Quantcast
Channel: Jurassic Park
Viewing all 127 articles
Browse latest View live

'Jurassic World' Director Reveals Bloody New Set Photo

$
0
0

As production continues on Universal Pictures' Jurassic World in Hawaii, director Colin Trevorrow has revealed the latest behind-the-scenes photo from the set.

While no cast members are featured in this image, it does tease a gruesome death, with a sole, bloody hand print left on a veterinary vehicle.

Who do you think met with their bloody demise on the Jurassic World set last night? Take a look at the photo, and offer your best guesses below.

 

Jurassic World takes place on Isla Nublar, 22 years after the original Jurassic Park, where a fully-functioning dinosaur theme park has become one of the hottest tourist destinations, attracting millions of visitors per year.

The story will reportedly feature a number of dinosaurs fans haven't seen before, although no other plot details have been confirmed at this time.

Jurassic World comes to theaters June 12th, 2015 and stars Ty SimpkinsBryce Dallas HowardNick RobinsonChris PrattVincent D'OnofrioIrrfan KhanB.D. WongOmar Sy. The film is directed by Colin Trevorrow.

SEE ALSO: 'Jurassic World' Set Photo Teases A New Dinosaur

Join the conversation about this story »


How 4 Minutes Of CGI Dinosaurs In ‘Jurassic Park’ Took A Year To Make

$
0
0

jurassic park dinosaur

Before the 1990s, most visual effects in movies consisted of stop motion and people in suits. 

While computer animation was used in “Star Wars” and “Tron” and in title sequences like 1978’s “Superman,” it wasn't until "Terminator 2" (1991) and Steven Spielberg’s "Jurassic Park" (1993) that a movie used lots of computer-generated imagery, or CGI, and mixed it with live action. 

There are only 14 minutes of dinosaur visual effects in "Jurassic Park," about four of which were made with a computer, but its lasting effect on movies has been monumental. 

Two years later, 1995's "Toy Story" was the first full-length computer-animated movie.

Today just about every film — from James Cameron's "Avatar" to summer blockbusters like Michael Bay's "Transformers" series — owes credit to CGI.

But what is CGI, and how is it used in movies? 

The simplest way to explain computer graphics without getting overly technical is to think of typical hand-drawn animation or stop motion, which consists of a series of drawings or photographs to create the illusion of movement.

peter panSimilarly, a lot of CGI animation in movies involves series of drawings or renderings on a computer screen. These are used to create that same illusion to make something look photo-realistic.

Business Insider recently spoke with Steve “Spaz” Williams, who was a CG Animator at Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), the visual-effects studio that helped bring “Jurassic Park” to life.

Here, with Business Insider, Williams breaks down the steps it took to bring the dinosaurs from paper and pad to the big screen in CGI.

1. They begin with drawn designs and prosthetics of the different dinosaurs. 

The production used CG for velociraptors, brachiosauruses, and the tyrannosaurus rex, which Williams worked on primarily.

T Rex joint image2. Next, those renderings needed to make their way into the computer.

They scanned models, including ones for the T. rex and the velociraptors, into the computers.trex stan winston, jurassic park"In order to get it into the computer we actually fire a laser at the three-dimensional rubber prosthetic model and extract the data so the computer had it essentially," says Williams.

Williams explains it's like the opposite of 3-D printing with them taking an object and turning it into data.

3. They then reconstruct the data to make it work in the computer.

These are two images of T. rex data from Williams' monitor using software called Alias.

dinosaur t rex Jurassic Parkt rex dinosaur

4. An animation piece of software called SoftImage 3D is used to figure out the joint placement on the dinosaurs. 

jurassic park softimageHere, you can see one of the Brachiosauruses in the beginning of the film.

jurassic park softimage
5. After that, the data has to be "rigged" with a digital armature in wireframes. 

This is the framework for the dinosaur that helps provide its structure allowing it to stand up, move, and run.

"This is the first shot I animated for the movie after I built all of the T. rex data," says Williams. "It took me months to get this run right, but once done, we reused the run data for the rest of the jeep-chase shots and ultimately for the following two 'Jurassic Park' movies."dinosaur t rex jurassic parkBelow is another wireframe for one of the raptors in a kitchen scene where the two children are trying to outsmart the dinosaurs.

wireframe raptor jurassic park6. Next, the dinosaurs get their skin. 

"We used a program called Viewpaint, which allowed us to actually paint the texture of the skin in the computer so now we have this textured map," says Williams.

7. To put all of the separate images together, they needed to be rendered by massive graphics computers.

"Now we substitute in this high-resolution mesh data into a low resolution wireframe. That's all being done in computer," says Williams. "It pretty much took 10 hours to calculate one frame. You have to remember film is 24 frames per second. So it would sit there and crunch all night."

