, which is why the kitchen is empty and tidy (apart from Hammond leaving the freezer open after grabbing some melting ice cream while the power was off).
Some people say that's way too much food for so few people but the point of the park visit was to showcase, so it can be assumed they're providing a sample of every item that will be available on the menu when the park was planned to open.
The raptor reveal in the shed is a huge line of great jumpscares for everyone...Jane felt all of them like a champ. 😅
One of the best parts my favorite of course is the t Rex scene especially knowing that the whole thing was real and those screams were real fear just makes the scene better
@@shanedaley6236 I'm guessing you mean the scene where the rex head breaks through the glass roof of the explorer?
@@kieranlazenbury8773 yes the machinery broke down in the rain
The book explains the cloning in more detail. Yes, multiple mosquitos from different parts of the world from different time periods. Basically, once they had a complete DNA strand, by filling in the gaps, etc., they'd literally have to grow it to see what hatched out. Then if it was still not "right," they'd go back, tweak the DNA and try again. So in the book, there were multiple versions of each dinosaur they created, with the more current "version" out in the park. Highly recommend reading the book, it's incredible and a fun read.
Not only is the book fun to read, it's literally horror as well, which I honestly love very much.
I hope they see your comment, given how well it answers their cloning questions.
sad how many people now, don't even know the entire movie franchise came from a book (and its sequel) and don't even know who the author is either... not knowing of him at all... sighs (michael crighton, the most well-known and/or the best sci-fi writer of the 80s and 90s, with many movies made of his books)
@@redmoonbloodmoon3161 100% One year, he was the NUMBER THREE highest paid entertainer in THE WORLD. Behind George Lucas (prequel era + toys) and Oprah Winfrey.
@@redmoonbloodmoon3161sorry, gotta do it... It's spelled Crichton lol
Honestly though, Jurassic Park is simultaneously my favorite movie and my favorite novel. They're different, sure, but I think they're both amongst the best examples of the genre ever made.
😂😂 Jane squealing & hitting her microphone so that it drops right into her face at the exact moment Ray Arnold's arm drops on to Ellie's shoulder & her subsequent squeal, the reaction to both it & to the raptor & then the realization it was just her mike during such an intense part of the movie may have been the best thing I have seen all week..😂😂
"JUSTIN, I'M HOT! I'M HOT..."☠☠🤣
Keep up the great reactions, guys..😉❤✌🏻
This is a classic for good reason. It was a groundbreaking film that has magic that they haven't been able to recreate in this franchise.
Since Justin mentioned it: from what I understand, the "ripple" effect in the cup of water during the T. rex attack went through several iterations, until the effects team finally decided to just thread a guitar string through the car and attach it to the cup. The ripple is produced by a technician plucking the guitar string off-screen. Sometimes the simple solution is the best one; 30 years later and it's still one of the coolest shots ever. :)
Jane: Keeps getting mad at the kids for being scared & screaming
Also Jane: AHHHHH!!!!!!!
This movie holds a special place in my heart, I had this back on vhs when I was a kid & watched it everyday. In defense of Lex with the light, since I watched this so young I understood her motives, I always saw it as that feeling when you're a kid all alone in the middle of the night during a thunderstorm with no adults around to save you so what do you do when there's a monster outside? You turn on a light to make it go away.
@@orangehawshe does have a kid 😊
@@orangehaw dude, she literally mention her trying not to wake up the kids.
Seen this movie a dozen times. Jane's constant screaming made this the most entertaining time! 😂
The scene where Grant has trouble buckling up pertains to the theme of the movie. The others seatbelts hook together, like a male and female, so to speak. But Grant has two female pieces, like the dinosaurs in the park. Instead of clipping them together, he tied them into a knot. Like life, he found a way.
hmmm didn't think of it that way
Well said.
"Safety uh... finds a way."
@@scipioafricanus5871 hahahahaha
Wow. I've never seen it from that pov. Thanks.
This movie was absolutely amazing to experience when I was young. Went to see it twice and then was terrified but it made love movies. This was and still is peak entertainment. I also saw this in theatres when I was like 8 or 9.
My aunt and uncle who did not have children of their own at the time, took me and sister to watch this in theatres (my first ever movie) I was three years old.. lmao! Can never forget the raptors in the kitchen scene engrained in my memory. Nightmares for years.
