JURASSIC PARK is STRESSFUL... and AMAZING. | First time watching

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Cristy Reacts

Cristy Reacts

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 585
@clarkness77
@clarkness77 Ай бұрын
My mom wouldn't let me see this cuz it was pg-13 and I was only 8. My dad picked me up and told her we were going out to dinner. We went straight to the theatre and watched this! One of my fav memories. Thanks dad!
@Byrvurra
@Byrvurra Ай бұрын
That's hilarious. I would have been, I think 11 when this came out. It wasn't the first PG-13 movie I saw in the theaters, but it was probably the first "scary" one.
@57kwest
@57kwest Ай бұрын
@@clarkness77 I'm that dad 😂.. I'm constantly getting in trouble for shit that I show my kids "too early"... We survived 🤷
@darthken815
@darthken815 Ай бұрын
#1 Dad!
@williamrosmer8381
@williamrosmer8381 Ай бұрын
my mom wouldn't let me see it at about the same age because one of her work friend's took their kids who got scared.
@aaronmicalowe
@aaronmicalowe Ай бұрын
Golden dad moment, for sure.
@crazyratlady3026
@crazyratlady3026 Ай бұрын
I was 12 and begged my dad to take me to see it in the theater. One of the best days of my childhood, and a memory me and my dad will hold on to forever. We still watch it together on occasion when he's having a good day (Dementia sucks) It did scare the crap out of me tho 😅😅
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy Ай бұрын
Pirates of the Caribbean was a ride at Disneyland that opened in the 60s. It was the only ride not based on a movie, so they decided to make movies based on the ride. The first movie was in 2003.
@markdenio4537
@markdenio4537 Ай бұрын
At least once Johnny Depp has dressed up as Captain Jack Sparrow and stood at a part of the ride, coming to "life" to suprise/scare riders.
@rimasmuliolis1136
@rimasmuliolis1136 Ай бұрын
The ride opened at Disney World in '73.
@arthurcamargo8416
@arthurcamargo8416 Ай бұрын
The Disney ride is based on the book Treasure Island. "15 men and a dead man's chest, yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum" song comes from the book, as does the quote "Thems that die'll be the lucky ones!" The Prisoners calling the dog to get the key to the cell is straight from the ride.
@Starsaber222
@Starsaber222 Ай бұрын
And then the ride was reengineered to be based on the movie.
@randomlyfactual1943
@randomlyfactual1943 Ай бұрын
Thanks for reminding me just how old I am. Awfully swell of ya 👍
@domingocurbelomorales8635
@domingocurbelomorales8635 Ай бұрын
Richard Attenborough (John Hammond) was a very prolific british actor. He was the older brother of famous naturalist David Attenborough.
@Metzwerg74
@Metzwerg74 Ай бұрын
9:53 their excitement..... my excitement, when that scene came up on the big screen...... with a soundmachine, that you could feel the bass in your chest, when the big fellow came back down.... nobody ever had seen such a realistic version of a dinosaur in cinema.... a cinema moment, i will never forget....
@ganggreen9012
@ganggreen9012 Ай бұрын
When the Westworld show came out a few years back on HBO it was reported that Michael Crichton had gone to Disney in the late 1960's and, while on the Pirates of the Caribbean ride came up with the idea of what would happen if the pirates came to life in the park. Which lead to him writing the book and movie Westworld, and later to writing Jurassic Park.
@Wheja_sciart
@Wheja_sciart Ай бұрын
I'm starting to think Mike just didn't like theme parks.
@qwaurk985
@qwaurk985 Ай бұрын
"Mr. Arnold's dead." At least disarmed.
@ScooterBond1970
@ScooterBond1970 Ай бұрын
Mr Arm-nold
@Grujnot
@Grujnot Ай бұрын
Samuel L jackson said recently he would like to come back in the JP franchise and that could be done because they did'nt show him dead ^^
@terryv2006
@terryv2006 Ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂
@crystalgemgirl731
@crystalgemgirl731 Ай бұрын
Boo, bad joke. Seriously, though, they WERE going to film Mr Arnold's death, but a real life hurricane destroyed the set. I know how he died in the book, if you'd like to know.
@brandonrobinson529
@brandonrobinson529 Ай бұрын
@@crystalgemgirl731 question? how he did died in the book
@jerrywalters8885
@jerrywalters8885 Ай бұрын
These kids were freaking AMAZING for it being their first big movie
@ScooterBond1970
@ScooterBond1970 Ай бұрын
31:20 The rearview mirror thing is probably the single greatest visual gag in cinematic history (outside of a Tex Avery cartoon, that is).
@drb6771
@drb6771 Ай бұрын
Cristy, " I want to go on that tour." 20 min later " OMG I'd be sh*tting my pants without a doubt!"🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
I mean... I'd wear adult diapers hahaha
@corymccarty8603
@corymccarty8603 Ай бұрын
​@@CristyReactsis comedy GOLD! LOL!
