REACTING to *Jurassic Park (1993)* ABSOLUTELY AMAZING!! (First Time Watching) Classic Movies

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White Noise Reacts

White Noise Reacts

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 3 500
@whitenoisereacts
@whitenoisereacts Жыл бұрын
What is your favorite dinasaur?
@christineegan3665
@christineegan3665 Жыл бұрын
t rex
@ItsMr.L
@ItsMr.L Жыл бұрын
I'm more of a triceratops kinda guy
@Mist_Hashira_Muichiro
@Mist_Hashira_Muichiro Жыл бұрын
i like how smart the Raptors are
@IVNHYPRFNK
@IVNHYPRFNK Жыл бұрын
Rexxie
@tinahastie
@tinahastie Жыл бұрын
The velociraptors! 😂
@boyaintright3317
@boyaintright3317 Жыл бұрын
It's hard to overstate the actual impact this had on pop culture at the time. It literally changed the audience expectation of blockbuster cinema going forward.
@2chaskell
@2chaskell Жыл бұрын
It also made millions of people think trex vision was actually based on movement lol
@LDk4816
@LDk4816 Жыл бұрын
@@2chaskellAnd that the dilophosaurus had the ability to spit poison (from the book) and had a neck frill.
@JeffKelly03
@JeffKelly03 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely right. This was the first movie I ever saw multiple times in the theater (I was 12 when it came out). Before then it just never occurred to me that I might wanna go see a movie multiple times.
@WULDORI
@WULDORI Жыл бұрын
Of course! It was one of the biggest breakthroughs in visual effects history! Before then, dinosaurs were made by stop motion puppets like in King Kong. CGI had never been used in that fashion before. Great Mouse detective used it for the bIg ben gears and T2 used it for the liquid metal scenes, but it was never used for textured skin detail. When we first saw the brachiosaurus lumber across the screen, we were in just as much awe as Grant in seeing a real life dinosaur for the first time…
@LDk4816
@LDk4816 Жыл бұрын
@@WULDORI Oh yes, I feel this. SO MUCH AWE. Heck, these effects hold up so well. Most of these scenes still give me a sense of awe. The scene with the gallamimus is my second favorite scene after that T-rex busting out and causing havoc.
@springplus300
@springplus300 11 ай бұрын
"Objects in mirror are closer than they appear" That might just be my favorite little detail of the entire movie
@musical_lolu4811
@musical_lolu4811 8 ай бұрын
I straight up laughed there amidst the fear😂
@wht-rabt-obj
@wht-rabt-obj Жыл бұрын
Notice how there’s absolutely no music during the Rex escape scene? None needed. Perfection.
@LarrySwishamane
@LarrySwishamane Жыл бұрын
watching her bend down snapping the last cable up favorite moment of cinematic history. Pun intended, the greatest one of all time. But, since the kids are around iAgree with ya "UTTER PERFECTION! best 7 minutes ever" but when they leave or go to bed....iWish they establish more context to more georgraphy about paddock & the empty moat. but iCant believe spielberg or ILM left those mistakes in there. 💔 1. Consistency about the car door 2. The stage light not only being shot in the background. Buts actually on. 3. the string pulling the jeep over
@LudusAurea
@LudusAurea 11 ай бұрын
There's literally non-stop music in the T rex chase scene unless you mean the visitor center scene.
@sagesaria
@sagesaria 10 ай бұрын
@@LudusAurea They mean when she first escapes. The "where's the goat" part. It's kind of funny because between Jurassic Park and the first Star Wars, there are two movies with soundtracks composed by John Williams, and the most tense scenes are the ones where none of his music is involved lol
@Unethical.Dodgson
@Unethical.Dodgson 7 ай бұрын
T-Rex escaping the fence and attacking the Car: No music. Just suspense. T-Rex returning to attack the gas jeep: No music at first, buildup with a very small amount of suspenseful music, and then the chase itself with the score going crazy. T-Rex attacks Gallimimus: No score. Just the actions speaking for itself. T-Rex attacks Raptors in Visitor Centre: Triumphant music as the Rex saves our heroes from the threat that was built up over the course of the whole movie. Every moment made perfect use of score. There either had to be a score to invoke emotion or none, to provoke a sense of awe.
@LarrySwishamane
@LarrySwishamane 7 ай бұрын
you ever notice the jeep door or the stage light in the background? @@Unethical.Dodgson
@FreakDaMIghet
@FreakDaMIghet Жыл бұрын
I like how, if you pay attention, you can track the T-Rex's movement across the island from her first appearance until the end. I especially enjoy the detail of, when Grant pranks the kids and yells out, the Rex hears him and starts heading in their direction. She then follows them all the way back to the Visitor's Center, arriving just in time to "save" them from the raptors.
@TheRumChum
@TheRumChum Жыл бұрын
fuck thats cool
@virgoleo81
@virgoleo81 Жыл бұрын
Kinda funny how Rexy actually saves people more often than she eats them.
@Sadpotatoirl2010
@Sadpotatoirl2010 Жыл бұрын
omg that's dope and quite scary, Lol
@finstrike7
@finstrike7 Жыл бұрын
@@virgoleo81she’s the reluctant heroine.
@averagenoah
@averagenoah Жыл бұрын
I’ve actually always understood how the T. rex snuck in. The ra 51:58 pr were stalking them, shrieking at them. I wouldn’t notice a monster truck.
@CenturyHomeProject
@CenturyHomeProject Жыл бұрын
I remember seeing this movie on opening night. The theater was completely packed. The scene where the velociraptor jumps up after the young girl that’s falling through the ceiling was hilarious! Every person in the theater screamed at the same time and literally took their feet up off the theater floor at the same time! everybody was rolling with laughter at the side of what happened! 😂
@minty_Joe
@minty_Joe 10 ай бұрын
I remember seeing this opening night too. It was at an IMAX theater and it was sold out tickets. It...was...LOUD! The place just shook when the T-Rex roared! It was awesome!! There's nothing like watching a new classic movie on a HUGE screen; bigger than your conventional theater sized screens.
@kristinkirschenmann1163
@kristinkirschenmann1163 7 ай бұрын
@@minty_JoeI was 7 when this came out so I didn’t see it until my parents bought the VHS (I absolutely hid behind the couch for the raptors) When I was in college it was going to be rereleased on IMAX in Valencia. car-fulls of us drove 2 hours to see it. It was PACKED and yes, the T-Rex roar did indeed shake the theater sooo good! 😅 We went back there to see Jurassic World when it just for the nostalgia. The T-Rex roar at the end of that got all kinds of clapping, cheering. Growing up with this movie and the WAVE of dinosaur mania it created was so so cool.
@DavidWright1138
@DavidWright1138 Жыл бұрын
Stella's - I guess it was a 4th wall break - stare into the camera when someone said "unless they can open doors" killed me.
@humbertoquadros9384
@humbertoquadros9384 Жыл бұрын
That was perfect
@tiananesbitt7156
@tiananesbitt7156 Жыл бұрын
That’s the first time I heard Pirates of the Caribbean referenced.
@alexbastos6960
@alexbastos6960 Жыл бұрын
As a 40-year-old who saw it in theaters as a kid, it's an absolute delight seeing you, young people, watch this *cinematic masterpiece* for the first time. Great video. Keep it up. Love from Brazil. ❤
@maylapaty
@maylapaty Жыл бұрын
Eu tenho 44 e vi no cinema também. Eu tive pesadelos com velociraptores desde então. Só depois que eu assisti Jurassic World, que eu vi um velociraptor "amigável", eu parei de ter pesadelos. Acredita nisso?