Williams built and animated the image below of the first fully rendered T. rex test. It was this video that convinced the producer Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg that "Jurassic Park" should be made in CGI rather than stop motion.

initial skin test t rex jurassic park Williams also animated all of the shots in a famous T. rex Jeep-chase sequenceHe says each frame in the entire sequence took an estimated 12 hours to render. 

The point where the T. rex breaks through the log is 75 frames long. 

jurassic park jeep"I animated all those shots where the T. rex is chasing the jeep. It took me four months to animate it, just to get the running to work properly," says Williams.

8. From there, the dinosaur needs to be put into a scene through a process called compositing.

This is where all the pieces to the puzzle are assembled together. CGI shots are combined together with live-action shots and any background and foreground imagery referred to as plate photography.

In this case, live-action shots of actors were combined with photography shoots in Kauai and ILM's work on the brachiosauruses and birds.

jurassic park composite

Here's the final shot with the added dinosaurs:

jurassic park composite with dinosaurs
9. Once it's put together, the images are reviewed to make sure they work. When everything looks good, the scene is put to film.

Final images are reviewed on a high-concentrated projector before translated to film.

All together, Williams says it took about a year to bring the dinosaurs to life.

“Basically May of ’92 to May of ’93 was the entire build and composite time for probably 40 shots,” says Williams. 

After $1 billion at the box office, you can't argue with the result.

jurassic park stampede You can watch Williams and others from ILM speak more about the creation of the dinosaurs in a featurette from the Academy of Motion Pictures below:

SEE ALSO: Find out why 'Age of Extinction" was the most difficult "Transformers" movie to make

Join the conversation about this story »

People Are Outraged On Facebook Thinking Steven Spielberg Actually Killed A Dinosaur

$
0
0

Steven Spielberg, Jurassic Park

There's been a lot of outrage on Facebook lately about people posting photos of hunting and killing animals.

There was Texas cheerleader Kendall Jones who had her hunting photos taken down by Facebook, 17-year-old Belgian soccer fan Axelle Despiegelaere whose hunting photos caused her to lose her L'Oreal modeling contract, and now Steven Spielberg for hunting ... a dinosaur.

Obviously, Steven Spielberg didn't kill a dinosaur for sport because, well, dinosaurs are extinct. But that didn't stop a whole lot of people on Facebook from thinking he did and being completely outraged by it.

A post by Jay Branscomb caused a huge stir on Facebook when the satirist posted a photo making Steven Spielberg look as if he had a "trophy kill" while sitting in front of a robotic Triceratops on the set of his 1993 blockbuster, "Jurassic Park."

"Disgraceful photo of recreational hunter happily posing next to a Triceratops he just slaughtered. Please share so the world can name and shame this despicable man," Branscomb jokingly wrote as the photo's caption.

steven spielberg dinosaur

A lot of people on Facebook didn't think it was a joke.

The post went viral with 32,000 shares and 5,700 comments, which varied from people in on the joke and many others who may not have been.

"That's Steven Spielberg, director of Jurassic Park!" one commenter wrote. This got a response of "I dont care who he is he should have not shot that animal."

Other commenters called Spielberg "inhumane" and "disgusting" and proclaimed they'd never watch his movies again because he's an "animal killer."

After the huge reaction to the photo, Branscomb posted another picture of Spielberg riding the shark from 1975's "Jaws," sarcastically asking for help to indentify this "vicious shark-killer shown posing with his illegal prey."

Steven Spielberg jaws hunter

Now, we can't tell which commenters were joking and which were serious, but regardless many had fun with all of the insanity.

"Seriously, those poor Triceratops," a commenter wrote. "If we don't stop this, they are gonna become extinct." 

SEE ALSO: 'Jurassic Park' Animator Shares How CGI Brought Dinosaurs To Life

Join the conversation about this story »

New Leaked 'Jurassic World' Brochure Reveal Details About The Upcoming Movie

$
0
0

Jurassic World Brochure front

So, they talked about how bad an idea it is, but Jurassic World finally features a fully-functional dinosaur park. The events of the first film, which killed several people, haven't been acknowledged. The T-Rex that rampaged through San Diego in The Lost World? Not a biggie. So what is this park going to be like? Photos have been spotted of Isla Nublar's Jurassic World that give us a slight peek at what's in store. 

From Reddit (via MTV), we have our first glimpse at a brochure for those daring to tour Jurassic World. Apparently, FedEx is the sponsor signing off on all the merciless dinosaur-on-man death that's going to occur. FedEx – handling your packaging needs, and hoping to watch as a velociraptor tears your face off! 