Omg. This was your first movie 😲
@@SeeJaneGoTV Surprised you guys watched Camp Cretaceous before reacting to JP, but also glad you liked CC :) Despite being more for kids, CC feels much more like a proper continuation of JP than do the sequel movies. 4 more notes:
-1) I hope you saw Minnesotajones261's comment, given how well it answers your cloning questions.
-2) In ref to ~4:40, sorry to be the "actually" guy, but that IS how some animals act (specifically, large predators that learn to hunt humans). This is discussed more in the book (see the "Terrible Truth About Velociraptor Hunting On Isla Nublar" video), but the movie still has plenty of context clues in the opening scene + the cow scene. Also, in ref to ~5:40, I get what Jane's trying to say, but to quote a dino museum, "paleontologists don't start digging randomly. They wait until there is an indication on the surface that something of interest is to be found below."
-3) That's Parasaurolophus you're trying to say at ~15:50 ;)
-4) As BlahBlahWoofWoof12 pointed out, I think you're too hard on Lex & Tim, especially at ~41:00 (Jane screamed every time a dino surprised her, so of course a scared kid like Lex would too) & ~56:20 (that fall could've broken or killed Tim had Grant not caught him, so of course he was scared to jump). BTW, in ref to ~41:00, Rexy didn't smell them b/c the rain washed away their scent.
@@SeeJaneGoTV You're Amazing 💯 love your reaction especially the famous restroom scene where the really mean old weenie lawyer guy selfishly abandoned the poor kids just desperately Scrambling trying to hide sitting on the toilet 😥 Rexy found him anyway 🤭 Cronch HA HA She said YUP that guy's Done goner lol Soo love Her reaction lol hey it was actually kinda funny because he kinda Deserve it for selfishly abandoned the poor kids would you agree with me?
@@SeeJaneGoTV does watching these Jurassic Park movies in a way make both of y'all love birds want 2 play Yu-Gi-Oh! using a Dinosaur Archetype/Theme Deck?
My experience was kinda the opposite. My dad was watching the movie on TV when I was really little, and I walked in during the scene with the Brachiosaurs and the kids in the tree. I really loved dinosaurs, so I wanted to keep watching, but dad must've known the raptor scene was right after, so he said I couldn't. I was pretty disappointed, but considering how I reacted to a bee sting when Dennis the Menace was on, he was probably right to do that.
It doesn't matter how many times 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.
That scene totally got me when I rewatched it as an adult. The consecutive scares was just 10/10
@@silverdandylmao Steven Spielberg is really good at suspense/horror moments.
This was the last movie i saw in theaters with my Dad before he died. He was always really interested in Dinosaurs and was like a little kid talking about it afterwards. One of if not my favorite memory in my life.
My friend and I took a drink every time Jane said "JUSTIN" and we got smashed. Not doing that again.
It's funny, Jane gets all scared and worked up over non scary things and not scared at the actual scary things! 😂😂
She’s annoying
I was 21 years old when this movie came out, and I loved it! I still love it. It's one of my favorites. Unfortunately, Richard Attenborough Is no longer with us.🥺🥺
I was 25. :o) The ten-year old in me was (and still is) going nuts.
Nor is Bob Peck (Muldoon), he died 6 years after this film came out from cancer I believe. RIP
I went to see Jurassic Park for my 12th birthday. I’ve seen it well over a hundred times, and still love it to this day!
That's awesome!
1993 Summer Classic!!
We were tough kids in the 90s. Everyone was OBSESSED with this movie. The merch was literally everywhere you looked. Lunchboxes, water bottles, backpacks, folders, pencil cases, hats, T-shirts, books...you name it. This movie is responsible for getting millions of kids into dinosaurs. It's like how J.K. Rowling got kids actually interested in books again. We wanted to learn everything about them, and we did. All the kids knew the names of dinosaurs. I remember doing an elementary school project on Iguanodon, and the picture I drew of it was one of the best pictures I've done to this day. 😂 I was so proud. I got an A on my project, but I was more proud of my effort than the grade. ❤
to say that the t-rex scene is iconic, is an understatement
Yes, this movie was a HUGE hit. $60M budget, $1B box office. These are classified as techno-thrillers. The combined direction and editing are amazing. Your reactions are proof of that. In the theaters audiences jumped up and yelled at the screen. You are in good company. Thank you.
Never in my life will I forget seeing this in the theater. What an experience.
Seeing as Justin asked, the vibrations caused by the T-Rex was done by strumming a guitar string directly beneath the glass. It took them a few different attempts to figure it out, but this worked a treat.
