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  1. 3 days ago · Today we're checking out another very interesting Mimo Toys Jurassic World release as this time we've got the GIGANTIC Giganotosaurus from Jurassic World Dom...

    • 13 min
    • 1960
    • Andy's Dinosaur Reviews
  2. Dec 11, 2023 · Witness the epic clash between the Giganotosaurus and the T-Rex as they engage in a fierce battle.SUBSCRIBE: https://uni.pictures/JW-SubscribeAbout Jurassic ...

    • 5 min
    • 1.4M
    • Jurassic World
  3. Jun 10, 2022 · Jurassic World Dominion 's prologue (which was released in 2021 but isn't part of the actual film) explained the ancient history between the T-rex and the Gigantosaurus. 65-million years ago during the Cretaceous age, a Gigantosaurus encountered a Tyrannosaurus Rex. The two massive apex predators fought and the larger and more powerful ...

    • John Orquiola
    • Senior Editor-Star Trek
  4. Jurassic World Dominion is the first film in the franchise with dinosaurs in a snowy environment. [15] [142] Some scenes, set in the Sierra Nevada, were filmed in British Columbia during a snowy winter. [105] Merritt was among the British Columbia locations, [112] [143] [144] which included its downtown [145] and a lumber yard.

    • 65 million years in the making (sort of).
    • Jurassic World: The Exhibition Images

    By Matt Purslow

    Updated: Nov 23, 2021 8:35 pm

    Posted: Nov 23, 2021 4:00 pm

    The prologue for Jurassic World Dominion takes us back 65 million years, rewinding time to when the dinosaurs ruled over the Earth. Its beautiful, almost serene depiction of natural dinosaur habitats was first seen in IMAX ahead of showings of Fast 9, but Universal has now released it for all to see. To get a deeper understanding of what that prologue means for the full movie, we spoke to Jurassic World Dominion director Colin Trevorrow, who revealed just how much of a dinosaur nerd he is while breaking down each scene.

    “Initially we had considered that this would be part of the film,” he says of the five-minute prologue, which now stands alone as a short film rather than being part of the final cut of Jurassic World Dominion. It’s a novel way to get these scenes out into the world, rather than leave them on the cutting room floor.

    “It's extremely important for me, as a storyteller, because I believe the dinosaurs are characters, and so this is the origin story for the T-Rex,” he says. “I wanted it to be told, and so Universal was totally down with experimenting with sharing five minutes of finished move as a ‘prologue’ six months in advance.”

    It was important to show this side of dinosaurs in order to reinforce one of Jurassic World Dominion’s themes. “A big part of this movie is making the connection between animals that live on the planet today and how we treat them, and how they coexist with us and dinosaurs,” says Trevorrow. “For us to really be able to see them in their natural habitat, just see them drinking water and moving in herds. The first time you watch it might almost seem a little quiet, it's not the kind of aggressive action that we show in our blockbuster movies. But that was the opportunity in [the prequel] for me. As a dinosaur nerd, I found that very exciting.”

    Talking of Trevorrow being a dinosaur nerd, you may notice in the prequel that the tyrannosaurus is covered in a coat of feathers. Science has discovered many new things about dinosaurs since the creation of the original Jurassic Park, and so setting the prequel in a time before genetically engineered dinosaurs gave Trevorrow the opportunity to make something more scientifically accurate.

    “I think we have a really good logical explanation for why these are dinosaurs that look different than the other Jurassic dinosaurs have looked in the past,” he says. “In this case, it's that we're showing them in their original habitat. There was no frog DNA used to bridge the gaps in the genomes, so it gave us an opportunity to show dinosaurs with feathers.”

    That feathered tyrannosaurus is an important character in the legacy of Jurassic Park; one day its DNA will be reconstructed used to create a living, breathing T-Rex in the year 1993. “It's an origin story, in the way we might get to do in a superhero film,” says Trevorrow. “The T-Rex is a superhero for me. It really allows us to take this brilliant concept that [Jurassic Park author] Michael Crichton conceived, that is the foundation that all of this has been built on, and show it in its absolutely purest form.”

    There was no frog DNA used to bridge the gaps, so it gave us an opportunity to show dinosaurs with feathers.

    • Matt Purslow
  5. Jun 27, 2022 · The Giganotosaurus, T-Rex, and Therizinosaurus all fight each other in the closing scene of Jurassic World Dominion, but they ignore the human characters fleeing the scene. While this may seem like an odd mistake, it is a moment that hammers home the fact that humans are ultimately not as significant to the dinosaurs as the dinosaurs are to humans.

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  7. Towards the middle of the extended preview we encounter a T-Rex and a Giganotosaurus fighting, and after a short battle, the T-Rex is killed. As we get a close-up on his eye dilating, we see a mosquito fly in and suck out some blood from the area nearby. Is it the same amber mosquito that John Hammond has on his staff in the first Jurassic Park ...