#jurassic park

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ofools:

Sometimes I remember that there’s a massive beef in the paleontological community between Jack Horner and Robert Bakker and it’s so big that when they both worked as advisers on the Jurassic Park films, Spielberg made 2 characters based on them and had a T. rex eat Bakker’s character as a favour to Horner.

“The bearded paleontologist Dr. Robert Burke, who is eaten by a Tyrannosaurus rex in Steven Spielberg’s film The Lost World: Jurassic Park, is an affectionate caricature of Bakker.

In real life, Bakker has argued for a predatory T. rex, while Bakker’s rival paleontologist Jack Horner views it as primarily a scavenger.

According to Horner, Spielberg wrote the character of Burke and had him killed by the T. rex as a favor for Horner. After the film came out, Bakker recognized himself in Burke, loved the caricature, and actually sent Horner a message saying, ‘See, I told you T. rex was a hunter!’.”

God this is still funny

Academia is very serious

@forever-tangledup

post-store: jpnostalgia: vol-au-ventbaudelaire:25 years of ads peeled away The day has come. This is

post-store:

jpnostalgia:

vol-au-ventbaudelaire:

25 years of ads peeled away

The day has come. This is the only day of the year you can post this

$40.99


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fionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys difionagallaqher:Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSIC PARK (1993) God creates dinosaurs. God destroys di

fionagallaqher:

Film meme: [2/5] sci-fi » JURASSICPARK(1993)
God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs… Dinosaurs eat man. Woman inherits the earth.


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Route Map for every character in Jurassic Park

Route Map for every character in Jurassic Park


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fourtccn:

A gif of Owen Grady from Jurassic World reaching out to touch a Parasaurolophus, a dinosaur with a long head ornament protruding from the back of its skull.
A gif of a long-necked dinosaur opening its mouth while people stand around it.
A gif of Blue, the main Velociraptor in Jurassic World, walking with a baby identical to her. Both have blue stripes running down their back.
A gif of a Mosasaurus, an aquatic reptile from the Late Cretaceous. The Mosasaurus is biting a fishing boat cage lure. The fishing boat is about the size of her head.
A gif of the Tyrannosaurus Rex from Jurassic Park standing in front of a film projector and roaring. People are seen running from her.
A gif of a raptor with red feathers running at the screen with its mouth open.
A gif of Jurassic World character Owen Grady riding a motorcycle in front of two large dinosaurs. They bare the likeness of a T. rex but have two small bumps above their eyes.
A gif of a Quetzalcoatlus, a pterosaur with a large beak and a bump at the top of its head. It is attacking a plane and is close in size to said plane.
A gif of a ceratopsian dinosaur with two large horns and beak pushing a rolling car down a hill.
A gif of Jurassic World character Claire Dearing screaming as a Dilophosaurus flashes its teeth a few inches away from her face. The Dilophosaurus is the Jurassic Park version, with a large frill.

“dinosaurs” in the jurassic world dominion trailer

Parasaurolophus

Apatosaurus

Velociraptor

Mosasaurus

Tyrannosaurus Rex

Pyroraptor

Carnotaurus

Quetzalcoatlus

Nasutoceratops

Dilophosaurus

Clever mash up of Jurassic Park with How To Train You Dragon! :)

Original design made by myself and was digitally created in Photoshop.

  • Durable black soft enamel

  • 1.5 inch length

  • 1 rubber clutch

$3.95 US

$9 Canada

$13 International

 Another Dino commission done! This Isle’s Rexie was so nice to do ahh  art @ me  character @

Another Dino commission done! This Isle’s Rexie was so nice to do ahh 

 art @ me  character @ Mr. Alpha on discord 


Commissions are open - feel free to send me a DM! 


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I keep forgeting to post my art on here too.But here. Have a spino

I keep forgeting to post my art on here too.


But here. Have a spino


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aquaseamunkey:winterpower98:prismatic-bell:plushchrome1212: faejilly:prismatic-bell:ruffboijuliaburn

aquaseamunkey:

winterpower98:

prismatic-bell:

plushchrome1212:

faejilly:

prismatic-bell:

ruffboijuliaburnsides:

prismatic-bell:

randomslasher:

karadin:

madmollcosplay:

fantastic-nonsense:

seldo:

wemblingfool:

banjobutch:

xbuster:

Marvel movies have completely eliminated the concept of practical effects from the movie-watching public’s consciousness

Not just practical effects just like. Basic set design lol

How… How do they think sci-fi was done before CGI?