That 3 rapid fire scares with the raptor and Ellie never fails to get me and I have this movie MEMORIZED. So good!
I BEGGED my dad to take me to see this at 10-12 years old or so....one of the greatest experiences of my life. All these years later, that damn theme will make me break out in a grin, eyes wet. John Williams IS the man.
Don’t you ever apologize for screaming. It’s great! I hurt my ribs laughing so hard because that’s what happened the first time I watched it. Watching you and Jane go through it is great joy! 😅
I'm a bit late here but Woolly Mammoths actually lived while Cleopatra was alive.
I was a teenager when this came out. I remember all the (well deserved) hype around this movie. Jane's constant jumping was hilarious to watch. I think the most uttered phrase in this reaction was "Frick Justin!"
I was born in '81 so I was 12 when I first saw this in theaters. I have never seen anything that thrilled me like this movie did. To this day, this is the movie I consider the bar for special effects. It's so amazing to me that even to this day, major Hollywood films have questionable CGI when they pulled this off in 1993. You can tell the CGI raptors from the guys in foam suits during the kitchen scene, but the fact that 30 years later it still looks so damn good is such a testament to the time and effort put into every frame of this masterpiece.
@@matthewpollock9685 I guess those major Hollywood films with questionable CGI did not "spare no expense".
@scipioafricanus5871 Lol! Well said, General Africanus. And as a brief aside, well done against those Carthaginian mongrels.
@@scipioafricanus5871 Well, considering that most of the dinosaurs here are practical effect animatronics (the brontosaurus/apatosaurus being both CGI & animatronics) and not just CGI makes this film miles better.
OMG. Watching Ms. Jane jump and scream “Justin I’m hot” was THE funniest thing I’ve seen in a long time. Mr. Justin is such a patient husband. Y’all are hilarious. 🥰
57:17. This is one of my all time favorite movies. I was waiting for this the moment since Jane was out from the first scene. Thank you for never disappointing. In fact that whole scene was just perfect entertainment. ❤❤❤ This movie as a child was the introduction to the jump scare for me👍🏾
Yeah this might be on of my favorite reaction moments of all time I was on the dying 😂😂😂😂 always love y’all’s reactions
Their reaction to the Ellie vs Velociraptor scene at the maintenance shed 57:18 was literally me when I rewatched it as an adult. It just kept going! They had absolutely NO CHILL 😅
I actually lost count of how many times Jane jumped 😂
I think I’m more entertained watching her freak out than watching the dinosaurs!
Loved your reaction! The reason there were so few employees was because they were changing shifts, so the current shift had left on a boat to the mainland, and the next shift hadn’t arrived yet. Can’t wait to see more of these movies on this channel!
It's a misconception that herbivores won't hurt people. All wild animals are fully capable of hurting and killing people. More people are hurt in Canada by moose elk and deer than they are by bears cougars and wolves. Number one killer of humans in Africa is a hippopotamus. Large herbivore. If it's a wild animal you show it respect and keep your distance.
This movie won an Oscar for best visual effects , best director and best cinematography
Fun fact when the trex came through the car roof. That was the trex anamatronic messing up due to the rain. The look of terror on the kids face was the real deal.
We need a bingo card for Janes reactions.
1. Deafining scream
2. Hold Justin's head
3. Squeeze chest
4. "JUSTIN"
5. Nearly break Justin's hand
6. Hits mic
7. "Why did they do that?"
8. Hands flail in air
9. Canadian words come out like "Gasrh" or "Eh"
55:40 “I’m going to vomit.”
garsh isnt a canadian word theyre just trying to avoid swearing so they dont get demonitzed.
Why she keep shouting Justin?
@@shattaredentertainment4782 Why? This is a "family" film, not a children's movie. In fact, the movie itself has a few swears in it.
jane being terrified is hilarious.i went to the movies when i was like 9 and laughted the whole time
I've been watching your reactions for a while now and it never occurred to me that you haven't reacted to any Jurassic Park movies yet. I like how afraid Jane is from the intro. This will be fun. 😄
The picture of the man at the desk was not Mr Rogers. He was Robert Oppenheimer the scientist who helped the US develop our atomic weapons.
