My FIRST TIME Watching Jurassic Park & I can't Believe it Took Me This Long!
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 พ.ค. 2024
- Thanks for subscribing & liking the video! You can further support the channel down below!
Thank you to all the channel members! (There are now so many of you, I don’t have enough room in video descriptions to name you alll, this is crazy!)
Thank you all for making these videos possible!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Support only if you WANT to... TH-cam content will always be free!
Throne Gifts: thronegifts.com/u/themirandal...
Meme-berships: / @themirandalorianreacts
SUPPORT ONLY Patreon (No Perks): / themirandalorian
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Follow my socials for updates!
Twitter: / mirandalorians
Instagram: / mirandalorians
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FOR BUSINESS ONLY:
the.mirandalorians@gmail.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#moviereaction #firstimewatching #moviereview #reactionvideo #movie #jurassicpark - บันเทิง
31 years later and I still get emotional when the Brachiosaurus is first seen. Everything John Williams writes is classic.
It's so crushing when it meets it's end in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom.
@LucianDevine I will never forgive the sequel trilogy for that. Also, @TheMirandalorianReacts, this is the vindication I've scoured TH-cam for in terms of reacting to the brachiosaur scene.
@@GarrettJayChristian Fair on both counts. If there's one dinosaur that you desperately hoped made it off of that island, yes even more than Rexy, despite how much she's saved the day, it's that first Brachiosaurus.
Me too
@@LucianDevine JW 1-2-3 are crushing in general b.c. it's so bad.At least its better than JP3 but i still don't like it that much.
"Mooing in fear"
That cow is a professional actor.
Spielberg personally worked with that cow to get the moo of fear just right.
Granted, their previous acting experience was in moosicals.
@@otterpoet i was so exited to hear they were going to be part of this moo-vie!
She later worked with the late Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt in "Twister"
@@BlankSpace83Yeah, but she was just a moo-ive extra there
She also worked in Lake Placid with Betty White. She's a 'being suspended' expert stunt cow.
I'll never forget seeing this in the theater. There was a disabled person a few rows up from us who had a service dog. During the quiet part of a particularly tense scene, that dog got up and shook off. Half the theater jumped 3 feet in the air. That movie was an experience, to say the least.
🤣🤣🤣
To hell with watching this in theaters. Try being an 8 year old and seeing it at the drive-in. The T-Rex footsteps were shaking the entire lot. The roars were deafening. Little kids freaking out while their parents were mesmerized. A truly magical time.
...We'll never have that experience again.
I was 7 when my dad took me to theaters to see this.
I had nightmares about dinosaurs till my late teens.
Shit was terrifying. Fun to watch nowadays, but yeah.
I'm imagining seeing a Godzilla movie at a drive in theater I would love it like Godzilla Minus one for example I wouldn't mind seeing GxK while I'm at it and the 2022 Batman would be cool as well hearing the engine on the Batmobile and the whole chase scene with it in that film would be amazing
I wish we have drive in
Been wanting to try since the first time I saw it in lady and the tramp
@@SwatchVault come to Michigan, we have US23 a drive in theater
I'm jealous of people who got to watch this in the cinema. If I had a millions dollars, I'd build my own personal home movie theater, and this is the first movie I'd watch.
I remember this movie coming out when I was 12. My dad was a car salesman at the time. And he told us (my mom and I) if he sold a car, we would all go out and watch Jurassic Park as a treat. And sure enough, he sold a car. And we all went out for dinner and a movie on a Friday night.
I miss those days. I also miss my dad. 😢
he sees you. ❤
That's a great story! Thank for sharing
They did Grant dirty in the movie version of this. In the book, Grant loved kids. And for good reason: Kids were the only people he'd met who were as enthusiastic about dinosaurs as he was.
Book spoilers: They also switched which kid liked dinosaurs, and made Gennaro the lawyer greedy and Hammond altruistic when they were the opposite in the book. The lawyer was cool, and survived, but Hammond was an a-hole and got eaten. I've always wondered about those changes, but they work for the movie.
@@doomsdayng The change of the lawyer was a good choice, a cool lawyer is total unrealistic.
i think it was a good change, as it added character growth.
@@wolf310ii Maybe, but in the book Gennaro was capable and helpful throughout. He knew he was beyond the safety of his office and did what was necessary to survive.
@@robertvenegas6113 A greedy bloodsucker doesnt becomes an action hero just because he is outside of his office
30:35 - "The dinosaur looks so real though."
That's because it _IS_ real. Most of that sequence relied upon full-scale animatronics, not CGI. If part of any dinosaur in this movie is off-camera, it's animatronics. Rexy is a full-scale hydraulic robot puppet with a leg and everything from the chest up. And the rain played havoc with the technology.
And some of the raptors are guys in rubber suits. You can't even tell!
I watched all of _Walking With Dinosaurs,_ and then _The Making Of Walking With Dinosaurs._ They used a lot of puppets and animatronics, and some of the effects were real video of a log being thrown into a river, with the jumping dinosaur spliced in over the log. The last part of the "making of" was about how the got them to walk properly, with all the calculations about joint stresses and muscle loads and how to move that shape most efficiently (personally, I still suspect they just motion-captured a pheasant), and the camera pulled back from the computer screen with the colour-coded frame and muscles on it to the fully CGI dinosaur watching itself be animated. It then kicked the animator's coffee cup off the desk, ran across the keyboard and hit among the stuff on the shelf.