Jurassic World bracelet
Holy crap, Starbucks is in on this too! So when these bracelets start malfunctioning, trapping Jurassic World visitors in a tight space with a clan of compsognathus, you'll have companies like Samsung to thank. If I could buy the world a Coke, that would be a ton of Coke bottles to throw at these rampaging gallimimus that are about to trample my ass. 

Jurassic World Brochure dinos
Now we're talking. Full-on dino glimpses. They brought back the Tyrannosaur Paddock, because that caused just about NO issues last time. Hopefully the Gentle Giants Petting Zoo doesn't ACTUALLY have a triceratops. Those things can run like crazy and stab you hard with those horns.

Along with the chance to "romp" with the gallimimus by car, this is kind of an encyclopedia of terrible, stupid things to do with dinosaurs. Extra points to the idiot who invented The Scrambler, however, which appears to be some fugazi-level amusement park ride that has nothing to do with dinosaurs. If it comes to sudden-death adventures with a long-extinct creature and getting on something that belongs next to a $5 Tilt-a-Whirl at the local fare, I know what I'm picking. 

Jurassic World more dinos
More rides! Apparently the Gyrosphere allows the Jurassic World people to be able to afford Jimmy Fallon. Oh great. Betting his "instructional video" involves Harrison Ford wearing a silly hat, or Elijah Wood playing Stratego with a dog or something. Maybe he sings. Oh god, maybe he sings! 

Jurassic World back page
Finally, the dinosaurs! It's good to know we're getting some old friends as well as new ones. Getting the vibe this Mosaurus is going to be a big breakout star of this movie. And we haven't gotten nearly enough stegosaurus in these films. Appreciate the warning, which reads, "PLEASE do not tap on the glass, cross barriers, throw anything into the exhibits, make excessive noise, tease or call out to the animals." Basically, if you bring your child to Jurassic World, it's because you hate them and want them to be eaten. 

Jurassic World eats kids on June 12th, 2015. 

SEE ALSO: 'Jurassic World' Director Reveals Bloody New Set Photo

Join the conversation about this story »

Jeff Goldblum Photobombs The Best Wedding Picture Ever

$
0
0

Jeff Goldblum gave the best wedding gift of all time this weekend.

The 61-year-old actor attended the wedding of Pamela and Jesse Sargent in Toronto as the date of his fiancé Emilie Livingston, who is a friend of the bride.

Goldblum happily obliged the bride and groom's wedding day request and reprised his "Jurassic Park" role as Dr. Ian Malcolm for one epic photo.

"T-Rex chases bridal party... thank-god Dr. Ian Malcom was there to save the day!!" Pamela Sargent wrote on her Facebook page after the nuptials.

Jeff Goldblum jurassic park wedding photo

"What an amazing, unbelievable weekend! Thanks to everyone who came to celebrate with us, and thanks Jeff for being a good sport!" Pamela wrote next to the photo.

Photographer Adam Biesenthal is responsible for the awesome shot.

Of course, the Sargents weren't the first couple to think of the wedding day dinosaur photo-op — but they are the only ones to get Jeff Goldblum.

Let's take a closer look at that again:

jeff goldblum wedding

Here's what Goldblum looked like running away from a dinosaur in the 1993 movie:Jeff Goldblum Jurassic Park

SEE ALSO: Chris Pratt Reveals The Plot For 'Jurassic Park' Sequel Out Next Summer

Join the conversation about this story »

There's A 'Jurassic Park' Sequel Out Next Summer, Here's The First Teaser Trailer

$
0
0

chris pratt jurassic world

Next summer, a new "Jurassic Park" sequel is coming to theaters and Universal Pictures just released a teaser trailer complete with a slowed down version of the familiar theme from composer John Williams.

"Jurassic World" will take place 22 years after the original 1993 film. The new movie, starring Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard, will bring viewers back to Isla Nublar which has been turned into a dinosaur theme park called, you guessed it, "Jurassic World." 

The sequel comes more than a decade after 2001's "Jurassic Park III" and is directed by Colin Trevorrow ("Safety Not Guaranteed").

The full trailer will debut Thursday on NBC during the Thanksgiving football game.

Update:Watch the full trailer here.

"Jurassic World" is in theaters June 12, 2015.

Check out the teaser: 

Here's a look at Howard in the film:

jessica chastain jurassic world

SEE ALSO: The plot for "Jurassic World" revealed

AND: Watch the full trailer here

Join the conversation about this story »

The Entire Premise Of 'Jurassic Park' Is Wrong

$
0
0

Jurassic Park mosquito in amber cane

There's a glaring mistake in the 1993 dinosaur classic "Jurassic Park" that any good entomologist would know. The mosquito used in the film is completely the wrong species.

