Jurassic Park (1993) Movie Reaction ☾ First Time Watching

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Centane

Centane

Жыл бұрын

Thank you for watching my reaction as I watch "Jurassic Park" for the first time! ♡
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Пікірлер: 825
@Centane
@Centane Жыл бұрын
I want to thank eWaaGe for editing this video for us, so we had a movie reaction this week! I really appreciate his help so I could enjoy my vacation to the fullest this week
@philshorten3221
@philshorten3221 Жыл бұрын
Not sure how Jeff Goldblum (Dr Malcolm) has got past you. A classic of his is "The Fly" a true classic SiFi Horror..... Love to see your reaction to the Special Effects 😉 (if you dare! )
@kosminuskosminus6668
@kosminuskosminus6668 Жыл бұрын
the one movie to react at the current time is PREY the one movie the entire you tube is reacting in the last week tip: produced by disney and is part of the predator series and it looks to be the very best of this series.
@JerkyD
@JerkyD Жыл бұрын
I'm glad you liked JP :) It's my favorite movie! Unfortunately, the sequel movies are very disappointing in comparison. That said, I highly recommend reacting to the "Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous" series on Netflix (& maybe "Jurassic World" from 2015). Also, let me know if you'd like any dino book recommendations. I like reading & reviewing dino books as a hobby. P.S. In reference to 22:38 & 29:12, the T. rex is patrolling her territory loudly so as to scare away intruders (like a male lion roaring when patrolling his territory). If she were hunting, she would've been quiet (E.g. When she kills the Gallimimus & the Velociraptor).
@Jargolf86
@Jargolf86 Жыл бұрын
If the little Tim / Jimmy looks familar to you... its Eugene Sledge from The Pacific. He grow up a bit ;-)
@Centane
@Centane Жыл бұрын
@@Jargolf86 I mentioned that twice in the video :')
@tkinsey3
@tkinsey3 Жыл бұрын
Even almost 30 years later, this film is ABSOLUTE magic.
@Centane
@Centane Жыл бұрын
it was so so sooo good
@boomingbob1579
@boomingbob1579 Жыл бұрын
It stands still now
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, next year it’ll be 30 years
@boomingbob1579
@boomingbob1579 Жыл бұрын
@@nsasupporter7557 dang
@schechter01
@schechter01 Жыл бұрын
@@nsasupporter7557 Time flies by, does it not? I saw Jurassic Park when it came out in movie theaters!
@craigbuchan
@craigbuchan Жыл бұрын
Fun fact - Jurassic Park, Forest Gump, Pulp Fiction and The Shawshank Redemption were all out in movie theatres at the same time! The 90s was a great era for movies!
@BradAaronTaylor
@BradAaronTaylor Жыл бұрын
_An Adventure_ _65 Million Years In The Making_ Best tagline ever. What a movie.
@Jon66B
@Jon66B Жыл бұрын
Watching this in the theater was a watershed moment. I had worked in computer animation at the time and this was unlike anything anyone had ever seen before. My colleagues left the theater with the realization that nothing in movies or TV would ever be the same. The first reveal of the dinosaur, a long shot, full frame, still brings me back to that "holy shit what am I watching" moment.
@deeanna8448
@deeanna8448 Жыл бұрын
The audience had the same stunned reaction as Dr. Grant!
@jwallaby7895
@jwallaby7895 Жыл бұрын
Ya know, and I have to say, that music for the first shot of the brachiosaurus is just perfect. John Williams (especially considering his age/concept of dinosaurs) could've brought out the timpani and the full orchestra to give a bombastic introduction to the creatures of the park. Instead, he gave that treatment to the park doors/the island. But for the actual first creature, he gives us a long gracefully emotional string motif to convey how the characters struggle to even process what they're seeing. In disbelief they're forced to believe their own eyes, and it overcomes them. They're scientists and rationalists who are brought to their knees in childlike awe and wonder. The music makes this scene. The impact of the triceratops scene is very much the same cuz they finally get to touch the animal. Leave it to John Williams to give it the right touch and make it an iconic memorable experience for all of us.
@jayeisenhardt1337
@jayeisenhardt1337 Жыл бұрын
"was a watershed moment" like watching some deepfakes that are so well done and thinking those guys saying the moon landing was faked might be onto something. lol
@petercofrancesco9812
@petercofrancesco9812 Жыл бұрын
The reason this stands up so well over time is that it isn't over reliant on CGI. They had a real giant animatronic T-Rex for that iconic fence scene. Spielberg takes the time to develop the characters and they're well acted. This all leads you caring what happens to them. It also doesn't hurt to have the genius John Williams music score. Both how the dionsaurs move and how the characters react seems very realistic. We aren't getting unbelievable super hero type stuff the defies physics.
@iwrotethis9290
@iwrotethis9290 Жыл бұрын
Yes, yes the practical effects & animatronics are great, but shouldn't underestimate the quality of the CGI. The first brachiosaurus scene is full CGI & it looks more realistic than current movies, also the gallimimus scene & t-rex chasing jeep scene
@Crespwnian
@Crespwnian Жыл бұрын
@@iwrotethis9290 the CGI used in this JP was ground breaking for it's time and thanks to that dedication and care put into the scene they still hold up very well even by today's standards (obviously) it has aged ....but imo it has aged quite well compared to some early 2000's CGI we got hit with that was just cringe
@brachiator1
@brachiator1 Жыл бұрын
There is also a very good video short that shows how Spielberg used great filmmaking skill to make the first movie so memorable. Why Jurassic Park is better than its sequels... kzfaq.info/get/bejne/eLFxf9t8x9CzkXk.html
@iwrotethis9290
@iwrotethis9290 Жыл бұрын
@@brachiator1 Spielberg understand that movies is audio visual medium, so he tried so hard not just to make the dinos looks real, but also sounds real. Every memorable dino's voice (Rex's roar, raptor's scream, brachio's howl, dilo etc) are established in the original movie that none of the sequels can matched
@brachiator1
@brachiator1 Жыл бұрын
@@iwrotethis9290 Spielberg also makes sure to make the sounds meaningful to the characters in the film. They respond or react to the sounds, and even to the tremors of a dinosaur's foot stomps. Some directors try, but still don't understand whats important. Spielberg uses the audio and the visual to tell a story, not just to show a pretty picture on the screen.
@paulfeist
@paulfeist Жыл бұрын
That look on your face when the camera turned, and you see that first dinosaur from the jeep? Yeah... that was EVERYONE in the theater in 1993... One can count on one hand the movies that were TRULY ground-breaking leaps forward in special effects in all of movie history - Jurassic Park was one of them.
@tfpp1
@tfpp1 Жыл бұрын
Agreed. What are some other ones? I would think Star Wars, and The Matrix. Any others, which 3-5 movies would you say?
