The galimimus were originally gonna be hadrosaurus. Apparently the galis were place holders for the duck bills but Spielberg seemed to like them so they stuck
Like most of Spielbiergs movies, he is a master in cut, add and change things on the flight, like the last appareance of the T rex on Visitor Center and in Lost World the T Rex tour at San Diego.
About the Journey to the Island scene within the comic: I'm fairly sure the comic writers just chose to adapt from the novel for that scene for extra text rather than something from any of Koepp's scripts. There's nothing like it in the three/four(?) drafts of Koepp's script we have and notice that the scene also includes plenty of other text directly from the novel concerning Isla Nublar. I also mention this because you didn't mention the lines of dialogue within the shooting script for that scene that were cut out, Hammond briefly mentions the airstrip under construction. Another fun bit of monologue that was sadly cut in the end was that Donald Gennaro was meant to have more lines taken from his novel counterpart during the dinner scene, which his actor specifically argued for to add.
@@The_AmberMine That'll be sweet. I also suggest taking a look at Koepp's first draft that he has up on his website. Contains gems like Ian Malcolm still being cut out at this phase (with Alan Grant mostly getting his relevant arguments), Ed Regis still being around, Grennaro's survival, and Muldoon as a black man.
Samuel L Jackson confirmed in an interview (there is a clip online) of him saying his death scene was cut due to the shooting time after the hurricane hit Hawaii
@@The_AmberMine I don't know of any video'd interview with Jackson, but the original interview where he mentions it is on AVClub and he talks about it in okay detail. AVC: That’s another one where you spend a lot of the movie up in the control room, sort of like the radio station in Do The Right Thing. SLJ: I was actually supposed to go to Hawaii, to shoot my death scene. But there was a hurricane that destroyed all the sets. So I didn’t get to go to Hawaii. AVC: Oh no! SLJ: All you see is the residue of my body, my arm. But yeah, I was supposed to be on set [and do a death scene].
I like this version of Proceratosaurus more that the JWE 1-2 one since it looks like a lazy version of Monolophosaurus, also Hypsilophodon is actually Dryosaurus and Othnielia is now called Nanosaurus
@@The_AmberMine you got it all mixed up, most of the time in the original novel it’s Dryosaurus that’s sometimes called Hypsilophodon while it’s Dryosaurus that appears throughout the novel
Not according Jurassic Pedia, the only wiki I trust as it has the least head canon and extra fluff in my opinion. www.jurassic-pedia.com/isla-nublar-2/ "Hypsilophodons were the first species seen on the Park Drive tour, living alongside the Othnielia in what had been dubbed “Hypsilophodont Highlands”. " I know there are other versions of the novel, but I'd personally rather go with the original as it was Crichton's original vision and untouched.
The galimimus were originally gonna be hadrosaurus. Apparently the galis were place holders for the duck bills but Spielberg seemed to like them so they stuck
Happy 30th anniversary for the masterpiece movie.
Like most of Spielbiergs movies, he is a master in cut, add and change things on the flight, like the last appareance of the T rex on Visitor Center and in Lost World the T Rex tour at San Diego.
The visitors center scene with raptors vs Rex was a stroke of genius and passion ❤️🥰
About the Journey to the Island scene within the comic: I'm fairly sure the comic writers just chose to adapt from the novel for that scene for extra text rather than something from any of Koepp's scripts. There's nothing like it in the three/four(?) drafts of Koepp's script we have and notice that the scene also includes plenty of other text directly from the novel concerning Isla Nublar. I also mention this because you didn't mention the lines of dialogue within the shooting script for that scene that were cut out, Hammond briefly mentions the airstrip under construction. Another fun bit of monologue that was sadly cut in the end was that Donald Gennaro was meant to have more lines taken from his novel counterpart during the dinner scene, which his actor specifically argued for to add.
Oh! I knew I forgot about the Airstrip! I guess I gotta do a part 2 comparing the Shooting Script and the final product
@@The_AmberMine That'll be sweet. I also suggest taking a look at Koepp's first draft that he has up on his website. Contains gems like Ian Malcolm still being cut out at this phase (with Alan Grant mostly getting his relevant arguments), Ed Regis still being around, Grennaro's survival, and Muldoon as a black man.
Great vid
The river raft scene would have been SOOO good in the movie.
10:54 why are there birds on it’s back
Samuel L Jackson confirmed in an interview (there is a clip online) of him saying his death scene was cut due to the shooting time after the hurricane hit Hawaii
Would you be able to find? We would love to create a video on the subject!
@@The_AmberMine He explains it on one of the Samuel L Jackson answers webs most asked questions videos. You can find on UA-cam
@@The_AmberMine I don't know of any video'd interview with Jackson, but the original interview where he mentions it is on AVClub and he talks about it in okay detail.
AVC: That’s another one where you spend a lot of the movie up in the control room, sort of like the radio station in Do The Right Thing.
SLJ: I was actually supposed to go to Hawaii, to shoot my death scene. But there was a hurricane that destroyed all the sets. So I didn’t get to go to Hawaii.
AVC: Oh no!
SLJ: All you see is the residue of my body, my arm. But yeah, I was supposed to be on set [and do a death scene].
3:43 That is not a picture of the man who died. Joffrey did not have any facial hair and his head was bigger around.
Great catch! I can't believe I missed this when I made this!
I like this version of Proceratosaurus more that the JWE 1-2 one since it looks like a lazy version of Monolophosaurus, also Hypsilophodon is actually Dryosaurus and Othnielia is now called Nanosaurus
1. The crest is based on Guanlong
2. "Hypsilophodont" was only what they called Dryosaurus in the books. Hypsilophodon is still a valid genus.
@@tigris115 no the Dryosaurus is what it’s called in the novel if you check the official JP franchise wiki it says it was Dryosaurus
Only some versions of the novel, all of my copies call it the Hypsilophodon
@@The_AmberMine you got it all mixed up, most of the time in the original novel it’s Dryosaurus that’s sometimes called Hypsilophodon while it’s Dryosaurus that appears throughout the novel
Not according Jurassic Pedia, the only wiki I trust as it has the least head canon and extra fluff in my opinion.
www.jurassic-pedia.com/isla-nublar-2/
"Hypsilophodons were the first species seen on the Park Drive tour, living alongside the Othnielia in what had been dubbed “Hypsilophodont Highlands”. "
I know there are other versions of the novel, but I'd personally rather go with the original as it was Crichton's original vision and untouched.
Wasn't Stegosaurus intended for the film version of Nublar?
Great video!