Dinosaur - videos, teasers and stills from filming

All videos, teasers and footage from the filming of the film "Dinosaur"
Dinosaur (2000)
Timing: 1:22 (82 min)
Dinosaur - TMDB rating
6.556/10
2715
Dinosaur - Kinopoisk rating
7.743/10
53003
Dinosaur - IMDB rating
6.4/10
73000

What's left behind the scenes

  • The coastline over which a pteranodon flies with an egg resembles the landscape of modern Australia.
  • Initially, it was assumed that the film would not have any dialogue at all, however, the head of Disney, Michael Eisner, insisted on including it in the script.
  • The backdrop of the film consisted of photographs of exotic locations in Venezuela, Tahiti, and Hawaii superimposed onto the image in the frame.
  • Directors Eric Leighton and Ralph Zondag initially intended to make the Tyrannosaurus Rex the main antagonist, however, due to the release of Steven Spielberg's 'The Lost World: Jurassic Park' in 1997, they changed it to a Carnotaurus, but the Carnotaurus was made larger than it actually was.
  • A plot hole that some pointed out concerned a herd of dinosaurs that produced offspring, but for some reason did not remain in the area after the birth of the young. The reason was that severe cold set in during the winter period, and the land was barren, forcing the herd to leave.
  • Originally, the film was intended to open with a meteor traveling through space, but this idea was abandoned after it was used in Michael Bay's adventure film *Armageddon* (1998).
  • An Oviraptor steals a surviving egg from Aladar. According to modern research, Oviraptors, contrary to their name (literally “egg thieves”), did not steal eggs from other nests.
  • Initially, directors Eric Leighton and Ralph Zondag intended to make a Tyrannosaurus Rex the main antagonist, however, due to the release of Steven Spielberg's 'The Lost World: Jurassic Park' in 1997, they switched to a Carnotaurus, but the Carnotaurus was made larger than they actually were.
  • Initially, the film was to open with a shot of a meteor moving through space, but this idea was abandoned when it was used in Michael Bay's adventure film "Armageddon" (1998).
Did you like the film?

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