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@@bennettoreilly Lol so Anthony is Leo. Anthony is his first name, Leo is his middle. He decided to go back to Anthony for logistics and business reasons, makes life a lot easier for us on our end
DTS was actually founded by a CalTech graduate Steven Spielberg wanted Jurassic Park to be the first with strictly digital sound. He funded the creation of DTS (digital theater system), which allows audiences to "really hear the movie the way it was intended to be heard". Steven felt that the theatrical sound formats up until the company's founding were no longer state of the art, and as a result were no longer optimal for use on projects where quality sound reproduction was of the utmost importance. Spielberg debuted the format with his 1993 production of Jurassic Park, which came slightly less than a full year after the official theatrical debut of Dolby Digital (Batman Returns). In addition, Jurassic Park also became the first home video release to contain DTS sound when it was released on LaserDisc in January of 1997, two years after the first Dolby Digital home video release (Clear and Present Danger on Laserdisc), which debuted in January of 1995.
Before the book was published, Crichton had demanded a non-negotiable fee of $1.5 million for the film rights and a substantial percentage of the gross. Warner Bros. and Tim Burton, Columbia Pictures and Richard Donner, and 20th Century Fox and Joe Dante bid for the rights,but Universal Studios eventually acquired them in May 1990 for Spielberg. After completing Hook, Spielberg wanted to film Schindler's List. Sidney Sheinberg, president of Music Corporation of America (Universal Pictures's parent company at the time) gave the green light to Schindler's List on the condition Spielberg make Jurassic Park first.
Along with the digital effects, Spielberg wanted the film to be the first with digital sound. He funded the creation of DTS (digital theater system), which allows audiences to "really hear the movie the way it was intended to be heard".The sound effects crew, supervised by George Lucas,were finished by the end of April.Sound designer Gary Rydstrom considered it a fun process, given the film had all kinds of noise-animal sounds, rain, gunshots, car crashes-and at times no music. During the process, Spielberg would take the weekends to fly from Poland to Paris, where he would meet Rydstrom to see the sound progress.Jurassic Park was finally completed on May 28, 1993.
I feel like I would get a long with you guys very well! What I like is how it’s just two friends talking about awesome movies and that they don’t edit to make themselves seem smarter! I feel like I’m hanging out with close friends talking about movies they love!
Sidney Sheinberg is credited with discovering director Steven Spielberg. In the late 1960s, Sheinberg had seen Spielberg's first short film, Amblin, and signed the director, then 20, to a 7-year contract to the MCA/Universal Television in 1968. as accurately recounted by Steven Spielberg on numerous occasions, Sheinberg famously told him, "a lot of people will stick with you in success; I'll stick with you in failure." In 1982, Thomas Keneally published his historical novel Schindler's Ark, which he wrote after a chance meeting with Leopold Pfefferberg in Los Angeles in 1980. Sheinberg sent director Spielberg a copy of the book along with a New York Times review. Sheinberg greenlit the film on condition that Spielberg made Jurassic Park first. Spielberg later said, "He knew that once I had directed Schindler I wouldn't be able to do Jurassic Park." The picture was assigned a small budget of $22 million, as Holocaust films are not usually profitable. Spielberg forwent a salary for the film, calling it "blood money", and believed the film would flop. The film was a box office success, bringing in over $320 million and is considered a historic motion picture that poignantly captured the Holocaust.
James where do you get those stickers on your laptop, been looking for some movie and movie poster stickers and can't find any. Also some suggestions on some episodes you guys can do. Leonardio DiCaprio Leon: The Professional Tom Hardy Tim Burton Martian Scorsese Movies with the best polt twists (like The Usual Suspects, Saw, Primal Fear, Donnie Darko) And also just an idea start rating the movies you talk about out of 10, think it'll be nice to see what you guys rate some of the movies you talk about. Love you guys always keen to see the next episodes.