@wesmcinerny4524
@wesmcinerny4524 Ай бұрын
19:50 The name you are looking for is Triceratops, a horned, rhino-like dinosaur. True rhinos, by the way, are NOT dinosaurs but are mammals, just like humans. Oh, and at 36:39, they already said a few seconds earlier that they are Gallimimus.
@terryv2006
@terryv2006 Ай бұрын
Thanks for the info. I find it interesting.
@The_Real_Mr_Al
@The_Real_Mr_Al Ай бұрын
Also, unlike the triceratops and most knowne horned animals, a rhino's horn is just pure keratin rather than bone covered in keratin. I've seen documentary videos about the creative ways African preserves try to discourage rhino poaching, such as drilling a small hole into a rhino horn and filling the keratin with bright pastel colours. Apparently rhino's are not bothered or affected in the least by having their keratin safely removed or modified, so I can only assume it's more like trimming your fingernails rather than declawing. So TLDR, rhino's getting their nails painted might stop poaching!
@mikebro674
@mikebro674 Ай бұрын
"I have a fascination with really big things" the immature male in me couldn't take you watching the movie seriously. 😅😜
@krisfrederick5001
@krisfrederick5001 Ай бұрын
Jeff Goldblum Jurassic Park: "Must go faster..." 🦖 Jeff Goldblum Independence Day: "MUST go FASTER! 👽 This is endlessly funny to me...
@yourlifeisagreatstory
@yourlifeisagreatstory Ай бұрын
Cristy: “Who mows that lawn? It’s impeccable!” I always use the “most go faster” line whenever I’m stuck in traffic, and use “Hold on to your butts” occasionally, they’re my own inside joke haha
@mgwilliams1000
@mgwilliams1000 Ай бұрын
Tap, Tap, Tap on the car camera... "Now eventually you do have dinosaurs on your dinosaur tour, right"?
@asterix7842
@asterix7842 Ай бұрын
Jeff Goldblum in The Lost World: "Increase your rate of climb."
@corymccarty8603
@corymccarty8603 Ай бұрын
Agreed. "Must go faster" in both movies was too funny.
@brandonrobinson529
@brandonrobinson529 Ай бұрын
@@corymccarty8603 Indeed it is I find it is a great callback from Jurassic Park “Must Go Faster”
@alanmartinez7746
@alanmartinez7746 Ай бұрын
The oxygen levels in the dinosaur times were higher than today, that's why animals were bigger in those times, even the insects
@rainbowpegacornstudios
@rainbowpegacornstudios Ай бұрын
I'd be scared AF to see a horse-sized mosquito
@ralphhenderson5276
@ralphhenderson5276 Ай бұрын
Yes! I just looked this up. Scientists say Earth’s atmosphere was about 33% oxygen at the end of the dinosaur’s era, compared to 21% today. This suggests the dinosaurs wouldn’t do very well breathing today’s air.
@1237barca
@1237barca Ай бұрын
Correct. Mammals are less hardy but better at moving oxygen around.
@Karamarika
@Karamarika Ай бұрын
I saw someone theorize that this shift in O2 concentration was the reason we got the idea of dragons. He claimed that the dinosaurs, that were supposedly living alongside people, would breathe fire from struggling to breathe with less O2 available. It doesn't make much sense, but at least he tried to tie it all together.
@kevinwilson140
@kevinwilson140 Ай бұрын
Oxygen levels during the age of dinosaurs was about what it is today. People are confusing the Carboniferous period that ended about 40 million years before the first dinosaurs appeared. The dinosaurs were so big because their gut was very inefficient so you need a huge fermentation digestive system.
@Loroths
@Loroths Ай бұрын
I was 6 when this movie came out and saw it in the cinema (or what Americans call theatre) and that was it. An obsession was born. I saw the movie countless times since, as a child i had dinosaur everything. Lunch box, bed covers, mountains of toys, textbooks upon books upon books. Such fascinating creatures.
@thejohnbeck
@thejohnbeck Ай бұрын
Theater. Lol.
@spacecadet35
@spacecadet35 Ай бұрын
Also the air pressure was higher, so they were getting about twice as much oxygen as today.
@mutantsheepofdoom
@mutantsheepofdoom Ай бұрын
I've been to the waterfall! My family took a helicopter tour to it when I was 11. It's on the island of Kauai in Hawaii.
@briantrash
@briantrash Ай бұрын
Pirates of the Caribbean has been a ride at Disneyland since 1967.
@chrissmalley83
@chrissmalley83 Ай бұрын
The films were based on the ride, which is now based on the films.
@jeri3808
@jeri3808 Ай бұрын
I was a 15 year old kid when Pirates of the Carribbean opened in California, 1967. Awesome boat ride!