Poor girl had the shakes. Also, I love how she wasn't actually supposed to crash through the car roof. Rexy was just THAT powerful.
Rexy would also short out with the fake rain soaking into the foam skin that she had. So randomly between takes or overnight she would move on her own. Apparently she would scare the shit out of the crew when she did that haha
As a math teacher, I love that Ian Malcom is presented as a "cool" mathematician. The character was an early influence on my love of mathematics.
@andrewstrom8157 Just remember, math makes people have nervous breakdowns and lose their hair!!!😬
Total chaos theory.
@@justinedse8435 i gained 2 bald spots in middle school I will choose to believe this
lol that Spinosaurus messed homegirl up for life
Try watching it in theaters on acid after just coming home out of the Army lol.
What’s crazy is the spinosaurus is actually a very recent find when the movie came out.
@@mikeaninger7388 Spinosaurus was discovered in 1912.
@@kenjutsukata1o1 can you imagine how old that movie is!!! lol
I still remember when I saw it in theaters with my sister and mom, and during that scene my mom reached over with both arms and covered our eyes🤣
It is amazing that this movie still impresses people today and makes them cry when the dinosaurs are shown the first time. Now imagine it is 1993, there were no life-like CGI-animals in movies ever seen before. And you are a 12 year old boy who was a fan of dinosaurs, sitting in the theater, was not spoiled by thousands of trailers, reviews,... (there was not internet), and watch that. Oh, it was such a great time!
I agree. I was 25 at the time, and when I saw the Brachiosaurus scene I was like "How the hell did they get a REAL dinosaur?' lol I mean it looked so real. Incredible
Are...are you me?
I was 4 and it was my first movie in the theater. Scared the crud out of me but hey I still like dinosaurs.
Ah this is great, I normally feel old in the comments section! 😄I was 7, my uncle took me to the cinema - the effects and dinos blew my mind too. I remember the only scene they kept showing on TV previews was the Gallimimus stampede, so we were seeing pretty much all of it for the first time on that big screen.
I was 10, my Dad got tickets to Free Willy in front of my mom, then when she left us, he said lets go see Jurassic Park instead! I love my Dad.
A movie from 1993 about dinosaurs is still making people emotional and awestruck today. I remember being 13 in the theater. Just completely and totally amazed. It was like magic was real. It's hard to explain. But I remember crying in the theaters 13 year old boy getting emotional seeing things we have never seen in a movie before.
Even now I can't get the right words out.
Greatest movie of all time.
I believe they could rerelease this film in theaters every 10-20 years, and it would still kill at the box office.
Watching this in the theater on release day was absolutely amazing. Special shout out to the scene with the first Brachiosaurus. Everyone in the theater gasped.
I'd love to see this in the cinema again!!
I wish they’d do that with lots of the big older movies: Star Wars OT, 2001, Blade Runner, Close Encounters of the third Kind, Jaws, The Matrix, Alien, Aliens…
They rereleased it in 3-D like 8 years ago didn't they? With remastered sound too, I think? Anyway, I saw it in the theater again at that time.
A friend of mine said that the "seatbelt tying" scene was the dumbest scene ever. But when I told him it was the greatest foreshadowing ever because he made two females work together, he was shocked!
😅
Damn that's a find
life...finds a way
Good foreshadowing, but impractical. In order for him to have 2 female buckles, ellie would have had 2 male buckles.
@@mitchyv1980 so?
Like she can't tie those together.
As a geologist, whose undergrad specialized in paleontology, I've never heard nope chicken. stealing that.
she probably got it from Ark:Survival Evolved, that's where I got it from
Easy, mister chicken, easy... (guess where this line is from)
The Nope Chicken is the evolutionary precursor to the Canadian Cobra Chicken. They share a lineage of sheer terror and brutality that is legendary unto eternity.
Same here. I laughed so hard lol
@@Spero_Hawk I haven't heard the term (single player only) but I was like 'sounds legit' because until I have enough tames or bolas, I run screaming from raptors
"Could you imagine bringing those back tho?"
Miranda....the ENTIRE FRANCHISE is showing exactly why that's a BAD idea, LMAO!
THAT'S A REALLY BAD IDEA!
Jurassic World: "Genetically alter them to make them stronger and smarter, you say? Sounds like a GOOD idea!"
Can we just bring back the small cute ones
@@TheYakusoku
Nope
@@itsmxtwistno, we already have small and cute animals.
12:05 It's John Williams. He does that.
"Without John Williams: Bikes don't really fly. Nor do brooms in quidditch matches. Nor do men in red capes. There is no Force. Dinosaurs do not walk the earth. We do not wonder. We do not weep. We do not believe."
-Steven Spielberg (at John Williams' AFI Life Achievement Award Ceremony in 2016)
Richard Attenborough (RIP) was David Attenborough's brother. David celebrated his 98th birthday last week.
So much talent. Their parents did a good job with these brothers.
Back in 93 there really wasn't something of this quality around. Something that still looks damn amazing today.