Watching this in 2024……..Damn……You two look so young…..And almost identical! I remember seeing this movie at the cinema when it was released and my jaw was literally on the floor….The effects were just so amazing and never seen before at that time. Still holds up pretty well today. My favourite line: “That is one big pile of shit”
I loved it. Wonderful job guys. You talk about the T-Rex enclosure being changed to the cliff. But you don’t mention that Neds Jeep passenger side door is closed as he jumps inside to hide from the Dilop. So how did the dinosaur get inside his jeep?! Another fun “mistake” Spielberg did.
Gotcha! I wouldn't call that a mistake! His driver's door was open the whole time. I interpret either the dilophosaurus ran in while he was blinded, banged his head and fell down. Speilberg moves the camera away from the jeep so we can't see it run into the Jeep. OR there could have been another one there too that sneaked in. :)
Sidney Sheinberg insisted that Steven Spielberg make Jurassic Park first before making Schindler’s List Richard Donner Tim Burton and Joe Dante all battled for the rights to Jurassic Park as did Columbia Pictures Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox
Jurassic Park is one of my ultimates. I've even got a triceratops tattooed on my leg. The film is amazing. I hated the latest one though. The whole cloning of humans was shite. Well done lovelies for another quality podcast 😘😘💝💝💝💝
jurassic Park is my all-time favorite movie, I have not listen to this yet. Please give this so much justice for one of the best movies of all time ever made. I promise to comment again once I listen to give some critique. I promise it’ll be positive criticism, I love you guys. Keep doing what you guys are doing I enjoy your content every time!
my preferred directors of choice to direct a sequel to Jurassic Park John Carpenter David Fincher Denis Villeneuve Ridley Scott James Cameron Bong Joon Ho Edgar Wright James Mangold Michael Mann Paul Verhoeven George Miller Guillermo Del Toro
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ Jurassic Park’s rerelease in 3D surpassed many records and made a billion dollars surpassing Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows:Part II
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Get 20% off and Free Shipping from Manscaped with checkout coupon code:
"RAIDERSOFTHELOST"
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I thought one of you guys was named Leo. Who’s Anthony?
@@bennettoreilly Lol so Anthony is Leo. Anthony is his first name, Leo is his middle. He decided to go back to Anthony for logistics and business reasons, makes life a lot easier for us on our end
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ ok that makes a lot of sense.
"We'll have a coupon-day" - Donald Gennaro
Great Podcast you guys are my fav I listen to y'all at work!
same but at school
Heck yea!!!
DTS was actually founded by a CalTech graduate
Steven Spielberg wanted Jurassic Park to be the first with strictly digital sound. He funded the creation of DTS (digital theater system), which allows audiences to "really hear the movie the way it was intended to be heard". Steven felt that the theatrical sound formats up until the company's founding were no longer state of the art, and as a result were no longer optimal for use on projects where quality sound reproduction was of the utmost importance. Spielberg debuted the format with his 1993 production of Jurassic Park, which came slightly less than a full year after the official theatrical debut of Dolby Digital (Batman Returns). In addition, Jurassic Park also became the first home video release to contain DTS sound when it was released on LaserDisc in January of 1997, two years after the first Dolby Digital home video release (Clear and Present Danger on Laserdisc), which debuted in January of 1995.
Before the book was published, Crichton had demanded a non-negotiable fee of $1.5 million for the film rights and a substantial percentage of the gross. Warner Bros. and Tim Burton, Columbia Pictures and Richard Donner, and 20th Century Fox and Joe Dante bid for the rights,but Universal Studios eventually acquired them in May 1990 for Spielberg.
After completing Hook, Spielberg wanted to film Schindler's List. Sidney Sheinberg, president of Music Corporation of America (Universal Pictures's parent company at the time) gave the green light to Schindler's List on the condition Spielberg make Jurassic Park first.
nim nmi kiki i
Along with the digital effects, Spielberg wanted the film to be the first with digital sound. He funded the creation of DTS (digital theater system), which allows audiences to "really hear the movie the way it was intended to be heard".The sound effects crew, supervised by George Lucas,were finished by the end of April.Sound designer Gary Rydstrom considered it a fun process, given the film had all kinds of noise-animal sounds, rain, gunshots, car crashes-and at times no music. During the process, Spielberg would take the weekends to fly from Poland to Paris, where he would meet Rydstrom to see the sound progress.Jurassic Park was finally completed on May 28, 1993.
the shotgun used in Jurassic Park is a Franchi SPAS-12 shotgun which was previously used in The Terminator(1984) and was later used in The Matrix
in one scene Alan Grant uses a Franchi SPAS-12 shotgun but throws it aside when it suffers from a stovepipe jam
I feel like I would get a long with you guys very well! What I like is how it’s just two friends talking about awesome movies and that they don’t edit to make themselves seem smarter! I feel like I’m hanging out with close friends talking about movies they love!
