A documentary series following various prehistoric creatures, depicting their way of lives as well as their lust for survival.A documentary series following various prehistoric creatures, depicting their way of lives as well as their lust for survival.A documentary series following various prehistoric creatures, depicting their way of lives as well as their lust for survival.
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOriginally intended to be a comedic but more adult-oriented and silent animated show with no narration, until the Discovery Channel changed the format to a television documentary in the final stage of development. Hence the drastic shifts in tone, from scientific and serious to over-the-top sensational and goofy, as well as the tacked-on narration and the talking heads.
- GoofsThroughout the series, there are shots when the animals unconvincingly slide across the terrain or float in the air when running, due to the rushed animation.
- ConnectionsEdited into Dinotasia (2012)
Featured review
Voyage of the Disneysaurii
Take a smattering of randomly themed vignettes, add some excitable paleopublicists, curiously proportioned and bizarrely animated models, throw them together, blend, and pour.
Is this entertainment? Education? I'm really not sure, and neither is it. Some paleontological background is presented, but in a token way, with a few stock shots of hammer wielding Indiana Jones style field workers cutting to a hand waving exposition of the conclusions, with no connection between the two. Science by assertion.
Pragmatically though, all television is a way to attract eyeballs for advertisers, and this series is clearly aimed at doing just that.
To its credit, there is an underlying theme to each episode, such as parental care. But this is illustrated with tiny minidramas, jumping around between eras and species in a disjointed way that prevents any subject being explored in depth.
And there are also some highly spurious scenarios, presumably thrown together more for re-use of models or raw drama than through any suggestion from their tame pseudo-science mouthpieces - giant killer mosquitoes, being a standout example.
The animation is passable, barely. Strangely staccato, it's more reminiscent of Harryhousen than Jurassic Park. Since the latter was made twenty years ago, there's little excuse for such jerky, hesitant beasts that float and waft through their environments without any interaction.
All of this I could forgive, but for one thing: the comedy anthropomorphisation of the stars, with a side line in puppyish behaviour.
Apparently the way to sell dinosaurs now is to have them react like people or our favourite contemporary beasts, to project human problems and emotions and reactions on to them.
Dinosaurs perform double-takes, females sport rounded, darkly lined eyes - I could swear that some of them were batting lashes. A sleepless night leads to a tired, grumpy dinosaur during the day. It's an animal! If it's tired, it will just lie down and sleep, problem solved.
This theme continues through the episodes that I bothered to watch, but eventually I realised that I was watching popular entertainment that simply isn't very entertaining.
Is this entertainment? Education? I'm really not sure, and neither is it. Some paleontological background is presented, but in a token way, with a few stock shots of hammer wielding Indiana Jones style field workers cutting to a hand waving exposition of the conclusions, with no connection between the two. Science by assertion.
Pragmatically though, all television is a way to attract eyeballs for advertisers, and this series is clearly aimed at doing just that.
To its credit, there is an underlying theme to each episode, such as parental care. But this is illustrated with tiny minidramas, jumping around between eras and species in a disjointed way that prevents any subject being explored in depth.
And there are also some highly spurious scenarios, presumably thrown together more for re-use of models or raw drama than through any suggestion from their tame pseudo-science mouthpieces - giant killer mosquitoes, being a standout example.
The animation is passable, barely. Strangely staccato, it's more reminiscent of Harryhousen than Jurassic Park. Since the latter was made twenty years ago, there's little excuse for such jerky, hesitant beasts that float and waft through their environments without any interaction.
All of this I could forgive, but for one thing: the comedy anthropomorphisation of the stars, with a side line in puppyish behaviour.
Apparently the way to sell dinosaurs now is to have them react like people or our favourite contemporary beasts, to project human problems and emotions and reactions on to them.
Dinosaurs perform double-takes, females sport rounded, darkly lined eyes - I could swear that some of them were batting lashes. A sleepless night leads to a tired, grumpy dinosaur during the day. It's an animal! If it's tired, it will just lie down and sleep, problem solved.
This theme continues through the episodes that I bothered to watch, but eventually I realised that I was watching popular entertainment that simply isn't very entertaining.
helpful•104
- RogerBorg
- Jan 26, 2013
- How many seasons does Dinosaur Revolution have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Reign of the Dinosaurs
- Filming locations
- Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain(Location)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content