• pinkdrunkenelephants
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    1 year ago

    🤔 So how come they’re not portrayed that way in Jurassic Park? Or did the newer movies change it?

    • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Jurassic Park came out literally 30 years ago.

      Feather fossilization requires almost perfect conditions. There’s a few locations where most of the fossil evidence of dinosaur feathers come from, and those fossils started to be found a few years after the movie came out. Feathered dinosaurs had been suggested long before Jurassic Park, but the evidence back then wasn’t great.

      More to the point, though, Jurassic Park was a mixture of the best science at the time and deliberate artistic license. Jack Horner, a paleontologist who worked with Spielberg in it, said “My job was to get a little science into Jurassic Park, but not ruin it”.

      For example, most of the dinos in the movie have muted colors, because Spielberg thought that colorful dinosaurs weren’t scary. Modern films have deliberately kept the look and feel of the original as an artistic choice.

      • pinkdrunkenelephants
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        1 year ago

        There are new movies in the franchise. Jurassic World Dominion came out in 2022 yet the dinosaurs still look suspiciously reptilian, with thick scales and teeth sticking out of their mouths.

        Honestly, you guys need to step it up and make them show dinosaurs the way you think they look now instead of letting them abuse artistic license to basically lie to people. Most Americans are peasants, including myself, and only know about dinosaurs through that franchise, so if you want to educate people, you need to step up and get them to change it.

        • Pipoca@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          Yes, and Jurassic Park has always been a monster movie and not a documentary.

          Honestly, what we need is an updated version of Walking With Dinosaurs.

          • pinkdrunkenelephants
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            1 year ago

            That too. We need more dinosaur love, period.

            Monster movie, not a documentary

            Monster movies are typically grounded in reality specifically to avoid immersion-breaking issues like this one