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Revision as of 18:07, 21 September 2008 by 207.38.189.240 (talk)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) 1999 British TV series or programmeWalking with Dinosaurs | |
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Genre | Documentary |
Developed by | Andrew Wilks |
Narrated by | Kenneth Branagh |
Theme music composer | Ben Bartlett |
Country of origin | UK |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 1 |
No. of episodes | 6 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producer | John Lynch |
Producers | Tim Haines, Jasper James |
Running time | 30 min. |
Original release | |
Network | BBC |
Release | 16 April 1999 |
Related | |
Walking with Beasts, Walking with Monsters |
Walking with Dinosaurs was a six-part television series produced by the BBC, narrated by Kenneth Branagh, and first aired in the UK in 1999. The series was subsequently aired in North America on the Discovery Channel, with Branagh's voice replaced with that of Avery Brooks. The series used computer-generated imagery and animatronics to recreate the life of the Mesozoic, showing dinosaurs in a way that hsdye hjsaeui fdysiegvhs yiaisvude bajfsydfye asyve a ayuyhbsacg sayfyiev syguyeg ayfyfe as uyxv bitch bitch bitch bitch fuck fuck fuck fuck shit shit shit shit shitof a nature documentary and therefore does not include "talking head" interviews. The series used paleontologists such as Peter Dodson, Peter Larson and James Farlow as advisors (their influence in the filming process can be seen in the documentary Walking with Dinosaurs - The Making Of).
The Guinness Book of World Records reported that the series was the most expensive documentary series per minute ever made.
Episodes
Each episode of Walking with Dinosaurs focused on the lives of one or more "protagonists", depicting fictional and speculative events based mainly on inferences and the behavior of modern animals, produced in a style that mimicked traditional wildlife documentaries.
"New Blood"
The first episode filmed and broadcast. 220 Million Years Ago — Late Triassic; Arizona
- Filming location: New Caledonia
- Conditions: semi-desert with short rainy season. In the year of the episode, the rains are late.
The episode followed a female Coelophysis as it tried to survive in the dry season. The Coelophysis was shown hunting a herd of Placerias, looking for weak members to prey upon. Early pterosaurs (specifically Peteinosaurus) were also featured, depicted cdroolibbhasdghkghwetdyheww yuo themselves in what little water was present during the drought. A female rauisuchian (Postosuchus, one of the largest carnivores alive at the time of the Triassic) was also shown following the Placerias herd. Still searching for food, the Coelophysis are shown discovering a burrow of the small mammal-like cynodont, Unfortunately one youngster strays too close and is eaten, The father cynodont attempts to protect the youngster, but to no avail. At night, the pair of cynodonts are shown eating their remaining young, then moving away. The female Postosuchus is later wounded by a Placerias's tusks, and is beaten out of its territory by a rival Postosuchus. Wounded, sick and without a territory, the female dies and is eaten by a pack of Coelophysis. Finally, the wet season comes again, and the Coelophysis have survived, along with the cynodont pair. The episode ends with the arrival of a herd of the prosauropod Plateosaurus, foreshadowing the future dominance of giant sauropod dinosaurs as depicted in the second episode.
- Coelophysis
- Placerias
- Cynodont
- Postosuchus
- Peteinosaurus
- Plateosaurus
- Lungfish
- Dragonfly (live acted)
"Time of the Titans"
The second episode to be filmed and broadcast. 152 Million Years Ago — Late Jurassic — Colorado
- Filming locations: Redwood National Park (Fern Canyon), Chile, Tasmania, New Zealand
- Conditions: warm with mixture of forest and fern-prairies.
This episode followed the life of a young female Diplodocus. After hatching at the forest edge, she and her siblings retreat to the safety of the denser trees. As they grow, they face many dangers, including Ornitholestes, Allosaurus (which kills one) and even Stegosaurus, which spears one with its tail. When they are close to adulthood, the group of young Diplodocus are nearly all killed by a huge forest fire, which leaves two survivors including the female. They are driven out onto the open plains, where they find a herd. The main female mates , but not long afterwards is attacked by a bull Allosaurus. She is saved when another Diplodocus strikes the Allosaur with its tail.