@MarcoMM1
@MarcoMM1 Ай бұрын
Great reaction Cristy like always, What an epic movie love it. When I saw this in the theaters there was NO CONVINCING anyone that dinosaurs were not real. The CGI and effects were so beyond anyone’s imagination. It still holds up decades later. The part where Dr. Grant sees the dinosaur for the first time always puts a lump in my throat. He's spent his entire life digging up their remains and from that, trying to determine how they lived, hunted, mated, everything. He's even talking to himself going over what he thought he always knew about them. Super powerful and well acted if you ask me! Here's a fun fact that has been stuck in my head for 30 years.The iconic water cup was actually really difficult to create. They spent weeks trying to figure out how to get the perfect ripples. By accident it was discovered that placing the glass on a guitar and plucking the strings created the ripples, so they ran a guitar string from bottom of the glass to the bottom of the car and plucked it. Perfect ripples. One of those cool super simple solutions that just need someone to think of them. Keep up the good work.
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
Marcoooooo! Wait, that's a great fun fact haha
@Steven-ez6qp
@Steven-ez6qp Ай бұрын
​@@CristyReactsHi ☺️ I just seen this Amazing reaction 💖 and hey that restroom scene where Rexy 🦖 She knocked over the restroom exposing the really mean old guy who selfishly left the poor kids trying Soo hard to hide 😥 save himself and Oops 🤭🤣 Eat Gobble him up 😋 anyway you giggle lol it was actually kinda funny and Deserved wouldn't you like kinda agree with me?
@kaibricturner8836
@kaibricturner8836 Ай бұрын
Rhinoceros Rex? LMAO 😂😂😂😂 Triceratops!
@2684dennis
@2684dennis Ай бұрын
12:29 hold that thought.
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
HA! i went back to watch what you meant, and LOL'd!!
@presencerocks2224
@presencerocks2224 Ай бұрын
I got extra credit in science for going to see this and writing a report
@OmegaS-117
@OmegaS-117 Ай бұрын
This was 1 of my childhood movies growing up
@mattburrito
@mattburrito Ай бұрын
me too im millennial grew up with it
@user-ch5qd3uz3l
@user-ch5qd3uz3l 2 күн бұрын
"it learned how to open the doors so now it knows how to open the doors" lol
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy Ай бұрын
Hammond isn’t greedy; he didn’t want tickets to his park to be expensive, because he wanted everyone to have the opportunity to see his dinosaurs. He’s a good man. He created the park because he loves dinosaurs and wanted to give a gift to the world.
@joey_mck
@joey_mck Ай бұрын
That’s the biggest difference between the lovable old man in the movie and the ruthless greedy Hammond seen in the book
@arwyss
@arwyss Ай бұрын
But he is reckless. And a liar (“we spared no expense” as he is constantly cutting corners)
@Tar-Numendil
@Tar-Numendil Ай бұрын
In the movie sure. In the book he is your typical greedy millionaire/billionaire that doesn't give a fuck about anything but money.
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy Ай бұрын
@ I don’t think he was blatantly lying. It’s been a while since I watched the entire movie, but I don’t remember him cutting any corners. The dinosaurs didn’t escape because he had cheap security measures; they escaped because Dennis Nedry shut down the security systems. Everything would have been fine if not for Nedry.
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy Ай бұрын
@ Sure. But this is a reaction to the movie; we’re talking about the movie character.
@SoularBeing
@SoularBeing Ай бұрын
"John I don't like you. Okay?!" Was my favorite line ever. I watched it three times. All this could have been avoided, had Hammond "spared no expense" with the people running his security.
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
Omg thank you so much!
@JerkyD
@JerkyD Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts I'm glad you like JP :) It's my favorite movie! If you haven't already watched it, I recommend JW's Camp Cretaceous series (which, despite being more for kids, feels much more like a proper continuation of JP than the JW movies). Also, if you wanna learn about real dinos (including birds), I highly recommend Darren Naish's "Dinosaurs: How They Lived and Evolved" (the best adult intro to the whole story of dinos) & "Dinopedia: A Brief Compendium of Dinosaur Lore" (the best adult guide to dinos & their cultural impact since the 1970s). 2 more things: -1) Speaking of Hammond (played by Richard Attenborough), I also recommend AppleTV's Prehistoric Planet (narrated by Richard's naturalist brother, David Attenborough). -2) Those are pelicans at 46:50, not storks.
@McCrispyTaco
@McCrispyTaco Ай бұрын
Gennaro : “In 48 hours……” T Rex: “Most I can give you is 10”
@corymccarty8603
@corymccarty8603 Ай бұрын
Cristy is so much fun to watch! When her eyes get wide and display shock, surprise, and occasionally terror, her expressiveness rivals even that of the characters on screen! Also she is incredibly sharp. When they started talking about shutting everything down she immediately clicked to the fact that meant the Velociraptor fences would be shut down as well. Normally the audence is reminded after the fact when it is clear they have escaped. Cristy is easily one of my favorite reactors. Truly a joy to behold!