@Xethuron
@Xethuron Жыл бұрын
@@tfpp1 Terminator 2
@spacecadet35
@spacecadet35 Жыл бұрын
Westworld (1973)? It had the first cgi ever used in a film. Le voyage dans la lune (1902) Some of the first special effects ever. Some are still in use. King Kong (1933). Stop motion at its finest. Heavenly Creatures (1994) and the Frighteners (1996) by Peter Jackson. The reason he was allowed to make Lord of the Rings.
@talyar04
@talyar04 Жыл бұрын
Very few people recognize that Lex’s constant exclamation of “he left us” is the trauma from the fact that her father just left them. The comment at the beginning about Mr. Hammond‘s daughter getting a divorce, is so subtle that it’s easy to miss. The kids are obviously on the island to get them away from the court proceedings and to give their mom a break to deal with her own feelings. I think Dr. Grant seriously helped Lex regain some of the trust she had lost. He probably helped Timmy a lot too.
@talyar04
@talyar04 Жыл бұрын
It’s subtle details like this that makes Spielberg films so awesome. He doesn’t just hand you everything on a silver platter.
@ivaneames4354
@ivaneames4354 11 ай бұрын
That's the first time I've seen this mentioned. I never thought of it before but it makes perfect sense.
@TheNowhereMan0
@TheNowhereMan0 Ай бұрын
Nice. I've never noted that before. And I've seen this movie 4594939582 times 😂
@kingscorpion7346
@kingscorpion7346 Жыл бұрын
I love everyone's reactions when they see the first CGI dinosaur in this movie, from 1993! Jurassic Park set a new standard in CGI tech that movies today follow in the footsteps.
@only257
@only257 Жыл бұрын
kzfaq.info/get/bejne/hMqmgpOl0rTOd6M.html
@fnx427
@fnx427 Жыл бұрын
That's kind of an understatement. JP basically introduced GCI to the movie industry as a whole. There were a few other movies with sparse CGI before it but there it was very specialized (water surface, molten metal, pure postprocessing effects etc.). Spielberg brought in a lot of experienced stop-motion-animation talent to work on the GCI who showed that naturalistic looking GCI on a large scale is feasible.
@JustLiesNOR
@JustLiesNOR Жыл бұрын
That being said, part of the reason it still holds up is that there isn't as much CGI as people assume. (only 4-5 minutes are full CGI dinos)
@Imyerda
@Imyerda Жыл бұрын
@@fnx427 yip ilm m8. watch documentary on story on disney plus about ilm ,vg . But you probably have already
@duanebidoux6087
@duanebidoux6087 Жыл бұрын
I don't know for sure, but I'd bet the effects budget relative to the entire budget was much bigger than most CGI films today. CGI was much more expensive and there wasn't AI to help out so it was much more labor intensive even with the computers. When it's costing a lot, the risk of a bad director or screenplay selects for the best (vs, as today, selecting for anyone).
@bigdream_dreambig
@bigdream_dreambig Жыл бұрын
Regarding the doors: With handles like those, dogs and cats can figure out how to open them (although pulling is harder than pushing), so it's not a stretch to think the raptors could too. Now, if they had been knobs, that'd be a different story! 🚪
@riveraharper8166
@riveraharper8166 Жыл бұрын
Yep. Our dog opened the front door. No problem. We had put the handle to vertical positions so he couldn't.
@folcotook3049
@folcotook3049 Жыл бұрын
My brother once had a cat that understood doorknobs were involved with opening a door, but they were round knobs so nothing for her to grab on to. She was allowed outside and to ask to go out she would jump up on the back of an armchair by the door and paw at the handle.
@xswrytes6828
@xswrytes6828 Жыл бұрын
We used to have a cat who watched and figured out how to break into rooms when we replaced the round door knobs with the flip-style; then used his weight to push or claws to pull doors open enough to get in or out. Lil stinker... Next, he figured out if he stood on hind legs and hook his claw into the screen and lean his weight he could go out to the backyard. The other interesting things with animals is when our turtle watched his cat brother and started doing the same to go out back too. Great reaction
@johnnehrich9601
@johnnehrich9601 Жыл бұрын
Real raptors are thought to have been only as smart as chickens. Both Crichton and Speilberg go out of their way to overcome the way people used to think of dinos, as sluggish incredibly stupid giant lizards - we were taught in the 1950's that some dinos had a second brain near their tail (not true) since their first one was so small. There used to be the joke of the dinosaur alarm clock - it would bite its tail and it would take so long for the nerve impulse to reach its brain and register the pain, the dino could catch a few hours of sleep (also totally wrong). But also raptors wrists didn't rotate and their hands were held 90 degrees to the way their were in the movie - it is said they were slappers, not clappers or that they couldn't shake your hand but could wave goodbye. So the current thinking is that they could NOT open doors because of how smart they weren't and how their wrists moved
@bigdream_dreambig
@bigdream_dreambig Жыл бұрын
@@johnnehrich9601 1) Interesting thought on the chicken raptors -- but, of course, in the fictional world of Jurassic Park, they're plenty smart. 2) I don't see how the wrist anatomy has any impact. As long as I was pushing the door rather than trying to pull it, I could open one with those lever-type handles even if I had no hands (just arm stubs).
@lathspell87
@lathspell87 Жыл бұрын
I was 5 years old when my parents took us to see this in the theatres... it blew everyone's mind, at the time, and still looks great to this day. What a classic and some of John Williams' best work.
@Centane
@Centane Жыл бұрын
5 YEARS OLD!?!!! oh bless u I would've been terrified
@natemalnaa1
@natemalnaa1 Жыл бұрын
@@Centane my parents bought the movie and the whole family watched it I was like 5 ish and by brother was 3 ish and the whole time I watched it through my fingers but brother loved it and wasn't scared at all. Now I'm 34 and I've still have a reoccurring nightmare about dinosaurs every once in awhile. But this movie is so amazing and still holds up 29 years later lol
@TamaMetalPuppet
@TamaMetalPuppet Жыл бұрын
I was 6 in theaters. Dolby THX.. oh man this scared me soo much. I was basically under my seat. though I was still blown away and am still fascinated by dinos to this day.
@isaackellogg3493
@isaackellogg3493 Жыл бұрын
I read the book three times before the movie came out, and five times after. But I didn’t see the movie until later. The first time I saw any footage was at the mall, where a big screen (CRT) tv was showing on repeat (a technology peculiar to dvd players, of which I was unaware before that) the scene of Malcolm in the jeep with the glasses of water and the others run to jump into the jeep just before the T-Rex emerges from the jungle. It was playing, unattended, in a dark alcove with two easy chairs and the big-screen tv. I watched the scene twenty times.
@leroypaulsen4566
@leroypaulsen4566 Жыл бұрын
I've seen this film dozens of times, and the scene where Dr. Grant first sees the dinosaur ALWAYS makes me tear up. So beautifully acted by all the characters, the score, and the outstanding cinematography combine to perfection.
@Aurich88
@Aurich88 Жыл бұрын
I think one of the crucial things that sets this movie apart from all the others is that the main characters are scientists, so you get infected with their giddy curiosity.
