The Guardian (USA)

The top 20 dinosaur movies – rrraaaanke­d!

- Stuart Heritage

20 Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018)

A film so stunningly stupid that it may as well not exist, the sequel to Jurassic World made the mistake of trying to move the story along. No longer just a romp about a theme park filled with dinosaurs, this is ostensibly a horror movie about a black market dinosaur auction in a spooky castle. Much worse than I have made it sound.

19 Theodore Rex (1995)

If you had to imagine the last film you would want to see, a mid-90s buddy cop movie starring Whoopi Goldberg and a fully dressed, anthropomo­rphic, animatroni­c dinosaur might be what you would envisage. Well, it already exists and it is called Theodore Rex. A film so bad that Goldberg had to be sued to appear in it.

18 Land of the Lost (2009)

In 2009, it seemed as if Will Ferrell could do no wrong. But that all changed when he released Land of the Lost, a $100m spectacula­r that attempted to fuse Ferrell’s loosey-goosey humour to a technologi­cally precise effects behemoth about dinosaurs. The two did not mesh at all and Land of the Lost remains one of Ferrell’s strangest missteps.

17 Super Mario Bros (1993)

Fun fact: Super Mario Bros was released two weeks before Jurassic Park, but those two weeks now feel like 25 years. Everything about this film is dismal, not least the fact that its central conceit – the meteorite that killed the dinosaurs created a parallel dimension of humanoid dinosaurs led by Dennis Hopper – has very little to do with Mario.

16 The Flintstone­s (1994)

The same dino fad that inspired Theodore Rex also gave us The Flintstone­s, a 1994 live-action remake of the beloved cartoon series. While not a good film by any stretch – John Goodman looks embarrasse­d to be playing Fred Flintstone, for instance – it still has its moments. If nothing else, its depiction

of Dino is relentless­ly cute. 15 Tammy and the T-Rex (1994)

I promise this is a real film. Denise Richards plays Tammy, a college girl whose life is turned upside down when her boyfriend’s brain is implanted into a giant animatroni­c dinosaur. Legend states that the film was made only because the director found a model dinosaur that nobody was using. It shows.

14 The Land That Time Forgot (1974)

There is a 2009 movie of this name produced by the creators of Sharknado. Please avoid that and head for the good stuff: Kevin Connor’s 1974 version. True, the dinosaurs lack the finesse of a Ray Harryhause­n production – some are puppets, and some are men dressed up – but the story is mostly faithful to the Edgar Rice Burroughs novel. Plus, it features one of the all-time great cinematic jump scares.

13 The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)

Were it not for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, this would be the worst Jurassic movie. Another attempt to deviate from a perfect story, The Lost World fails on many fronts. Half the original cast is missing (replaced by Vince Vaughn and others), all the characters know exactly what to expect from the island, and the finale (in which a T rex goes nuts in San Diego) sails far too close to pastiche.

12 The Valley of Gwangi (1969)

Three years after One Million Years BC, Harryhause­n had another, less successful, stab at dinosaur creation with The Valley of Gwangi. Essentiall­y, some cowboys find a load of dinosaurs and have a big fight with them. The whole thing is ridiculous and isn’t remembered with much fondness. But if HBO can reimagine Westworld as an expensive prestige drama series, then The Valley of Gwangi deserves the same.

11 The Lost World (1925)

Arthur Conan Doyle’s novel has been adapted countless times, but the most effective version is Harry O Hoyt’s silent offering from 1925. It is is an exceptiona­l production, utilising stop motion, full-body makeup and real animals. Points added for the climax, in which a loose brontosaur­us smashes up a beloved Soho drinking establishm­ent. Points lost for other elements ageing very, very badly indeed. You will know them when you see them.

10 Jurassic Park III (2001)

What a weird film. For the bulk of its running time, Jurassic Park III is intent on correcting the wrongs of The Lost World: Jurassic Park. The story is more compact, the scares are scarier; everything is going swimmingly. Then it comes to an abrupt end, as if the production ran out of money. A wasted opportunit­y.

9 A Journey to the Beginning of Time (1955)

It is incredible to think that Karel

Zeman’s 1955 movie is almost 70 years old. While the story has decayed a little over time – kids row a boat down a river and gawp at the animals on the banks – the experience of watching it remains undimmed. In terms of animation, set design and ambition, this film is a miracle. Wes Anderson is a fan for a reason.

8 Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs (2009)

Having backed itself into a corner with the environmen­tal sermon Ice Age: The Meltdown, the franchise decided to fudge history and introduce some dinosaurs into proceeding­s. For many, this is where the series began to lose its way, but there are plenty of delights to be had in the deliberate­ly unfaithful dinosaur depictions.

7 The Land Before Time (1988)

Although the series eventually meandered into direct-to-video infinity, for a while The Land Before Time was the dinosaur movie. Directed by Don Bluth and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, Kathleen Kennedy and Frank Marshall, it was envisioned as “Bambi with dinosaurs” and it absolutely nails the assignment. In parts syrupy, scary and profound, it is worth a rewatch.

6 Jurassic World (2015)

A huge financial success, Jurassic World isn’t so much a sequel as a remake. You could argue that its mimicry becomes rote and that Chris Pratt is no Jeff Goldblum, but there is something thrilling about a story being told well all over again. And, hey, if you are going to rip off anything, it might as well be Jurassic Park.

5 The Tree of Life (2011)

OK, you have to ignore most of the film to consider this a dinosaur movie. But that is fine, because you will just be ignoring lots of middle-aged men having bland quasi-existentia­l crises. The moment in question comes when Terrence Malick gets bored by his film and decides to show us the history of the universe instead. There is a dinosaur sequence that cannot be forgotten.

4 The Good Dinosaur (2015)

This was overlooked on release, thanks to the cultural crater left by Inside Out, but Pixar’s The Good Dinosaur is an oasis of quiet charm. The story of a young apatosauru­s who finds himself in charge of a small, mute human, The Good Dinosaur isn’t particular­ly spectacula­r or inventive, but it has charm by the bucketload and a supremely weepy ending. The best talking-dinosaur film.

3 One Million Years BC (1966)

Even compared with some of the duds on this list, One Million Years BC is wildly inaccurate. Human beings weren’t around 1m years ago and the last dinosaurs died tens of million of years before that. But your mind would have been blown in innumerabl­e ways had you watched Harryhause­n’s spectacula­r dinosaur animation in a cinema in the 60s.

2 King Kong (2005)

I have opted for Peter Jackson’s 2005 behemoth, but feel free to sub in your preferred Kong. While New York is the setting for the famous climax, the real fun is had back on Skull Island. This is where Kong goes at it with a prehistori­c beast, fending off an attack so savagely that his power will never again be underestim­ated.

1 Jurassic Park (1993)

How could it be anything else? Jurassic Park is more than a film; it is a line in the sand after which the modern blockbuste­r came into being. It is a marvel of technologi­cal progress and (mostly) accurate creature depictions, tied to a propulsive plot that understand­s exactly which buttons it needs to press at any given moment. An incontesta­ble classic, this film will still be top of the list a century from now.

 ?? ?? Life finds a way … Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborou­gh, Laura Dern and Sam Neill in Jurassic Park. Photograph: Universal/Allstar
Life finds a way … Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborou­gh, Laura Dern and Sam Neill in Jurassic Park. Photograph: Universal/Allstar
 ?? ?? The Land That Time Forgot. Photograph: Amicus/Kobal/Shuttersto­ck
The Land That Time Forgot. Photograph: Amicus/Kobal/Shuttersto­ck

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