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
Cory this comment made me so happy! Thank you for your awesome words. I’m so lucky that people like you actually apreciarte my silly little comments 🫶🏼
@corymccarty8603
@corymccarty8603 Ай бұрын
@@CristyReacts And I am so happy my comments make you happy. If they give back to you a fraction of the joy your reactions bring to me then it makes me very happy. ( PS. I made a spelling correction to the above post so it undid your like. My Bad. )
@zosometalgod
@zosometalgod Ай бұрын
He was talking about pirates of the Caribbean The Ride at Disneyland that opened in 1969
@DanielRamosMilitaryWiz
@DanielRamosMilitaryWiz Ай бұрын
Hi Cristy! I’m so glad you enjoyed Jurassic Park. This remember being blown away when I first saw this movie as a kid in the 90s. I had never seen dinosaurs portrayed so realistically before. The brought these creatures to life using a combination of CGI, puppetry, and animatronics. The special effects were overseen by the legendary Stan Winston, who was just coming off work on Terminator 2: Judgement Day and Batman Returns. This film is based off the 1990 novel Jurassic Park, written by Michael Crichton. What’s interesting is that back in 1973, Crichton had written and directed Westworld, which has several similarities to Jurassic Park. The film is about guests visiting an interactive amusement park with lifelike androids inhabiting three “themed” attractions, Western World, Medieval World, and Roman World. Things go wrong when the androids malfunction, unleashing chaos and terror on the guests. Both stories explore the theme of man using science to play god. It’s called a Triceratops Cristy (19:38). The name comes from the Greek words meaning “three-horn face.” That’s the Dilophosaurus (27:50). It was the first dinosaur mentioned during the driving tour, but it was a “no show.” It seems they did take liberties with the depiction of the Dilophosaurus because there is no evidence that it had a frill or spit venom. It’s possible that the filmmakers wanted the dinosaur to be more visually interesting and threatening. The frill and venom-spitting ability gives the Dilophosaurus unique and memorable characteristics that help it to stand out from the other dinosaurs in the film. It worked in creating a more suspenseful and thrilling scene with Nedry’s death. (37:03) Pirates of the Caribbean was actually a ride created by Walt Disney in 1967. It was the last ride in which he envisioned and personally oversaw it’s construction. He died just three months before it opened at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. It became so popular that it was replicated in 1973 at the Magic Kingdom of Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida. Versions of the ride were replicated at Tokyo Disneyland in 1983, and Disneyland Paris in 1992. The ride became know for its iconic theme song “A Pirate’s Life for Me.” The Pirates of the Caribbean films starring Johnny Depp were inspired by the ride.
@nathanmoss3347
@nathanmoss3347 Ай бұрын
Pirates of the Caribbean was a ride at Disney World long before it was a movie franchise. In fact, when the first "Pirates" movie was being made, there was a lot of scuttlebutt about it being based on a ride, and what a silly concept it was. And here we are a string of successful movies later. :)
@markmorningstar5374
@markmorningstar5374 Ай бұрын
And at "Disneyland" 15 years before "Disneyworld" was built!
@nealrepetti2396
@nealrepetti2396 Ай бұрын
This was the very beginning of the C.G. era. Speiburg is always at the for front of special effects. I think he's the best director of our generation.
@peterkoester7358
@peterkoester7358 17 күн бұрын
37:21 Pirates of the Caribbean began as a ride in Disneyland in California when the park opened in 1955.
@markunderwood912
@markunderwood912 11 сағат бұрын
A double entendre !!! People like me that hasn't got a clean mind like you😂😊❤❤
@stanleywiggins5047
@stanleywiggins5047 Ай бұрын
Disney, Piryets of the Caribbean ride was first opened sometime in the 1960s I think as this 66 year young Aussie has never been outside Australia 😊
@ChrisReise
@ChrisReise Ай бұрын
37:20 The "Pirates of the Caribbean" movie franchise is based on the Walt Disney theme park RIDE that opened in Disneyland in 1967. That's why Ian said "When the Pirates of the Caribbean BREAKS DOWN, the pirates don't eat the tourists."
@LuminairPrime
@LuminairPrime Ай бұрын
Sometimes when you feel down, you just need to watch someone fall in love with something you love. Thank you Cristy Reacts And I love this paleontology sponsorship! Thank you Dan's Dinosaurs!
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
You're the best!
@jacotromp59581
@jacotromp59581 Ай бұрын
I was 14 when I saw this in the 2nd week of it's original release and it was and still to this day it's one of the greatest cinematic experiences of my life. Seeing these dinosaurs coming to life right infront of us was a experience that's truly difficult to explain.
@jeri3808
@jeri3808 Ай бұрын
If you visit Hawaii where this was filmed, they have turned it into drive/ride thru attraction like Disney and Universal Studios. You can even ride horseback or bicycles through it.
@markcainyourfriendinthecar3387
@markcainyourfriendinthecar3387 Ай бұрын
That John Williams theme still gives me chills
@HildegardActual
@HildegardActual Ай бұрын
We *all* wanna go on that tour Cristy
@lazyperfectionist2
@lazyperfectionist2 Ай бұрын
19:55 "I don't know the name of this... dinosaur." Triceratops.
