Total Recall: Dinosaurs!

With the re-release of Jurassic Park hitting theaters this week, we run down some of cinema's most memorable prehistoric beasts.

Dinosaurs

Dinosaurs! They've all been dead for millions of years, but at the box office, they'll never go extinct. This weekend's 3D re-release of Steven Spielberg's classic blockbuster Jurassic Park is just the latest example of how much filmgoers love getting stomped on by the big scaly beasts, but Hollywood has a long tradition of studios reaping Tyrannosaurus-sized grosses out of dino-thrillers -- or occasionally looking like cavemen when audiences don't show up. In honor of the movie biz's continued love affair with our prehistoric pals, this week's list offers a look back at some of the most dino-centric movies we could think of. It's time for Total Recall!

Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend

15%

Filmed at a unique moment in cinema history -- when animatronic effects were really starting to come into their own, and before the advent of affordable, good-looking CGI -- 1985's Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend is a sweetly affable, family-friendly drama about a husband-and-wife team of paleontologists (played by Sean Young and William Katt) racing against time through the jungles of Africa to rescue a cute widdle baby dinosaur and its mother from an evil scientist (Patrick McGoohan). Unfortunately, despite the studio's insistence that Baby would take filmgoers on "the greatest adventure ever born," it ended up being a bit of a box office disaster for Disney/Touchstone -- and a different kind of nightmare for critics like Marie Mahoney of the Austin Chronicle, who pleaded, "Even if your children like dinosaurs, don't let them be exposed to the offensive, insensitive, intolerably anti-humanist and racist propagandizing that is draped around them in this film. No plot, no heart, no soul."

Dinosaur

65%

Unlike a lot of modern-day animated movies, Disney's Dinosaur doesn't offer much in the way of a flashy voice cast; its stars included D.B. Sweeney, Ossie Davis, Alfre Woodard, Della Reese, and a young(er) Hayden Panettiere. But what it lacked in marquee oomph, it made up with sheer visual brilliance, bringing most of its $127 million budget to bear on breathtakingly detailed computer animation. That was enough for audiences, who turned out en masse to witness the story of Aladar (Sweeney), an orphan Iguanodon adopted by a family of lemurs, bringing in nearly $350 million in worldwide grosses. Dinosaur wasn't quite as much of a hit with critics, but it still had its supporters -- including Roger Ebert, who marveled, "The movie sends the message that computer animation is now sophisticated enough to mimic life itself in full motion, with such detail that the texture of reptilian skin seems as real as a photograph in National Geographic."

Dinosaurus!

60%

Combining two of sci-fi's most well-worn tropes -- modern man's propensity for uncovering exotic corpses while building modern stuff and lightning's ability to resuscitate said corpses -- 1960's Dinosaurus! takes viewers to a Caribbean harbor, where construction workers unknowingly dig up a caveman alongside some million-year-old dinosaur bodies, leave them out to be zapped by bolts from the sky, and trigger a bit of low-budget Jurassic Park action. The result isn't really anyone's idea of a classic dinosaur movie -- but it's also, in the words of Ken Hanke of the Mountain Xpress, "Too goofy to dislike."

Jurassic Park

92%

Heralding the full-on arrival of Hollywood's CG era with a throwback to good old-fashioned creature features, Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park offered sublime spectacle without forgetting the cardinal rule of filmmaking: You have to tell a story audiences are going to care about. To that end, Park assembled a cast of savvy character actors (including Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, and Richard Attenborough) to lend heart and believability to a sci-fi-infused tale about a goofy millionaire (Attenborough) who bankrolls a vacation destination filled with real live dinosaurs. Having said that, it would be disingenuous to suggest that David Koepp and Michael Crichton's script spent much time on human characterizations; it was far too busy zipping around from one dino-peril to the next. But that was just fine with audiences, who made Jurassic Park the year's top-grossing film by a wide margin -- and with most critics, including Movieline's Stephen Farber, who admitted "True, the dialogue and performances are feeble, but the thing is basically no more -- and no less -- than a nifty monster movie that delivers crackerjack thrills."

The Land Before Time

72%

Animator Don Bluth was one of the more star-crossed filmmakers of the 1980s, finding his promising career derailed by a series of business setbacks throughout the decade in spite of generally well-received work. But no amount of bad luck could stop 1988's The Land Before Time, which used the power of cute talking dinosaur toddlers to reap big box office bucks (and spawn a franchise that currently includes a dozen direct-to-video sequels). If you grew up in the 1980s, spending time with Littlefoot, Ducky, Cera, and Petrie was a rite of passage; as critic Steve Rhodes put it, "It is full of the delightful merriment of childhood, albeit dinosaur childhood not Homo sapiens. For a sweet and simple little picture the whole family can gather round the tube and watch with delight, this one delivers the goods."