You guys are watching/have watched Camp Cretaceous?! Awesome! That guy isn’t Kenji’s dad, but he does appear in the show a couple times. Henry Wu, the main guy behind the dino cloning
The water tremors in the cups were achieved by attaching piano strings to the bottom of the cups and plucking them. or guitar strings. some instrument string
I always assumed Lex was trying to use the light like a laser pointer to lure the rex away, like Alan and Ian do with the flares. I guess I’m the only one after checking online discussions. Best answer I saw is that she’s too afraid to think and doesn’t know what to do, so she looks for anything to do, and finds the flashlight, so she uses it.
This woman nearly pisses herself over a leaf crunching and sobs when a cat dies, but can’t understand how children react to the sight of a giant T. Rex walking around free.
This movie changed how we made movies. Just like Star Wars had done 15 years prior. This was the first movie to use CGI effects to this level. At first the dinosaurs were meant to be stop motion effects. It completely blew people away when they saw it in the cinema. I still remember being sucked into it completely
Most of the dinos in this film are practical effect animatronics mixed with minimal high-quality CGI. The modern dinos, by comparison, are all CGI, so they look faker.
A couple Fun facts about this movie. When the T-rex broke thru the car ceiling, it wasn't actually planned. The crew underestimated the strength of the animatronic and it broke clean through making the kids experience actual terror.
When it shows grant digging up a full Raptor skeleton, there are a few inaccuracy's.
1. Raptor fossils have only ever been found in parts of Asia so a full skeleton being in Montana is almost impossible.
2. there is actually no scientific proof that Raptors were pack hunters since any fossils found are single raptors and not in groups.
3. when the kid says a Velociraptor is like a turkey that is actually true only they weren't 6 feet more like 2 feet or whatever an average turkey size might be. you'd could honestly fight one off with a stick.
and one last cool fact is, during filming an actual Hurricane hit their location so they filmed it for the storm scenes but sadly due to the storm they lost a lot of set pieces as well as dinosaurs that we never got to see in the film.😟💔
Ah, Paul Hogan in "Crocodile Dundee"... a classic comedy, action and romance film! Jane would love it, I'm sure. 🙂 This was a great film reaction, by the way! Loved it!
Like you I loved the fact that Dennis Nedry is an anagram of Nerdy Sinned. A good name for him, lol.
I had to laugh the couple times you referred to the portrait on Nedry's desk calling him "Mr. Rogers"! :) That was J. Robert Oppenheimer, the father of the atomic bomb!
"Isn't he the guy that died because he got stung by a stingray?"
That was the Crocodile HUNTER, not Crocodile Dundee.
Ok I thought the same thing 😭 like dang he could of said that was his name atleast 😅
Justin kept calling the guy in the photo on Nedry’s computer Mr. Rogers but it was Oppenheimer 😂😂
Please watch the rest of the series!! Love Jane’s reactions! 🔥😂
Honestly, Jane’s reaction …..might be better than the movie 😂 In all honesty her reactions show why this movie is such a classic!
Jane in the beggining: Shut up, kids!!!
Jane 30 minutes in: JUSTIIIN!!! IIIIHHHH!!! JUSTIN!!! IIIIHHH!! IIIIHHHHH!! 😂
Did she live under a rock? How can anyone in their mid to late 30's not remember how HUGE this movie was in the 90's?
Haha she turned the gloves inside out, we do that alot in the zoo field :P
I went to see this with my cousin in 1993. We were sitting on the middle-right side of the theater. We were just talking about it a few weeks ago, as we just saw the latest Jurassic Park movie.
Interesting fact about this movie is that their was a “Hurricane” in the Hawaii Islands while they were filming this whole movie.
57:16 I think I've replayed that about a dozen times. Love it! 😁
Grant didn't run out of ammo. The gun jammed
I was growing up on these Movies. I'm not as old as them of course, I just watched them a lot when I was young, always brings back all those good memories. I even started building an entire Jurassic Park Island in Lego!
To get the concentric ripples in the water glass, they tied a guitar string from the frame of the car to a platform under it. A crew member was under the car, and every time he plucked the string, it sent vibrations into the cup holder and into the cup, causing the perfect ripples.
According to a "making of" video I saw, Steven Spielberg was driving along I-5 listening to AC/DC with the volume cranked up, and his rear mirror was vibrating every time the base hit. That was the inspiration for both the mirror vibrating and the water cup. The mirror was easy because it just had to vibrate, but the guy in charge of coming up with the ripples in the cup couldn't make the water ripple the way Spielberg wanted it to. He tried bass in subwoofers, hitting the bottom of the cup, probably a bunch of other things, but nothing worked. One evening at home, he was playing his guitar and for some reason he thought of setting a glass of water on the guitar and plucking the strings, and much to his surprise, there it was, the perfect ripples, so they basically turned the car into a giant guitar.
