20:40 In his making of video he confirmed that the living Tyrannosaurus actually had cannibalized its mate that probably died during the initial impact (I’m assuming it was the one that was resting its head on top of the other Rex) in order to survive a bit longer
@SleepySloth27057 ай бұрын
11:06 Deadsound did confirm that the one on the right is the male, as he gave him bigger eyebrow-crests, facial scars, and is slightly smaller than the female
@brianlevine8717 ай бұрын
Your new dog is very cute! Also regarding that Cretaceous bird, Dead Sound said he made it up. It's kind of like this series' equivalent to Scrat from the "Ice Age" franchise where a fictional, small animal is living alongside actual extinct creatures. You can watch his behind-the-scenes video on this episode to learn more about it.
@DryptosaurusDavid7 ай бұрын
The saddest depiction of the KT extinction.
@matem16497 ай бұрын
KPG not KT
@beastmaster09347 ай бұрын
@@matem1649 I never got why it’s called the “KPG” considering Cretaceous is spelled with a C and not a K. It should be the “CPG” mass extinction. But whatever, I’m not a scientist.
@matem16497 ай бұрын
@@beastmaster0934 It's so that it's not confused with the Cambrian
@DryptosaurusDavid7 ай бұрын
@@matem1649im pretty sure you could call it KT or KPG. KT meaning the boundary.
@matem16497 ай бұрын
@@DryptosaurusDavid Well the reason I don't think you should is because the name Tertiary is now outdated
@nateperez77687 ай бұрын
Fun fact: the birds in the cretaceous segments are a fictional species
@Geniusprimate6 ай бұрын
They're actually avisaurs
@nateperez77686 ай бұрын
@Geniusprimate I know. I meant they're a species that the maker created for the video
@DryptosaurusDavid6 ай бұрын
@@nateperez7768similar to Scrat from Ice Age at first.
@Geniusprimate3 ай бұрын
@@DryptosaurusDavid but he's a cronopio
@Unfortunatefish88677 ай бұрын
We turned there poop it museum items 💀
@synderthmc7 ай бұрын
Also one of the t rex survived by cannibalizing the other
@michaelbaker16606 ай бұрын
Watching your review, I definitely think you should have watched through the whole thing in one go to really get the impact of the short. I never noticed the two T.rex in the background at the start of the film until you pointed them out. Also on that final shot in the museum, you pointing out the shark, made me realise that it is supposed to represent the natural history museum in Edinburgh, which I think has a shark hanging from the ceiling. It would make sense given that David Armsby is Scottish, and it would most likely be his most familiar reference point for a museum.
@joshuaW56217 ай бұрын
This might be the best T. rex I’ve seen next to Prehistoric Planet.
@creakingskull70087 ай бұрын
I think it is actually better than Prehistoric Planet, the skeletal and muscular anatomy seems better to me
@horse14t7 ай бұрын
Please react to the behind the scenes videos of the series some time. They will answer at least some of your questions too.
@GodSoloGames4 ай бұрын
This is one of the few pieces of media to make me shed a tear.
@krankarvolund77716 ай бұрын
"Anything bigger than a small burrowing creature is dead" Well except for the big crocodilians who survived ^^
@evananouna82447 ай бұрын
We named the dog Indiana
@DryptosaurusDavid7 ай бұрын
You are named after the dog?
@trenttinsley54997 ай бұрын
That tie in to the beginning with the bird at the end got me acting up ngl
@unlovednekochan947 ай бұрын
Deadsounds dino animations are so cool
@Stitch23167 ай бұрын
The creator said in the making of video that the reason the other tyrannosaurs looks like that is because the female cannibalised it after it died
@tylergamingshark84977 ай бұрын
The Mother Triceratops is pretty likely a teen that had a kid cuz Things that are Teenagers do sometimes have kids
@horse14t7 ай бұрын
The barn cat where I work was a teenage mom. She wasn't even 1 year old yet... Her babies were very cute though!
@jabbarmuhammad7 ай бұрын
The last tyrant visually stimulating beautiful and quite sad all of these beautiful magnificent creatures wipe out by the KT extinction
@sarlife7 ай бұрын
Just once I would like a TRex doc that didnt end with everything dying. They were around for a while, no need to always make it about the last ones.