In the film, scientists extract dinosaur blood from the gut of a prehistoric mosquito, preserved in amber. They then use the DNA in the dinosaur blood to create the terrifying creatures that roam the island and eventually maim and kill many of the characters.

Yes, retired Navy entomologist Joe Conlon confirmed, mosquitoes did indeed buzz around during the time of dinosaurs feeding on their blood.

"They've been around for about 170 million years," Conlon, who now works for the American Mosquito Control Association, told us. Unfortunately, the species portrayed in "Jurassic Park"— Toxorhynchites rutilus — doesn't feed on blood. It's actually the only type of mosquito that doesn't.

T. rutilus is also the largest species of mosquito that scientists know of, even beating the recently infamous gallinipper.

Another problem with the movie: DNA couldn't have possibly stayed intact for 80 million years. Scientists are trying to resurrect some more recently extinct creatures, though.

SEE ALSO: There's A 'Jurassic Park' Sequel Out Next Summer, Here's The First Teaser Trailer

Join the conversation about this story »

How 4 Minutes Of CGI Dinosaurs In ‘Jurassic Park’ Took A Year To Make

$
0
0

jurassic park dinosaur

Universal Pictures unveiled the first trailer for next summer's "Jurassic World" movie Tuesday starring Chris Pratt. 

From the looks of it, the fourth installment in the series will be filled with plenty of computer-generated (CG) dinosaurs and Velociraptors

When the first "Jurassic Park" came out in 1993, it contained very little CG. Director Steven Spielberg originally wanted the dinosaurs in the film to be done through practical effects with stop motion.

It wasn't until producer Kathleen Kennedy spotted CG test footage of a T-Rex on a computer screen at visual effects studio Industrial Light & Magic (ILM), that it was decided to mix CG dinosaurs in with the live action film.

T rex bones, Jurassic Park

There are only 14 minutes of dinosaur visual effects in "Jurassic Park," about four of which were made with a computer, but its lasting effect on movies has been monumental. 

Two years later, 1995's "Toy Story" was the first full-length computer-animated movie.

Today just about every film — from James Cameron's "Avatar" to summer blockbusters like Michael Bay's "Transformers" series — owes credit to CG.

Business Insider spoke with Steve “Spaz” Williams, who was a CG Animator at ILM, the visual-effects studio that helped bring “Jurassic Park” to life.

Williams broke down the steps it took to bring the dinosaurs from paper and pad to the big screen in CG.

1. They begin with drawn designs and prosthetics of the different dinosaurs. 

The production used CG for velociraptors, brachiosauruses, and the tyrannosaurus rex, which Williams worked on primarily.

T Rex joint image2. Next, those renderings needed to make their way into the computer.

They scanned models, including ones for the T. rex and the velociraptors, into the computers.trex stan winston, jurassic park"In order to get it into the computer we actually fire a laser at the three-dimensional rubber prosthetic model and extract the data so the computer had it essentially," says Williams.

Williams explains it's like the opposite of 3-D printing with them taking an object and turning it into data.

3. They then reconstruct the data to make it work in the computer.

These are two images of T. rex data from Williams' monitor using software called Alias.

dinosaur t rex Jurassic Parkt rex dinosaur

4. An animation piece of software called SoftImage 3D is used to figure out the joint placement on the dinosaurs. 

jurassic park softimageHere, you can see one of the Brachiosauruses in the beginning of the film.

jurassic park softimage
5. After that, the data has to be "rigged" with a digital armature in wireframes. 

This is the framework for the dinosaur that helps provide its structure allowing it to stand up, move, and run.

"This is the first shot I animated for the movie after I built all of the T. rex data," says Williams. "It took me months to get this run right, but once done, we reused the run data for the rest of the jeep-chase shots and ultimately for the following two 'Jurassic Park' movies."dinosaur t rex jurassic parkBelow is another wireframe for one of the raptors in a kitchen scene where the two children are trying to outsmart the dinosaurs.

wireframe raptor jurassic park6. Next, the dinosaurs get their skin. 

"We used a program called Viewpaint, which allowed us to actually paint the texture of the skin in the computer so now we have this textured map," says Williams.

7. To put all of the separate images together, they needed to be rendered by massive graphics computers.

"Now we substitute in this high-resolution mesh data into a low resolution wireframe. That's all being done in computer," says Williams. "It pretty much took 10 hours to calculate one frame. You have to remember film is 24 frames per second. So it would sit there and crunch all night."