There is a bare hint of aging in the CGI, but the use of the practical effects alongside them was the perfect call even with as complicated and expensive as it was.
I still remember when they used clay animation. This was the first movie that made dinosaurs looked like real animals. Amazing movie.
@@shawnpatrick1877 Phil Tippett was the animation supervisor for Jurassic Park and had previously pioneered the art of "Go-motion" which is where computers control the movement of puppet models filmed so that they move during the film exposure (producing realistic motion blur, for example.)
When he found out that Spielberg had decided on using CGI animation Tippet thought that his profession had become extinct. Instead, he devised a genius technique for _reversing_ the go-motion process. Instead of using computers to control models, he used the physical jointed models as input devices to program the CGI characters. This way the computer animations could be "posed" virtually by experienced puppet animators manipulating real physical jointed puppets.
@@shawnpatrick1877 Yeah, stop motion. I still say this is the first film that made dinosaurs look real.
@@chrismaverick9828 I only learned last year, that the car in this scene at 30:57 was completely CGI in all the wide shots. Now I can't unsee it, but achieving this in 1993 was groundbreaking.
Feeling emotional is the correct response to that first proper view of the dinosaurs. Even 30 years later, I still tear up with that music and scene.
Great gag that a lot people miss when the T-Rex is chasing the jeep and you see his reflection filling up the side mirror, and the mirror has written on it "OBJECTS IN MIRROR ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR"
Thank you! I was hoping someone would point that out!
I used to work at a big cat reserve. One weekend the keepers were busy with a sick Lion, and we had a 4-month-old Tiger cub that still needed constant care. So, I volunteered to watch it while they were busy with the Lion. Our Basset wasn't happy about it but quickly adjusted. We were chillin when Jurassic Park came on TBS. Everything was ok, until the T-Rex roared. The Tiger cub jumped up on the couch and hid between me and the back of the couch. There was something that they sampled for the T-Rex roar that scared the Tiger cub.😅
I wanna say that I read that one of the sounds used for the T-Rex roar was an elephant so maybe that was it! 😂
Well, there's a bit of lion...some elephant...and metal on metal scraping along.
You got it right! Actor and Oscar winning director Lord Richard Attenborough was the older brother of natural historian and all round national treasure Sir David Attenborough 😊
Heck with national treasure, Sir David Attenborough is a global treasure. Don't care where you live, he should be on your 'I am grateful he exists' list.
@@billmcdonough3950 Wait, how is Richard a Lord but David is only a Sir? Don't tell me it's some stupid age thing.
@@JoeThornhill Arguably because David wouldn't want it. Which is quite understandable. You have parliamentary responsibilities as a Lord.
@@ciarangallagher2729 Oh, yeah ok.
@@JoeThornhill Yeah if he wanted it I’m sure he’d have gotten it. Worth noting that he’s in the Order of Merit too which is arguably the most exclusive order, only 24 living members at one time. Officially he has way more titles to his name than his brother did: Sir David Attenborough OM GCMG CH CVO CBE FRS FSA FRSA FLS FZS FRSGS FRSB
There’s actually a theory going around the JP community recently saying that Muldoon (the hunter guy) may have actually survived his run in with the raptors, the evidence is VERY much speculation. What we know is that Muldoon is similar to that of Chris Pratt’s character in Jurassic world, Owen Grady, and that they both share the same job as Raptor wrangler. Both characters raised the raptors from hatchlings to full grown, and the belief is that it jumped on him playfully and that he just got back up and walked off somewhere. As unlikely as this theory sounds (and trust me, this sound like absolute bull when I first read it), the new Jurassic park horror game “Jurassic Park: Survival” leads us to believe that a female character is left behind on the island is the last one on the island, but finds help from someone, and the speculation is Muldoon, because who else could help someone survive Jurassic Park. AGAIN, THIS IS A THEORY AND PURE SPECULATION, just thought I’d share and get those cogs in your head turning. That is all.
- Some Idiot with too much time
I saw this in theaters when I was 10 years old. I’m sure my parents were not prepared for how many subsequent times we’d watch it that summer, nor how many dinosaur toys they’d end up buying me and my brother 😅
31 years later and it still gets me
The scene where we see the Brachiosaurus for the first time is such a cinematically significant moment. I saw it when it came out at the cinema- when the characters and the audience are in perfect sync- both seeing something incredible for the first time. Also the choice of aspect ratio allowed us to have the sense of scale and height, bravo Mr Spielberg.
Yep there is a good video on TH-cam comparing it to a similar scene in the recent movies and it just doesn't compare.
Remember that this was shown in movie theaters in 1993! The quality of SFX in this movie was second to none for many many years forward.
The whole movie has approximately 5 minutes worth of CGI graphics in total and everything else is puppets and animatronics.
"The whole movie has approximately 5 minutes worth of CGI graphics in total and everything else is puppets and animatronics."
*And now we live in a world where movies have five minutes of practical effects, and everything else is CGI, we've fallen far.*
Also the reason they needed the budget they did - worth every damn penny spent though
DTS was the best of the best back then.
@@Dusk.EighthLegion Five minutes of practical effects IF WE'RE LUCKY.