@legionbeast3 ай бұрын
It's why I hate deadsound for making that video. All of his others were about bringing the animals to life, this focuses on killing them and even cannibalism. That is just being sadistic and cruel.
@PollenEye3 ай бұрын
@@legionbeast lol hate him? Why are you taking it so personally? It's just a depiction of the mass extinction. And like he said in the 'making of' video, the ending is meant to be a celebration of dinosaurs and how much they've inspired humanity.
@legionbeast3 ай бұрын
@@PollenEye When I watch dinosaurs I want dinosaurs, not humanity. TL:DR: You can keep your Cenozoic, but I'll take that Mesozoic.
@PollenEye3 ай бұрын
@legionbeast They were only there for a short moment. The finale of the series was literally the finale of dinosaurs. Nothing sadistic or cruel about it.
@legionbeast3 ай бұрын
@@PollenEye Over 200 million years of dinosaur life to focus on and he focuses on slow suffering starvation, cannibalism, and extinction? No that's a cruel thing to spend your time and effort on and not what any dinosaur lover would make. That is like someone who loves humans and has a talent for animation and spends a massive amount of time showing humans post-war with ruined homes, streets filled with the dead, family members cannibalizing their own family members to try and stay alive, then everyone dying anyway. Wow, what an "appreciation' and "love letter" to the life and wonder of humanity!/s
@C6BaizhuHaver7 ай бұрын
I don’t know why but I can hold it together until the Sauropod Scene, maybe it’s because I adore Sauropods but it breaks my heart
@PrehistoricRager7 ай бұрын
Great video! Fun fact, I actually have Westie dogs as well!
@goldentyrant48227 ай бұрын
Do you plan on watching the associated “making of” videos ?
@damienlopez39447 ай бұрын
Welp now that we finished dinosauria you should check out his other series he’s still working on called sauria which is like a medieval fantasy world with dinosaurs, creatures of the Triassic and even some Cenozoic creatures it’s really good red raptor you should watch them
@Intrusion4987 ай бұрын
Red raptor writes face reveal
@n_ex137 ай бұрын
I am too tired to write a half page essay about why your mech is awesome So yeah it's really really nice
@ConeEEEeEeEE2 ай бұрын
creaoshima 66,038,000 million years ago (maybe maybe not exact i found this on a paper about when exactly they went extinct)
@@Geniusprimateits not kzbin.info/www/bejne/rIvaiouZbdWJbLsm32s
@synderthmc6 ай бұрын
kzbin.info/www/bejne/rIvaiouZbdWJbLsm32s Its not, its not even one of the inspirationa mentioned for its design
@theleaderturtle6 ай бұрын
Red Raptor Writes, have you ever seen the TV show, Primeval.
@teamninjabug82877 ай бұрын
I wouldn't say pterosaurs aren't related to birds. They're both archosaurs, are they not? Birds *are* dinosaurs, not *related* to dinosaurs, and pterosaurs are closer related to dinosaurs (and thus to birds) than crocodilians are, right? Correct me if I'm wrong, of course. Also, I'm still very iffy about feathered baby T. rex. I can't recall a single animal that changes its integument from feathers to scales or vice versa in its life-cycle, so wouldn't feathered baby T. rex's not even be considered as possible unless evidence shows it's the first and only animal to ever be able to do that? Again, correct me if wrong.
@catislandadventures79267 ай бұрын
While there’s no examples of feathers to scales it’s worth mentioning that the feathers adults Birds have and the juveniles fluff are often very different structures. The adults have complex structures while the juveniles have basically a different version of hair. The juvenile fuzz doesn’t turn into the adult feathers it completely falls out and something new grows in its place. So I think the feathers to scale thing is plausible enough.
@foxxtitan70287 ай бұрын
Also you cannot says that birds are dinosaurs and also not related to dinosaurs in the same phrase because it dosen't makes any sens. They can't be both at the same time. Birds are dinosaurs, so of course they are related to dinosaurs, birds are a group from the Theropod branch after all.