@ButchKilobyte
@ButchKilobyte Жыл бұрын
I saw this when they re-released it in theaters in 2013...in IMAX®3D. Probably the best movie experience of my life.
@DougRayPhillips
@DougRayPhillips Жыл бұрын
Spielberg initially planned to do some of the dino effects with stop-motion miniatures, Ray Harryhausen style. But once he saw what Lucas and ILM could do, he went that direction instead. Jumping back and forth between million-dollar robots and CGI (such as in the kitchen raptor scene) meant that the viewer's brain was searching for "how did they do that" but couldn't lock onto a firm answer. All the lead actors have extensive catalogs. Keep watching older stuff, you'll see them again.
@christopherbowers7236
@christopherbowers7236 Жыл бұрын
They also had the stop animators on board for the CGI. Thry had a careers worth of knowledge on how things move to tap into
@jericoba
@jericoba Жыл бұрын
Correction, Spielberg had green light on going all stop-motion. 100%. That chanced though, as we know.
@NetAndyCz
@NetAndyCz Жыл бұрын
The CGI holds up pretty well to this day, but it was something really unseen before when this movie came out. And they masterfully combined it with animatronics, the special effects in this one are really superb. My favourite part is the T-rex pupil changing size when the light shines on it. That really sells it to me and makes it look truly alive. The music is amazing as well, and the whole movie is done really well.
@petersvillage7447
@petersvillage7447 Жыл бұрын
They threw in a lot of little animal behaviour touches that I loved, because it made the dinosaurs seem more real - like the way the T-Rex turns the jeep over and bites at it's 'guts', and the dominance/submission behaviour between the two raptors in the kitchen.
@Crespwnian
@Crespwnian Жыл бұрын
@@petersvillage7447 also the eyes of the raptor right before it is about to pounce them at the end
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Жыл бұрын
@@petersvillage7447 why did Nedry leave the raptor fences on
@petersvillage7447
@petersvillage7447 Жыл бұрын
@@nsasupporter7557 Muldoon says its because even he knew better than to shut them down... but it's tempting to assume that it was because the film-makers wanted to make sure that the raptors didn't show up until the latter part of the film. I suppose it makes sense in that the raptors seem to be contained right near where the people are based...
@wheelmanstan
@wheelmanstan Жыл бұрын
before jurassic park there was nothing that came close..in any way, dinosaurs in films looked just as terrible as they did in 1993 (until Jurassic Park that year) as they did in 1933 in King Kong, no one was even using decent animatronics, it was puppets and stop-motion, projection type effects, I mean I wish people would go check out the dinosaur films of 1992 and 1993 and even the dinosaur tv shows made into the 2000's because it really tells you just how mind-blowing this film was to viewers, there were puppets for 60 years and then BOOM dinosaurs suddenly came to life yeah the pupil really sells it, as well as seeing the foot push down into the mud, there's also breath, in the sequels I think they didn't even use breath, I think Spielberg really wanted to get the pupil right because in Jaws he couldn't, I mean the whole "black eyes roll over white" thing wasn't possible I guess, the music is what really helps Spielberg bring the magic, he owes John William's a lot it's a shame animatronics isn't used like it once was, for close-ups the cgi just can't compare, you feel the creature in the shot with animatronics, heck they were using animatronics even in the Harry suit, his whole mouth is animatronic, practical effects also kept things grounded in physics, dinosaurs can look too squishy when only cgi is used my only real gripe with the franchise is the lack of Triceratops and Sauropods, they really botched it with keeping those creatures out of the films, they could definitely hold their own around the theropods and did
@OneAndOnlyMe
@OneAndOnlyMe Жыл бұрын
Yes, our jaws dropped too in 1993. The combination of music , cinematography, state of the art ILM visuals, and first class acting, still brings a smile to my face whenever I watch this eminently rewatchable movie. Younger audiences (post gen X) are accustomed to photo realistic CG today, but for a generation, in 1993, nothing like this had been experienced before. I saw it first time in a THX movie theater, and that T-Rex scene sent hearts racing!
@DavidUngerMusic
@DavidUngerMusic Жыл бұрын
I saw it over 100 times in the theater as a kid. I practically lived at the theater that year. It blew my mind, and it's still the ultimate nostalgia pull on me. Wish I could go back and experience it for the first time again.
@tehdipstick
@tehdipstick Жыл бұрын
Yep, Tim is played by Joseph Mazzello, who also played Eugene Sledge in "The Pacific". He was actually a fairly well-known child actor for a few years in the early-mid 90's. A couple of his other movies from that time are "Radio Flyer" and "The Cure".
@kjek1
@kjek1 Жыл бұрын
I think he was in Simon Birch too
@tehdipstick
@tehdipstick Жыл бұрын
@@kjek1 Indeed he was.
@micksailor4715
@micksailor4715 Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park is based on the novel by Michael Crichton, and I highly recommend it, as you'll find a lot of differences between the movie and the book, but both are extraordinary. I recommend reading the second novel, The Lost World, before watching the movie of the same name, mainly because I loved the book, but the movie was almost completely different, as Spielberg took the latter in a very different direction than the story from the novel, and the movie wasn't near as good. Glad you enjoyed the flick! Take care, be safe!
@TheLanceUppercut
@TheLanceUppercut Жыл бұрын
I believe, based on the success of the first film, that the options for The Lost World were bought before the book was even fully written. Instead of waiting for it to be finished, Spielberg just made his own movie.
@Jubes83
@Jubes83 Жыл бұрын
Many scenes from jurassic park 3 are pulled direct from the original book as well.
@daddynitro199
@daddynitro199 Жыл бұрын
I liked the book and movie of Jurassic Park almost equally. I preferred the book version of The Lost World far more than the movie. I was irritated that the Carnotaurus part of the book wasn’t in the movie. It was so damn TENSE!
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Жыл бұрын
I always wondered why Nedry didn’t turn off the raptor fences
@TheLanceUppercut
@TheLanceUppercut Жыл бұрын
@@nsasupporter7557 He had no reason to. The raptor pen was isolated. It wasn't in his way. His goal wasn't to kill people, he just wanted to get off the island and get paid.
@Iymarra
@Iymarra Жыл бұрын
This was mind blowing back in 93. The rex still terrifies me, that roar is iconic.
@donaldsteven7592
@donaldsteven7592 Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park Amazing movie 🤩 remember that Awsome restroom scene where the really mean old greedy lawyer guy selfishly abbonond those poor kids! He's just trying to save himself but Rexy 🦖 She found him anyway lol bite him up and Shaking him around like a fun Dogy chew toy before Eating him up it was actually kinda funny looking wouldn't you Agree?
@neugassh3570
@neugassh3570 Жыл бұрын
They used mainly physical dinosaur models alongside the cgi. That's why it looks so much better than other newer films.
@Arbosh4
@Arbosh4 Жыл бұрын
I was 14 when this came out and watching it in the theater was incredible! The sound, the acting, the practical effects, and then the groundbreaking CGI is definitely why I ended up with a career in science. Blew my mind when I first saw it, and doesn't disappoint nearly 30 years later.