@Chrisfragger1
@Chrisfragger1 Ай бұрын
You can't even imagine what it was like to see that first Sauropod in the theaters.
@Chrisfragger1
@Chrisfragger1 Ай бұрын
You should see Jeff Goldblum's first appearance in Death Wish.
@Chrisfragger1
@Chrisfragger1 Ай бұрын
Hippo's are vegesaururses of today, I wouldn't suggest feeding them.
@OmegaS-117
@OmegaS-117 Ай бұрын
The legendary John Williams did the music for this movie
@Rob-vs8ye
@Rob-vs8ye Ай бұрын
that raptor in the egg would have looked alot more like a scary chicken than a bald lizard
@peterkoester7358
@peterkoester7358 17 күн бұрын
48:35 In the original book, Hammond was more the stereotypical villain - more greedy and power-hungry than the gentle old man portrayed in the film, and as a result the readers received a degree of satisfaction when Hammond is killed by a pack of Procompsognathus (aka Compys), a species they did not have in this original film but which would play a larger part in a sequel or two.
@michaelwatson266
@michaelwatson266 Ай бұрын
I get the feeling that when Cristy is really tired, she kinda sounds like a T-Rex when she yawns 😂🤣. I'm kidding 😋
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
How'd you know?!?!?
@michaelwatson266
@michaelwatson266 Ай бұрын
​@CristyReacts I can hear all the way in Canada 😋😋
@samcodebreaker
@samcodebreaker Ай бұрын
I like what you've done with drowned out sound during the dramatic parts. React to all 3 OG jurassic parks
@ieyke
@ieyke Ай бұрын
When they're talking about how Pirates of the Caribbean does it break down in the pirates eat the tourists, that's because Pirates of the Caribbean is a theme park ride at Disney World / Disneyland. The movies are based on the theme park ride.
@jdde756
@jdde756 Ай бұрын
Welcome to Jurassic park 🦕🦖🦕🦖
@l.piloto7964
@l.piloto7964 Ай бұрын
I like watching movies with you Cristy. You make it feel like watching with a friend in my home theater like experience. Gracias, Cristy.
@CristyReacts
@CristyReacts Ай бұрын
siii this makes me happy!
@jacotromp59581
@jacotromp59581 Ай бұрын
My dad absolutely loved movies. He introduced me to horror and sci-fi from a very young age. I was about 5 the first time I saw Jaws in the drive-in with my parents. February 1993 my dad took his own life, few months before this movie was released. He would have love this movie so much
@mckrackin5324
@mckrackin5324 Ай бұрын
Why are humans so small? Well, the reason dinosaurs were so big was due to several things like a higher oxygen content in the atmosphere and a lack of predators allowed to evolve much larger than present day animals. Humans are smaller because we evolved after the extinction of dinosaurs and alongside some deadly predators and a lower oxygen content in the new atmosphere after almost all vegetation being wiped out by an ice age.
@Choalith_Ikanthe
@Choalith_Ikanthe Ай бұрын
Fantastic answer, and spot on. There's also the fact of resource efficiency. Human Brains are ridiculously over-developed, and require what is frankly an ungodly caloric intake to operate at the levels they do. Even in times of tribal hunter-gatherer austerity, the brain alone takes up nearly 20% of the energy we eat. If we were much bigger, that constant need to take in energy would scale up exponentially owing to something called the Square Cube law. As something doubles in size, it squares in volume, and the energy and structural stability needed to maintain it ramps up like mad. Humans are in a sweet spot where we can afford to run such powerful brains without starving to death or endlessly stuffing our faces. In fact, there some suggestion that the way we've perfected the making and eating of food is what's leading to us slowly getting bigger as a species. Mankind's average height has increased slowly over the recent hundreds of years that we have evidence.
@Alfonso88279
@Alfonso88279 Ай бұрын
That thing about lack of predators is bullshit. The number of predators in the sea is huuuuge, much bigger rate than in land, but creatures can be so much bigger. The secret sauce is weight. Dinosaurs are lighter than mammals because their bones tend to be lighter, they have holes inside. They are still very strong, but lighter. If you extrapolate the size, you may think that a sauropod 5 times the size of an elephant would be 5 times heavier but that's wrong, it may be 3 times heavier. That means that they can keep growing more than mamals. Also, dinosaurs enjoyed long periods of estability in their environments. In stable times, animals tend to get bigger. Mammals got to be extremely big until the ice age. Then big, highly specialized mammals started to die and we arrived and made sure no one survived.
@mckrackin5324
@mckrackin5324 Ай бұрын
@@Alfonso88279 You okay Skippy?
@j.w.sraptorsquad982
@j.w.sraptorsquad982 Ай бұрын
@@Alfonso88279 it also didn't hurt that they had a respiratory system similar to modern birds, that enabled them to extract oxygen more efficiently from the air than mammals can, which also helped them sustain such massive sizes
@fireeaglefitnessmartialart935
@fireeaglefitnessmartialart935 Ай бұрын
​@Alfonso88279 but Aldo consider the space in between those animals and how far any given prey might be from a predator. The ocean is vast and there was more of it before the last ice age. So animals could grow a while before encountering predators, and many prey animals usually stay in groups even in the ocean.