@amazing-robert-g
@amazing-robert-g Жыл бұрын
I`m 42 years old. I saw the film on my vacation in LA. For the second time, the film came out a few months later in my home country germany. Es war fantastisch!
@trueseattleite6958
@trueseattleite6958 11 ай бұрын
Omg, I'm 4 years older than you and remember being absolutely terrified watching this movie in theaters at the age of 13/14! I couldn't begin to imagine watching this movie at 9/10 years old like you did! I would've been traumatized! 😳 That soundtrack though was off the chain and still makes the movie that much more amazing!
@logan4005
@logan4005 Жыл бұрын
Not sure if anyone has mentioned this but Tim, the little boy, is still an actor and he played John Deacon (Guitarist in the band Queen) in Bohemian Rhapsody. And he did an amazing job.
@darcybrummett7004
@darcybrummett7004 8 ай бұрын
Really? Cool! Queen is my favorite band from back then.
@CatInaHat-cr6we
@CatInaHat-cr6we 7 ай бұрын
The actors name is Joe Mazzello, he’s literally one of my absolute favorite actors out there.
@mikearmstrong8483
@mikearmstrong8483 3 ай бұрын
Ironically in the context of this thread, Brian May, lead guitarist for Queen, ended up becoming a scientist. Although an astronomer, not a paleontologist.
@jeffleonard343
@jeffleonard343 3 ай бұрын
He also stars in the series The Pacific!
@joshuaedler7041
@joshuaedler7041 Ай бұрын
He also played Eugene sledge a marine during the pacific theatre in ww2 (the pacific hbo series)
@EChacon
@EChacon Жыл бұрын
This film is hands-down a benchmark in Hollywood Blockbusters and one of Steven Spielberg’s greatest films ever. It’s crazy to think that’s it’s been over 30 years since this film came out in theaters and the visuals effects from Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and the Animatronic dinosaurs by Stan Winston still hold up 3 decades later and to think when this came out it remained one of the highest grossing films until James Cameron’s Titanic took that spot 4 years later. Thank you for the fun reaction you guys and big congrats for your first reaction video reaching to 200k views in less than two months.
@lisaboiciuc9754
@lisaboiciuc9754 11 ай бұрын
This is because, everything was handmade, and they changes the location 15 times, and the rain was also real on this island.. was a lot of work..
@wikusclass77
@wikusclass77 9 ай бұрын
Phil Tippett, Dennis Muren, Michael Lantieri, the team behing who made all work on dinos movements and animations and animatronics. ;)
@iamburko
@iamburko Жыл бұрын
I still get tears in my eyes when you see the first dinosaur. That John Williams score goes hard.
@bethyoshida6715
@bethyoshida6715 Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park actually came out the day my big brother passed, I was 10, he was 12. I saw this movie 8 times over that summer and it really helped me cope because I could get my head out of the real world and into a fantasy. It still helps me on hard days.
@LarrySwishamane
@LarrySwishamane 7 ай бұрын
😭💔 my codolenses. iGotta s/o to him because this movie. this my favor film ever knowing its direct line keeping yall closest person to "you" to you & sustaining his legacy. makes it that much better RIP but 12? thats cruel putting your family thru hell like that. what happened?
@jp9095
@jp9095 8 ай бұрын
Fun Fact- The full-size animatronic T-Rex had a rather amusing issue. It's "skin" soaked up water like a sponge, so in the rainy scene after a few minutes the extra weight of the water threw off balance of the mechanisms inside it's body and it would stop working. The crew had to beat it with towels to get the water out so they could film again.
@sarahkwast1250
@sarahkwast1250 3 ай бұрын
It caused other issues as well. The scene when the Rex pushed in the moonroof was NOT planned. The water screwed up the controls making it push harder and farther than planned. The terror on the kids' faces was absolutely real, they were TERRIFIED!
@praxton
@praxton Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park was mostly a groundbreaking film in regards to CGI moreso than practical effects which were still quite impressive. It was the standard for CGI for nearly a decade when LOTR trilogy and Weta took up the mantle.
@chrisleebowers
@chrisleebowers Жыл бұрын
Six minutes. There's only six minutes of CGI. There's only twelve minutes of dinosaurs. This movie is a master class in building suspense because it's like two hours of humans talking about dinos and running from dinos but only a couple minutes of actual dinos Spielberg figured all this out on "Jaws" because the robot shark wouldn't work and he had to figure out how to make it scary when you couldn't see it.
@mckenzie.latham91
@mckenzie.latham91 Жыл бұрын
The use of both practical effects along with CGI made it work, the practical effects allowed something for the CG to improve upon by having a real thing to move and graft the CGI onto which made it look and feel more real.
@Cangaca777
@Cangaca777 Жыл бұрын
This is the perfect example of using CGI to the serve the movie, not the other way around.
@Timmayytoo
@Timmayytoo Жыл бұрын
@@Cangaca777 This is such an overused and inaccurate statement - many, many films made today use CGI to serve the film but you don't notice it because it's totally seamless.
@Skye_Writer
@Skye_Writer Жыл бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/laPPo2aCr9ukpck In fact, most of the effects in Jurassic Park are not CGI at all.
@jeremycovelli
@jeremycovelli Жыл бұрын
The voltage is missleading, it's actually the amps that matter. The fence would have a much higher amperage than a taser. Also.. great reaction!
@whitenoisereacts
@whitenoisereacts Жыл бұрын
Ohhhhh ok!
@heavycritic9554
@heavycritic9554 Жыл бұрын
Exactly. A taser is at about 3-5 milliamps, and even an average electric fence is at something like 100 milliamps. It's probable that the fences at Jurassic Park would be significantly higher than that.
@chriscowey7464
@chriscowey7464 Жыл бұрын
I missed you reply and said the same thing. :)
@trulybtd5396
@trulybtd5396 Жыл бұрын
Voltage hurts, amperage kills you. And unless you have the best power chain in the world doing inductive buffering (sorry English is not my first language) Amperage is a direct function of Voltage.
@vct454
@vct454 Жыл бұрын
I'd also like to point out how amazing Samuel L. Jackson is in this movie. He's only on the screen for like 3 minutes and has like 10 lines but they got their money's worth. The part where he tries to turn the power on and it doesn't work and he just goes "uhhhhh" is so perfect.
@rnw2739
@rnw2739 Жыл бұрын
And he certainly git his moneys worth with that pack of fags.... smoking everyone down to the filter.
@jp3813
@jp3813 Жыл бұрын
The audience didn't really care about Samuel until Pulp Fiction.
@jhuisenga6022
@jhuisenga6022 Жыл бұрын
To this day my go to phrase is "hold on to your butts" 😅
@findalin4857
@findalin4857 Жыл бұрын
book arnold and muldoon woulda impressed you even more, they had so much more to do in the novel, such a shame bob peck and samuel l jackson didnt get to play the full potential of their characters
@JustKelso1993
@JustKelso1993 Жыл бұрын
First movie I ever saw him in as a kid, "hold on to your butts" came way before "say what again" for me😂
@mattholland8966
@mattholland8966 Жыл бұрын
Let me compliment you on this reaction. You didn't over chatter during the scenes. You reacted to what you saw, jump scares, and all. You saved the more in-depth analysis for after. And the volume of the film you were watching was loud enough so we could follow along. You did great with this. Thank you.