@andrzejmrozik1130
@andrzejmrozik1130 Жыл бұрын
I was 11 and still it's the best cinema experience i ever had. Few weeks after watching it my parents bought me Crichton's book. To this day this book is with me. Thank you, Steven Spielberg and Michael Crichton for this amazing adventure.
@jonasfermefors
@jonasfermefors Жыл бұрын
This was the most media hyped movie ever when it came out and the merchandizing was insane - McDonalds alone had only Jurassic Park themed happy meals and even burgers for a year. So, expectations going in were pretty high. It was the best looking movie ever made at the time and like most people I was blown away by the effects but it was also a good movie which was a pleasant surprise.
@kjek1
@kjek1 Жыл бұрын
I remember this. The logo was absolutely everywhere, especially in McDonalds
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 Жыл бұрын
My #1 favorite movie of all time! Before Spielberg took the reins and made the movie, Richard Donner, James Cameron, Tim Burton and Joe Dante were considered. Harrison Ford, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Kevin Costner, William Hurt, Michael Douglas, Tom Hanks, Sam Shepard, Pierce Brosnan, Nick Nolte, Tom Selleck, Kurt Russell, Jeff Bridges, Richard Dreyfuss, Michael Biehn, Dylan McDermott, and Tom Sizemore were considered for Alan Grant. Kelly McGillis, Julia Roberts, Linda Hamilton, Bridget Fonda, Jodie Foster, Nicole Kidman, Melanie Griffith, Brooke Shields, Kyra Sedgwick, Uma Thurman, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Wright Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Geena Davis, Michelle Pfeiffer, Meg Ryan, Juliette Lewis, Helen Hunt, Genevieve Bujold, Christina Applegate, Sarah Jessica Parker, Joan Cusack, Debra Winger, Teri Hatcher, Elizabeth Hurley, Juliette Binoche, Sandra Bullock, Sherilyn Fenn, Heather Graham, Lisa Rinna, Renee Zellweger, Kim Raver, Mariska Hargitay, and Kim Basinger were considered for Ellie Satler. Johnny Depp, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Bruce Campbell, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, Michael J Fox, and Bill Paxton were considered for Ian Malcolm. Sean Connery, Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, Paul Newman, Ian Bannen, and Clint Eastwood were considered for John Hammond. Brian Cox, Geoffrey Rush, Bob Hoskins, and Jeffrey Jones were considered for Robert Muldoon. The film was a box office and critical success making $1 billion dollars ($1.8 billion dollars today) against a $65 million dollar budget. It won Best Visual Effects, Best Sound Editing, Best Sound Mixing. It's now considered to be one of the best Sci-fi movies ever made.
@isaackellogg3493
@isaackellogg3493 Жыл бұрын
If they’d used Uma Thurman, this movie would always be paired with pulp fiction to contrast SLJ and UT in both movies.
@natemalnaa1
@natemalnaa1 Жыл бұрын
9:05 "Welcome, to Jurassic Park" that line to this day still gives me goosebumps, Richard Attenborough is so good in this 😎 34:47 was the first day shooting on set and they did that to Tim lol 36:26 "Clever Girl" still one of the best lines of the movie RIP Bob Peck 🙏 36:58 that shot of Lex with the Jello is iconic, the actress Ariana Richards started painting and you can actually buy a painting of that shot from her it's really cool. I also heard that the 3 main cast members Laura Dern, Sam Neil and Jeff Goldblum each got one of the full size 6 foot tall animatronic Raptors as wrapping gifts from Steven Spielberg lol
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Жыл бұрын
the skins rotted away after only a few years...but the machines would still be cool.
@thorleif8872
@thorleif8872 Жыл бұрын
38:25 I have watched this movie so many times and I laugh every time when I see Lex charging forward, eyes closed and screaming XD
@incogni-bro8276
@incogni-bro8276 Жыл бұрын
Definitely one of the best movies in existence.
@Maya_Ruinz
@Maya_Ruinz Жыл бұрын
I remember vividly seeing this in the theater when I was a young kid, and it completely dominated my childhood. It was the Harry Potter, Star Wars or Lord of the Rings of the early 90s, it was huge in a way that changed cinema forever. My family went to see it like 5 times and I think I owned every toy at one point. Its great seeing young people enjoy it for the first time because its very much a generational classic.
@Geth-Who
@Geth-Who Жыл бұрын
8:09 This is my favourite moment in any JP first-time reaction. That exact face, that exact reaction. It doesn't *look* like it's 1993 CGI at all, and combined with the music and the directing it just hits a wonderful spot for awe and beauty.
@joshritz7067
@joshritz7067 Жыл бұрын
The look on your face for the big Brachiosaurus reveal made me smile. As someone who has taken to see this in theaters by my parents and then took my kids to see the first Jurassic World in theaters, I recognize that look
@houdin654jeff
@houdin654jeff Жыл бұрын
I feel like the CG holds up so well because there really isn’t much of it. There’s a handful of major shots of the full sized T Rex running, some of the far away Brachiosaurs, and the occasional Velociraptor, but most of the close up effects are on set animatronic puppets. The Dilophosaur that spits on and eats Nedry is entirely a puppet, the sick Triceratops is too, so are a lot of the T Rex shots attacking the Jeep. The CG is there, but it’s used as the glue to hold together a lot of practical effects work that just isn’t done very often today, for better or worse. I saw this movie in the theater when I was 7 and loved it. Never really thought of it as scary or horror, more a thriller action movie than anything, and it remains my favorite of the Jurassic movies. I like the sequel, Lost World, more than most people, but it is a strange follow up. Also, if you don’t know much about dinosaurs, Jurassic is the name of the middle period of the Mesozoic era they were dominant in, the three periods being Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous. Ironically, a lot of dino species in this story come from the Cretaceous (tyrannosaur, velociraptor, triceratops), but I suspect that’s a harder word to pronounce.
@Shawaeon
@Shawaeon Жыл бұрын
Probably my favorite movie of all time. I had it on VHS when I was a kid and watched it countless of times.
@Salta0monte
@Salta0monte Жыл бұрын
It wasn't only fantastic CGI (and animatronics), but it was the first time dinosaurs had been depicted reasonably accurately on screen. Because they lived 65+ million years ago, and because they're reptiles, it was assumed for many years that they were cold-blooded, slow and dumb. The idea that dinosaurs were warm-blooded and smart - essentially birds without wings - was only just starting to be widely accepted by the scientific community when this movie was made, so it was cutting edge in terms of science as well as CGI. The movie was in theatres the summer directly before I went to university to study zoology. I went to see it 3 times (you almost certainly can still find a theatre showing it somewhere, and it's definitely worth it), and added geology and paleontology to my first year studies specifically because of this movie.