Exactly right. All the relatively young youtube reactors can't truly relate to how incredible the cgi dinosaurs in this film impacted the public at the time. Today of course, cgi is pervasive in films, so everyone takes it for granted.
Pretty much all the dino knowledge in this movie is outdated by now - but the VFX still hold up. What a milestone movie.
To this day, the T-rex breaking out of the paddock is one of my favourite moments I experienced as a kid in theatres. I was just 7 years old. Blew my mind.
"is this sabatoge why?" it's sabatoge so he can commit corporate espionage. he turned off the power to the fences so he could get through them undetected. it's why he doesn't mess with the raptor fences, they're irrelevant to his goals of stealing embryos and driving to the dock and back. had the storm not happened it probably would have gone fine.
I feel like she wasn't really listening to some of the dialogue early on...
Yeah, the comedic antics of Wayne Knight with shaving cream distracted her from the very important plot being discussed. Happens to the best of us.
@@SubterrelProspector that's her trademark at this point: get overly hyped over nothing, miss critical plot points. You gotta love her enthusiasm tho I guess
she just completely missed that
@@frenchynoob Ah, so she's one of those that are more concerned with having a reaction, than reacting to the movie? The type of reactor that ignores the movie so that they can talk to the audience, and get back to the movie when they're finished.
This was an event movie back in the day. I have no idea how many times I've watched it over the last 30 years, but it never gets old.
You don't need to apologize for being emotional. You are human and you have feelings and there is nothing wrong with expressing them.
I love how music helps invoke so much emotion when well executed in the process of filmmaking.
“Nope Chickens” 🤣🤣 never change, Miranda
When I saw this in the theater when it first came out, that T-Rex roar literally shook the theater. It was so awesome.
Those little ones you talked about are compsognathus ("compies"), and while present in the book, they don't show up until the second movie.
Can confirm that watching that in theater in 1993 as a 12 years old was a treat, special effects still hold up even after 30 years so you can imagine how impressive it was back then.
Great movie, great reaction.
I love how people go, "I don't know what I would do" to immediate criticizing 12 year olds- left alone- being terrorized by a dinosaur. always fun.
"You're gonna need a bigger goat."
😂😂😂
It already had 5 legs though
Hammond's biggest problem honestly was just ignoring basic park safety features that already exist in zoos and parks today. Sure, some of the dinos probably shouldn't have been bred (particularly so early before learning more about dinos and processes) but still. Park design was terrible. This is ofc well trodden on the interwebs and the movie just doesn't work if they did. Also, its not really the lesson we're supposed to take from the story lol
It's funny that the Park games made recently actually take jabs at that, too. 'Careful you don't lose TOO MANY park-goers!'
As in 'You're playing with something deadly and you're killing innocent people just because Dinos are cool'. They lay the 'sometimes, things should be left alone' on pretty thick.
Despite the crazy inaccuracies with most of the Dino’s (especially Dilophosaurus & the raptors), this film single handedly put these species in the public eye
Yes, in the theater in '93 this movie was miraculously crowd-pleasing.
Miranda’s being emotional over this movie has me being emotional over this movie all over again. I remember going to the theater to see this movie in 1993 and just being blown away. Love it!
Right? _Jurassic Park_ is one of those classics that makes me annoyed studios almost never bother to re-release movies. Instead of throwing loads of cash into spin-offs that are inferior in every conceivable way - looking at you, _Jurassic World_ - what would be wrong with remastering originals that are proven to be great and putting them back into cinematic release? There are so many classic films that really get their greatest benefit from being seen on the big screen, and even from a cold-heartedly capitalist perspective, the profit-to-cost ratio would be insane. I'd bet a pretty major body part that a cinematic re-release of _Jurassic Park_ would pull at least half a billion dollars
@rhonafenwick5643 Jurassic Park has actually been reshown in theaters a handful of times now. I got to see it in theaters for the 25 year anniversary and whoa boy was that a wonderful experience.
Spielberg made jurassic park and Schindlers list in the same year, so amazing, probably the greatest director who ever lived
Akira korusawa, trust me steven would agree.
T rex actually had the largest eyes of any terrestrial land animal on the Earth. Basically it wouldn't give a shit if you stayed still.
Yeah I don't know why they even tried to make that a thing
If I recall correctly, it’s vision would have exceeded that of modern birds of prey.
Eye size has nothing to do with it. Earlier Paleo data believed that the shape of the skull would mean part of the Occipital cortex would be under-developed based on a FROG brain. Now, we all know that frogs are not T-Rexes, and further studies were done. It is believed that they would have not only better sight than most birds nowadays, but would likely be quite intelligent and have fairly strong problem-solving skills.
Not only was the original hypothesis wrong, but the theory has flipped almost 180 degrees. The Rex was the 'King' for a reason. Those bad boys likely were so hard to escape from that the only option would be to have spiny coverings on your body and a stout frame to knock them off you, like certain dinosaurs did.
In the summer of '93 I had just finished reading Jurassic Park and had been incredibly impressed with the book. I was convinced that it would make a great movie if someone was ambitious enough and if movie technology ever got that advanced. Then, a couple of weeks later, I was reading a newspaper (in the visitor's center at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon of all places) and an article said that a Jurassic Park movie would be opening the next weekend. I might have been thirty, but I felt like a kid at Christmas! One of the friends I was vacationing with was also captivated by the idea of the movie, so we went to see it on its opening weekend. Our Reviewer is right about what it must have been to see it in a theater. Completely horrifying and captivating at the same time. We were both blown away. I've probably seen Jurassic Park a dozen times since, and it never gets old!