@martinishot
@martinishot Жыл бұрын
Your did not chatter compliment has one gigantic exception. "But your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could they didn't stop to think if they should" we never got to hear anybody there react to one of the best lines in the entire movie. Because of chattering that went on for far too long.
@hazeltifiaeh6196
@hazeltifiaeh6196 Жыл бұрын
@@martinishot It's probably in the full version on their Patron.
@martinishot
@martinishot Жыл бұрын
@@hazeltifiaeh6196 no it was heard and seen right here in this version they simply continue talking through it.
@kirAthshiAue
@kirAthshiAue Жыл бұрын
They missed a lot of important lines.
@ariochiv
@ariochiv 10 ай бұрын
There were a lot of traumatized children in the theater when it first aired. Parents assumed because of the dinosaurs that it was a family-friendly movie, but not so much...
@brianscotpatterson2101
@brianscotpatterson2101 Жыл бұрын
Before the movie was released, Universal Studios Hollywood started building the Jurassic Park River Adventure. Universal knew Jurassic Park would be a hit. Dinomania was in pop culture in the 1990's. Gene-sequencing was on the fore-front of biological technology. And the film is a masterpiece in balancing: "Scientifically, we can now do this", "Ethically, should we do this", and "Capitalistically, can we make money off it."
@TwilightLink77
@TwilightLink77 Жыл бұрын
I don’t think it was being built yet because the Studio Tour was still happening around that area at the time, and the ride didn’t open till 1996.
@fliodhas79
@fliodhas79 Жыл бұрын
This is hands down one of the best movies EVER.
@LarrySwishamane
@LarrySwishamane Жыл бұрын
true story
@c.a.norwood34
@c.a.norwood34 9 ай бұрын
When I saw it in the theater as a teen in 1993, we honestly had no idea what we were going into. The last major dinosaur movie was The Land Before Time, and there were almost no spoilers in trailers, etc. People honestly thought it was probably a kids’ movie…and brought their toddlers and elementary-aged kids to this. There was definitely screaming and crying in the theater. When Grant saw the dinosaurs for the first time, we ALL had the exact same reaction. Watching the raptors jump up on the kitchen counters at the end was horrifying. The images were unlike anything we’d seen before; the next time we had that experience was about 5 or 6 years later with The Matrix. But ugh, hearing it called a “classic movie”! 😂
@boybye7986
@boybye7986 Жыл бұрын
The book is a straight up horror, Steven made the film Disneyland compared to Michael's book, the dinosaurs are so much more creepy and scary in the book, the deaths are more terrifying in the book, they need to make a series using the book version, but I think to get a full taste of the scense of lurking danger, I highly recommend you read the book
@RockTheBass
@RockTheBass 11 ай бұрын
For me, the movie was scary, but the book was downright traumatizing.
@zacharyjoy8724
@zacharyjoy8724 9 ай бұрын
I won’t go into details, because I’m still desperately trying to repress it, years later (and failing), but there’s one especially bad scene in the book. It involves a nursery.
@SSD_Penumbra
@SSD_Penumbra 9 ай бұрын
@@zacharyjoy8724 Also, one of the coolest parts. It involves Muldoon, who survives, the t-rex and a rocket launcher.
@leeauld4216
@leeauld4216 5 ай бұрын
Wasn't it true that there was a bidding war for the rights to this movie between Speilberg and James Cameron, who was just edged out in the end by Speilberg. Cameron was planing a version that was to stick alot closer to the book and be a strait up horror movie that was very dark, graphic, gory and violent.
@d.j.8059
@d.j.8059 10 ай бұрын
Both the novel AND the movie are excellent. The novel is actually much darker and the characters on the whole are less likeable (also, more of them die) than in the movie. The adapters of the screenplay did an EXCELLENT job removing a lot of the cynicism, lightening up some of the characters and turning it into a (still-scary) summer thrill ride of an action film! A more "true to the novel" movie, I believe, would have turned off kids and not done nearly as well. Side note: I saw this movie in the theater in my early teens and had a huge crush on Ariana Richards, who plays Lex here and is also in the film "Angus".
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 Жыл бұрын
YES!!! MY #1 FAVORITE MOVIE OF ALL TIME! Before Steven Spielberg was picked to direct the project, James Cameron, Richard Donner, Tim Burton and Joe Dante were considered. Cameron was going to direct the project as a Sci Fi Horror Thriller film, but Spielberg got the rights to the novel. He even said in an interview during the films 25th Anniversary that "he wasn't the right person for the job and that his version would have been too dark and scary for kids." Before Sam Neill was cast as Alan Grant, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Tim Robbins, Harrison Ford, Kevin Costner, Michael Douglas, Tom Hanks, Sam Shepard, Pierce Brosnan, Richard Dreyfuss, William Hurt, Michael Biehn, Tom Selleck, Mel Gibson, Dennis Quaid, Jeff Bridges, Nick Nolte, Kurt Russell, Tom Sizemore, Robin Williams and Dylan McDermott were considered. Before Laura Dern was cast as Ellie Satler, Kelly McGillis, Julia Roberts, Amanda Plummer, Joan Cusack, Debra Winger, Claire Danes, Gwyneth Paltrow, Julianne Moore, Teri Hatcher, Elizabeth Hurley, Ally Sheedy Geena Davis Michelle Pfeiffer Meg Ryan, Sarah Jessica Parker, Christina Applegate, Nicole Kidman, Melanie Griffith, Sigourney Weaver, Robin Wright, Kyra Sedgwick, Uma Thurman, Juliette Binoche, Sandra Bullock, Sherilyn Fenn, Heather Graham, Lisa Rinna, Bridget Fonda, Laura Linney, Helen Hunt, Renee Zellweger, Kim Raver, Mariska Hargitay, Juliette Lewis, Genevieve Bujold, and Kim Basinger were considered Before Jeff Goldblum was cast as Ian Malcolm, Johnny Depp, Jim Carrey, Michael Keaton, Bruce Campbell, Steve Guttenberg, Ted Danson, and Michael J. Fox were considered. Before Richard Attenborough was cast as John Hammond, Clint Eastwood, Sean Connery, Paul Newman, Ian Bannen, Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, and Jon Pertwee were considered. Brian Cox, Bob Hoskins, Jeffrey Jones, and Geoffrey Rush were considered for Robert Muldoon. The film won 3 Oscars: Best Visual Effects Best Soun Editing Best Sound Mixing. It made $1 billion dollars at the box office (2008 re release) against a $65 million dollar budget. Now it's made $1.8 billion dollars today. Its the best Sci-fi Action Adventure film ever made.
@doctor-aesthetic
@doctor-aesthetic Жыл бұрын
Claire Danes would have been 13 when this movie came out, so I gotta question your sources on the casting alternatives there... Was she maybe in talks for Lex?
@shainewhite2781
@shainewhite2781 Жыл бұрын
@@doctor-aesthetic Yes she was. Christina Ricci was even considered for the role.
@eyezaropin
@eyezaropin Жыл бұрын
@@doctor-aesthetic And question them you should, because the majority of those "fun facts" are not facts at all, just a bunch of names and gibberish. I've seen almost identical comments like this one (from different usernames) on other reaction channels and not always for the same movie either, it's kinda weird honestly.
