An orphaned dinosaur raised by lemurs joins an arduous trek to a sanctuary after a meteorite shower destroys his family home.An orphaned dinosaur raised by lemurs joins an arduous trek to a sanctuary after a meteorite shower destroys his family home.An orphaned dinosaur raised by lemurs joins an arduous trek to a sanctuary after a meteorite shower destroys his family home.
- Awards
- 4 wins & 22 nominations
D.B. Sweeney
- Aladar
- (voice)
Julianna Margulies
- Neera
- (voice)
Samuel E. Wright
- Kron
- (voice)
Alfre Woodard
- Plio
- (voice)
Ossie Davis
- Yar
- (voice)
Max Casella
- Zini
- (voice)
Hayden Panettiere
- Suri
- (voice)
Peter Siragusa
- Bruton
- (voice)
Joan Plowright
- Baylene
- (voice)
Della Reese
- Eema
- (voice)
Matt Adler
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
Sandina Bailo-Lape
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
- (as Sandina Bailolape)
Cathy Cavadini
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
- (as Catherine Cavadini)
Holly Dorff
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
Greg Finley
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
Jeff Fischer
- Additional Voice
- (voice)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaInitially, Directors Eric Leighton and Ralph Zondag were to use the popular Tyrannosaurus rex as this movie's antagonistic predator, but at around the time of production, The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) was released, which depicted a somewhat softer, motherly side to the classic dinosaur. Thus, a Carnotaurus was used. However, they changed the Carnotaurus' size to be even larger than Tyrannosaurus rex, close to 17-18 m long, when real Carnotaurus were only 8-9 m in length, about the same size or even smaller then the film's hero Aladar.
- GoofsThe movie takes place in prehistoric North America, yet the Carnotaurs, the main antagonists were actually South American dinosaurs. The characters do claim that they haven't been seen "this far up north" before, however this doesn't rectify the mistake, since North and South America weren't connected back then. The Carnotaurs would have had to swim through the sea to reach North America, which would have been impossible.
- Crazy creditsThe film opens without any opening credits, which other than the production logo and the title of the film.
- Alternate versionsThe original print included a song by Kate Bush, but this was cut after unfavorable response from preview audiences.
Featured review
When i heard that the original screenplay o this film planned no dialogue at all for the characters, i became even more disappointed at the end result. While a very good film Dinosaur certainly is, it could have been incredible. The visual effects alone are a sight to behold, never more so than in the opening sequence. This is probably the best stretch in the whole film for me; it's unsanitised by talking animals and genuinely feels like a prehistoric world (ignoring the multitude of historical inaccuracies like grass in the Mesozoic era, particular dinosaurs living side by side). Once the animals start to talk the film is bogged down by the shortcomings of the script, which is idealistic and morally exposition heavy, for the sake of the target audience. It also detracts from the illusion the film so effortlessly produces on the screen at the start; it all just becomes so standard an routine when it seemed to be so much more. With a weak script, the visuals no longer arrest like they did before and would have done had nobody talked. Without the amazing cgi, this could have almost been straight to video.
I say almost because despite the shortcomings Dinosaur is a good movie; it's at times thrilling, exhilarating, touching and surprisingly intense, for a movie with a such a routine story. Had it had a better script it could have been great. Had it had no dialogue at all it could have been a classic and perhaps one of Disney's finest. The era of risk taking and inventiveness for the company seems to be at an end, or at least under suppression. Damn you Eisner! They were onto something this time.
I say almost because despite the shortcomings Dinosaur is a good movie; it's at times thrilling, exhilarating, touching and surprisingly intense, for a movie with a such a routine story. Had it had a better script it could have been great. Had it had no dialogue at all it could have been a classic and perhaps one of Disney's finest. The era of risk taking and inventiveness for the company seems to be at an end, or at least under suppression. Damn you Eisner! They were onto something this time.
- SevenStitches
- May 15, 2006
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Khủng Long
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $127,500,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $137,748,063
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $38,854,851
- May 21, 2000
- Gross worldwide
- $349,822,765
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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