@RedRanger1138
@RedRanger1138 Ай бұрын
I would recommend reading the Jurassic Park book. I think you would enjoy it. It answers several questions in the movie like why the dinosaur was sick and why Nedry is betraying Hammond. On side note the TRex showed us that lawyers are not all bad.
@MadcapMatt
@MadcapMatt Ай бұрын
2:45 have you watched Tomb Raider with Angelina Jolie? Two great movies that are all about that. There's also a more modern version of it with Alicia Vikander.
@jjkk1630
@jjkk1630 Ай бұрын
The original Michael Crichton book this film was based on was a delight to read. As you might expect there were quite a few differences in the film; Donald Gennaro was a much more badass and heroic character who survived to the end, his film counterpart was mashed together with a different character called Ed Regis, the coward that abandoned the kids and was later killed by the juvenile T-Rex (there were two in the book); Alan Grant had a bushy beard; the kids' roles were reversed in the film (book Tim was the older computer expert, book Lex was the younger annoying one); John Hammond was indeed more of a ruthless villain and much less sympathetic in the book, and died at the end after injuring his leg and being attacked by a swarm of procompsognathus (smaller, dog-sized dinos); Lewis Dodgson (the rival corpo who serves as Nedry's liaison) was also a more active villain who returned as the main antagonist of the Lost World book, but he didn't appear in the films again until Jurassic World Dominion in 2022. Malcolm was also ill and implied to die at the end in the book, but because that didn't happen in the film and it became a big hit, Crichton wrote the sequel more in relation to the film than the book, which ended up hurting it in my opinion.
@TorazChryx
@TorazChryx Ай бұрын
fyi, the Pirates Of The Caribbean movies are named after/based on a Disney themepark ride that (IIRC) was present when the park opened in the 50s
@MartinBeerbom
@MartinBeerbom Ай бұрын
The first ride "Pirates of the Caribbean" opened in 1967.
@justinwoolpert9381
@justinwoolpert9381 Ай бұрын
Brachiosaurus grew as large as they did due to the increased amount of oxygen in the atmosphere. This allowed animals to grow larger than ever before or since.
@randomlyfactual1943
@randomlyfactual1943 Ай бұрын
"Did we shrink?" On land, yes. I'll remind you that in the oceans, the cetaceans stands undefeated as the heaviest animals ever found in the fossil record. On land though, the story is more complicated, but to summarise it: bigger does not mean better. Being bigger means you need a higher biomass intake in order to survive. Also, finding shelter from the elements is hard when you are three storeys tall and as long as a city bus. For birds, trading away size was very successful, as they've gained the ability to fly. For mammals, being smaller meant being able to give better parental care as well, making us the family that most efficiently raises its young.
@brewswillis9783
@brewswillis9783 Ай бұрын
Experiencing this movie in 1990 on a 30 foot tall screen, where you had to turn your head to watch, is absolutely at the top of my cinematic experiences (along with Avatar in 3d). Well done Cristy.
@emultra759
@emultra759 Ай бұрын
I'm more impressed by the time machine that you used to watch this in 1990. 1.21 gigawatts?
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy
@WillFlyTheLightingGuy Ай бұрын
1993
@MrBigPicture835
@MrBigPicture835 24 күн бұрын
East of Los Angeles is a small town called Cabazon that has a dinosaur park.
@NadeemShekh-uy9zn
@NadeemShekh-uy9zn Ай бұрын
I love the first jurassic park movie
@tyrelloge6910
@tyrelloge6910 Ай бұрын
"..yes." 😂😂
@arthurcamargo8416
@arthurcamargo8416 Ай бұрын
Dinosaurs came in many different sizes.... from chicken size, to ... well, the largest creatures ever to roam the planet! A few things... dinosaurs and whales are comparative in terms of size. The atmosphere was very different back then as well. More oxygen led to larger creatures in general, but also larger insects. Imagine a dragonfly about the size of a modern duck or turkey!! Also, in Virginia, USA, there is a dinosaur land theme park. Some dinosaurs are made to look the way people thought they looked (tail dragging) while others are made to look more modern.
@ImVeryOriginal
@ImVeryOriginal 15 күн бұрын
Giant insects were a Carboniferous thing, not a Mesozoic thing. Oxygen levels were similar during the age of dinos, but temperatures were higher, and the plants more nutritionally dense. Plus dinosaurs (at least certain lineages) had a slew of adaptations, like partially hollow bones, that helped them grow bigger than mammals ever did (though keep in mind today's land mammals aren't the norm, they can reach bigger sizes, the last batch of giants just got killed off by climate shifts and us).