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Жыл бұрын
@@doctor-aesthetic Don't believe a lot of the things this guy said about this movie. A lot of it is wrong.
@scottb3034
@scottb3034 Жыл бұрын
@@eyezaropin This is the only thing this guy puts. He goes onto every JP reaction and spreads these fallacies. I've tried to head them off a few times and he never bothers to address it when i call him out on it. I was convinced he was a bot until he posted the reply to Jen.
@walther007
@walther007 Жыл бұрын
It's amazing how the movie holds up after all this time. Fantastic film and as you can imagine, people were floored when it came out.
@martinbraun1211
@martinbraun1211 Жыл бұрын
I've seen all the "Jurassic" films in the cinema. I was 14 when I saw the first part in 1993. What an experience!
@scottalynch
@scottalynch Жыл бұрын
This was huge! I worked in the cinema in 1993.
@MoreJoy79
@MoreJoy79 Жыл бұрын
I was the same age. It was the MOST AMAZING film in terms of special fx and the theater experience was awe inspiring
@SevenEllen
@SevenEllen Жыл бұрын
I saw it when I was nine, and it fascinated and terrified me. I remember having my hands over my ears when T-Rex broke out and roared but I couldn't stop watching.
@thehonestreviewer7754
@thehonestreviewer7754 Жыл бұрын
When Covid mandates were slowly lifting where movie theaters were opening back up they were only able to show old movies, and Jurassic Park was the one I saw then the most. Seeing people startled over the raptor scenes made my day.
@mckenzie.latham91
@mckenzie.latham91 Жыл бұрын
I was too young to see the original film in theatre, but when they re released t in theaters in 3d I saw it four times in theatre, i loved it and the experience so much. Seeing that opening scene in the Imax and theatre setting for the first time, blew me away.
@sonjathemango
@sonjathemango Жыл бұрын
I'm already excited to see you watch the rest of the movies! it's such an amazing series. also, if you're looking for another Jeff goldblum movie, one of my favorites is independence day
@amouramarie
@amouramarie Жыл бұрын
Oh my God... ID4 is from 1996. I am not okay with the passage of time. Another good spectacle movie from that era is Deep Impact. (imo, way better than the other big meteor movie, Armageddon. ;)
@tjjordan4207
@tjjordan4207 Жыл бұрын
This movie was revolutionary back in 1993 and throughout the 90s (and still is to this day). The special and physical effects still hold up (with some exceptions), and no movie has ever been able to replicate this film since its release, not even the sequels. And it just dawned on me that Jurassic Park released just 30 years ago. This was the first film where I got interested in the "behind the scenes" material when I bought the 'Jurassic Park - Adventure Pack' on DVD back in 2005, which contained some really cool stuff to learn about in the making of the trilogy (back when it was just 3 films). Watching the "Making of Jurassic Park" really opened my eyes to the process of what it took to make these films and the dedication and got me interested in seeing what it took to make all of this happen.
@anthonyminimum
@anthonyminimum 3 ай бұрын
“What they got in there, King Kong?” A classic line from the movie!
@airora_aerial
@airora_aerial Жыл бұрын
Kauai, Hawaii is where the island was filmed. I visited there last year and got to see the waterfall and did a helicopter tour. It is an absolutely stunning place (but very expensive).
@Hakuofthewatertribe
@Hakuofthewatertribe 4 ай бұрын
Just the waterfall and raptor paddock was filmed on that island
@thomasrodgers2291
@thomasrodgers2291 Жыл бұрын
Girl on the left was correct, electric fences send a small shock to animals to teach them not to approach or touch, they're not meant to incapacitate like a taser is. Also, voltage does have a bearing on the effectiveness of electric items, but it's the amperage that really matters. You can have a million volts running through that fence, but if the amperage is low or not existent, wouldn't even matter... Also, as for Nedry shutting down the security systems on the island, it was meant to cover his tracks. He would leave last minute on the boat for the mainland, those still on the island would be left with no means of comms and with his hope, to be killed off by the dinosaurs.
@pedropassamani
@pedropassamani 6 ай бұрын
Nedry planned on coming back, actually. His plan was to shut down the security systems so he could get to the embryos (and cover his tracks, yes), deliver them to his contact (the guy he speaks with on that Vidnet phone) at the East Dock and then come back to the Visitors Center. He would then turn everything back on and play dumb. The 18 minute window was the amount of time he calculated as needed to deliver the embryos and come back before anyone noticed he was gone. If his plan was to just kill everyone he would've turned off the Raptor fences as well.
@thomasrodgers2291
@thomasrodgers2291 6 ай бұрын
@@pedropassamani - He did turn off the raptor fences, this was mentioned by Muldoon when they realized the raptors had escaped. His 18 min was the time it would take him to just get to the east dock, which is why he says that if he pushes it he could be there in 15. He had no intent on coming back, Nedry was not a dumb man, he would not turn the fences off with the idea of hopefully getting back before the dinos escaped, thus putting his own life in danger. If he merely wanted to deceive, and it would take him only 18 min to get to the dock and back, he could have done that all in the time he would claim a lunch break. No, Nedry definitely intended for the dinos to kill the remaining people on the island and the cover up was to protect him when InGen investigated after the fact. Nedry was selfish, cowardly, but very intelligent...
@pedropassamani
@pedropassamani 6 ай бұрын
​@@thomasrodgers2291 It's not as fleshed out in the movie, I'll give you that, but it's clearly stated in the novel, by Nedry himself, that the plan was always to come back. 18 to 20 minutes (15, at minimum) to turn off the security systems, steal the embryos, get them to his contact at the East Dock and then drive back to the Control Room to turn everything back on before anyone noticed he had been gone. He was very confident his plan was going to succeed, as he had planned everything to the last detail. What he didn't know was that a tropical storm was going to ruin everything. As for the raptor fences, no, he didn't turn them off. After the "fences are failling all over the park" scene, Muldoon asks Mr. Arnold if the raptor fences are out, to which he replies "No, they're still on". Hammond even asks "Why the hell would he turn the others off?". It wasn't until they shut down the whole system, later in the movie, that the raptor fences actually went out. Nedry never planned to kill anyone, and leaving on the boat would make no sense to his plan as that would've raised a lot of suspicion on him when the staff eventually found out some embryos were missing (Nedry was part of park's skeleton crew, after all, so he wasn't supposed to leave that day). By coming back and fixing everything, he could defer the blame to any other employee who left on the boat that day, as InGen wouldn't have had any means (CCTV footage, keycard access logs, motion tracking data and so on) to hold him accountable for.
@thomasrodgers2291
@thomasrodgers2291 6 ай бұрын
@@pedropassamani - Ya, I get that the novel had this intended, but the movie script differed quite a bit and I personally don't believe it was his intent to come back in the movie. The 18 min was nowhere near enough time to make the trek to the docks and back, especially with the storm which was already in full effect by the time he began making his way to the ship. As for Muldoon, he clearly states when seeing the raptors had escaped their paddock that the system must have shut down all of the fences. I believe that early in the event, when Arnold checked the raptor fences status, it was most likely a delay, either in the system readings or a delay with the fences shutting off, but they definitely were shut off in the film. As for Nedry being discovered, there is a good chance it might not have happened. All non essential personnel were evacuated from the island and while he would be essential, it's easy to come up with a story about why he had to leave and was on the boat. As for the missing embryos, it would be a while, if ever, that they would have discovered them to be gone. Remember, the island would be filled with lose dinosaurs after this incident, it would be hard to conduct a full investigation quickly under the circumstances.