That's exactly what we want you all to feel! I'm sure we'd be buds!
Sidney Sheinberg is credited with discovering director Steven Spielberg. In the late 1960s, Sheinberg had seen Spielberg's first short film, Amblin, and signed the director, then 20, to a 7-year contract to the MCA/Universal Television in 1968. as accurately recounted by Steven Spielberg on numerous occasions, Sheinberg famously told him, "a lot of people will stick with you in success; I'll stick with you in failure."
In 1982, Thomas Keneally published his historical novel Schindler's Ark, which he wrote after a chance meeting with Leopold Pfefferberg in Los Angeles in 1980. Sheinberg sent director Spielberg a copy of the book along with a New York Times review. Sheinberg greenlit the film on condition that Spielberg made Jurassic Park first. Spielberg later said, "He knew that once I had directed Schindler I wouldn't be able to do Jurassic Park." The picture was assigned a small budget of $22 million, as Holocaust films are not usually profitable. Spielberg forwent a salary for the film, calling it "blood money", and believed the film would flop. The film was a box office success, bringing in over $320 million and is considered a historic motion picture that poignantly captured the Holocaust.
I watched this last night. Still amazing. Holds up mostly.
🙌
Stan Winston and Gary Rydstrom had a blast winning Oscars back to back between T2 and Jurassic Park
Ray Harryhausen gave his approval on the CGI for Jurassic Park
🙌
Jeff Goldblum worked on David Cronenberg’s The Fly(1986)
Stan Winston and Gary Rydstrom won Oscars for their work on this masterpiece
I love your podcast. It's so good. I talk about your podcast my family is starting to hate movies. Keep up the fantastic work guys
😂😂 that’s amazing! Thank you!!
James where do you get those stickers on your laptop, been looking for some movie and movie poster stickers and can't find any. Also some suggestions on some episodes you guys can do.
Leonardio DiCaprio
Leon: The Professional
Tom Hardy
Tim Burton
Martian Scorsese
Movies with the best polt twists (like The Usual Suspects, Saw, Primal Fear, Donnie Darko)
And also just an idea start rating the movies you talk about out of 10, think it'll be nice to see what you guys rate some of the movies you talk about.
Love you guys always keen to see the next episodes.
Amazon! Just search laptop movie stickers 😎
Love the suggestions 🙌🏻
Watching this in 2024……..Damn……You two look so young…..And almost identical!
I remember seeing this movie at the cinema when it was released and my jaw was literally on the floor….The effects were just so amazing and never seen before at that time. Still holds up pretty well today. My favourite line: “That is one big pile of shit”
One of my favorite childhood movies. I owned the first two movies on VHS haha
yall need to see Duel (Spielberg's first movie)
Love it!
Sam Neill was born in Northern Ireland, moved to New Zealand at age 7.
I loved it. Wonderful job guys.
You talk about the T-Rex enclosure being changed to the cliff. But you don’t mention that Neds Jeep passenger side door is closed as he jumps inside to hide from the Dilop. So how did the dinosaur get inside his jeep?! Another fun “mistake” Spielberg did.
Gotcha! I wouldn't call that a mistake! His driver's door was open the whole time. I interpret either the dilophosaurus ran in while he was blinded, banged his head and fell down. Speilberg moves the camera away from the jeep so we can't see it run into the Jeep. OR there could have been another one there too that sneaked in. :)
Raiders Of The Lost Podcast I love the idea of 2!!!!
@@Wednesday_2day :)
In Which order do you reccomend I watch the star wars. I watched it when I was a kid but want to rewatch. THANKYOUU
Jesus…I’m sincere shock at the number…wow!
for real!