Really badly? Do you remember sci-fi before CGI? It was shit. And don’t say Star Wars because they went back and fixed that with CGI later.

*big sigh* *puts head in hands* heathens who’ve never watched pre-MCU sci-fi movies OR the unedited Star Wars movies, my beloathed

So first of all, most people agree that the majority of the “CGI fixes” in the Star Wars original trilogy (excluding minor visual/sound effects like lightsaber colors and blaster sounds) are unececssary, extremely conspicuous, and/or bad. This is not news to literally anyone older than about 20 who has consumed Star Wars content on any level. There are quite literally two very famous ‘despecialized’ fan projects explicitly dedicated to un-doing all of the shitty “fixed” CGI effects while simultaneously restoring the OT in HD.

And yes, I do, in fact, remember sci-fi special effects before CGI was the foundational cornerstone of moviemaking. It was not, in fact, shit:

Also, ironically I can show you by….*gasp* using fucking Star Wars, of all things. Welcome to the Tatooine pod race set of The Phantom Menace, which was not, as popularly believed, CGI’d but was instead a fully-built miniature set:

Yes, they built the entire set as a minature, built life-sized pod racers for the actors, then spliced the two together using digital effects. Yes, they did such a fantastic job that people think the entire set and scene sequence was basically completely CGI’d to this day. You’re fucking welcome for undervaluing the time, effort, and talents of set designers by implying that set design and practical effects inherently mean things will look like shit.

CGI also ages really poorly. What you think looks incredibly realistic now is going to look terrible in a few years. Just look at the original vs remastered Star Trek. They “restored” Star Trek around 2006 and replaced a lot of the practical effects with CGI, and maybe it looked ok in 2006, but it looks so bad and fake now.

You can see a video comparison for one episode here: https://youtu.be/ruPVTPCavdM

In the 60s they built a whole model of the Enterprise, complete with blinking lights and beautifully sculpted/painted details. It looks stunning! Then they replaced it with that horribly smooth and fake looking cgi ship.

Just look at this beauty

You can see the model at the Air and Space Museum in DC

Unfortunately the remastered version is the only version available to stream, but you can still find DVDs with the original effect.

made in 1968 and still stunning 2001 A Space Odyssey

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the designers worked with engineers at NASA to make realistic futuristic special effects using models and matte paintings no computer effects at all! - and incidentally inspired David Bowie to write Space Oddity, later performed in space by astronaut Chris Hadfield

The CGI of the original Jurassic Park may not be aging well (though arguably still better than some), but the practical effects will always look stunning. 

I want to talk fantasy.

This shot was achieved with splicing and green screen.

This wild-looking shot (and similar manipulations) was famously achieved by having a professional juggler in a duplicate of Bowie’s jacket and gloves sitting behind him, basically with Bowie in his lap, doing the handwork while Bowie kept his arms behind the juggler. You may have seen a game based on this on Whose Line Is It Anyway.

This? Wires! Splicing! THE CGI TO DO THIS DIDN’T EXIST YET! (The juggler is hidden under the cape. If there’s a scene where he’s wearing a cape, that’s actually probably why.)

And this? This heartstopping shot?


This does appear to be from the version with CGI—


—CGI THAT WAS USED TO ERASE THE SHADOW FROM THE PRACTICAL EFFECT.


The shot itself hasn’t changed. The lift itself was done with wires and Bowie was given some propulsion with an air cannon so he could make that turn at speed. A minor amount of CGI was used in the 30th anniversary to “touch up” the work done in 1986, and one of the things they did was to remove a shadow on the wall from one of the wires.

How about this?

You don’t know it, but you’re looking at a practical effect. In real life, the Ruby Slippers are almost orange. That luxe, rich ruby color showed up on the film as black when the shoes were the correct color, so the costumers adjusted the actual costume to give the color they wanted.


A MODEL OF A HOUSE SHOT INSIDE A NYLON STOCKING ATTACHED TO A FAN.


MAN IN A COSTUME.



HORSES DUSTED WITH COLORED GELATIN.