@ScarlettM
@ScarlettM Жыл бұрын
4:29 - that was said by a kid who never had a turkey going after him. They are aggressive birds and fearless at 4 feet; so a 6 foot turkey would really mess you up. A rooster doesn't reach your kneecaps, but they can send most people feeling from their beak and spears.
@ninjcrafts
@ninjcrafts Жыл бұрын
I hope you do Jurassic World. People have their opinions on reboots, but honestly it's just a fun watch that you can build your own opinions on
@thomasdavis5675
@thomasdavis5675 Жыл бұрын
Ok Jurassic world was not a reboot of this it is a sequel or else Dr Ian Malcolm Alan grant and Laura dern would not have made an appearance as their original characters and I'm among those that don't get into the Jurassic world movies mainly because of their idea to make a dino that never existed with the indominus and that turned me off from that part of the series
@RedRoseSeptember22
@RedRoseSeptember22 Жыл бұрын
It's not really a reboot, it's a continuation!!!
@Nick-pu3of
@Nick-pu3of Жыл бұрын
Not a reboot. There's literally ruins of the first park in the film!
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Жыл бұрын
@@thomasdavis5675 it was both, a sequel and reboot
@thomasdavis5675
@thomasdavis5675 Жыл бұрын
@@nsasupporter7557 no it wasn't it is either a sequel or a reboot in the case of these movies due to the inclusion of grant sattler and Malcolm with the original stars that played them plus there are the ruins of the old park shown in the movie
@Fonny222
@Fonny222 Жыл бұрын
I read the books recently and I definitely recommend them. They are different enough to not be spoiled if you saw the movies first and give you more backstory.
@jenellienostrabo
@jenellienostrabo Жыл бұрын
Micheal Crichton is an amazing thriller/sci fi author. If you liked it I recommend: Prey. He also wrote West World.
@rachelhughes8487
@rachelhughes8487 Жыл бұрын
@@jenellienostrabo My favorite of his is the Andromeda Strain.
@oneopinion6806
@oneopinion6806 Жыл бұрын
I was 12 or 13 when the movie came out in theaters I had already read the book a year prior and was excited to see it even if it was a little bit intense but I thought since I had read it before I should be able to handle it. This movie was the 1st experience I had and finding out that a script does not need to match the source material. There are people that make it in the movie that don't in the book there are people that die in the book that are alive in the movie. Those changes ended up having this movie scare the pants off me on that 1st watch. Still an excellent cinematic experience! I will add that there was information that came out on dinosaurs after the movie discounted some of the things that they said about the T. Rex but a movie is going to movie. On the positive side the movie dealt with the scale and scope of what the T. Rex should be better than the book there's action beats in the book that wouldn't make sense unless the T. Rex was significantly larger.
@rhast57
@rhast57 Жыл бұрын
Sphere is my fav after Jurassic Park. The first time I read Sphere was amazing. I was on the edge of my steat till the last page. I actually had to count the pages. There were 6 left, and I had no idea how they could finish the story in 6 pages. Fantastic book. Fantastic movie.
@Fonny222
@Fonny222 Жыл бұрын
@@rhast57 I haven’t read that one yet. But every one of his books I’ve read even ones I wasn’t necessarily a fan of I’m constantly going “ok one more chapter.”
@shirw
@shirw Жыл бұрын
My husband and I always quote, "I'm fairly alarmed here." 😂 This is such a great movie!Saw it in the theater in college at the dollar movie!
@donp1964
@donp1964 8 ай бұрын
Jurassic Park was written by Dr. Michael Crichton MD who was well recognized for the amount of scientific detail he put into his stories. Aside from Jurassic Park, some of his other famous works are “Coma”, “West World”, “Runaway”, “Rising Sun”, “Sphere”, “Twister”, “13th Warrior (Eaters of the Dead), “Looker”, “Congo”, and my personal favorite,” The Andromeda Strain”. These are just a few of his books, and the ones listed here have been made into major movies.
@ImmortalCrow1821
@ImmortalCrow1821 Жыл бұрын
Another fun fact: during the course of filming an actual Hurricane hit their location and they filmed it for the storm scenes in the movie.
@TheAmocca
@TheAmocca Жыл бұрын
I saw this in theaters as a teenager. It was seriously amazing. That T-rex roar in surround sound - jesus!
@HirXeBomb
@HirXeBomb 8 ай бұрын
It's a masterpiece in every form. I still remember kids watching this movie in the cinema and had nightmares for weeks going to the toilet. 🤣 The Lost World in my opinion is a good sequel but the rest of movies afterwards unfortunately never could capture the vision that Steven Spielberg showed.
@mryoungandbrave1
@mryoungandbrave1 Жыл бұрын
The fact it took 30 years until anyone noticed that the T-rex comes though the fence on solid ground, only for Alan to go through at the same spot and have to scale a sheer cliff, is a testament to how good this film is, and how good of a filmmaker Steven Spielberg is.
@LarrySwishamane
@LarrySwishamane Жыл бұрын
no...wrong! its like the biggest plot "hole" of the movie. But, it took me 29 yrs to recall the hammond had w/ the gennaro in the jeep. Whats a bigger "plot" hole than an empty moat? And not sure if 48 hours had the same interpretation back then that it does now, but he's never was gonna get that apology, was he?
@mistermeanial1690
@mistermeanial1690 Жыл бұрын
I noticed it the first time I saw it in the theater on opening day. To my credit, I had the nit pickers guide to the galaxy, so I was in the habit of looking for things like this
@Imaculata
@Imaculata Жыл бұрын
People keep bringing that up, and they are wrong. Grant doesn't go through the same place the T-tex came in. The T-rex enters near Grants car, then walks to the car of the kids, and pushes that car over the edge. The moat is to the left of where the T-rex entered. People misunderstand the layout of the paddock, but if you look at production drawings of the set, there is no plot hole here at all. It makes perfect sense.
@vct454
@vct454 Жыл бұрын
I've had the same thought, it's just such a good movie that I think everyone that noticed just didn't care.
@mistermeanial1690
@mistermeanial1690 Жыл бұрын
@@vct454 I agree. I saw it in the theater 5 times. It just wasn’t a movie breaking moment for me
@Unusual_Farmer
@Unusual_Farmer Жыл бұрын
If any of y'all like to read, the book is pretty good. It goes more in-depth with the science and explains some of the things that you had questions about. Plus, like anything else, there are lots of extra scenes in the book that got left out of the movie. I like the book because it expands on the science involved here, and there are various charts and graphs that are extremely helpful to get an idea of the grand scope of things. There are small bits of the book that appear in the 2nd and 3rd movies as well.
@Chilipotamus
@Chilipotamus Жыл бұрын
The scenes in the book when they recalibrate the trackers all around the island and the real numbers start rolling in is soooo good, I'm really bummed they cut that from the theatrical script.
@Slaptastic1
@Slaptastic1 Жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly, in the book, Nedry doesn’t get killed in his jeep. The dinosaur rips his intestines out, picks him up by the head and snaps his neck.