@slchance8839
@slchance8839 Жыл бұрын
Yes, if you find books written before 1993 (or movies) you'll see they thought dinosaurs DRAGGED THEIR TAIL on the GROUND, and were slow and dumb. Instead, you see the tail up high, like a road runner, blue jay, or crow, and they are quick, with darting motions and problem-solving intelligence. i once dated a girl with a parrot, and if you didnt actually padlock it's cage, it could figure out any kind of jury-rigging on the latch and escape. We wake up routinely, with the parrot on the breakfast table or perched on the back of a kitchen chair.
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 Жыл бұрын
Pretty accurate based on what we knew at the time. We now know that raptors and probably most other theropods had some form of feathers. But I don't think audiences want to see a T-Rex with fuzzy feathers. Also, that would been really hard to properly animate at the time. Heck, it would have been hard to animate 10 years later
@Salta0monte
@Salta0monte Жыл бұрын
@@ronmaximilian6953 The year before this movie's release I read a book called 'The Dinosaur Heresies' by Bob Bakker, written in 1987 I believe. He laid out the case for warm-blooded dinosaurs which, as the book title suggests, was still heresy even then. Bob Bakker is actually caricatured in Jurassic Park III - he's the big bearded scientist wearing a cowboy hat. I remember in the book (I lost it many years ago) there were descriptions or even drawings of how dinosaurs used to be depicted, e.g. the big herbivores with their knees sticking out sideways and belly close to the ground, like a crocodile, even though that posture didn't fit the bone structure. Later that was changed so the legs were underneath, but it was concluded they must have lived in swamps 100% of the time because they couldn't support their own bodyweight. The first shot in JP of the brachiosaurus walking on land, and rearing up on its hind legs to take a high branch was completely contrary to that dogma, and probably enraged a lot of still active paleontologists at the time. All this because many scientists felt they had to protect the notion of progress in evolution - animals that died out 65 million years ago couldn't be highly advanced and well-adapted because that would mean they broke the linear chain of steady improvement in adaptations. It was the realization that evolutionary history is like a bush with many branches, that didn't all advance at the same rate or in the same time period, that convinced scientists they no longer needed to protect this dogma to avoid attacks from creationists.
@jcbchuck
@jcbchuck Жыл бұрын
Worked as an assistant manager of a movie theatre in Germantown, TN when this film was out. After almost a year in the theatre, we sold out every night show the last week it played. Spent dozens of breaks watching the TRex/Jeep chase scene. Movie magic.
@TheRodentSama
@TheRodentSama Жыл бұрын
Late to the party... I saw this opening weekend in 1993, when I was only 11 years old. This was my Star Wars moment. Somehow my dad got hold of 4 tickets. Me, my sister, my best friend, and my sister's best friend (our besties were also brother and sister)... just the four of us, all kids, alone at the opening weekend of Jurassic Park. Dad gave us all a £10 note each (in those days, popcorn didn't cost a small mortgage), and we played a few arcade machines, then bought our popcorn and drinks and headed to the lobby. I can still remember being in that lobby, with the JP music on repeat, the trailer also on repeat. The smell of the popcorn, the fact that the entire 25 screen cinema was showing nothing but JP in a staggered schedule... and the place was packed from wall to wall. No weekend has ever matched the magic of that weekend.
@zhubajie6940
@zhubajie6940 Жыл бұрын
This has just the right balance of CGI and practical effects. When it came out the dinosaurs were mind-blowing as before all we had was stop motion and claymation. I still jump when the Velociraptor tries to grab Lex's leg when she almost falls from the ceiling partition. The late Richard Attenborough is famous for many movies foremost the 1966 Sand Pebbles as an actor as well as for producing and directing Gandhi (1982). Laura Dern's performance in October Sky (1999) made a tear or two. Sam Neill in The Hunt for Red October (1990) was also fantastic and tragic.
@Leon108
@Leon108 Жыл бұрын
I saw this movie for the first time when I was seven, at a drive-in theater (don't know if they have that where you're at, but it's an outdoor theater where you watch the movie from your car). The first time I felt genuine terror in my life was when I was in my parents' car, watching the T-Rex towering over the JP vehicles as it emerged from its paddock.
@MrTbk1701
@MrTbk1701 Жыл бұрын
I was a teenager when this came out and I can’t even remember how many times I watched in the theater. I never get tired of watching it. It still looks awesome to this day. ❤
@commanderdon4300
@commanderdon4300 Жыл бұрын
Seeing this in the cinema when i was 10 was one of the greatest cinema experiences of my life, no one had ever seen anything like this before. To this day i don't think anything tops it.
@wesleypeters4112
@wesleypeters4112 Жыл бұрын
This movie is one of my top favorites, the CGI is top grade and done like art. The movment of the T-Rex and Raptors is just stunning. I also had that jaw dropping moment when the Brachiosaurus appeared on screen. Even now when I rewatch that opening scene I still get a little lump in my throat from the score and the acting.
@dr.burtgummerfan439
@dr.burtgummerfan439 Жыл бұрын
I think it's so cute the way the little girl tilts her head when she screams.🤣
@junosaxon4370
@junosaxon4370 Жыл бұрын
Lex was a great character, as well as Tim.
@kellypatterson8506
@kellypatterson8506 13 күн бұрын
Her name is Ariana Richards just played in the movie Tremors with Kevin Bacon and Fred Ward
@leereynolds3673
@leereynolds3673 8 ай бұрын
the smile on your face when the brachiosaurus appears at the start is what this films about! the music for this films 10/10
@beedubree2550
@beedubree2550 Жыл бұрын
I got to see this movie in IMAX for it's 20th anniversary and it was one of the greatest cinema experiences of my life, even though I'd already seen it at least 10 times before that at home - definitely keep an eye out for a cinema screening you can catch, I imagine there might be some showings at independent cinemas for the 30th anniversary, because this movie just hits different on a cinema screen. Jurassic Park is probably the first film I ever fell in love with, I was obsessed with dinosaurs as a kid and my dad first showed it to me when I was about 6 or 7. One of my absolute favourites of all time.
@raymondjones2634
@raymondjones2634 Жыл бұрын
seeing this in the theaters was the defining moment of my childhood. everything cool about being a boy, dinosaurs,action, meeting the best crafting cinema can offer and that John Williams score. i went back twice in its original run, wore out the VHS,and saw it again in 3D on its 20 year anniversary. as in love as i sound with this movie, ive really still Undersold it
@Ryan_Christopher
@Ryan_Christopher Жыл бұрын
First movie I watched in a THX theater. What an exciting summer. Had just moved to the U.S. on my green card. Eager to enjoy all the cool current movie tech of the time, vs waiting forever for them to ge released in my home country, which still had old mono- or stereo-only sound systems.
@Shatterpath
@Shatterpath 10 күн бұрын
This movie holds up so well. As a 53 year old Old Fart (tm) I cannot stress how much of a seismic shift this film was to the public. As an example, my mother was a big deal in CAD at the time, which was mostly used to do mechanical solid modeling in computers. This film had her speechless, even with the extensive institutional knowledge.