Williams built and animated the image below of the first fully rendered T. rex test. It was this video that convinced the producer Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg that "Jurassic Park" should be made in CG rather than stop motion.

initial skin test t rex jurassic park Williams also animated all of the shots in a famous T. rex Jeep-chase sequenceHe says each frame in the entire sequence took an estimated 12 hours to render. 

The point where the T. rex breaks through the log is 75 frames long. 

jurassic park jeep"I animated all those shots where the T. rex is chasing the jeep. It took me four months to animate it, just to get the running to work properly," says Williams.

8. From there, the dinosaur needs to be put into a scene through a process called compositing.

This is where all the pieces to the puzzle are assembled together. CG shots are combined together with live-action shots and any background and foreground imagery referred to as plate photography.

In this case, live-action shots of actors were combined with photography shoots in Kauai and ILM's work on the brachiosauruses and birds.

jurassic park composite

Here's the final shot with the added dinosaurs:

jurassic park composite with dinosaurs
9. Once it's put together, the images are reviewed to make sure they work. When everything looks good, the scene is put to film.

Final images are reviewed on a high-concentrated projector before translated to film.

All together, Williams says it took about a year to bring the dinosaurs to life.

“Basically May of ’92 to May of ’93 was the entire build and composite time for probably 40 shots,” says Williams. 

After $1 billion at the box office, you can't argue with the result.

jurassic park stampede You can watch Williams and others from ILM speak more about the creation of the dinosaurs in a featurette from the Academy of Motion Pictures below:

SEE ALSO: The first "Jurassic World" trailer reveals the dinosaur theme park of our nightmares

AND: Chris Pratt reveals the plot for "Jurassic World"

Join the conversation about this story »


This Is The 6-Wheeled Monster Mercedes That May Battle Dinosaurs In The Next 'Jurassic Park'

Here's the disturbing way the dinosaur sounds in Jurassic Park were made

$
0
0

Jeff Goldblum Jurassic Park

I remember exactly where I was when I first watched Jurassic Park — hiding behind a couch at my dad's friend's house, hands covering my ears to muffle the terrifying sound of dinosaur yelps and roars spewing from his surround-sound speakers.

Had I known what I was actually listening to, I might have been far more terrified — and traumatized.

Those sounds, it turns out, are bonafide recordings of real animals.

But they're engaged in an activity you might not expect for a 1993 PG-13 film: having sex.

The film's sound designer, Gary Rydstrom, spent months recording and fine-tuning these sounds, he told Kyle Buchanan over at Vulture.

"If people knew where the sounds in Jurassic Park came from, it'd be rated R!" Rydstrom says.

In the film, each dinosaur species has a distinct set of sounds. Some are R-rated, others are a bit more mild, but still surprisingly strange.

Here's how they made the most iconic dinosaur sounds:

Barking Velociraptors

The strange, bark-like sounds that the film's raptors use to communicate is actually the sound of tortoises having sex. Really.

"It's somewhat embarrassing,"Rydstrom told Vulture.

Stampede of Gallimimus

I still can't forget the feeling of my adrenaline racing as I listened to a stampede of screeching creatures as they chased doctors Grant and Satler (played by Sam Neil and Laura Dern) through the forest.

In reality, though, the high-pitched squawking sounds those little guys make are terrifying for an altogether different reason: They're actually the sound of a female horse squealing at a male horse when he got "a little too close" and she got excited, Rydstrom said,

Magical Brachiosaurus

Remember the magical moment in the movie where doctors Grant and Satler are captivated by the sound of the slow-moving, long-necked Brachiosaurus as it chomps on its leafy lunch in the forest?

Get ready to be disappointed. That enchanting moment comes courtesy of a pretty non-magical creature: the donkey.

"You think of donkeys, and they kind of yodel, you know? There's this pitch shift in donkey vocals, and if you slow them way down, you get almost a hooting, songlike quality,"Rydstrom told Vulture. As it turns out, slowing down small-animal noises is how Rydstrom gets a lot of his bigger-sounding animal roars.

Terrifying T-Rex

As I remember it, the Tyrannosaurus rex was the star of the film — it's biggest, scariest character. Yet the majority of its sounds came from none other than Rydstrom's own pet, a petite Jack Russell terrier named Buster. It's characteristic roar, on the other hand, is actually the sound of a baby elephant.

Dying Triceratops

The triceratops sounds were from dozens of cows from George Lucas' film site, Skywalker Ranch, where Rydstrom works. As for the unforgettable sound of the dying triceratops, though, Rydstrom turned to a simple, homemade device: a cardboard tube with a spring in it. "When Sam Neill puts his ear right up to the chest cavity of the triceratops and listens to its breathing, there's a lot of cow in there, but the key element of the breathing is mostly me breathing into a tube,"Rydstrom told Vulture.