@testfire3000
@testfire3000 10 ай бұрын
Favorite reaction moment at 33:35. The dinosaur goes into attack mode and Stella absolutely lights up with glee. 🤣 This movie was tons of fun on the big screen. I think the part that sticks with me the most was when the T-Rex busted through the roof the the car, and the two kids were holding up the clear plastic roof with just their hands and feet. That part was truly terrifying when my wife and I first saw it.
@StudioMod
@StudioMod Жыл бұрын
"Deus Rex Machina" is officially the best thing I've ever heard. Brilliant off-the-cuff joke.
@BeamKnight
@BeamKnight Жыл бұрын
Dr. Grant loves kids in Michael Crichton's original novel. It is written that there is no way for him to hate those children who remember every long complicated name of dinosaurs.
@user-kt3zv1cm5j
@user-kt3zv1cm5j 4 ай бұрын
Of all the absolutely perfect things about this film, one of my favourites is that the T-rex feels like a real animal exploring new surroundings and objects. She's having the time of her life! Playing with the tyres, shoving the jeep off the cliff - that headbash to the moving jeep especially is just so realistic to me, like she doesn't really know how to hunt because she never learned, and even if she had she wouldn't know how to hunt a jeep, and she also literally just ate (rip goat and genarro) so she's more invested in just playing with it and working out what it is.
@Ryou_Sensei
@Ryou_Sensei Жыл бұрын
I always loved that Tim wears the same outfit as Alan but slightly different. Alan has a red bandana while Tim has a blue one, Tim is wearing his lighter blue shirt open while Alan's is darker blue and buttoned up, and Alan is in grey pants while Tim is in shorts of the same color. Also, ive seen many first time reaction videos to JP1, and man, a lot of them kept mistaking Hammond being Nedry's father because of that "Thanks dad" comment. But like, no, it's clearly a sarcastic quip because Hammond was lecturing him
@ObserverAmanda
@ObserverAmanda Жыл бұрын
I have fond memories because this is the first film I ever saw at a drive-in. I was about 5 years old and loved it.
@jp3813
@jp3813 Жыл бұрын
40:00 The Velociraptors were still caged at that point. Hence, those aren't their eggs.
@mikeellis7359
@mikeellis7359 11 ай бұрын
All the little sub-plots had great setups and payoffs, like Lex's hacking skills coming into play, and Dr. Grant actually being great with kids.
@daddynanners3944
@daddynanners3944 10 ай бұрын
Want to note that Spielberg likes to “lighten up” movies based on books & another example Jaws. The book & the movie are different, but the awe this movie had when I saw it in theaters as a child is the only movie I’ve seen that I can say I remember my reaction for all the big scenes. Forgot to add when you all talked about them looking for more amber, this is 100% spot on. They touched on it in the book & it goes in detail just how the dinosaurs are made. The reason they changed sex & had babies in the wild is because of the amphibian dna & more specifically a type of frog that will change its sex if there’s too many of one sex in an area. Also the egg you see the raptor hatching from is plastic. They designed this to act exactly like an egg & then they inserted the embryo with crocodile yolk in the eggs.
@ace.squared.productions
@ace.squared.productions Жыл бұрын
This is my favourite movie ever. I grew up obsessed with dinosaurs, I used to make my granddad and my parents watch this movie so much. I know the entire script off by heart 😂 I cannot describe my love for this film, also the kitchen scene will always be iconic and is the reason why I love raptors!
@knightradiant
@knightradiant Жыл бұрын
It's the Brachiosaurus for me. Seeing that opening shot of the long neck as a kid was mesmerising 🥰
@rebel11201991
@rebel11201991 Жыл бұрын
I was the same way I went through so many copies of the vhs 🤣 my scene is when the Rex first gets out and roars the first time. I also love the end where the raptor looks both ways before coming out from under the tarp.
@ImmortalCrow1821
@ImmortalCrow1821 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact: Velociraptors bones are mostly found in Asia So grant finding one in Montana is pretty crazy. Not to mention a Velociraptor was in reality about the size of a turkey.
@MadailinBurnhope
@MadailinBurnhope 10 ай бұрын
"guys, it's a Deus Rex Machina" 😂
@christopherchesnajr1429
@christopherchesnajr1429 Жыл бұрын
Many years later and this movie still gives me goosebumps
@Pirelli913
@Pirelli913 4 ай бұрын
Michael Crichton (who started writing Jurassic Park in 1983 before it was published in 1990) wrote it as a cautionary tale of what happens when man messes with nature and tries to play god. He also wrote and directed Westworld in 1973 (which became an HBO series in 2016) and is also a cautionary tale about technology and AI. Point is, he was ahead of his time. Jurassic Park is my favorite novel of all-time (read it multiple times) and the film is my favorite movie of all-time (I was 10 when I saw it in theaters and still have my original VHS copy). Also, my top five favorite dinosaurs (and I will never not share this when someone asks) are: 5. Diplodocus 4. Styracosaurus 3. Allosaurus 2. Deinonychus 1. Ankylosaurus
@drewettgreen3688
@drewettgreen3688 Жыл бұрын
To be honest, I love all six movies, this one is probably the best but I enjoy all of them, I like the characters in old and new ones the same and I think all of them are worth the watch.
@nsasupporter7557
@nsasupporter7557 Жыл бұрын
Not me, this one is the best of course and will always be a classic. The Lost World was ok until the T-Rex was in the city, but they were all garbage after that.
@rebel11201991
@rebel11201991 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree this is definitely the best but the others are still all good movies
@saviomendes8268
@saviomendes8268 Жыл бұрын
At the time I thought the scene with the dinosaur devouring that man was very strong but I understood later why this scene was... it was supposed to say that the dinosaur wasn't kidding that the danger was real...but I was a little traumatized 😂 I saw this film at its premiere in 1993 😅
@TheDaringPastry1313
@TheDaringPastry1313 Жыл бұрын
10:40 The causal glance Stella gave to the screen because of what Nobu said knowing what was coming - I see you!
@mckenzie.latham91
@mckenzie.latham91 Жыл бұрын
Seeing that opening scene in a theatre for the first time, was beyond an amazing experience
@MissFlow
@MissFlow 7 ай бұрын
34:06 The book is even worse, believe me. Nedry's death got it's own chapter and is very excruciatingly detailed. SPOILERS FOR THE BOOK In the book Nedry meets the Dilophosaur, which is actually 10+ feet tall, yellow/black with a red crest on her head. Similair to the movie, Nedry flees back to his car and making the fatal mistake of turning around, she spits in his eyes. It blinds him. Losing his vision makes Nedry freak out and running/waving in all directions. He then gets gutted, holding his own colon in his hand. She then bites him in the head, lifting him up and this ends Nedry. There is much more different in the book than that:)
@underthetrees4780
@underthetrees4780 Жыл бұрын
I like how you mention how you don't see carnivorous dinosaurs in the first half of the movie, but it wasn't for budget, it's because of what Spielberg learned on Jaws. The shark animatroic was a massive failure so Spielberg built the suspense without his robot and used a similar technique on JP, by choice.
@1Katakana
@1Katakana Жыл бұрын
Whenever I catch it running on tv, I always watch to the t-rex escape scene if the movie hasn't gotten to that point yet. Also, I heard that the actress that plays the granddaughter was so convincing with her screaming during audition, members of the staff actually came into the room thinking something was wrong.
