That’s why I was glad to finally see a pterosaur documentary. In 2011, this documentary, called Flying Monsters, hit IMAX screens in 3D. Despite the relatively short running time, this film was ambitious-David Attenborough was the host, pterosaur evolution and biomechanics was the focus, and CGI was used extensively. Does it do pterosaurs justice? Well, that’s what I’m going to talk about now.
Showing posts with label documentary review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label documentary review. Show all posts
Friday, May 30, 2014
Documentary Review: Flying Monsters 3D
I must admit to being as guilty as pop culture is in terms of pterosaurs. Pterosaurs have always played second fiddle to the dinosaurs. When they’re not actually mislabeled as dinosaurs themselves, they’re often passed over as inferior prototypes to avian dinosaurs. Pterosaurs often seem to be token bit players in the world of dinosaurs-Pteranodon and Pterodactylus have an ocean and nearly 100 million years between them, but they’re synonymized in the public eye.
Saturday, May 10, 2014
Documentary Review: Walking With Dinosaurs-the Ballad of Big Al
In December I reviewed the sequel to the BBC’s smash hit
Walking With Dinosaurs, Walking With Beasts. However, this wasn’t the only 2001
followup. It’s a sign of the original series’ success that they not only made a
sequel, but also made a spinoff around the same time. This was not a complete
series, however, but a single episode explicitly based on a specific fossil. It
has the same opening sequence as the rest of the series, and follows the same
format. The name of this special, however, is much less dramatic, despite the
story being as grim and violent as the other stories in the series: The Ballad
of Big Al.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Documentary Review: Walking With Monsters 2005
Well, it’s been a long time coming, but it’s finally time we
finish the “Walking With” trilogy. True, there’s the three Chased by Dinosaurs
specials and Allosaurus and Walking With Cavemen, but this one is the closest
to the original in terms of structure.
It’s very different, however, in many ways, from running time to
presentation. It’s certainly ambitious and explores much-neglected times and
places in prehistory. People often forget that these periods existed, and only
the trilobite, Dimetrodon, and possibly Meganuera as familiar to most of the
public. They’ve always played second fiddle to dinosaurs, so much that
Dimetrodon is more often placed with dinosaurs than with fellow Pelycosaurs.
It’s telling that in the former exhibit Life Over Time, there was a corridor
visitors could take to bypass the entire Palaeozoic and go straight to the
dinosaurs (thankfully, Evolving Planet does not). It’s certainly the longest in
terms of time periods covered, while it’s much shorter in running time: at 90
minutes, it’s half the length of the first two.
So without further ado, let’s look at the prehistoric clip show to see
how they can deal with 280 million years of evolution in one and a half hours.
Saturday, February 1, 2014
Documentary review: Jurassic Fight Club
I have a special connection to this week’s documentary being
reviewed. When it first came out in 2008, I was eagerly anticipating it. You
see, it reminded me of a series I was really interested in as a teenager. It
was on Discovery, a show called Animal Face-Off, which discussed possible
battles between coexisting species such as lion vs tiger, elephant vs
rhinoceros, bear vs alligator, etc.
While the execution was terribly done, I liked the premise. When I heard
what sounded like a dinosaur version of the show was coming to TV, I couldn’t
wait.
This is Jurassic Fight Club. When I did watch it, it wasn’t as good as I hoped, but still a very
enjoyable show. The premise is
extrapolating from fossils about prehistoric conflicts. The discovery is first
shown, then the species involved, the environment, and then a comparison and
finally an action sequence showing the conflict. The host is George Blasing, a
paleontology expert and teacher who has a roadshow in Texas, educating at schools on fossils and
prehistoric animals. George is a great personality, dynamic and funny on the
show, and with a vivid imagination he describes, blow by blow, the incidents
implied by the fossil finds. When my
birthday came this past week, I immediately bought myself the DVD set for this
review.
Labels:
Allosaurus,
biomechanics,
Cretaceous,
Deinonychus,
Dinosaurs,
documentary review,
Jurassic,
K-T extinction,
Morrison,
Nanotyrannus,
Pachyrhinosaurus,
Pleistocene,
predators,
too many genera to tag,
Tyrannosaurus,
vs
Friday, January 17, 2014
Documentary Review: Clash of the Dinosaurs
Paleontologists usually don’t get furious, at least not at their job. Yeah, there are arguments and disagreements and the natural reaction to creationists and other forms of pseudoscience and anti-science, but personal offense isn’t usually part of the day. This makes such incidents very notable and significant. You see, the media is both the ally and nemesis of scientists; most of the time they help each other out, but when the deals go bad, things can be very messy. Today I’m going to talk about Matt Wedel and Clash of the Dinosaurs.
Monday, December 23, 2013
Documentary Review: Walking With Beasts 2001
You know, I reviewed Walking With Dinosaurs for two reasons.
One was to prepare for the upcoming movie. The other, however, was because of a
very happy holiday. I believe it was 2001 that it happened. Every year, usually
two weeks before Christmas, I visit my grandfather so we can put up his
Christmas tree and celebrate my father’s birthday with a pizza. That year we
went out, and enjoyed a pizza together at a nearby restaurant. There were
televisions nearby, and they always take up some attention. I had watched
Walking With Dinosaurs in the past year thanks to an uncle with cable.
Suddenly, when I looked up, I saw a Basilosaurus. Then brontotheres. A giant
predatory mammal ate a turtle. Ancestors of elephants swam by. I was
transfixed. Throughout the evening I watched the rest of the episode, and then
the next happened. A giant piglike animal snarled. A Baluchitherium marched
across a dry plain. A Hyenodon savagely killed another strange-looking
mammal. I stopped paying attention to the
pizza or my family. It was just me and the fantastic mammals. I had to be
dragged off just as a preview was shown featuring a giant prehistoric relative
of the elephant chasing human ancestors.
Monday, December 9, 2013
Documentary Review: Walking With Dinosaurs 1999
Today’s review should be compared with the previous
documentary review. Of course, this television program was made 10 years later.
In the late 90s, with the dinosaur enthusiasm produced by Jurassic Park
still strong, documentary producer Tim Haines wanted to make a cinematic style
documentary about prehistoric mammals. Dinosaurs proved to be more popular,
however, and Haines was told he could make a mammal program if and only if he
could make a dinosaur program first. In 1999, the BBC produced a high concept,
highly expensive, ambitious 6-part miniseries: Walking With Dinosaurs. Suffice
to say, it was a hit. Its imaginative style of prehistoric drama with
overlaying narration, based on nature documentaries, set the paradigm for all
paleontology documentaries since. So
today, I’m going to cover all 6 episodes, and see how they compare today. Why?
Well, this winter the BBC’s nature film
company will release a dinosaur epic under the same title, continuing the
legacy of their megahit 14 years before.
Friday, November 22, 2013
Documentary Review: T. rex Exposed 1991
Today is usually a movie day, but I do like to change things up. That’s right, this week I’m doing a documentary. This one I remember a long time ago, catching it as a re-run when I was six years old. I watched it on VHS over and over, and it can only be found today in VHS form or on Youtube from a grainy transfer. This is a Nova Episode called T.rex Exposed. Nova continues to be one of my favorite shows, exploring scientific concerns while most other shows prefer sensationalism or are replaced by reality TV. In the 90s, even before Jurassic Park, dinosaurs were popular enough for their own episodes.
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