@RetroMediaRoom
@RetroMediaRoom Жыл бұрын
I saw this when I was around 7 years old in theaters and it was such an incredible experience as a kid. The effects were so incredible it was what sparked me to pay attention to behind the scenes of how effects are made.
@troy34bronze
@troy34bronze Жыл бұрын
This was the first movie where they superimposed someone’s face on another’s body. When Lex fell through the ceiling that was her stunt double. When she looked up, lex’s face.
@vidar3581
@vidar3581 Жыл бұрын
I remember watching this on a VHS tape as a kid SOO many times!
@Sherman1fan
@Sherman1fan Жыл бұрын
Lot of the scenic shots were filmed here in Hawaii: Maui, Kauai and Oahu at Kualoa Ranch, which is featured in many movies ( Kong, Godzilla, Avatar, Jumanji, Pirates 4). Come visit sometime!
@MaikKellerhals
@MaikKellerhals Жыл бұрын
The CGI looks so good because it was used only in limited scenes and for those scenes they had the time (and funds) to put real care into it. Sadly it has become an industry where time is money and money rules... hollywood doesn't take risks any more. (or VERY rarely, which is not good, because risk only sometimes pays)
@Rainbow.Pegacorn.Cosplay
@Rainbow.Pegacorn.Cosplay Жыл бұрын
The dinosaur sounds in this movie were made by combining sounds made by living animals and everyday objects. The Tyrannosaurus rex was a mix of elephant calf vocalizations (roar, snarls and growls) and a dog playing with a rope toy (shaking the Gallimimus to death). The Dilophosaurus was a mix of hawk, swan, howler monkey and rattlesnake. The adult Raptors were a mix of a walrus chest roar and dolphin mating scream, while the hatchling was a mix of owlet and fox kit sounds. The Brachiosaurus vocalizations were slowed down donkey calls, while the sneeze was a mix of a fire hydrant and a whale breathing through its blowhole. The Gallimimus's chief sound effect was made using the recorded calls of a female horse in heat. And yes, that Raptor popping up right behind Ellie is always a major jumpscare...especially for me with my autism and anxiety.
@malelonewolf80
@malelonewolf80 Жыл бұрын
I can tell you, that watching this movie in theaters, at an age of 13, and this movie being one of the first movies that I did see in the theatre, absolutely made an impression on me. I have seen this movie many times later of the years, but my first viewing, in the theatre, with the sound system (really made the t-rex roar seem real) in the theatre, cannot be replicated. It was an experience. And back then, this movie was such a leap in regards to computer graphics (though most of the special effects were animatronics) which people of later generations I do not think can appreciate since they are used to CGI in movies.
@kimarhironso437
@kimarhironso437 Жыл бұрын
I was 7 when this movie came out in theaters. As somewhat of a nerdy kid, who was into dinosaurs at the time this movie checked all the boxes of my imagination. It was something we hadn't seen before, the characters while not particularly deep were likeable and understandable enough that even my young brain was able to follow what was going on, and the crowd energy level fed the theater experience. It was hype. It was one of the few movies I went back to see in theaters more than once. It is a favorite showing of dollar theaters here in the US, so it isn't impossible for somebody to be in the states and still get the theater experience. If you looked at it today, I think that younger generations might not appreciate the SFX marvel this was at the time. I think part of the reason the SFX holds up in that era of movies is because they both used CGI AND practical effects. Nowadays everything is CGI with very few practical effects. I liked uncharted okay, but I always wonder why they had Tom Holland CGI at certain points in the movie, like how expensive could it be to actually show Tom or a stunt double falling a few feet? Anyways, I always enjoy when people watch a movie I loved as a kid in modern times.
@toddpatrick8254
@toddpatrick8254 Жыл бұрын
Welcome to Jaws on land! 😂 Most movies made today are rushed in production just to take your money. Speilburg doesn't rush anything. Most older movies are light years ahead in quality. I loved the blank stare on your face everytime a dinosaur appeared on screen!
@HankMeyer
@HankMeyer Жыл бұрын
I saw this in the theater 6 times. I was 9. I also owned the soundtrack on CD and cassette. I had all the toys too. Nobody had ever seen dinosaurs in a movie look that realistic, and unlike in earlier movies where people encounter dinosaurs, the director of JP had the decency to portray them as animals instead of monsters.
@clownzzz4837
@clownzzz4837 Жыл бұрын
'The Hunt For Red October' is a classic that has Sam Neill along with Sean Connery.
@mariescott
@mariescott Жыл бұрын
I smiled at the look on your face when they revealed the dinosaurs. That was everybody's reaction when this movie first came out. The practical effects still stand up almost 30 years later.
@NocturnEternal
@NocturnEternal Жыл бұрын
Not going to lie: I may be in the minority but I wanted Muldoon to survive. People say he acted stupidly and that’s what got him killed. He knew pack behavior and sacrificed himself to lure them away from Ellie, probably knowing full well he wasn’t going to make it. People don’t always say what they mean, especially since Muldoon said “I got her”. By that he meant he had The Big One’s attention; and one would be forgiven if they thought Muldoon was going to hunt the raptors. But the raptors were never in the wild till close to the end, they were always contained.
@paulobrien9572
@paulobrien9572 Жыл бұрын
What is amazing about Spielberg is that while filming this movie he was also working on Schindler's List. Talk about keeping plates spinning. He would approve shot set ups and designs while doing preproduction work in Poland for Schindler's List
@ayrtonm7907
@ayrtonm7907 9 ай бұрын
Love the fact you actually watch the movie without rambling on and the reactions are genuine. Bonus, you’re cute as well. Keep it up.
@Ronfost89
@Ronfost89 Жыл бұрын
First movie my parents ever took me to see. I don't really remember it since I was only about 4 but both my parents tell me that I loved it and wanted nothing but dinosaurs. My dad says my mouth dropped to the floor and I turned super white when the T-rex showed up the first time. Still one of my favorites today.
@AmaroqFan
@AmaroqFan Жыл бұрын
I was 7 years old when this movie came out. I loved dinosaurs, so despite it being a horror movie, my mother took me to see it in the theaters. Looking up at the screen when the brachiosaurus (long necky boi) appeared on screen, you felt as though you were looking up at it yourself. When the T-rex stepped, and you could see the ripples in the water, you felt it in your chest. The vegetation moving sounded like it was around you. In the darkness of the theater, you were there. There is no describing the surreal experience certain movies have when watching them in the theaters vs. at home. I'm glad you enjoyed this little part of my childhood.
@erikhoxsey8186
@erikhoxsey8186 Жыл бұрын
Fear The T-Rex! Velocoraptors are terrifying too! I saw this movie in theatre. As a teen. There was a lot of chatter amongst the young children. When the T-Rex roars for the first time, all quiet. You could hear a pin drop. Good movie memory.