@supafun33
@supafun33 Жыл бұрын
Loved your reactions to this, I saw this in theaters when I was 5! It was such a foundational thing for my imagination and wonder, and my love of movies. This was only the third studio film to create moving creatures with CGI, the first to create living animals. They used animatronics for the dinosaurs when they aren't seen walking. It adds to the realism and the franchise became known for it. Also this is the first film to use CGI face replacement, when the kid Lex falls through the vent it was the stunt double who looked back up at the camera, and they replaced her face with the actress Arianna. The sequels have some terrific moments, but most fans would probably agree the original was the best. Steven Spielberg directed the first two films, with the third film being handed off to Joe Johnston the JV team that had worked alongside them in the first two. It wasn't well received and Universal spent the next decade trying to figure out what to do with the franchise. Eventually they handed the reigns to Colin Trevorrow for the next three films, the "World" trilogy, though JA Bayona directed number 5. The novel this was all based on was written by Michael Crichton, and it's much darker and full of scientific theory and philosophy.
@bidwell13
@bidwell13 Жыл бұрын
20:58 correct the electric fence is to train them to stay away from the fence. It’s inhumane for them to have voltage high enough to hurt them. PETA would be on them in a heartbeat. 51:09 I love how the T-Rex seems to be the king of the dinosaurs. It could’ve gone after the humans but it was more concerned with the other dinos. Maybe the T-Rex is more pure than the other dinos or it senses that the other dinos don’t belong.
@trinkab
@trinkab Жыл бұрын
I went to see this movie in theaters with a whole group of computer programmers and when the girl said " It's a UNIX system! I know this!" They all burst out laughing.
@evelynrosas665
@evelynrosas665 Жыл бұрын
I watched this movie at least once a week for the first ten years of my life. It’s one of my all time faves and watching you guys experience it for the first time brought me so much joy! This was great thank you! And yes you are correct. At the age of five my dream job was to be a paleontologist. And yes I am now going to school to become an archaeologist 😂
@Whitebrowpriest
@Whitebrowpriest Жыл бұрын
Well, I don't need to tell you guys how fortunate you are to live in a day and age with such amazing special effects as they have them now, especially the lot of what we've seen with the MCU. So can you imagine just how HUGE a movie like this was for us way back in 1993?! Also, because the special effects, although mostly practical effects, were masterful and way ahead of its time. In its original run, it grossed at least $978 Million worldwide.
@mj_SR22
@mj_SR22 Жыл бұрын
The book -- which is fantastic -- reads more like a techno-horror story. Absolutely like Alien. The movie covers perhaps 30% of what's in the book. It doesn't even hit all the main points. In the. book the raptors play a larger role as an ongoing threat, like how in Alien they're moving about the ship never knowing if they're safe or not. Fantastic read, highly recommend.
@christopherwall2121
@christopherwall2121 Жыл бұрын
It's basically _Westworld_ with dinosaurs. Same guy wrote both books, of course.
@MetaLatias5
@MetaLatias5 Жыл бұрын
This movie definitely made me want to become a Paleontologist, at about 5 years old I was really serious about it way back then too, learning as much as I could and stumping adults with my niche knowledge (and ability to pronounce all the names, etc pff) until I eventually got more into art/cartoons/animation
@WithTwoFlakes
@WithTwoFlakes Жыл бұрын
37:15 I'd clear forgotten "Objects in mirror are closer than they appear" Comedy Gold...
@chasingbirds3073
@chasingbirds3073 Жыл бұрын
This was filmed on Kauai in Hawaii. They take helicopter tours to the waterfall at the beginning of the movie.
@TarlaPrettyPaws
@TarlaPrettyPaws Жыл бұрын
The first movie did a great job of trying to stay true to the original material. There was a lot they couldn't fit in, though, and if you find the story fascinating I really recommend picking up the book. The illness the trike was suffering from, as well as the breeding on the park and possibility of escapees to the mainland, go into much more detail and you actually get answers. I saw this in theaters when I was 10 and both the movie and the book are something I can come back to a hundred times over and still enjoy today. The second book, Lost World, is equally good, but was not really used for any of the movies from then on, they are all much more studio stories. I think most people agree that 2 is okay, 3 is the worst in the series. I still think they're fun, though, and the newer ones aren't bad. Michael Crichton was an amazing author, I couldn't recommend his books enough. All of them. P.S. for a laugh: I saw this with my family. I was far too fascinated with what was going on to be afraid, but my mother was terrified. She didn't want me to see anyone get eaten, so she'd slap a hand over my eyes every time. Except, we are seeing it for the first time so she doesn't know when those scenes are going to happen. I remember her hand slapping over my eyes every time, but always just after someone got eaten lol.
@wesleypeters4112
@wesleypeters4112 Жыл бұрын
There something about that opening scene that never gets old. I get a bit emotional when I watch that part. The score by John Williams is perfect. The T-Rex escape scene is also a top favorite. Notice during that scene that it is just raw sounds, no music, just the sound of rain, snapping wires, and T-Rex sounds.
@sheldonlamey7010
@sheldonlamey7010 Жыл бұрын
They're certain movies that give one a sense of satisfaction J Park and Transformers for me. I want to thank White Noise reacts for introducing me to movie reactions. I transitioned from music reactions to movie reactions and you guys are the first. I think Blade was the first movie I searched. You guys are a good mix of natural and professional type of reactions you can tell you guys work in the entertainment industry....Now I watch like 15 different movie reactors because of you Thanks again I'll always stop by to see my first movie reactors👍🏾.
@jtphenom0811
@jtphenom0811 10 ай бұрын
That "deus rex machina" comment was GOLD!
@A_foranonymous
@A_foranonymous Жыл бұрын
This movie is my favourite Spielberg movie ever I always come back to rewatch this movie
@stevencraven4897
@stevencraven4897 7 ай бұрын
I really love that the rear view mirror has the notice/warning "Images in this mirror are nearer than they appear to be." It is too small to see on a TV or computer screen.
@kelg3793
@kelg3793 Жыл бұрын
I've read the book and seen the movie. I like both, but there are a lot of differences between the two.
@antpal319
@antpal319 Жыл бұрын
Taser initially generates around 50,000 volts of electricity, mainly to allow the wires to pass through the air and through clothing. Once it makes contact with somebody, it drops to 1,500 volts delivered in extremely short pulses.
@scottalynch
@scottalynch Жыл бұрын
Spielberg is familiar to horror…. remember Jaws?
@TangentOmega
@TangentOmega Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park was filmed in Hawaii.
@whitenoisereacts
@whitenoisereacts Жыл бұрын
Of course it was lol
@vortecmacs
@vortecmacs 3 ай бұрын
I like how Red knew what was up and enjoying the guys reacting.
@coppercrow5840
@coppercrow5840 Жыл бұрын
You can tell Stella loves this movie on a whole other level
@KindredKeepsake
@KindredKeepsake 7 ай бұрын
The Deus *Rex* Machina pun broke me. XD Well played!
@rufusmorris9160
@rufusmorris9160 Жыл бұрын
Ignore what they all say and watch them all at your discretion, you only need yourselves to see if it’s good or bad.
@SasatheShy
@SasatheShy 6 ай бұрын
Fun Fact: when the T-rex breaks the top glass of the jeep to get to the kids, that wasn't originally meant to happen, but from the rain the animatronic became so heavy it fell forward and broke the glass. So, the kid actors' quick reaction by putting their legs and hands up to hold the glass and the look of terror on their faces was real fear and not acting.