Land of the Lost

26%

Will Ferrell, Danny McBride, and dinosaurs -- plus a loose creative affiliation with one of the most beloved live-action Saturday morning serials of the 1970s. It's a can't-miss proposition, right? Universal certainly seemed to think so, given that the studio ponied up $100 million and a plum June release date for 2009's Land of the Lost. Sadly, the result -- which starred Ferrell as a nincompoop paleontologist who triggers a time warp and finds himself trapped in the distant past with a college student (Anna Friel) and a gift shop owner (McBride) -- didn't even try to recapture the low-budget magic of the original series, opting instead for a satirical approach that failed to resound with filmgoers and critics alike. "With his belligerent blankness and gawky aplomb, Ferrell has made me laugh as much as any comic of his generation, but he's not doing anything fresh in Land of the Lost," opined a disappointed Peter Rainer for the Christian Science Monitor.

Comments

Typhon

Typhon Q

I feel like everyone's forgotten about Dinosaur. It was actually a pretty good movie.

On the other hand, we have Land of the Lost, which is just plain terrible.

Apr 3 - 04:38 PM

Brenton M.

Brenton Malnofski

It has been some time since I've watched Dinosaur. I remember loving it as a kid, and I remember the Carnotaurs being scary and badass. Gotta revisit it for nostalgia's sake.

Apr 3 - 08:27 PM

Andrew Brinkerhoff

Andrew Brinkerhoff

Seeing that meteor shower in the theater was one of my more memorable childhood memories (I was 7).

Apr 3 - 10:27 PM

King  S.

King Simba

Dinosaur had some fantastic scenes and the score is absolutely epic, but I found the story only so-so. Interestingly I could say the same for Atlantis, another Disney movie released around the same time with a score by James Newton Howard.

Apr 4 - 05:44 AM

Lyle Bandoquillo

Lyle Bandoquillo

Saw it as a kid and loved it, but never knew why critics hated it. Maybe a bit similar to Land Before Time?

Apr 5 - 12:48 AM

Adam Almerud

Adam Almerud

I think it was of the on-coming clichés we have seen before,the steretype characters and the Moses story. But overall I thought it was really good as a kid, and now I believe I would think almost the same even though the critics may have a point. But hey that didn´t stop the critics for not hating on Avatar, that had the storyline of Pocahontas and Ferngully.

Apr 5 - 11:55 AM

Emin Azeroglu

Emin Azeroglu

I have no idea why people hate this animated awesomeness

Apr 6 - 10:58 AM

Emin Azeroglu

Emin Azeroglu

I have no idea why people hate this animated awesomeness

Apr 6 - 10:58 AM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

We're Back and The Land Before Time, now those were the days...

Apr 3 - 04:47 PM

Ethan Sam

Ethan Sam

Ain't it the truth!

Apr 4 - 06:30 PM

Stephen Adolf

Stephen Adolf

Heh, I remembering watching them so much that I memorized all the lines

Apr 5 - 02:17 AM

Gradhito Omar Ramadhan

Gradhito Omar Ramadhan

we're back! is as good as the land before time for me, both of them are my childhood

Apr 7 - 05:11 AM

William Gonzalez

William Gonzalez

The land before time... last time I saw that was a like million years ago.

Apr 3 - 04:50 PM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

IKR! I was a toddler when I first saw it in theaters.

Apr 3 - 06:43 PM

Griffin Watson

Griffin Watson

That was funny and cute. Cool animation Gertie the Dinosaur. And I remember We're Back The Dinosaur Story. I now realize how bad it was.

Apr 3 - 04:55 PM

Dave J

Dave J

How can some of those dinosaurs movies be memorable if some scored less than 60%? I guess it's a matter of public perception!

Apr 3 - 05:09 PM

Derek Viars

Derek Viars

Because judging a movie by its Rotten Tomatoes score is the movie equivalent of judging a book by its cover.

Apr 3 - 05:20 PM

Dave J

Dave J

"One Million Years B.C." starring Raquel Welch from 1966; "Time Machine" had some dinosaurs in it and "the Last Continent" otherwise great list!

Apr 3 - 05:30 PM

Rowan McGrath

Rowan McGrath

Its telling you say, starring Raquel Welch. Back in the day when one good cave bikini could cause a stir.

Apr 4 - 03:18 AM

Typhon

Typhon Q

Because I think that there are only so many dinosaur movies they can go with.

Apr 3 - 09:09 PM

King  S.

King Simba

I think they could have easily replaced a few of these with more worthy titles. I mean I could see why they wouldn't include King Kong and Fantasia, as as great as the dinosaur sequences in them were they weren't the primary focus of the films, but you've still got The Lost World (1925) and One Million Years B.C, which are both far more well known than most of the films listed here (even if the latter is more well known for the furry bikini than the dinosaurs).

Apr 4 - 05:33 AM

David Ballard

David Ballard

Spot on, King Simba. You can add When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth to that list of notable omissions as well.

Apr 5 - 07:00 AM

Dave J

Dave J

^lower^

Apr 4 - 01:25 PM

Bradley J.

Bradley J

Jurassic Park and Dinosaur are definetly the best films on this list. Dinosaur was underrated in my opinion.