Read the full list of dino-noises over at Vulture>

UP NEXT: Scientist has a bedbug breakthrough after subjecting herself to 180,000 bites

SEE ALSO: The frightening true story of the Florida sinkhole that swallowed Jeffrey Bush

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 5 amazing science facts that sound false but are actually true

This incredible 'Jurassic Park' short used $100,000 worth of Legos

$
0
0

Paul Hollingsworth and his daughter Hailee joined forces to recreate Jurassic Park using $100,000 in Legos. Paul has been making films with his daughter for the past few years. Animation has been a great bonding experience for the two. It has also been a way for Hailee to learn to use math in practical situations and build upon her storytelling and problem solving skills.

With the use of stop-motion, motion controlled camera rigs, after effects composition and an original score composed by Voodoo Highway, Paul and Hailee were able to put together an incredible film in just 3 months.

Video courtesy of Digital Wizards Studios

Visit digitalwizards.tv for more incredible Lego films.

Follow BI Video:On Facebook

 

Join the conversation about this story »

The new 'Jurassic World' trailer shows why it took $190 million to make this summer blockbuster

$
0
0

Universal Pictures released a new trailer for its Summer tentpole "Jurassic World." This is the third trailer we've seen so far and it definitely reveals more footage than we've seen up to this point. The visuals are pretty stunning and one can easily see where the $190 million budget went to. 

Steven Spielberg is an executive producer on the movie, which is directed by Colin Trevorrow. 

"Jurassic World" hits theaters on June 12.

Follow BI Video: on Facebook

Join the conversation about this story »

The new 'Jurassic World' trailer made me much less excited for the movie

$
0
0

A new trailer for "Jurassic World" arrived Monday.

We learn much more about the movie's plot line, but unfortunately it seems rather predictable and goofy, not to mention extremely reminiscent of the original 1993 film.

Chris Pratt plays Owen Grady, who looks like a dino trainer, or maybe just a "tamer." Training dinos "is not about control; it's a relationship based on respect," he says.

jurassic world 1

A female voiceover — likely Bryce Dallas Howard, who plays geneticist Claire Dearing — tells Grady that every time Jurassic World has unveiled a new attraction, attendance has spiked. "Corporate felt genetic modification would up the wow factor," she says. Grady's response: "They're dinosaurs, [that's] 'wow' enough."

jurassic world 4

First of all, are we really pinning the whole plot of this movie on a nameless, faceless, "corporate" moniker? And why does Grady sound so much like Indiana Jones here?

indiana jones

Of course, it wouldn't be a "Jurassic Park" movie without a giant dinosaur escaping its pen.

jurassic world 2

 jurassic park escape

A military group finds a tracking implant, which the giant diano clawed out of itself. "How would it know to do that?" someone asks. Grady: "She remembered where they put it in."

jurassic world 5

"She's killing for sport."

jurassic world 6

Did you like the scene in "Jurassic Park" where those two kids were trapped in a vehicle under attack from the T-rex? "Jurassic World" has the same thing.

jurassic park 3

jurassic world 7

And in classic "Jurassic Park" form, the military is absolutely useless against just one dinosaur. jurassic world 8

"If we do this, we do this my way." I guess Grady's way involves a pack of trained velociraptors.

jurassic world 9

Grady's friend: "Something's wrong... they're communicating." Based on the trailer, it seems like the "villain" dinosaur starts recruiting other dinosaurs to do its bidding. You see the big dino roar at several flying dinosaurs that, in turn, start attacking the screaming tourists.

jurassic world 10

 jurassic world 11

The trailer closes with some foreshadowing: There's always a bigger dino.

jurassic world 12

jurassic world 13

Based on the latest trailer, "Jurassic World" looks like a rehash of all the popular bits from the original "Jurassic Park," but bigger: More and bigger dinosaurs, more CGI, more futuristic vehicles, more action, and plenty of Chris Pratt. It doesn't feel original, and it feels like the trailer gave away many important plot points. Hopefully there are some surprises when the film hits theaters on June 12.

"Jurassic World" might not be the best action movie this year, but if there's one thing to get excited for, it's the music.

 

 

SEE ALSO: Steve Ballmer went nuts at last night's Clippers game

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: Here's what 'Game of Thrones' stars look like in real life

The original 'Jurassic Park' T. rex will be in 'Jurassic World'

$
0
0

t rex jurassic parkB.D. Wong isn’t the only familiar face we’ll be seeing in "Jurassic World."

There’s another, bigger, more vicious predator from the first "Jurassic Park" film that will stomp her way in the new installment.

Hopefully you can tell which character we’re talking about already, but just in case, it’s the original T. Rex. 