@davewhitmore1958
@davewhitmore1958 Жыл бұрын
I loved the joy in your eyes at the T-Rex's final roar while the banner falls, we all felt the same when we first saw this
@fenner1986
@fenner1986 Жыл бұрын
My favorite reactor! So much good commentary and great thought processes. Today's a good day :)
@carterlegrand6698
@carterlegrand6698 Жыл бұрын
She may be the best.90% of the rest OVEREACT and talk over the dialog. Her face tells it all
@Curraghmore
@Curraghmore Жыл бұрын
It was cool how the expression on your face at the first sight of the dinosaurs was the same as the expressions on Alan and Ellie's faces. Appropriately, John Hammond was played by Richard Attenborough who was the brother of the famous wildlife documentary film maker, David Attenborough. Richard was an award-winning film director himself, directing a film about Gandhi (titled 'Gandhi') in 1982 that featured a young Daniel Day-Lewis in his first film role.
@SomeOne-hw6jw
@SomeOne-hw6jw Жыл бұрын
14:32 I "love" how the last JP movie literally does this and everybody claps at the end... it's not the CGI that were better in 1993, it's the writing. The new writers enjoy the rape of the natural world I guess...
@YouOnlyIiveTwice
@YouOnlyIiveTwice Жыл бұрын
If you notice in the beginning inside the helicopter Dr. Grant only had the 2 'female' ends of the buckle, but he ends up finding a way to make them work after all; Just like how the dinosaurs were able to find a way to breed despite all being female. It's a minor but fun little detail they threw in.
@pesty4
@pesty4 Жыл бұрын
Your fans were correct to vote in JP. Your face was the same as ours the first time we seen the Brachiasaur. It's purely a movie of wonderment, brilliantly directed and a score that is John Williams best.
@sithmaster
@sithmaster 5 ай бұрын
Haha the goat leg scene. I remember when I was seeing that as an 11-year-old in a movie theater back in 1993. The whole theater room jump scared. Will never forget this moment.
@michaelccozens
@michaelccozens Жыл бұрын
Re: the raptors' intelligence. Seems like, these days, every bit of research we're doing is telling us that animals are a hell of a lot smarter than we ever gave them credit for being, and even smarter than we thought possible. Certain crows can not only use tools, but can also design, craft, and utilize unique ones to solve problems they've never before encountered. Goldfish can do arithmetic. Chimps seem to be better at eliminating extraneous information than human children. Orcas are terrifyingly intelligent, organized, and social, moreso than many human adults. Even plants are proving to have capabilities akin to intelligence way beyond anything we ever imagined. The more we look, the less unique we realize ourselves to be. The only thing that really seems to separate humans from the rest of life is our innate and burning desire to teach. It is "nerve-wracking", though "nerve-racking" is the previous spelling. "Wrack" is a somewhat-archaic verb related to "'wreck", and "rack" mostly refers to the brutal torture method. "Nerve-wrecking" would hold pretty much the same meaning, but because English hates nothing so much as "logic" and "consistent rules", it isn't the known phrase.
@Alfonso88279
@Alfonso88279 Жыл бұрын
I was 5 when this movie was released, and I was fortunate that my parents allowed me to watch it. I had nightmares for the next decade, but they were fascinating nightmares so it's ok. Back then this movie was a revolution. It was everywhere. In the supermarket they gave you figurines and posters, we collected trading cards, the picture that represented jurassic park was the silhouette of the jungle during twilight, all black against weak red, it was mystery and horror, but marvel and discovery too. When I was a child I used to see movies and tried to understand how they did every effect. Sometimes I asked my parents during the movie which they didn't like, but they always answered me. When I asked them about the T-Rex, they got quiet and looked at each other. Back then CGI was not a well known thing. They said that it was probably a very good puppet and then my father said that either was that or they were breeding dinosaurs in secret XD Jurassic Park 1993 has a special place in my heart. Usually when you rewatch these movies as an adult you can see the problems, even if you still like them but the more I see this movie, the greater is my admiration for what they accomplished. Such a simple yet great, movie.
@Ryan_Christopher
@Ryan_Christopher Жыл бұрын
I still have my Jurassic Park coffee mug and lapel pin I bought in Universal Studios in 1993!
@KillingJoke96
@KillingJoke96 Жыл бұрын
Joseph Mazzello (Actor of Eugene Sledge & Tim Murphy) 🤝 Getting stuck in a living hell, in a tropical climate.
@BramGaunt
@BramGaunt Жыл бұрын
It's not just the CGI or the practical effects, even many parts of the dialogue stand out so much in terms of quality from today's films.
@476429
@476429 Жыл бұрын
I saw this on opening night in '93. This was groundbreaking CGI at the time. There hadn't yet been realistic-looking CGI animals on this scale so seeing this on the big screen was awe-inspiring. It was the closest we had ever gotten to realistic dinosaurs.
@joel5644
@joel5644 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Hammond: "We've got a T-Rex!" Centane: "I don't know if that's good or bad." T-Rex: "It's bad."
@Centane
@Centane Жыл бұрын
YEP it was very bad 👀
@MrLovegrove
@MrLovegrove Жыл бұрын
The best moment in the theater (in my opinion) is when Lex is hanging from the vent and the raptor jumps up at her. Everyone in the packed theater I was watching did the same thing as me. All of us at the same time yanked our legs off the floor to try to get them out of the way of the dinosaur on the screen. It made me laugh a lot afterwards, but it's a testament to how good a job they did making this movie feel real to us.
@Heru3005
@Heru3005 Жыл бұрын
I saw this in theaters when I was 8. Absolutely mind blowing.
@JS-wp4gs
@JS-wp4gs Жыл бұрын
'This reminds me of alien' Thats basically the premise of carnosaur, a low budget dinosaur movie also from 1993
@granadosvm
@granadosvm Жыл бұрын
Watching this movie in the big screen, really big, before the multiplexes was amazing. Your conscious mind would tell you it's all animation, but your eyes would tell you that the animals were live, right in front of you.
@slchance8839
@slchance8839 Жыл бұрын
Also, almost no one acknowledges that one of the main reasons the dinos look so great is that master storyteller Steven Spielberg is at the helm. Spielberg is the man who INVENTED the summer blockbuster by working around his sinking mechanical shark and shot around it to build tension like a boss in Jaws. Nearly every one of his movies is a masterclass because he knows how to visually tell a story, regardless of technology.
@TheoMurpse
@TheoMurpse Жыл бұрын
I was 10yo and had read the novel before the movie came out. I was so hyped. My friend's parents rented out the entire theater for our class, and we had so much fun. It was unbelievable in 1993 how real it looked.
@Arthur_King_of_the_Britons
@Arthur_King_of_the_Britons Жыл бұрын
in 1993 you cannot over-emphasize what a blockbuster movie this was. Not only was it awe-inspiring to see on the big screen but it was dinosaur mania with Jurassic Park-everything that summer
@gothicbutterfly013
@gothicbutterfly013 4 ай бұрын
It was the highest grossing movie ever for several years when it released, and even to this day *5* of the 6 movies are still within the top 200 highest grossing movies of all time, 3 of which are within the top 30. It may have genuinely been a generation-defining experience.