And this? This is where it would’ve been useful to have CGI. Margaret Hamilton got really badly burned on the steam doing one of her entrance/exits, and ended up in the hospital. THIS is what you use CGI for.

You come into my house and insult practical effects?


I’ll just finish off by reminding you THIS IS ONE, TOO.

That last one, iirc, was there was a double in a sepia-toned costume, and the interior door and wall there was painted brown, so when it was lit and shot it all appeared to still be in the sepia tone of the Kansas scenes, and part of why Dorothy stepped back out of the frame was so the double and Judy Garland (in the proper blue-and-white costume) could swap.

You are correct. The double’s name, by the way, was Bobbi Koshay.

#this is also a purely personal opinion but aged practical effects are charming #in a way that aged cgi is not(via@glorious-spoon)

Another movie that was made without CGI:

There are so many practical effects in Mary Poppins that it’s unbelievable. Ranging from the big ones (popping through pictures, tea parties on the ceiling, flying with an umbrella, etc.) to the incredibly little details, there’s a big reason why Mary Poppins won the Oscar for “Best Visual Effects” in 1965

I can’t find a list of all effects used, so this is just going off my memory of a documentary I watched once, so bear with me here; some of these things might be misremembered. But, some of the practical effects used in this film:

- Actors suspended on wires

- Scenes filmed front of a white screen lit with sodium vaporlights (early cinema’s “greenscreen” before greenscreen was invented)

- Matte paintings on glass for the cityscape scenes (rooftops of London, St. Paul Cathedral, etc.)

- Animatronics (the robin that whistles with Mary Poppins is an animatronic controlled by a wire, and the movement and sound you see on-screen was what it was actually doing on-set. The talking parrot umbrella head was also an animatronic.)

- Moving set pieces (every time they slide up or down the banister, they’re riding on a mechanized chair-lift hidden from the camera)

- Padded stairs (when they climb up the staircase made of smoke, the actors actually were climbing up a staircase padded with thick styrofoam, so that their feet would actually sink in some. The children found it particularly challenging, prompting Dick Van Dyke and Julie Andrews to offer extra help in keeping them balanced, thus really selling the idea that they are two kids walking on smoke with assistance from their guardians)

- Scene splicing (When she pulls impossibly large items from her carpet bag, she’s pulling them through a hole from under the table. The scene was spliced with footage depicting the table with nothing underneath it - except for Michael, who crawled underneath to ‘examine’ for a hole)

- Hidden compartments in bottles containing liquid of different colors (this one is my favorite lol; the children were not told that the medicine would come out of the bottle in different colors; they were just supposed to complain about taking it. Their reactions of shock and amazement are 100% genuine)

Even tiny details that you wouldn’t normally even think of as “special effects” were paid careful attention to, in order to help sell the story. Such as, during the Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious scene, while Julie Andrews and Dick Van Dyke are dancing and acting their hearts out, the children are supposed to sit on a fence and eat candy-apples. However, after filming for a long time, the kids were sick of the candy apples they’d been eating. So, Disney called for candy-apples made in tons of unique and delicious flavors, just colored to all look the same. It became the children’s favorite thing about the scene: they just got to sit and listen to fun music and watch the adults sing and dance while they tried a hundred different candy-apples, which is why they’re devouring them like little lions every time you see them on-screen.

(Also not so much a practical effect but just cute to note while I’m talking about Mary Poppins: the kids kept actually falling asleep during filming for the scenes in which Julie Andrews sings them lullabies lol)

CGI has its uses, to be sure. But it ought to be used to ENHANCE practical effects, not REPLACE them.

tbh that’s what Coraline is. And pretty much every movie by LAIKA Studios. It’s all filmed with practical effects and then enhanced with CGI.

Practical effects are actually amazing, and the overreliance on CGI makes films look far more ‘fake’ and causes them to grow outdated far more quickly than modern producers want people to admit.

Mainly because set designers and practical effects specialists are UNIONIZED but computer animators are not, making their labor easy to exploit and often leaving them massively overworked and underpaid.

I know I was already here, but since @plushchrome1212 made this incredible addition, I just want to point out this is a gold standard of practical effects work. Like. What I wrote above probably clued you in that I love looking for the man behind the curtain and going “oh, THAT’S how they did that!”

