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Jurassic Park (1993) - movie trivia

Jurassic Park (1993)

User Rating
80%
(649 votes)
Critic Rating
72%
(6 reviews)
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Quotes (67)
Trivia (15)
Plot Description
Soundtrack
Wallpapers
Shooting Locations
Popularity

Directed by
Steven Spielberg

Written by
Michael Crichton

Cast
Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Bob Peck [more]


Release Date
• USA: Jun 11, 1993
DVD Release Date
• R1: Feb 1, 2000
• R2: 4 Sep 2000

Budget $63,000,000

MPAA Rating
PG13

Running Time
2 hours, 7 minutes

Country USA

Studio Amblin Entertainment, Universal

More info on IMDb.com

Other Titles
• Jurassic Park
• JP (1993)



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 Trivia from Jurassic Park (1993)
1
Theatrical release: June 10, 1993.

  68.571428571429% (14 votes)
2
The film was shot at Universal Studios and Kauai, Hawaii.

  61.666666666667% (12 votes)
3
Phil Tippett, Stan Winston, Michael Lantieri, and Dennis Muren won Academy Awards for Best Visual Effects for their innovative use of CGI.

  60% (11 votes)
4
The film made more than $350 million at the domestic box office and more than $920 million worldwide.

  62.222222222222% (9 votes)
5
Steven Spielberg's JURASSIC PARK quickly found its place among the top 6 films composing Variety's 15 box-office hits of all time. The film's rise to the top began opening weekend, when it set a record for the biggest opening day, $18 million, and the highest-grossing three-day opening of all time, $52 million. This estimation doesn't, however, include inflationary prices, which might alter the film's revenue rank.

  70% (8 votes)
6
Executives also predicted the film would become one of the highest-grossing films in Japan. It has already become the highest-grossing movie in Britain, not to mention the biggest hit in international box-office history, generating more than $900 million in ticket sales.

  
7
According to financial analysts, the high opening weekend revenues were aided by strong advance sales obtained through telephone ticketing. MovieFone reported that 30 major theaters in Los Angeles and New York were sold out entirely through the teleticketing service.

  
8
The film's estimated cost was between $56 and $100 million, including the $2 million the studio paid cowriter Michael Crichton for rights to his 1990 best-seller.

  
9
Because Spielberg was concerned with anatomical accuracy, he employed a group of dino-technicians, including artists, fabricators, and paleontologists.

  
10
Initially, conventional special effects techniques were to be supervised by Oscar winner Stan Winston (ALIENS, T2) until Industrial Lights & Magic's Dennis Muren (THE ABYSS, T2) convinced him computer graphics more appropriately suited the task for the large-scale scenes.

  
11
Muren created ostrichlike Gallimimus on his computer that were so realistic, they left Spielberg amazed. Computer animators and model builders began working together thereafter. Winston's artists created detailed drawings from the computer pictures, which were then re-created in clay. From the clay models, large-scale hydraulic skeletons, operable by remote control, were constructed. Latex skins covered the skeletons, giving the textured appearance of the outer epidermal surfaces.

  
12
The final creations included a 40-foot-long Tyrannosaurus rex, predatory velociraptors, a brachiosaur, and a spitting dilophosaur. The T-rex was controlled by a model one-fifth its scale.

  
13
Spielberg's film benefited from recent scientific discoveries that refuted widely held dinosaur stereotypes.

  
14
There were a number of discrepancies between the book and the film. For example, Crichton's literary menagerie included 15 dinosaur species, while the film contains only 7.

  
15
Though some found the film's premise incredible, biologists Raul Cano of California Polytechnic State University at San Luis Obispo and George Poinar Jr. of the University of California, Berkeley, disclosed they had cloned DNA from a 40-million-year-old bee preserved in amber. And according to Newsweek, scientists at the American Museum of Natural History in New York also claimed to have cloned DNA from a 25-million-year-old termite trapped in a similar mineral. They are still a long way from bringing creatures to life, however.

  


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