@cbretschneider
@cbretschneider Жыл бұрын
Hi Centane! this was a fun reaction. I got to see this in theatres as a teenager back in '93 and it was absolutely amazing. The sound design for this film was just as incredible as the special effects, especiallly in the theatre. Those footsteps of the t-rex in her big reveal secene, that whole scene overall was petrifying. Good times!
@paulieluppino1856
@paulieluppino1856 Жыл бұрын
When this movie came out, I was 5 years old, but I remember perfectly that the merchandise around this film was crazy.... Anywhere you look at, there were T-shirts, cereals, toys, snacks, candies, house slippers, videogames.... We had dinosaurs even in the soup.... (Like, literally, it was soup with dinosaur shaped pasta.... that one taste awful).....
@Mr-gg8ek
@Mr-gg8ek 7 ай бұрын
This came out the summer I graduated from high school. For the first time since Stars Wars 16 years previous, people could not belief what they were seeing. It was so realistic. I think the look of the film holds up to this day. The T-Rex breaching the fence scene in particular looks so good.
@SilentZombie
@SilentZombie Жыл бұрын
I watched this when it was first released in 93. As a kid then who was obsessed with Dinosaurs back then, seeing this movie when it first came out and the Brachiosaur alone was beyond mind blowing. So with that being said... Fun facts time. The actual extinct animal Velociraptor was the size of a dog. The animal in this movie was based on 2 different species of raptor. 1 was Deinonychus and the other one, at the time, was a newly discovered species called Utahraptor. Second fun fact: while not shown on screen, Nedry was hunted by 2 Dilophosaur's, the spitter and the one that climbed into the jeep when he left the door open to use the cable.
@slchance8839
@slchance8839 Жыл бұрын
I read once, that there was a "golden era" of special effects from about 1993-1998 where CGI was great, but EXPENSIVE, so only the biggest budget movies (and directors) could afford it, but to keep costs down, they had to combine CGI with practical. During this "Golden era," you get unbelievable but believably good movies like Titanic, Terminator 2, The Abyss, and Jurassic Park. You shoulda seen these in the theater: the look, the feel, the sounds, the music...it was movie magic.
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 Жыл бұрын
If you'll notice, three movies on that list were produced by James Cameron: Terminator 2, the Abyss, and Titanic.
@slchance8839
@slchance8839 Жыл бұрын
@@ronmaximilian6953 "We had the tools. We had the talent!"
@joepinkley3109
@joepinkley3109 Жыл бұрын
Nice reference to Ghost Busters Ron
@joshuaciresoli2927
@joshuaciresoli2927 Жыл бұрын
I remember when this came out on VHS in 1994. Being six years old, this was the first PG-13 movie I ever saw and it is still one of my favorites. That main theme by composer John Williams is still so moving.
@sca88
@sca88 Жыл бұрын
Don't know about how smart Raptors were as to learn how to open latch handle doors but we've had 3 cats over the years the would open all our latch doors with ease. They would get pissed about door knobs as they would try grip them with their paws. One cat used to open the child proof cupboards.
@steeltalon2356
@steeltalon2356 Жыл бұрын
This movie was a massive hit. It was a huge deal it was when it came out. A phenomenon, much like Star wars was when it debuted. Jurassic Park was a technical marvel that changed how movies were made.
@zatornagirroc7175
@zatornagirroc7175 Жыл бұрын
Several names are in this film as A-list actors. Sir Richard Attenborough (Hammond), Sam Neill (Dr. Grant), Laura Dern (Dr. Sattler) and Jeff Goldblum (Malcolm) are all big names and have more than one blockbuster to their names. This movie quite blew us away when we saw it in the theatres.
@vanpiisu88
@vanpiisu88 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite movies ever since my childhood 🧡 and it's spectacular how well they made the dinosaurs back in the 90s, T-Rex still looks so good. I think the theme song by John Williams is also the most beautiful ^_^. I loved the reaction and hopefully you will watch all the movies in the franchise 😊!
@Nick-wl2xq
@Nick-wl2xq Жыл бұрын
I saw this in the theater for my 11th birthday party and I still remember the feeling I had seeing the T. Rex coming of the paddock in that amazing scene. CGI is only as good as the director or artist using it, and Spielberg is an amazing Director, that’s why everything looks so good. Plus he used real robotic models as well, and filmed some of it at night and was smart about his use of CGI. Thank you for sharing your reaction.
@lordwalker71
@lordwalker71 Жыл бұрын
The storm wasn’t originally in the script but they filmed in Hawaii and it was hit by a hurricane while they were filming and it destroyed some of the sets so they wrote it into the movie, Spielberg apparently stayed up and played games with the kids to keep their minds off the storm. The scene where the plexiglass roof of the SUV falls in on the kids wasn’t supposed to happen but the T-Rex malfunctioned and pushed down on it so that was the kids genuine reaction because they were not expecting that to happen. It was this year when I realized that the part where the T-Rex breaks out of its paddock doesn’t makes sense since the ground seemed to be the same level on her side as it was on the vehicle side but when it pushed the SUV over the concrete barrier there is suddenly a huge drop there which means we shouldn’t have been able to see the T-Rex. I saw someone point out that in the helicopter scene when they are landing that Alan uses the two female ends of the seat belt to tie around himself and they wondered if it was a nod to the female dinosaurs figuring out a way to breed.
@hettbeans
@hettbeans Жыл бұрын
Yes, the scene with the roof was supposed to happen. This crap gets repeated on every single JP reaction. It's in the novel and in the script. The only thing that wasn't supposed to happen was the edge of the glass panel breaking after it was already inside the car. The screaming is all acting - just think critically for one second. You think these child actors (one of the most highly regulated professions in the country) were screaming in genuine fear and Spielberg was like "oh yeah that's it, keep rolling", with cameras perfectly positioned for the shot to boot?
@snakeeyes7507
@snakeeyes7507 2 ай бұрын
I saw this in theaters, and it is at the time when theaters were coming out with surround sound. The movie was extremely louder than we were used to. And when the raptor jumped on the kitchen counter, it made everyone jump out of our seats and made a lot of kids cry.
@mikebrown7799
@mikebrown7799 Жыл бұрын
Nice premiere and reactions to your first Jurassic Park film, Kamilla!!!!🎬👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽It was definitely a breakthrough with the dinosaurs, and does hold up well 30 years later.
@leeswhimsy
@leeswhimsy Жыл бұрын
I got to see this on a VERY large screen (inside, but like a drive-in theatre screen) - It was terrifying to us, as we had never experienced CGI like this EVER before! It was absolutely awe-inspiring.
@TheYoungWolfI
@TheYoungWolfI Жыл бұрын
Great reaction. This was one of my first favourite live action movies ever. I was 5 years old when it came out, and of course loved dinosaurs like all little kids. Didn't see it in theatres, my parents didn't let me see it until I was 6 and found out I'd watched it at a friend's house. Also, Adam Jones worked on special effects in this movie. He's the guitarist of Tool, my favourite band :)
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