Gonna need a Taika episode so you guys can go in depth on Sam Neill's wonderful performance in Hunt for the Wilderpeople.
Taika is amazing! Great suggestion
Sidney Sheinberg insisted that Steven Spielberg make Jurassic Park first before making Schindler’s List
Richard Donner Tim Burton and Joe Dante all battled for the rights to Jurassic Park as did Columbia Pictures Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox
Awesome fact
Jurassic Park is one of my ultimates. I've even got a triceratops tattooed on my leg. The film is amazing. I hated the latest one though. The whole cloning of humans was shite. Well done lovelies for another quality podcast 😘😘💝💝💝💝
No way that's so cool!!! They'll never achieve what the original did. Thanks for always watching 💝💝💝
jurassic Park is my all-time favorite movie, I have not listen to this yet. Please give this so much justice for one of the best movies of all time ever made. I promise to comment again once I listen to give some critique. I promise it’ll be positive criticism, I love you guys. Keep doing what you guys are doing I enjoy your content every time!
Oh don't worry Wendy, we did nothing but sing the praises of the film! 💝
Love watching the podcast while I’m doing my homework.
:)
Dennis Nedry is like Carter J.Burke characteristically
sci-fi can serve as a great educational tool even horror
I’ve been waiting for this episode. Already liked it
Jurassic Park got the ball rolling for The LOTR trilogy to get made
Sam Neill worked with John Carpenter on In The Mouth of Madness
👌👌
Are you going to do a podcast on the other Jurassic park/world movies?
Of course!
I can not wait!! You guys make my favorite podcast and covering my favorite movie series would be a dream!!
You two make me wanna read the book :D
It’s exceptional! A lot of different things happen but it’s so good
my preferred directors of choice to direct a sequel to Jurassic Park
John Carpenter
David Fincher
Denis Villeneuve
Ridley Scott
James Cameron
Bong Joon Ho
Edgar Wright
James Mangold
Michael Mann
Paul Verhoeven
George Miller
Guillermo Del Toro
Great episode for a great movie
😌
Fatherhood Is s big theme in jurassic park as well.
100%!
My favorite movie 😭🦕🦖 loveee you guys! ❤️
We ❤️ you too Andrea!!! 🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
both Jurassic Park Fight Club and The Matrix all got made on the same budget of $63 million dollars
Dang’
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ Jurassic Park’s rerelease in 3D surpassed many records and made a billion dollars surpassing Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows:Part II
Jurassic Park is number 95 on The 100 Scariest Movie Moments
Best podcast ever.
Best fans ever
Stan Winston said that the T-Rex runs at 350 horsepower
the guards also use M16A2 rifles
I’m in favor of Ridley Scott directing a Jurassic Park sequel
That'd be cool!
Raiders Of The Lost Podcast I think he’d make a fantastic one
Stan Winston worked with John Carpenter James Cameron and Steven Spielberg
So are you guys going to cover the rest of the movies?? Lol 🦖🦕
Of course! Eventually :)
Stan Winston worked on Jurassic Park
in Jurassic World The T-Rex and The Velociraptors battled The Indominus Rex
You guys need to to an episode on TV shows like the office.
THAT'S WHAT SHE SAID
If you guys ever do a episode on documentaries you should do 'my brother Jordan'. Its on TH-cam, check it out if you haven't.
We'll check it out Aaron!
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ I think you guys would like it and if you do i hope you talk about it at some point.
James bond? plz cover some but mostly the best ones!
On the list!
Jurassic Park Fight Club and The Matrix were all made on a budget of $63 million dollars
I believe Matrix was $90
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ I checked on IMDb
@@karanvirkooner1993 fact check true 🫡
@@raidersofthelostpodcast_ and let’s not forget that Ray Harryhausen approved of the CGI
Total mindreaders. Literally firing on all cylinders with these topic choices.
Yesssss, thanks Sal
Favorite plot twists?
Fight Club, The Usual Suspects, Gone Girl, Memento, Shutter Island, Get Out, The Sixth Sense
Jurassic Park III doesn’t hold up well unlike the first one