Apr 3 - 05:40 PM

You Mans

You Mans

Jurassic Park, Dinosaur and The Land Before Time are some of my favorite movies ever! And it's true, Dinosaur is very underrated!

Apr 3 - 06:16 PM

Gavin Miller

Gavin Miller

Jurassic Park is my favorite, and I watched Gertie the Dinosaur, that made my day!! :)

Apr 3 - 06:35 PM

Dick Travis

Mick Travis

The year of 1993 was indeed the Year of the Dinosaur, as we not only had WE'RE BACK! and JURASSIC PARK, but also the Full Moon release CARNOSAUR, which spawned its own low-budget franchise like the studio's PUPPET MASTER series. There are 2 other omissions I'd like to dole out: 1925's THE LOST WORLD and 1981's CAVEMAN, both of which had significant dino effects for their respective times.

Apr 3 - 06:35 PM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

I saw Caveman recently and you are indeed right. Best caveman movie of the 80s.

Apr 3 - 06:46 PM

Edward Thomson

Edward Thomson

King Kong's (2005) V-Rex is my favorite, even though they get their asses kicked

Apr 3 - 07:03 PM

Clayton Bambrough

Clayton Bambrough

Forgot Carnosaur, the other Jurassic Park ripoff of 1993. Terrible, but some cool animatronics and very gory, basically R rated Jurassic Park

Apr 3 - 07:11 PM

infernaldude

Infernal Dude

No Carnosaur!? No Prehysteria!? For shame...

Apr 3 - 07:47 PM

Sammy Allouba

Sammy Allouba

What, no One Million Years B.C.? That's a classic!!!!

And The Valley of Gwangi is a severely underrated movie.

Apr 3 - 07:56 PM

Captain Terror

Captain Terror

I had an irrational love for "Dinosaurus" when I was a kid. It was already old by then, but boy did I love that movie.

And I hereby admit that I saw "Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend" at the theater. Not the most masculine day of my life.

Apr 3 - 08:11 PM

Jeffrey Polizzi

Jeffrey Polizzi

They forgot to mention "Dinosaur City," "We're Back: A Dinosaur Story," "Dinosaurs" TV series, Walt Disney's "Fantasia" scene where dinosaurs roam the Earth from life to death featuring "Rite of Spring" by Igor Stravinsky, Peter Jackson's remake of "King Kong" which feature dinosaurs in some scenes, "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs," maybe "Night at the Museum" featuring a fossil-ed T-Rex, and many more unless that's all of it. Whew!!!

Apr 3 - 09:31 PM

Kurtiss Keefner

Kurtiss Keefner

We're Back is the last movie on the list.

Apr 3 - 10:56 PM

King  S.

King Simba

I still get the chills in Rite of the Springs when all the dinosurs turn around and there's a T.Rex standing there. Second scarriest entrance for a dinosaur behind only Jurassic Park.

Apr 4 - 05:37 AM

Matthew R.

Matthew Reimer

Night At The Museum, Fantasia and King Kong don't reallr count because they are not really about dinosaurs as dinosaurs were only elements in those movies. Though I do agree on Ice Age Dawn of The Dinosaurs.

Apr 4 - 02:21 PM

Andrew Brinkerhoff

Andrew Brinkerhoff

Liked "Land Before Time", "Jurassic Park" is solid entertainment, "Dinosaur" brings some nostalgia for me as it was one of my earlier theater experiences, but I wasn't the biggest fan of it last time I watched it (probably 4-5 years ago), may have to see it again to refresh my memory. Didn't see "Land of the Lost" because it looked freaking awful (I dislike Will Ferrell), though I have seen a few episodes of the original show (which is ultra-cheesy but actually kind of fun from what I remember. And I completely missed out on "We're Back!", being a 1992 baby (and have never come across a VHS or DVD copy), but from what I've heard it seems like I didn't miss much...

Apr 3 - 10:43 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

The Land Before Time, quit possibly the only film next to Anastasia from Don Bluth I actually love. I should really watch it again though, it's been ages.

And Jurassic Park, & Jurassic Park 3 kick ass. The Lost world can suck it & drown underwater.

Dinosaur was pretty good, though not one of Disney's best.

Apr 3 - 11:45 PM

Maurice Frerejean

Maurice Frerejean

JP3 sucked. The Lost World was okay, but cannot compete with JP.

Apr 4 - 02:51 AM

Dick Travis

Mick Travis

I'd rather watch JP3 than THE LOST WORLD, as the those retarded gymnastics moves and KING KONG rip-off were too much for me to stomach. Also JP3 is really short!

Apr 4 - 09:14 AM

King  S.

King Simba

Personally, nothing in Lost World was as difficult to stomach as watching the T.Rex go from a childhood nightmare to a complete joke. And I found the girl doing gymnastics to fight off the raptors a lot more believable than a boy surviving on an island for 8 weeks, while highly trained adults are picked off almost instantly.

Apr 4 - 01:58 PM

Frisby2007

Frisby 2007

And Jurassic Park, & Jurassic Park 3 kick ass. The Lost world can suck it & drown underwater.

Apr 4 - 08:52 PM

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