Fun Dinosaur facts!
The Dinosaurs seen in this move, by order of appearance are:
Brachiosaurus (Jurassic, Macronarian Sauropod from North America).
Parasaurolophus (Seen but not mentioned, crested Hadrosaur from Cretaceous North America, this is the only dinosaur which we know what it sounded like).
Triceratops (a Ceretopsian dinosaur from late Cretaceous North America).
Tyrannosaurus rex (The largest Theropod Dinosaur by body mass, needs no introduction)
Dilophosaurus (an early Jurassic Therepod, the real life animal did not have a frill and was MUCH larger, reaching 20 feet in length and being as tall as the average person)
Gallimimus (an ornitomomid from late Cretaceous Mongolia. This dinosaur, a herbivore is more closely related to Velociraptor than to other herbivores seen in the move)
Velociraptor (a Dromaeosaur Theropod from Late Cretaceous Mongolia. The dinosaur show in the movie is actually probaby nor Velociraptor, which were only about 3 feet tall at the largest. Rather it is probaby Deinonychus, a larger Dromeaosaur from North America).
Second, you are, fortunatly wrong. Dinosaurs still very much exist in our world today. You can even keep them as pets. Birds are Maniraptoran Thereopods in the Paraves Family, and are a Sister Taxon to Dromaeosaurs. Since you cannot evolve out of a clade, Birds never stopped being Dinosaurs. Velociraptors are more closely related to a street Pigeon than to any of the other Dinosaurs in this move. If this is hard to believe I urge you to look into Cassowaries.
With the exception of the Dilophosaurus and Velociraptor, the depictions of the dinosaurs in this movie are very, very good, even today. The few issues are mostly with the Tyrannosaurus and the Paralophosaurus. Tyrannosaurus would have been bulkier than depicted, and would hold its hands inwards, not downwards. Parasaurolophus would have probaby walked primarily on 4 legs, running on 2 legs. These are minor issues however.
Richard Attenborough was David Attenborough's brother. Not a Dinosaur fact, but definitly relevent.
David Attenborough narrates an utterly fantastic documentary series about late Cretaceous Dinosaurs called Prehistoric Planet. Would be a bit of a change of pace, but would also be a great reaction.
You should definitly watch the other 5 movies in the series. I don't think they every really capture the magic of the first one but its hard to make something about Dinosaurs not entertaining.
Frontier Entertainment makes a Jurassic Park park builder game called Jurassic World Evolution 2. You dont need to play the first game, but its definitly worth checking out.
Parasaurolophus. How do we know what it sounded like?
You mostly have it. Just a slight addition:
Crighton's velociraptors *are* deinonychus. He consulted with a paleontologist friend for the book, then before it published, he apologized and said he changed the name creative purposes.
Ironically, however, The Big One/Clever Girl, is actually *not* a deino, but a much larger dromaesaurid. The creative team wanted her bigger, bulkier, more powerful looking. Here's why "ironically." Around the same time they were making her, a raptor with pretty much her same design and size was discovered in Utah. They unknowingly created Utahraptor at the same time its fossils were found.
Can we please not tell the pigeons any of this?
@@Masterfighterx The large bony crest on it's head served as a resonating chamber that funneled air through various channels to produce a very loud call. Since this resonating chamber was made of bone it was preserved and palaeontologists have been able to recreate the sound by making models of it and blowing air through
Fact: Few time after JP, the Utahraptor was discovered, the biggest Raptor and the same size of the raptors of the movie.
I distinctly remember my dad coming home from work and telling me we were going to the drive-in to see this.
It was 1993, I was 11. Good times.
RIP Dad.
I saw this when I was 13, back in '93. It was magnificent. I remember the hype, and it remains one of the only things I've seen that truly exceeded all expectations. I see people watching this, I'm 13 again.
As someone who had to finally give up on getting my teeth fixed and had to get implants; your dental health and smile compliments your laugh in a wonderful way. RIP my O.G's from military service. But, I'm not shy to say your smile is a blessing.
You were right about the great music, very few movie scores can compare with Jurassic Park.
Thank you John Williams.
John Williams is a genius. Jurassic Park, Indiana Jones, Star Wars, Superman, Harry Potter and Schindler's List just to name a few.
The Mozart of our day! But don't forget Jerry Goldsmith, James Horner, Hans Zimmer...
Plagiarised all his music th-cam.com/video/mfKmS74WueY/w-d-xo.htmlsi=BkNl8UAJDNAysn9g
Jaws.
Close Encounters, Home Alone
His son Joseph is the lead singer of Toto
It's always funny hearing Hammond say "I know my way around a kitchen" when they're having the conversation in the trailer, while completely missing the fact that there's stem glasses on top of the microwave and pouring the champagne into tumblers.
51:26 Richard was David's brother 😄
Honestly couldn't be more perfectly cast.
17:45 Thats one of my favourite philosophical quotes from this movie "Yeah, yeah, but your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn't stop to think if they should." Kudos for picking up on that early on.