@Rob-vs8ye
@Rob-vs8ye Ай бұрын
technically the velociraptor would have been the size of a turkey and covered in feathers with wings that helped it turn at high speeds. the ones you see in the movie are actually the Utah raptor
@andrewneese6484
@andrewneese6484 Ай бұрын
I definitely hope you go ahead and react to the entire Jurassic Park/World series. While certainly some are better than others, they are all worth a watch.
@MadailinBurnhope
@MadailinBurnhope Ай бұрын
I was 11 when my dad took me to see this in 1993, very possibly my favourite film of all time
@MrKINSM
@MrKINSM Ай бұрын
There's the creation museum in Northern Kentucky near Cincinnati Ohio that promotes the earth only being 6,000 years old and has a giant ark with dinos walking hand in hand with humans.
@tonyantonellis9983
@tonyantonellis9983 Ай бұрын
Dinosaurs are my top favorite real life animals and I know so well about them plus I can model and animate them in blender.
@lawrencejoy2256
@lawrencejoy2256 Ай бұрын
Second movie i played for my son after bringing him home from the hospital...Jaws was his first movie
@Gabriel_Pierne
@Gabriel_Pierne Ай бұрын
41:26 Exactly
@Avalee325
@Avalee325 5 күн бұрын
Omg lol. The pirates ride is like 50 years old 😂 I knew youngins would assume Johnny depp just inspired the whole thing 😭
@l.piloto7964
@l.piloto7964 Ай бұрын
Universal Studios FLORIDA had a animatronic ( robotic dinosaurs with realistic skin and everything) you would ride a rollercoaster type ride avoiding the velociraptores and a T-Rex. You could even do the sick breathing dinosaur like in the movie
@TheRumChum
@TheRumChum 29 күн бұрын
those big creatures existed because of the oxegen content or somehting , btw we were little mouse like mammals at that time IRL
@dandotvid
@dandotvid Ай бұрын
Something that still gets me every time is the three climbing over the fence when they can clearly fit right through the gaps in the wires.
@Justinlingo777
@Justinlingo777 Ай бұрын
A lot of people don't believe me but that was me I was the dino droppings in all the Jurassic Park films 😅
@jasontoddman7265
@jasontoddman7265 Ай бұрын
37:15 - Yes, the pirates of the Caribbean existed when this movie was made, and for nearly thirty years before that in Disneyland. It was actually the last ride envisioned by Walt Disney himself to be overseen by him before his death. I went to Disney World in 1976 and went on that ride myself; that one had been built in 1973.
@vudujl83
@vudujl83 Ай бұрын
didn't get to see this in theaters during it's original run in 1993 😥 so had to settle for the (then) VHS experience; however there was a theatrical re-release some time in the 2000s, went and saw it and it was still just as good 😃
@scottdarden3091
@scottdarden3091 Ай бұрын
Cristy, a Butterfinger and a Coke, a Heath bar and a Pepsi, a Payday and a 7UP 😂😂
@DeRockMedia
@DeRockMedia Ай бұрын
37:15 Pirates of the carribean was a famous disneyland ride before the movies.
@barbarino2000
@barbarino2000 Ай бұрын
Exterior shots filmed on the Hawaiian island of Kauai. A gorgeous helicopter tour.
@jeremysmith54565
@jeremysmith54565 Ай бұрын
With the whole premise of what the book was (though I think the book came out after the film in the end) about is them discovering what could possibly be the remains of Dinosaur DNA in amber (I say that because DNA degrades incredibly quickly), so with the notion said in the film about them filling in the gaps by Frog DNA would be like creating a whole new animal in reality, as there'd be awfully large gaps (if not making it up as they went along in reality). This isn't in anyway to hate on the film as I actually love it to bits, infact its up in my top 10 at least of films ever made this lol.
@Fred_L.
@Fred_L. Ай бұрын
Just realized Richard Attenborough saying having a metaphorical pebble in his shoe at the sandy dig site ... some two dozen years earlier he won a Golden Globe for his acting in The Sand Pebbles.
@cristiancastaneda2808
@cristiancastaneda2808 Ай бұрын
17:10 in Guatemala there is a park about dinosaurs in the department of Retalhuleu that it is called ¨Dino Park¨ and it has a lot of references to this movie, there are also other parks about dinosaurs in the world in other countries like Spain, Thailand, Mexico, Costa Rica and also in your beloved Colombia
@scottdarden3091
@scottdarden3091 Ай бұрын
They would be fine on the fence, current is what kills, in order to get current, voltage has to have a pathway to ground. That's why birds and squirrels are fine on electrical wires.
@jimdetry9420
@jimdetry9420 Ай бұрын
This movie was filmed on one of the islands in Hawaii. If you like the jungle and waterfalls, go to Hawaii and take a tour. As I recall, the island started with a K. If you're ever in the Los Angeles area visit the LaBrea Tar Pits museum--a long time ago many animals got trapped in the tar and buried there. Someone wrote about getting dino DNA from mosquitos trapped in amber many years ago. I think it was in Omni magazine. Possibly that's where Crichton got the idea for his Jurassic Park novel.