We knew that there would be a T. Rex in "Jurassic World" — you just can’t have a Jurassic Park movie without the big gal herself — but director Colin Trevorrow recently told The LA Times’ Hero Complex that it’s the same one from the first film. 

"The T. Rex in this movie is the same T. Rex from 'Jurassic Park'…She’s been on the island for 22 years. She’s still alive. She’s a little older, and she’s angry."

There are a lot of dinosaurs populating "Jurassic World," which sees a day when the human populace sees going to a zoo filled with living dinos as common as vacationing in Disney World.

We’ve seen the pterodactyls, the Great White Shark-eating mosasaurus and the still-menacing velociraptors, but we haven’t yet heard that signature roar from the franchise’s signature beast. Hopefully this means she’ll come in at the last minute to save Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard) and Owen (Chris Pratt) from certain annihilation by the Indominus Rex — perhaps even in mid-leap. That would certainly be an epic throwback to the final moments of "Jurassic Park." 

jurassic world 12

The dinosaurs are said to have as big of a part as the human relationships. While it’s fine and dandy to see Owen pontificate on playing God and the pride of man, we want to see some dinosaurs!

Phil Tippett, the genius who supervised the creation of these creatures in the first "Jurassic Park," is back on dino duty for "Jurassic World." It’s unclear exactly how much practical effects will be used, as all the trailers and promotional materials have pegged this to be a VFX extravaganza, but Hero Complex revealed something else that’s just as interesting and awe-inspiring than a mechanical triceratops breathing in and out. 

According to the publication, all the velociraptors are actually actors wearing motion-capture suits. In the style of the apes from the recent "Planet of the Apes" movies, this technology allows each creature to move in a unique way. The "Jurassic Park" of 1993 also had actors performing as these predators, but they were wearing suits instead. 

jurassic world 13

"Jurassic World" will hit theaters starting June 12, and you can see all these dinosaurs come to life.  

SEE ALSO: Here's what the dinosaurs in 'Jurassic World' will look like

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: The new 'Jurassic World' trailer shows why it took $190 million to make this summer blockbuster

The trailer for Lego's 'Jurassic World' game is here and it looks like a lot of fun

$
0
0

Though this summer's big "Jurassic World" film is all about Chris Pratt and his dinosaur motorcycle gang, "Lego Jurassic World" is a Lego-filled romp through the entire franchise's history.

Anxious to see Dr. Ian Malcolm excitedly talk his head off? "Lego Jurassic World" is right up your alley. The game launches this June alongside the new film, and it's headed to a wide variety of platforms: Xbox 360, Xbox One, PlayStation 3, Vita, PlayStation 4, Nintendo 3DS and Wii .

Video Produced by Graham Flanagan, courtesy WB Games.

Follow BI Video: On Facebook

Join the conversation about this story »


THEN & NOW: The cast of 'Jurassic Park' 22 years later

$
0
0

jurassic parkWhen "Jurassic Park" came out in 1993, it was a groundbreaking marvel. It revolutionized CGI while telling a compelling story.

With the next installment, "Jurassic World," out in theaters June 12, now seemed like as good a time as any to see where everybody from the original is today.

The actors and actresses who helped bring the original classic to life have found success long after escaping the clutches of the Velociraptors.

THEN: In perhaps the biggest role of his career, Sam Neill played leading paleontologist Dr. Alan Grant, who gets invited to the dinosaur-filled island home to Jurassic Park.



NOW: Neill reprised his role in "Jurassic Park III" and has appeared in TV series including "The Tudors." He now plays Inspector Chester Campbell in the British gangster drama "Peaky Blinders," which is preparing for its third season.

"Peaky Blinders" airs on BBC Two and can be seen on Netflix.



THEN: Laura Dern played paleobotanist Dr. Ellie Sattler, who accompanies Dr. Grant on his trip to Jurassic Park.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

'Jurassic World' had a monster opening night

$
0
0

jurassic world

Universal's "Jurassic World" is already a massive hit.

The Spielberg-produced sequel to "Jurassic Park" has amassed $18.5 million in Thursday night previews, which began at 7 p.m. last night. It opens in 4,273 theaters this weekend and is tracking to earn $125 million or more. 

The film also opened in several international markets on Wednesday, earning a combined $24.5 million on the day of its debut in China and France. 

"Jurassic World" topped "Furious 7" to become the biggest Universal "late night" Thursday release of all time. "Furious 7" earned $15.6 on the first Thursday of its release and wound up taking home a cool $147 million through the weekend. 