@cateiya95
@cateiya95 Жыл бұрын
This movie traumatized me as a child 😅😅 I still have a reoccurring nightmare about the T-rex scene with the water rippling and I'm 28 😂😂 love it though
@Tanx33
@Tanx33 Жыл бұрын
Jurassic Park is one of the only books I have read where I wasn't disappointed for a good part of the movie/tv series. I am still glad I saw the movie first though because that might have changed a bit. The movie has quite a few major differences that don't spoil everything for the movie and make it almost its' own cool story. There was a lot more characters and the dinosaur numbers were different. There were way more raptors in the book, it was sick Stego in the book instead of the trike. Ellie found out why it got sick. dinos were escaping off the island(part of how they ended up having to get Grant and co. to visit the island). The book goes through way more about how Hammond gained the funding for the park and develops his character way more where you kind of root for him getting the park going, but at the same time making you see what a jerk he was. They swapped a lot of his traits and lines with the lawyer in the movie. the lawyer was actually a decent guy in the book and helped a ton. in the movie they gave him all of Hammonds worst traits(like Hammond talked about the "coupon day" for the non-super rich and cared way more about money and having his name attached to the greatest scientific achievement in history) and they also gave him the traits of the park publicist name Ed Regis(who was not in the movie). Probably one of the only disappointments for me was less Malcolm in the movie. He was basically Crichton's voice in the book and talked way more about why the park would fail and talked way more about consequences of the science they were so recklessly using. oh and in the movie they swapped the girl and boy's age and traits. Lex was an 8 year old tomboy baseball fan. Tim was 11, loved dinosaurs and was good with computers and it was obvious that his dad liked his sister more and was a bit of a black sheep. Dr. Grant was also changed a lot. in the book was a 55 year old barrel chested man. he was a widower. he loved children because they are the most enthusiastic about dinosaurs. He got along really well with Tim right from the start. He also mostly studied maiasaura instead of raptors. Dr. Sattler was a grad student working on Grant's dig site and was engaged to a professor or physicist or something at a university. She was only 24 years old. Robert Muldoon was really cool in the movie but he was way more badass in the book. hanging on the back of a jeep shooting giant tranq darts out of a rocket launcher at a charging T-Rex cool. oh well at least we got the "Clever girl" meme out of it. Anyway just one of those books that anyone who loved the movie should read. and the second book is basically a completely different plot than movie. Also JP 2 is really worth the watch. another great movie. really every one of the movies and even the animated series on netflix(camp cretaceous) are all well worth the watch. I still think the 3rd is the worst. still enjoy it overall, just a lot of thins they did that I didn't really like and one thing I kind of hated.
@GFCpresentations
@GFCpresentations 11 ай бұрын
Yes! A lot of Spielberg movies focus on kids as a reflection of his own childhood. E.T. Close Encounters. There is a scene in Munich. Empire of the Sun. There is a scene in saving private Ryan. Minority Report. World of the worlds. The beginning of Jaws. Hook. Red dress in Schindler’s List. Ready player One. You name it.
@beez991
@beez991 Жыл бұрын
The first, the most realistic, and the best one. They went downhill after this one. The old movies were the best and those were the best times to be alive too. Fun, free and less stress. I miss those days
@janetjoshkosovac7217
@janetjoshkosovac7217 Жыл бұрын
I’m making my own movies soon and I’m proud to say that this masterpiece is what got me into the filmmaking industry🎥🎬 By the way, Allosaurus and T-Rex are my favourite dinosaurs🦖
@CharlesVanNoland
@CharlesVanNoland Жыл бұрын
That kitchen scene with the raptors chasing the kids is classic.
@bricaro8808
@bricaro8808 7 ай бұрын
I was 11 when I watched this in the movie theatre. It was the first time I ever saw a film in theatre. I still remember the sheer amazement of how realistic everything looked and then realizing that I was actually in a horror movie. I didn't dare to go into the woods for two weeks bc I was so scared of a dino jumping out of the bushes lol.
@KaiserM3
@KaiserM3 11 ай бұрын
i watched this movie in the movies with my mother, i had like 7 years old and it is the first fil i remember to watch in the movie theater, i remember that like if tat was yesterday, for that, this is prolly my favourite movie ever. the Cinema was full and the intro to the movie, even the publicity before the start was just absolutely incredible, you felt like if a dinosaur was aboput to eat you, and you could see Tyrannosaur's shadow in the background like walking slowly towards you.... all that just with publicity before the movie started, imagine having 6 to 7 years old and watching that entire show, the first dinopsaur's movie you ever watch and everything prepares you for this insane movie, the sounds like if it was breathing behind you.... it was absolutely mind blowing, i guess i was lucky of enjoying that time. Like now this kind of movies is like watching any show around....but the felling that day was pfff.... and by th way the effects of this movie was out of this world, even today works fantastic.
@krystanruitenbeek3636
@krystanruitenbeek3636 5 ай бұрын
This movie is perfect, i have seen this movie 73 times and it is still perfect. The book is also perfect, but in a different way. The book is more an adult thing. The way they explain the deaths in detail is so scary.
@royboismier6023
@royboismier6023 Жыл бұрын
Fun facts for your enjoyment: In the book- you'll be sad to note that the lawyer and Hammond are switched. The lawyer is wholesome and is got protecting the kids and Hammond IS the greedy capitalist that you were glad he wasn't in the movie The movie only has CGI because the animators were originally hired to add motion blur to the stop motion animation that WAS supposed to be used. But, two guys at that CGI company were like, "but what if we can do this full stop in the computer only instead of the puppets" and put up a bones T-Rex walk cycle on screen the day the producers were coming to check out the motion blur progress. They got picked instead, thus leading to the CGI leading the world today. On that note, the "Don't you mean extinct?" Line came about from the stop motion head guy when he saw that walk cycle. Spielberg enjoyed the irony so much he put it in the script
@EsTornino77
@EsTornino77 Жыл бұрын
I was like 16 years old, went to the cinema to see this movie, When the Brachiosaurus stood up and came down, the bass in the cinema, Wow !!!!, Steven Spielberg used the best CGI available at the time, he and George Lucas , Robert Zemeckis, James Cameron etc.. gave my generation the Greatest movies made !! , and the agelevel for watching certain movies, like this one, a family movie, well, we weren't upset so easily or something ;-)
@NathanMalnaa
@NathanMalnaa 6 ай бұрын
I love this movie. Its over 30 years old and still looks incredible lol Laura Dern was only 23 years old in this 8:23 they named that waterfall Jurassic Park Falls in Hawaii lol 15:33 one of my favorite lines "the only one on my side is the blood sucking lawyer" lol 23:24 love that line lol 29:42 thats my favorite shot of the whole movie, the light goes in the T-Rexs eye and it dilates, so good 43:28 that was the first day shooting, them climbing the fence and blowing up Timmy lol 45:30 that was a real reaction from Laura lol 46:08 another iconic line. RIP Bob Peck 46:53 Ariana Richards is so good in this, shes actually a professional painter now and you can get that shot from her.
@joshuagross3151
@joshuagross3151 9 ай бұрын
We now know dilophosaurus was _significantly_ larger than it was portrayed. The smallest adult sample found was about 9 feet long from snout to tail. The largest measured in at 14 feet. Both had an estimated height at between 6-9 feet. They used a combination of sawblade teeth and three-fingered claws to slice open prey species or severely wound more dangerous targets.
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