- Diplodocus
- Allosaurus
- Ornitholestes
- Stegosaurus
- Brachiosaurus
- Anurognathus
- Dryosaurus
- Stokesosaurus
- Damselfly (live acted)
- Dung beetle (live acted)
"Cruel Sea"
The third episode filmed and broadcast. 149 Million Years Ago — Late Jurassic — Oxfordshire
- Filming locations: Bahamas, New Caledonia
- Conditions: Hurricanes hit the islands repeatedly, making it difficult for dinosaurs and sea reptiles to adapt.
The Ophthalmosaurus breeding ceremony is the main event of the episode, but sharks and other predators, including Liopleurodon are on the hunt. The opening portrays a Liopleurodon snatching a Eustreptospondylus from the land, but there is no evidence of this ever occurring. (According to the producers, they were influenced by similar attacks by Killer Whales on land creatures.) In the end of the episode, a typhoon kills many Rhamphorhynchus, and washes a female Liopleurodon ashore and she dies suffocated by her weight. The episode however ends on a more positive note, as it shows that the juvenile Ophthalmosaurus have survived the storm, and are now off to live and breed in the open sea - a promise of the next generations to come.
- Ophthalmosaurus
- Cryptoclidus
- Hybodus (identified as shark, revealed on website and in encyclopedia)
- Leptolepis (identified as fish, revealed in website, live-acted by herring)
- Rhamphorhynchus
- Eustreptospondylus
- Liopleurodon
- Perisphinctes (identified as ammonite, revealed in book)
- Unindentified horseshoe crab (live acted by horseshoe crab)
- Jellyfish (live acted)
- Squid (live acted)
- Bark beetle (live acted)
- Unidentified turtle (shown dead)
"Giant of the skies"
The fourth episode filmed and broadcast. 127 Million Years Ago — Early Cretaceous — Young Atlantic Ocean (Brazil, Cantabria)
- Filming locations: New Zealand, Tasmania
- Conditions: Sea and coastlands.
The story begins with a male Ornithocheirus dead on a beach. It then goes back 6 months to Brazil, where the Ornithocheirus flies off for Cantabria among a colony of Tapejara. He flies past a migrating column of Iguanodon and a Polacanthus. He reaches the southern tip of North America, where he is forced to shelter from a storm. To pass the time, he grooms himself, ridding his body of Saurophthirus. Then he stets off across the Atlantic, which was then less than half as wide is it is today and, after a whole day on the wing, reaches the westernmost of the European islands. He does not rest here, as a pack of Utahraptor are hunting Iguanodon. He flies to the outskirts of a forest, but is driven away by Iberomesornis. He reaches Cantabria, but was delayed by the storm and cannot reach the centre of the many grounded male Ornithocheirus. Consequently, he does not mate and dies from exhaustion under the glaring Sun.
- Ornithocheirus.
- Iguanodon
- Utahraptor
- Polacanthus
- Tapejara
- Iberomesornis (identified as bird, revealed on website, in book and encyclopedia)
- Plesiopleurodon (not identified, revealed on web)
- Saurophthirus (identified as parasite, revealed on website and book)
- Unidentified pterosaur
- Fish (live acted)
- Wasp (live acted)
"Spirits of the Ice Forest"
The fifth episode filmed and broadcast. 106 Million Years Ago — Mid Cretaceous, in the rift valley where Australia is beginning to separate from Antarctica.
- Conditions: Forest dominated by podocarps, very near South Pole (the sun did not rise for 5 months in the winter). The lopsided arrangement of the continents keeps ocean currents and strong monsoon winds blowing across the polar area, keeping it free of icecap and warm enough for forests to grow.