When jane realized it was her idea to watch this 😂 i love your guys reactions
That opening was hilariously cute "wrahwr... dinosaurs..."
I felt Jane’s anxiety hahaha
That entire "Welcome, to Jurassic Park" intro... from the first Brachio, to when grant asks "How'd you do this?".. has given me goosebumps ever since I was a kid 😭
The music, the buildup, all of it just.. 'chefkiss'.
Bro by far my favorite reaction from you guys. Jane being Jane, the Justin counter overload, jane wardrobe change, and even Justin screaming. It was hilarious. Lol
Jane: "Justin, I hurt my neck!"
Justin: *Must've been the wind.*
Jane is a MAJOR empath, you are WAY too precious for this world darling. It is so hard watching you be empathetic to EVERYONE. The whirlwind of emotions- ugh. (Except for screaming Lex- LMAO, you both were like “SHUT UP” 😂)- Although it was like you could feel the Dinosaur sneeze. It was a little funny 😂. I hope you are both well, wishing you the best 😊.
50:40 - Jane: It's snot what I imagined. 😂
I had a little girl try to convince me that she was allowed to watch this on one of my first babysitting gigs. Almost gave in, but then decided she could watch it with her family and not me. After she was asleep, I tried the first 5 minutes, then chickened out.
😅 The whole video she keeps yelling Justin as if he’s in the movie. 😂
I love all of the hints of how much this park is held together with gum and paperclips. Guy raising the gate (not automated), underpaying Nedry (and Nedry is their only IT guy for the entire park), chopper having faulty seatbelts, easily escape the information ride, no locks on the vehicle doors, and that is before the dinosaurs escape...
Yeah its only the stuff that the customers will see that isnt the lowest bidder
@@christopherbowers7236 Yeah, and even a lot of that - the automated tour vehicles with the Richard Kiley-narrated tour program seem expensive, high tech, and flashy - BUT, they also save having to pay human drivers/tour guides, and let you fit one more paying guest in each vehicle, thereby also reducing the total number of vehicles in the fleet.
And the high level of automation in general, using advanced computer systems - expensive up front investment, but it all allows it to be run with minimal staff, saving money over time (Nedry mentions the whole place can be run for up to several days at a time by just a couple people working in the control room, which lets them keep staffing levels in the rest of the park to a minimum).
Its all initially impressive stuff that Hammond can boast about, but in reality, is all designed to cut costs once you look deeper.
The book goes deeper, of course, the concrete moats around the fences are really just for security theater, they're not deep enough or wide enough to actually contain the dinosaurs when the fences fail, but provide visual reassurance to visitors that there's an extra fail safe. And the lysine contingency is BS, since all animals, humans included, have to ingest lysine from their food, which is readily available throughout the environment. Its just a lie that creates the perception of extra safety, in the hopes that most people will just take it at face value. The lack of locking mechanisms on the tour vehicles is also a simple and obvious safety failing, even if nothing else went wrong, you obviously can't have tourists wandering off on their own when there's dangerous animals around.
Hammond intentionally hid the full scope of the IT project, causing Nedry to vastly underbid for it, then held him to his original price quote under threat of using his business connections to ruin Nedry's company if he tried to back out. It went through project creep with constant revisions and scope expansion, Nedry couldn't afford to put any of his own employees on it to assist and had to do it all himself to keep his losses to a minimum. Part of why the system has so many bugs is because Hammond didn't give clear specifications of what was needed and dribbled details out over time and also demanded constant re-dos as his ambitions grew and changed, plus it had to be all done by a single guy.
It’s so funny how she keeps yelling your name as if you’re the one making all the bad stuff happen. 😂🤣
The man with the dark curly hair and glasses is Jeff Goldblum. Hes been acting for years.
Alright LAST COMMENT I SWEAR. Jon Hammond, the owner of the park, is played by the brother of Sir David Attenborough, the narrator of BBC earth and all that (he’s the British voice you think of in any nature documentary ever). Weirdly fitting in some way.
Mannnn, I just wanna say Jane has theeee BEST scared reactions on UA-cam history !!! I love it!!!!!😂😂😂😂
13:39 this was actually the origin of super size, which at the time was called “jurassic size”
1:06:09 The T-rex managed to get in and out of the building because the building itself was actually still under construction.