@Cordinjung51413 ай бұрын
After doing this you should watch the making of Dinosauria series it's really interesting
@PteranodonLongicepsGen17 ай бұрын
Next are you going to do sauria or primal or anything like that
@johntodd39107 ай бұрын
Can you review the ice age movies soon
@dino._.con12327 ай бұрын
You know you don’t have to freeze it every 3 frames
@JackSnell-l8w7 ай бұрын
26:27 But the Pteranodon is closest relative to the birds because Pterosaurs & Birds are both Archosaurs.
@koopajuniorsavannah51707 ай бұрын
So are dinosaurs which are also archosaurs and were the ancestors of birds
@Geniusprimate6 ай бұрын
@@koopajuniorsavannah5170yes
@JackSnell-l8w6 ай бұрын
@@koopajuniorsavannah5170 But Dromeosaurids Troodontids and Oviraptorids are mostly more closely related to birds than they are to other non-avian dinosaurs.
@esselluna33547 ай бұрын
Will you please watch sauria next by dead sound
@creakingskull70087 ай бұрын
Dog
@Frogboyaidan7 ай бұрын
Yoo
@legionbeast5 ай бұрын
I think it was the stupidest thing he could have made and is honestly the stupidest thing anyone involved in dino media CAN make. Ah yes, "and they all died". Right, because Dinosaurs existed on monday and died on wednesday then thursday was the ice age and on friday you have modern man. It's an insult to the massive powerful legacy that Dinosaurs had for 250 million years, and it's not even over yet since they are STILL HERE. I liked deadsound's videos for bringing LIFE to dinosaurs, but then he went and made that cliché piece of garbage and I was so insulted I refuse to acknowledge anything else they may have done and consider anyone who praises this chapter of deadsound to not be a dinosaur lover.
@GabiteEditz5 ай бұрын
I think you're just overreacting
@legionbeast5 ай бұрын
@@GabiteEditz If deadsound was the only one to do this, then I may agree, however he isn't. Just about every paleo media ever made always goes "oh and THEY ALL DIED. Next came the ice age and mammoths and saber tooth cats". Just about the only two pieces of paleo media that HAVEN'T done this are Prehistoric Planet and Dinosaur Train.
@Frogzor173 ай бұрын
I think you're missing the point of the animation. Is focusing on the KT extinction overdone, especially when the age of the dinosaurs was far longer than humanity has existed? Admittedly, yes, but I think The Last Tyrant offers a meaningful new perspective on it. It's not that "they all died", it's that these creatures weren't just lumbering, obsolete beasts doomed for extinction. They were incredible animals in an entire, thriving ecosystem that was destroyed by a sudden, unexpected tragedy. Even then, their death itself isn't the message of The Last Tyrant. It's that, though they may be gone, their legacy lives on in modern birds (hence the scene comparing the crow to the various extinct dinosaurs, and the general focus on birds), and through our fascination with them. Dinosaurs continue to spark our imaginations, inspiring us to learn all we can about them and create art and media based on them. That's the entire point of the museum scene. I don't see how enjoying a piece of art with the message of "dinosaurs have such a powerful legacy that we can't help but be inspired by them millions of years after their extinction (that they even managed to survive through with birds)" makes you not a dinosaur lover.
@legionbeast3 ай бұрын
@@Frogzor17 It wasn't a "sudden unexpected tragedy" anymore than the previous multitude of extinctions that happened before it. It wasn't an overnight ordeal and anyone who pushes that idea is back in the 1930's ideals of paleontology. Yes I'm looking at anyone pushing the asteroid nonsense as being the reason the megafauna all died off. The point is that the video still focuses on "and they all died" focus. Not using the medium to BRING the dinosaurs to life, but to use the medium to depict killing them and then showing off what humans are doing with their remains. Imagine watching prehistoric planet, something predicated on telling the stories and lives of the prehistoric animals, but we get those animals for 5 minutes, get told "and they died" and then we spend the next 55 minutes watching people walk through a museum. I would be insulted since that is NOT exploring the LIVES the animals lived or the world they were in. Honestly I'm getting increasingly sickened over the years as people continue to ALWAYS go "and then a rock fell and everyone died". Oh, well how did they live? "Lmao IDK but they died on friday, saturday was the ice age, and then sunday humans popped up". You'd probably love the 1987 book Allosaurus written by Ron Wilson.