I can confirm that seeing this movie in a theater IS a different experience than seeing it on a small screen &/or without full surround sound. The scene were you first see the Brachiosaurus & the first roar of T Rex were particularly powerful moments.
To this very day, I still have the original copy on VHS.
It was the first movie I ever saw in theaters as a 6 yr old kid and it not only sparked a lifetime love of film, it gave me an obsession with learning everything I could about dinosaurs that continues to this day.
I got the chance to see it in theaters in 2023 (they were re-showing a TON of movies due to the lack of material from the strikes), and I POUNCED. Fabulous opportunity, glad I took it.
Oh my god. Thank you for showing me I’m not the only personal who gets emotional and even cries during the brachiosaurus scene
50:20 I first watched this movie when it came out, as a kid, and I've been rewatching it for decades and never quite picked up on that before! Thank you! Spielberg, Crichton, Koepp and Williams are/were absolute geniuses!
Yes, David Attenborough is the man who narrates all the nature documentaries. Richard Attenborough was an actor, director and producer, also he was David's elder brother. Sadly we lost him in 2014.
Which makes it more amusing every time I watch the part where he talks about hiring Richard Kiley as the tour narrator... couldn't even give the job to his own brother.
@@dannykent6190 No, He couldn't, because Steven Spielberg dicided to hire the Narrator that was written into the original Novel.
Both brothers have the perfect voice for narration. If you listen to the the Hammond memoirs from Jurassic Park: Trespasser, Richard Attenborough puts his all into it.
The scene you were frightened by is in JP3, an underrated gem.
For the final product it is amazing. But when you rewatch a few times you can see the convoluted storylines they started and abandoned due to script rewrites during filming.
I suppose it's hard to not be underrated when you're considered to be rock bottom.
@@EvanG529until Dominion that is
Its not a hidden gem, movies have just gotten markedly worse over the last 20+ years. So in hindsight it looks better now with our more recent piles of 💩 than it did back when it came out. But tell me more about how Grant talks to the Raptors.
Fun fact: that storm immediately after the sick triceratops was real. It was a hurricane that they had to hunker down through until it was over. But they caught the beginning on camera, which is the shot of the ocean crashing against the land. They had to rebuild a LOT of their sets to continue filming.
27:14 her calling him "honey", the unending attempts to convince him to want to have kids......
I saw this back in 1993 when I was 5 years old in a drive in theater. I was both amazed and terrified lol. That T-Rex scene will forever be burned in my memory.
Real "nope chickens" were tiny! They were smaller than turkeys! The raptors portrayed in the film were based on much larger relatives, the Utahraptor. Even Michael Chricton (the book's author) wanted the raptors to be the size of another relative, the Deinonychus. Back then, the name Velociraptor was used interchangeably with Deinonychus as it was thought they were the same species spread between the US (where big raptors like Deinonychus lived) and Mongolia (where Velociraptor lived). It was only about thirty years ago that they were declared entirely different.
I love that there are callouts to this in “The Last of Us Part Two” video game.
Not Utahraptor. The novel used Deinonychus as the model for the Velociraptor and the movie went with that concept. The actual Utahraptor is actually MUCH bigger than the movie Velociraptor
I think the ones in the novel were smaller than the ones in the film, too. One human victim manages to throw one off.
There were more of them, though.
Have you ever seen a turkey? They're not much shorter than the raptors in this movie. lol. And just as mean...but thankfully dumb as rocks.
@@eileenmiller4685 yes, I've seen turkeys and real velociraptor skeletons and the size difference isn't much. Raptors were a hell of a lot smarter than turkeys, though.
NO ONE had seen anything close to looking like a realistic dinosaur before this movie.
THANK GOD FINALLY someone gets emotional with these movies at the right time and place. I LOVE YOU MAN
I was eight when I saw this movie and it blew my f*cking mind. I thought....This is IT. Like, the pinnacle of human achievement was this movie about dinosaurs.
You weren't far off. It certainly is part of the zeitgeist that looks like now, will probably be the pinnacle of human society. Kinda looks like we're over the peak and heading back down the last 2 decades, and picking up steam. 🤷♂️😊
You say that like you now think that this movie *isn't* the pinnacle of human society, which it absolutely is.
There are a few movies that rise to a higher level. Jurassic Park and The Lord of the Rings trilogy are two on a very short list.
i still love the closeup on the T-rex eye reacting to the light. it's so real and gives credit to the sheer amount of elbow grease put into the film.
That's my favorite shot of the movie lol
I think you also forgot blood sweat and tears.
@@draygontaygen677pretty sure that’s what was implied
Yeah. The pupil contracting was what sold the shot. Up to that point, there’s that little bit of uncanny valley in the back of your brain, but that just erased it.
54:27 Yep, 1993. My little 13-year-old self was totally blown away witnessing this miracle of film sitting below a towering big-screen accompanied by thundering surround-sound. Absolutely *_bitchin'!!!_* It was the first time humans had seen Computer Generated Imagery that actually looked _real!!_ and what a subject to bring to life!! A watershed moment in time. Yes, you missed out ; )
38:25 a bit of context there is symbolizing of Alan Grant’s acceptance that his line of work is more or less gonna be “extinct” and he’s got to evolve not only his work but also himself as a person.
