About five minutes into David Krentz & Erik Nelson's CG animated feature, Dinotasia, the thought occurred to me that this film didn't look any better than any number of Discovery Channel TV programs. Suffice it to say, I was not surprised to learn Dinotasia does, in fact, find its origins in a Discovery Channel series titled Dinosaur Revolution. That being said, I'm a fan of those programs. My son and I watch shows like Clash of the Dinosaurs, Walking with Beasts, and Monsters Resurrected all the time. However, this film was marketed as a stand alone feature, and I feel as though that is a bit of a sketchy description.The ideas behind Dinotasia are certainly interesting. The filmmakers wanted to create short vignettes following one or two...
- 11/8/2012
- Screen Anarchy
Dinosaurs may have died out 65 million years ago but mankind's knowledge about them continues to evolve and they remain an endless source of fascination and feature film material.
It's now widely accepted that many had plumage and in January the largest feathered dinosaur known was discovered in China. Yutyrannus huali (pictured above; click for a larger version) measured almost 30ft in length and weighed more than a tonne; it was a close cousin of T.rex but, unlike its famous relative, fossils show it was covered in downy feathers to keep it warm.
If Hollywood is taking note, maybe these latest discoveries will make it into Spielberg's planned Jurassic Park 4 or Barry Sonnenfeld's planned Dominion: Dinosaurs vs Aliens.
But in the meantime, there are other prehistoric-themed projects to sink your teeth into.
This Friday, May 4, sees the cinema release of Dinotasia, directed by David Krentz and Erik Nelson and...
It's now widely accepted that many had plumage and in January the largest feathered dinosaur known was discovered in China. Yutyrannus huali (pictured above; click for a larger version) measured almost 30ft in length and weighed more than a tonne; it was a close cousin of T.rex but, unlike its famous relative, fossils show it was covered in downy feathers to keep it warm.
If Hollywood is taking note, maybe these latest discoveries will make it into Spielberg's planned Jurassic Park 4 or Barry Sonnenfeld's planned Dominion: Dinosaurs vs Aliens.
But in the meantime, there are other prehistoric-themed projects to sink your teeth into.
This Friday, May 4, sees the cinema release of Dinotasia, directed by David Krentz and Erik Nelson and...
- 5/2/2012
- by David Bentley
- The Geek Files
I don't know what fossil records contributed to the making of the series of CG-animated vignettes that make up Dinotasia, but it seems directors Erik Nelson and David Krentz found some evidence of a dead triceratops stabbing, an arm-ripping incident and other various dinosaur-on-dinosaur violence courtesy of today's palaeontologists. After that they teamed up with Werner Herzog to narrate the whole thing, which will open in London on May 4, which must be why The Avengers is opening on April 26 across the pond rather than its stateside May 4 debut. No sense in competing with this. The animation in this feature was originally created for the Discovery Channel series "Dinosaur Revolution" which aired last September, but not as it was originally intended. The trivia section at IMDb offers some interesting information on the production: ["Dinosaur Revolution" was originally] intended to be a comedic but more adult-oriented and silent animated show with no narration, until the Discovery Channel...
- 4/23/2012
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
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