@matthewchoder655
@matthewchoder655 Ай бұрын
I don't understand how anyone hasn't seen Jurassic Park
@imthewolf1
@imthewolf1 Ай бұрын
The movies pirates of the Caribbean were made from the ride. I went on it in 1981 and it was already old.
@jeff-ni5cy
@jeff-ni5cy Ай бұрын
The Children are Ariana Richards who became a pretty well known painter and you can watch Joseph Mazzello in The Pacific as Eugene Sledge.
@NathanMalnaa
@NathanMalnaa Ай бұрын
I love this movie it's over 30 years old and still looks incredible lol 8:40 they named that waterfall Jurassic Park Falls in Hawaii lol 10:27 the most iconic line of the movie "Welcome to Jurassic Park" 17:55 on the left monitor you can see another Steven Spielberg movie Jaws playing lol 20:40 great line lol 24:58 that's my favorite shot of the movie, where the flashlight goes into the T-Rexs eye and it dilates it's so good lol 30:18 great line lol 3826 that was the first day of shooting, blowing up Timmy lol 40:30 that's a real reaction from Laura and it's hard to believe she's only 23 in this lol 41:12 iconic line "Clever Girl" RIP Bob Peck 42:12 Ariana Richards is incredible in this movie, she's actually a professional painter now and you can get that shot from her website
@nebulousreactions
@nebulousreactions Ай бұрын
In case no one has answered this yet: for a long time it was theorized dinosaurs and other megafauna (love that word!) were able to get so large mostly because there was SO much more oxygen back then, but recent studies have shown this is probably not the case, so now they're thinking it's more likely a combination of factors rather than one specific reason, and some of those factors include: many of the largest species having hollow bones (like birds, as they mention in the movie), more efficient breathing systems (oxygen is necessary for rapid growth), and having especially rapid growth early in life relative to what we'd recognize. We don't know for sure why they got so big though.
@MadcapMatt
@MadcapMatt Ай бұрын
If you ever plan to get a really good surround sound system make sure this movie is one of the first things you watch with it. Some of the best sound design in a movie ever.
@CoastalNomad
@CoastalNomad Ай бұрын
Great Reaction...... "Who mows that Lawn"........ Cristy out here asking the important questions....... Everytime some one mentions using DNA to recreate a species, I calmly remind them of this franchise.......
@blakewalker84120
@blakewalker84120 Ай бұрын
39:00 "OMG, if you turn the power on it will electrocute everyone climbing it." That's no and no. "Electrocute" means death by electricity. This fence won't kill anybody. It's only half the voltage used in commercial tasers you can buy at stores that sell self-defense equipment, and they usually don't kill anybody who doesn't have a pacemaker. Also, unlike what you see in the movie, Timmy won't even get "shocked" (electricity that doesn't kill) because he is not grounded.
@willcool713
@willcool713 Ай бұрын
If you look at all the sizes of the Universe, from the size of the whole shebang all the way down to the tiniest indivisible bit of time-space, it turns out the middle size of all things is something under a meter, around the two foot scale. We're just a bit bigger than the middle size. It has been said before: Cats are wrong about being the center of the Universe, but they do live there.
@corymccarty8603
@corymccarty8603 Ай бұрын
Cristy. Pirate of the Caribbean was a ride at Disney World and Disney Land LONG before they made it into a movie. So while the Movie PotC came out after Jurassic Park, the ride was around for decades before the Jurassic Park Movie and that is why Malcom said "Yeah, but Pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the Pirate don't wat the tourists." Hammond compared his park having difficulty to when Disney parks first opened, they had a lot of problems early on, and Malcom was pointing out that when Disney had problems, their attractions didn't eat the tourists. When Jurassic Park "broke down" it had lethal consequences.. and while certainly people have died at Disney World it not common at all as apposed to having a predatory dinosaurs eating guests. Love you work, Girl. Cheers! PS. Thanks for the translation. I never knew the hispanic "Digger" was betting the lawyer would fall.
@nickcollins5191
@nickcollins5191 Ай бұрын
Interesting fact about the movie, Samuel L. Jackson was meant to record a death scene for his character. However, during production there was either a tropical storm or a hurricane (I can’t remember which), the beginning of which is supposedly the scene where the waves are crashing down on the beach/rock/pier in the film. Anyway, this storm damaged a bunch of the set which had to be repaired after the storm had passed at which point Jackson was no longer available to film his scene
@firestorm1088
@firestorm1088 Ай бұрын
Cristy: I love big things And cue the snickering. On a more serious note, part of the reason we think dinosaurs were big is bias in the evidence. There were plenty of smaller dinosaurs but we have more evidence of the big ones because bigger bones are more likely to fossilize. Another interesting thing most people don’t think about is that whales are actually bigger than anything that lived in the dinosaur times.
@trackatlas237
@trackatlas237 Ай бұрын
Only three Spielberg movies!?!? So many good ones. Watch more.
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