Jurassic Park has such a huge nostalgia hit for me. The music is perhaps the greatest movie music of all time. There is NOTHING more memorable except MAYBE the Star Wars intro music. Dude is a legend.
I don't know what the greatest movie score ever is but I know John Williams wrote it.
Uhm, Ennio Morricone, the Good the Bad the Ugly, Once upon a Time in the West, a Fistfull of Dollars, ...
Movies i dont know the composer, Indiana Jones theme, Dances with Wolfes, Goldfinger, Life of Brian, ...
TV, Detective Rockford, Magnum, Airwolf, Miami Vice, GoT, North and South, ...
I remember my parents taking me to see this in the theater and I had that same expression on my face when I first saw the Brachiosaurus. The raptors scared me so bad that I had to peek into the theater restroom before going in because I thought one was waiting for me! I will never forget the feeling of the theater seats shaking when the T-rex was stomping around outside her paddock. Absolutely incredible memory.
I'm glad you enjoyed it. I watched it in theaters when I was 9 years old with my sister and parents and after the movie my Dad said my sister and I came out of the theater as white as sheets but completely awestruck. I have loved Dinosaurs since I was a little kid. 2 years ago I shared a photo of a 3 foot long skeleton of a Tyrannosaurus rex I made and was fortunate enough to catch the attention of and get in touch with one of the model makers and artists who made the Velociraptors for the very first Jurassic Park. He complimented me on my model and shared photos of his work posing with the Velociraptor animatronics and it was such an incredible rendezvous that I never thought I would ever get to experience in my life! Again, I am glad you enjoyed it and watching your reaction to it was wonderful because you felt the feels like we all did when we first watched it! Pretty amazing, isn't it?!
Paleontologist Jack Horner was an advisor on this film. One of the things he has said since the movie was that the actors could not get the pronunciation of most of the dinosaur names right.
Most of the knowledge you shared about dinosaurs comes from Michael Crichton's book (nicknames for dinosaurs, the size and behavior of Velociraptor) or from this movie (Dilophosaurus having a frill), presumably from the game you were talking about.
Richard Attenborough was David Attenborough's older brother. He passed away in 2014.
12:00 “😭 It’s the music.”
John Williams is the man!
The T-Rex scenes were split between animatronic and CGI. I believe Stan Winstons team made a 12000lbs life size hydraulic T-Rex. I believe there are videos on TH-cam that show behind the scenes of it. As the T-Rex was the star of the first movie and has a lot of love from the fans of the movie
That life size T-Rex is now in England at Combe Martin Dinosaur Park. Close to where I live
@@jannette771 Combe Martin is that Devon ? I believe I went on a holiday there with my parents when I was a kid at a caravan park I think or near by. I haven’t been to Devon Cornwall area for about 5 years
@@johnfullbrook628 yes it is.
Rexy wasn't meant to break the car roof in, though. It had absorbed loads of water and had become much heavier, so instead of stopping where it was meant to, it smashed through the car.
The kids' screams of terror were genuine!!
1) The movie you saw a scene of as a kid was Jurassic park 3
2) Your explanation of Ark is valid 😂
As a science teacher, I show this to my middle school classes every year with a quiz. The last question is: What was the last dinosaur of the movie? Some will put T. rex, some will put Velociraptor, maybe some particularly attentive kid will answer Brachiosaurus (because it called as they boarded the helicopter), but the answer is Pelican.
This movie went hard on the birds are dinosaurs theory that wasn’t well known to the public at the time and has become even more supported with fossils since the movie came out.
27:20 "Find Nedry. Check the vending machine. Remember that time he got himself stuck in there?"
Nedry are you just holding on to the can?
@@Donjeur"Your point being?"
Haha, you legend!
To this day, I still don't know if Newman or the Barbasol can made that squeek sound 🤣
Newman.
I legit only knew him as Newman until I was about 30. 🤣
"Even the music is getting me emotional."
That's just John Williams. You know he does that to everyone.
The first time we see the dinosaur is very emotional! Paired with the amazing acting tears are very valid!
I saw this movie in the theater when I was a kid. I can still remember the shock and awe it gave me.
This movie's warnings not to would not stop me from visiting a real-life place like this!!
That's why there are two types of people in the world, people who can't wait for science to make Jurassic Park possible, and people with common sense.
You’d only get me on Nublar with an anti tank rifle on hand.
@@TheaBlackwood-um1pi I've read the book too, and I remember the _Compsognathus_ and ... Benelli M4. I'm not saying the Barrett wouldn't have a place in the Jeep, but Benelli M4.
I'd go with you! I figure there's no cooler way to die than getting eaten by an extinct animal.
John Williams is still alive today. His contribution to music in movies is monumental. We have the great fortune to live in a time when so many creative people got together to share their talents and contribute to these fantastic movies.
"And they thought wire was going to keep it back, even if it was electrified?"
Well, yes. Because it had been doing so. It's REALLY electrified.
The problem is, at that time, it was NOT electrified because Nedry sabotaged the fences so he could shortcut through the park's interior unimpeded.
"It gave up? That [T-Rex] could easily outrun them!"