"Jurassic World" stars Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard as they try and track down a genetically engineered, hyperintelligent dinosaur that gets loose and terrorizes the island. Reviews have been generally favorable. The film currently sports a 71% on RottenTomatoes.

jurassic world 12

SEE ALSO: ‘Jurassic World’ completely ignores these important discoveries scientists have made about dinosaurs

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 5 science facts 'Jurassic World' totally ignored

5 inconsistencies in 'Jurassic World' that will drive scientists crazy

Here’s how big the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park would be in real life

$
0
0

Jack Horner — the paleontologist who's served as technical advisor on all of the Jurassic Park films — thinks that he can make a real dinosaur in the next five to 10 yearsHorner's idea for a dinosaur, however, is a slightly altered chicken he calls a "dino-chicken."

We here at Business Insider were hoping for something more frightening to get in the spirit of the latest film, "Jurassic World." So to conjure an idea of what it would feel like, size-wise, to live in a real Jurassic world, we've created this graphic, which includes some of the dinosaurs that appear in the film.

*Note that all of the numbers in this graphic, which are taken from a series of dinosaur sizes provided on this Wikipedia page, are measurements based on scientific excavation and analysis and don't necessarily resemble some of the scientifically inaccurate dinosaurs that appear in the film, such as the Velociraptor. 

BI_Graphics_Here’s how big the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park would be in real life

LEARN MORE: The paleontologist who worked on 'Jurassic World' is trying to create a real dinosaur within 5 to 10 years

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 5 science facts 'Jurassic World' totally ignored

Here's how the 'Jurassic World' dinosaurs looked in real life

$
0
0

Jurassic World

It is well-known at this point that "Jurassic World," the latest installment of the "Jurassic Park" franchise, diverges from the science when it comes to its portrayal of dinosaurs.

In real life, many of the dinosaurs vary in size and are often covered in feathers, but a few of them actually don't look that different.

Let's start with Velociraptor, one of the most feared creatures in the "Jurassic Park" universe:

Velociraptor Jurassic WorldIn reality, the Velociraptor could be more easily compared to either a turkey or a coyote:

Velociraptor Accurate

The look of Velociraptors in the film was actually based more off of Deinonychus ...

Deinonychus

... as well as a Utahraptor which was discovered as the original "Jurassic Park" was being made:

UtahraptorOne of the most terrifying new dinosaurs introduced in "Jurassic World" is the Mosasaurus, which makes even a great white shark look tiny.

jurassic worldThe real Mosasaurus isn't actually a dinosaur and it didn't have spikes along its back.

Mosasaurus

The Mosasaurus is really "marine lizard that's more closely related to snakes and lizards," according to Dr. John Hutchinson. 

However, that is nowhere near the biggest problem with the film's depiction.

According to Mark Witton, an illustrator who researches and specializes in dinosaurs, that misconception is based off depictions of this animal from the 1890s. The mistake was cleared up in the early 1900s. 

"The ["Jurassic World"] press has been showing their mosasaur has a series of scutes along it's back, similar to depictions of these animals by artists working in the 1890s. These Victorian artists were misled by bones which had dislocated from the throat to lie along the top of fossil skeletons, but this mistake was recognised by the early 1900s." Witton told Business Insider. "Indeed, we actually know quite a lot about mosasaur skin, and that they went to some length to be very streamlined and smooth."

After making a brief cameo in "Jurassic Park," the Gallimimus returned for "Jurassic World":

Gallimimus GIFThe real Gallimimus was actually fairly similar, but with a lot more feathers.

Gallimimus Feathers

Here is a Pteranodonthe unlucky victim of the much larger Mosasaurus:

jurassic world 12And here's a sketch of what the winged animal (who isn't actually a dinosaur) probably looked like:

Pteranodon

The Pteranodon was actually a Pterosaur, which is "a winged reptile which is very, very, very closely related to dinosaurs but not a dinosaur," according to Hutchinson.

Witton, who has consulted on several films about Pterosaurs in general, called the "Jurassic World" interpretation of the Pteranodon "among the worst reconstructions [he's] ever seen."

"No pterosaur had feet like that, and they certainly couldn't pick things up with them as shown in the trailers." Witton told Business Insider.

And finally, there's the almighty T. rex:

Jurassic Park T RexThe real T. rex was still huge, but it was actually covered in feathers. 

T rex feathers

Some have jokingly compared the T. rex to a "giant chicken." But still, would you want to mess with it?

"Jurassic World" opens in theaters Friday.

SEE ALSO: ‘Jurassic World’ completely ignores these important discoveries scientists have made about dinosaurs

AND: The velociraptors in the 'Jurassic Park' movies are nothing like their real-life counterparts

Join the conversation about this story »

NOW WATCH: 5 science facts 'Jurassic World' totally ignored

Viewing all 127 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>