Mary Poppins is my favorite Disney movie. In 33 years, it has never once occurred to me to question how any of it was done. The illusion is so complete, I’m a grownass adult who just. Accepted that they disappeared into the sidewalk.

Can Someone please add the plant puppet from “My little shop of horrors”!?

That special effect was fenomenal and it took 6-8 people to move that puppet!

I got you:

Mean Green Mother From Outer Space scene: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mQJagD96X8U&t=22s


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Same coat & color as my kitty.. hmmmmmmmmmm *wants to give that cat a hair cut*

Same coat & color as my kitty.. hmmmmmmmmmm *wants to give that cat a hair cut*


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dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg dafoes:JEFF GOLDBLUM as IAN MALCOLM JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg

dafoes:

JEFF GOLDBLUMasIAN MALCOLM
JURASSIC PARK (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg


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ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? ohaladdins: Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right?

ohaladdins:

Ah, now eventually you do plan to have dinosaurs on your, on your dinosaur tour, right? Hello?

Jurassic Park (1993) dir. Steven Spielberg


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hariheart:grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:poetry-protest-pornography:harritudur: 1993 / 2022 Dr. ELhariheart:grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:poetry-protest-pornography:harritudur: 1993 / 2022 Dr. EL

hariheart:

grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:

poetry-protest-pornography:

harritudur:

1993 / 2022

Dr.ELLIESATTLER,Dr.ALANGRANT,Dr.IANMALCOLM

They’re all hotter?

They’re all hotter.

They ARE all hotter


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hariheart:grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:poetry-protest-pornography:harritudur: 1993 / 2022 Dr. ELhariheart:grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:poetry-protest-pornography:harritudur: 1993 / 2022 Dr. EL

hariheart:

grandtheftflora2electricboogaloo:

poetry-protest-pornography:

harritudur:

1993 / 2022

Dr.ELLIESATTLER,Dr.ALANGRANT,Dr.IANMALCOLM

They’re all hotter?

They’re all hotter.

They ARE all hotter

When I first saw them on the trailer I actually screamed. But they are hotter


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I’m delighted with how they look together.Jurassic Park and The Lost World, written by Michael Crich

I’m delighted with how they look together.

Jurassic Park and The Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.

Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / title page / internal illustrations by me. Both are out now only on foliosociety.com!

More images on Instagram: instagram.com/vectorthatfox


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The Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / tThe Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / tThe Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / tThe Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / tThe Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / tThe Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / t

The Lost World, written by Michael Crichton.

Published by Folio Society, with binding / endpapers / title page / map and 6 internal illustrations by me. Out now only on foliosociety.com!

Huge thanks to AD Sheri Gee, editor Rob Davies & everyone over at Folio Society. What an incredibly talented and hard-working team. Also massive thanks to the hoards of people who contacted us about doing this book over the past year; keeping quiet about it was so difficult.

I only wish he’d written more books for this series so we could keep the party going…

More images to come on Instagram: instagram.com/vectorthatfox


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JURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio SocieJURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio SocieJURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio SocieJURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio SocieJURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio Socie

JURASSIC PARK, written by Michael Crichton, illustrated by Vector That Fox, published by Folio Society. Available now at: www.foliosociety.com

More images and info on instagram: @vectorthatfox

In mid December of 2019 I was approached via an email to see if I was interested in a job that hadn’t been approved yet, was in the early stages of being pitched, and probably wouldn’t happen. I got my hopes entirely up and agreed. On the 8th of January (my birthday), I found out that the job was indeed going ahead, and what a bloody gift that was. It’s been incredibly difficult to keep my mouth shut and not show anyone what I was doing for the first third of this mad year, but now it’s finally real.

Enormous thanks to Art Director, Sheri Gee (and for the beautiful typography); everyone working with Sheri at Folio Society; the licensing team; Steve Brusatte for being my palaeontologist consultant; Heather for being ignored / bored by my quotes and “fun facts” for months, and anyone else involved in the process of creating this. This. This beautiful, this official, this illustrated republishing of the 1990 Michael Crichton novel, Jurassic Park. Complete with textured slipcase and soft-touch laminated cover with a textured spot varnish.

More images to come; hold onto your butts.


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