Hammond: we clocked the T-Rex at 32 mph
Jeep: probably doing 40+
Most hunter animals arent into endurance sprints... they get close then dash at their prey in a short burst of energy.
Did you like the scene when Lex fell through the (literal) drop ceiling? An adult stunt woman was used for the swinging and climbing up part!...
And allegedly led to the first ever digital face replacement effect in a movie, as the stunt double accidentally looked up and it was for too long a shot to get away with it, so they had to compose Ariana Richards' face over hers.
Lord Richard Attenborough (yes, Lord Richard was made a Baron the same year he was in this film) and Sir David Attenborough were brothers. David went into nature TV and films while Richard became an actor and director. Richard is often overlooked, but he starred in, produced and directed some big films. He was in The Great Escape (1963) and The Sand Pebbles (1966) with Steve McQueen, and in Doctor Dolittle (1966) with Rex Harrison. Another good performance of his is "The Flight of the Phoenix" (1965) co-starring with James Stewart. He'd taken a long break from acting throughout the 80's and early 90's until this film, then starred in a remake of "Miracle on 34th Street" as Santa. For directing he preferred to make biographical films. Two of his biggest films that he directed were "Shadowlands" (1993) starring Anthony Hopkins as C.S. Lewis, and "Chaplin" (1992) starring Robert Downey Jr. as Charlie Chaplin. He won an Academy Award for Best Director and for Best Picture (as producer) for "Gandhi" (1982). And besides all that, he also served on several film and TV boards and organizations, including as President of BAFTA.
The restraint you showed at 44:45! The "eff!" almost got out! 😁
“Welcome to Jurassic Park.” “That gave me chills.” SAME.
This movie is actually one of the most frequently rereleased to theaters. I guarantee if you keep an eye out to whatever your semi-local area is, you'll be able to see it in theaters within the year. I go pretty much every time it comes near me. Also just went last year to a screening of it with a full orchestra accompaniment in a concert hall. Greatest movie of all time. (Possibly a shared title with Field of Dreams and the 10th Kingdom)
25:25 "She gets right in there"
In the "Lego Jurassic World" game, the animation for characters who can analyze dino droppings, is literally them jumping full body in the pile, and rummaging through it. 😅
🤢
What a lot of people don't realize is that once principle photography was finished, Steven Spielberg turned over directing duties to trusted friend George Lucas. He did this for two reasons, the main being that he had to be in Europe to start shooting Schilndler's List and the second being that he knew that Lucas had a very good working relationship with his people at ILM, who would be heavily involved in postproduction.
The truest line in this movie is “Your Scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could that they didn’t stop to think whether or not they should”. The Facts of Human History. 🔥💯
Welcome to Jurrasic Park! One of the best lines ever, due to the significance of what it all meant. The concept of how could they bring dinosaurs back to life and could we see them, was so amazing at the time. I love this movie for we finally got to see dinosaurs roaming in the world again. Remember, this was the first one. The practical effects is what made this film! Welcome aboard!
This movie is such a classic, I remember this was the first movie I ever went to see opening night at a midnight showing when I was 13
You know, rewatching this through your reaction I'm reminded what a WELL written movie this is. Alan hating kids is such an interesting little character quirk, but its still written into the script to have a payoff. Hammond being a well meaning but bumbliny billionaire is such a refreshing departure from the usual "corrupt megalomaniac driven by greed" you usually see from that character archetype. The kids have personalities beyond just being sources of tension. The dialogue is witty without being self-indulgent. So many moments have payoffs. Just an incredible script.
“The real thing replaced the bones. That’s funny!!” I never thought about it like that!! Great way to look at it!!
The velociraptors in this film are technically not raptors. They are too big. An actual velociraptor was only 3 ft tall, max. What was actually in this film, but never mentioned, was deinonychus, which is in the same family, but much larger. They were very similar to the utahraptor, which was even bigger.
Please continue reacting to :
★ *The Lost World: Jurassic Park* (1997)
★ *Jurassic Park III* (2001)
★ *Jurassic World* (2015)
BONUS TRACK
🔥 *King Kong* (2005)
_Jack Black , Naomi Watts & Adrien Brody_
Directed by *Peter Jackson*
But what about Jurassic Worlds?
@@Dave-hb7lxNo to King Kong, yes to Godzilla
yes please!
love those movies!
+2
@@jaystarr6571 i can't recommend *Fallen Kingdom* because is a pice of garbage
@@DopeSauceBenevolence
*Godzilla* (1998) ?
This movie holds a special place in my heart. It always takes me right back to the wonder I felt as a kid seeing it for the first time. It's just simply magic. I've loved it ever since! Then in my mid-twenties, I was blessed enough to be cast as an extra for Jurassic World. To become a part of this universe that I had adored for so long, and to see the theme park that I loved as a kid so up close and feel so real, even if we were only acting on fake sets, was a wonderful experience that I will always treasure. I felt like a kid all over again, and I was so happy to be a part of this franchise that was such a big part of my childhood. It was like a full circle moment for me. I'm so glad you liked it and hope you continue on to the rest of the films! There are 6 total!
'I'd give up the internet, dead serious' you sholud definitely watch JW Camp Cretacious after the other movies! It fits that idea really well 🤪