Tumgik
#we're back! a dinosaur story
vampiremeerkat · 2 years
Note
What does Larie's voice sound like?
I don't have a well-thought out comparison, though I've used the main kid's voice from A Dinosaur Story for an animation once. I imagine something that hasn't hit puberty yet. Marie's voice itself is really high-pitched.
11 notes · View notes
howieblings · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
I made a crazy risk. You gamble and it's - about to pay off.
317 notes · View notes
king-k-ripple · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
854 notes · View notes
Text
Riot Kings, page 149
Tumblr media
prev next
108 notes · View notes
animatejournal · 1 year
Video
We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story Producer: Steve Hickner | Studio: Amblin USA, 1993
116 notes · View notes
theabbystabby · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
They are the same. And I'm here for it.
113 notes · View notes
Photo
Tumblr media
we all wanted the breakfast sandwich rube goldberg machine from we’re back
87 notes · View notes
themattress · 1 year
Text
Random Ghetsis Thoughts
Not sure why this suddenly occurred to me, but it did and I want to talk about it. 
Tumblr media
Concept art confirms that Ghetsis’ right eye is scarred, which is why he covers it up with a fancy eye piece. It’s possible that however this happened is the same reason he has such a weak, hardly-able-to-be-used right arm. I’m not sure if this was the intention, but I really, truly believe that a Pokémon was responsible. Possibly even his Deino/Zweilous/Hydreigon, since as everyone is aware it reached its full evolution at a level before its species is normally able to and has a very powerful Frustration attack; which is an attack that is stronger the more the Pokémon hates its trainer...all signs that Ghetsis heavily abused this Pokémon in order to make it achieve this kind of power.  Now, the first thing that came to mind when I thought about this was the High Evolutionary, villain of the recent Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3, who is also a psychotic narcissist who suffered facial disfigurement from an animal he abused. However, all things considered his relationship with said animal is more akin to Ghetsis’ relationship with N than with any Pokémon; in both cases the narcissist thought so little of his victim that said victim managing to turn against them and even out-do them drove them mad. 
And that’s when my mind drifted to a far more obscure cinematic villain.
youtube
Professor Screweyes was the stand-out of the otherwise mediocre We’re Back! A Dinosaur’s Story (well, him and John Goodman as the lead dinosaur), and as he explains in the deleted scene above it was a crow pecking out his eye that led to him having a metallic replacement, and it also led to him to develop a fear of crows and what they are capable of. This is a fact that his narcissistic ego wouldn’t let stand, and so he collected a bunch of crows that he keeps under firm, tyrannical control in order to show that he is “the master of his own fear”.
And then, after he’s defeated, this happens: 
youtube
In attempting to control his own fear in such a cruel way - abusing the crows and making them despise him - Screweyes only ended up causing his worst nightmare to come true.
......Wait.
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
He doesn’t die like Screweyes and instead is imprisoned like the High Evolutionary, but the same principle of what befell Screweyes is at work here in the Pokémon Adventures manga. The implication is obvious: a Pokémon he couldn’t control fucked him up, making him scared of Pokémon he can’t control, and as a result he decided to become “the master of his own fear” by controlling every Pokémon, through hurting them in the most unimaginably cruel ways. As a direct consequence, he finds himself faced with his worst nightmare: he’s on the shitlist of practically every Pokémon in Unova, and they refuse to be controlled by him. Their glare is the same as Zekrom’s, suggesting the same thing “If you dare try to worm your way out of prison and mess with us again, we will fuck you up”, cutting right to that same fear he felt when his right eye and right arm were destroyed and making him lose his goddamn mind.
44 notes · View notes
bestanimatedmovie · 1 year
Text
Tumblr's favorite animated movie!
Tumblr media
Vote in the other polls!
What fans say:
In This Corner of the World:
Love the animation style and story telling.
Animation and music are beautiful. I also love that it's told from the perspective of an artist whose head is always on the clouds. So many historical events are happening, but she's just living her life as best as possible in her little corner of the world. It's also interesting to see the WWII from the perspective of Japanese civilians.
We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story:
Does anyone else even know this movie? t I want to give it a shout out because it was such a fun oddball of a film.
39 notes · View notes
eric9794 · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Drawings I've done in June
39 notes · View notes
ararebreedstory · 3 months
Text
What are your top 10 favorite Dinosaur Movies that aren't Jurassic Park?
(In no particular order.)
1. Planet Of The Dinosaurs (1976)
2. Carnosaur (1993)
3. The Last Dinosaur (1977)
4. At The Earth's Core (1976)
5. One Million Years B.C. (1966)
6. The Land Before Time (1988)
7. We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993)
8. Prehysteria! (1993)
9. Adventures in Dinosaur City (1992)
10. Theodore Rex (1995)
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
7 notes · View notes
rhinowalker · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
30 Years Later..
Happy 30th Anniversary to We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story!
9 notes · View notes
king-k-ripple · 11 months
Photo
Tumblr media
364 notes · View notes
Text
I started my quest to watch 30 movies from the year I was born (1993) last night with a double feature of Rex: A Dinosaur's Story and We're Back: A Dinosaur's Story. I don't know if I have it in me to review every one of these things, but this pair should be of interest.
Rex is required viewing for any Godzilla fan, if only so your jaw can drop at how much Godzilla vs. Mechagodzilla II ripped it off. (The egg even hatches after hearing a song!) I also didn't expect the lost continent of Mu to have such a big role... or for no one to feed the theropod meat. No wonder he keeps trying to bite people! It's almost overpoweringly sentimental, but the sheer cuteness of the dino lets it get away with a lot. Oh yeah, and it ends with a snowmobile chase right out of a Bond movie.
We're Back is another cautionary tale about trying to adapt picture books into feature-length films. The source material didn't have a villain, and the first half of this movie doesn't either. Professor Screweyes would have thrived in a more focused story. A ringmaster who doesn't understand comedy and just wants to scare people, makes 12-year-olds sign contracts in blood and turns them into monkeys, hypnotizes people and dinosaurs alike with his right eye (which is a screw), and gets eaten bones and all by his crows as soon as his audience deserts him... he's an S-tier villain trapped in a half-assed Jurassic Park cash-in. Now, 1993 saw plenty of Jurassic Park cash-ins, but this one is unusual in that Steven Spielberg produced it. I feel like this character is meant to represent him directing Jurassic Park and giving a generation of kids nightmares about velociraptors, whereas the kindly Captain Neweyes, who gives the dinosaur heroes human intelligence so they can bring joy to kids in the present day, is him producing this movie. (Too bad it bombed.) Alternatively, the two characters are the Master and the Doctor... I mean, the latter does have a time machine.
41 notes · View notes
ner5y · 4 months
Text
Now that I'm rewatching clips from "We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story", I realise the circus scenes fit the overall vibe I imagine for Freakshow so well
4 notes · View notes
skinslip · 11 months
Text
Tumblr media
Jurassic Park (1993) in We're Back: A Dinosaur's Story (1993)
16 notes · View notes