Right & so Ninja like
We really need a compilation of Jane screaming XD
As someone who was "graped" as a teen. I think Malcolm's use of the word was okay. Its something forced on nature.
The scene with the dilophosaurus and Nedry in the car was WAY worse in the books. Dilos are like 20ft tall irl, the movie made them really small. The scene in the book is just haunting. It ends with Nedry realizing he’s blind, standing in the rain and he can’t find where he’s at, and the dilo just keeps hooting like an owl. Then it slashed his guts open and he can feel his own intestines in his hands, it picks him up by his head in its mouth, and he’s praying it’ll be over soon because he knows he’s gonna die.
Also, the owner of the park is way way more self absorbed and greedy in the books. He keeps saying “spared no expense” but in reality he cut SO many corners, which is why everything fails so spectacularly. He brings his grandchildren to impress the lawyer and experts, to show “look, these kids LOVE it!” But he’s negligently put them in mortal danger. He also gets eaten in this book, by a bunch of little dinosaurs called compsognathus (you only see them in the next movie). They’re supposed to have something in their saliva that’s like Novocain, so he ends up accidentally sliding down a ravine, and they swarm and attack and eat him, while he can’t even call for help because he’s numbed by the saliva, paralyzed, like 50ft from the road where everybody else is.
This movie could have been way more scary. And very much rated R. This is the Spielberg adaptation, with Kathleen Kennedy as the producer, trying to somehow make the story even possible for a kid and adult audience simultaneously. And it’s still scary as hell for the uninitiated.
I saw this as a kid. No one told me it was a horror movie. I had nightmares for years. It’s still one of my favorite movies though 😂
Me too!
It was a horror movie?
I saw it when I was little and I hate horror but I didn't find it very scary at all
@@stxticnathan6627 that’s what I’m saying except I didn’t really mind horror
I like that you kept calling the Dennis Nedry character "Newman." 😆
Jane's reaction was more entertaining than the film.
I love how every reaction to this movie, the reactors say "Why aren't there more people working at this place?", when the movie makes it very clear that the park has been reduced to a ghost crew because of the oncoming storm.
To get the water to vibrate inside the footprint, they tried dropping heavy things, but it didn't work. Playing a guitar into a loudspeaker did it.
The picture at Nedry's (Newman's) screen is Professor Oppenheimer, father of the atomic bomb 1945. There is a movie about him about to come out.
Jane you are so funny when you call Justins name
The kitchen screen with the rapters scared me as a kid
The scene in the helicopter is foreshadowing. He has two female seatbelt connectors, but he ties them together and makes it work. Nature finds a way. 😮
FUN FACT: When Nedry is taking the embryos you can see the names of the. dinosaurs. They missprlled StegOsauruus as StegAsaurus. You'd think somebody in a Spielberg film would have caught that
I missed the film when it came out. My girlfriend's (at the time) best friend couldn't believe I hadn't seen it and took me to the theater while my girlfriend was at work. I still remember seeing the T-Rex for the first time.
Tyrannosaurus is also missing one of the "N's" too.
And they called the unidentified dromeosaur a velociraptor, even though it looks nothing like one
Ya know what I love about Jane’s reactions? You act as if it’s really happening. The both if you are so engaged in what you’re watching.
As an Aussie the conversation about Croc Dundee/Steve Irwin had me chuckling
C’mon y’all. The T-Rex is the #1 most popular dinosaur. We all love the Triceratops but c’mon. A park like this would never make REAL money without predators. It would not bring in as much traffic. The same goes for a zoo. People LOVE to watch predators. It’s just a fact.
Gotta feel sorry for the poor sap who had to climb into the T-Rex's mouth between scenes because there was no other way to drain the water that would pool between the animatronic's head and the synthetic skin. And that thing's head would apparently drop with unexpected force. Like the glass on the car that dropped on the kids was not supposed to break in two the way it did. Those kids almost got sliced when that happened.
Fun fact: the jeep scene when the t-rex smashes thought the roof on to the kids it wasn't surpost to give way on the first hit but it did and it did really scare the kid actors but George liked the shot he kept it in the film
George? This isn't _Star Wars_ my friend. This is a STEVEN SPIELBERG film.
@@TherealRNOwwfpooh oh yeah haha I meant Steven Spielberg
I’ll just say this, most herbivores are quiet hostile so it wouldn’t matter which ones they brought back