- Filming location: New Zealand
This episode focuses upon a small clan of Leaellynasaura, hypsilophodonts native to Australia at the time, examining their lifestyle over the year - as they defend their territory against a rival clan, as they proceed through the mating season, as they rear their chicks, and as the cycle repeats again at the end of the episode. Other features of the episode are a carnosaur, identified as a dwarf species of Allosaur, as it stalks a herd of Muttaburrasaurus' and manages to kill the alpha female of the Leaellynasaura clan, and a Koolasuchus as it, and every other permanent denizen, endures the polar winter of the Antarctic circle while the Allosaur and the Muttaburrasaurus herd move further north to warmer climates.
- Leaellynasaura
- Muttaburrasaurus
- Unidentified allosaur (identified as a polar allosaur)
- Koolasuchus
- Unidentified pterosaur
- Steropodon (identified as mammal, revealed in website and book, live-acted by a coati)
- Tuatara (live acted)
- Weta (live acted)
- Mosquito (live acted)
"Death of a Dynasty"
The sixth episode filmed and broadcast. 65.5 Million Years Ago — Late Cretaceous — Montana
- Conditions: Areas of low herbaceous plant cover, and forest, affected by volcanism. The episode shows some effects of the end-of-Cretaceous asteroid impact.
- Filming locations: Chile (Conguillío National Park)
This episode starts several months before the extinction of the dinosaurs. According to the book, the forests were shrinking and the Pierre Seaway between Laramidia and Appalachia was slowly drying up from the north. The main character is a female Tyrannosaurus, who abandons her nest because all the eggs in it were infertile. She mates and nests again, lays 12 eggs, of which 3 hatch. One of the babies disappears, most likely eaten by the other two. The mother is wounded by a blow from an Ankylosaurus's tail-club and dies later of internal injuries and a broken femur. Her babies die when the dinosaurs become extinct by the Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event, which, in the series is caused by a gigantic meteor that collides with earth in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Tyrannosaurus
- Didelphodon
- Anatotitan
- Torosaurus
- Dromaeosaurus (identified as a dromaeosaur, revealed in encyclopedia)
- Unidentified small ornithopods
- Ankylosaurus
- Quetzalcoatlus
- Deinosuchus (not identified, revealed on website, book and encyclopedia)
- Dinilysia (identified as snake, revealed in website, live acted by red-tailed boa)
- Butterfly (live acted)
- Triceratops (shown dead)
- Unidentified mammal (shown dead)
- Unidentified reptile (shown dead)
- African elephant (live-acted, modern day)
- lion (live-acted, modern day)
- African Buffalo (live-acted, modern day)
- white rhinoceros (live-acted, modern day)
- goose (live-acted, modern day)
- tickbird (live-acted, modern day)
Companion book
A companion book was written by Tim Haines to accompany the first screening of the series in 1999. The settings of some of the six episodes were changed between the time the book was written and the screening of the television series, and some of their names were changed: 'New Blood' is set at Ghost Ranch; 'Cruel Sea' is set at or near Solnhofen in Germany near what then were the Vindelicisch Islands . The book elaborated on the background for each story, went further in explaining the science on which much of the program as based, and included descriptions of several animals not identified or featured in the series.
Critical reaction
In a list of the 100 Greatest British Television Programmes drawn up by the British Film Institute in 2000, voted on by industry professionals, Walking with Dinosaurs was placed 72nd.
The series won three Emmy Awards, including Best Animated Program (For More Than One Hour).
Censorship
In the initial U.S. broadcasts of the series, a few scenes were omitted from some of the episodes. The most notable deletions were a shot of the cynodont pair devouring their offspring, and a scene where a dead-in-shell Tyrannosaurus embryo is preyed upon by a pair of Didelphodon. The DVD and VHS contains the original UK broadcast, so the omitted scenes were restored.
Spin-offs
See more info in the Walking with...
The popularity of Walking with Dinosaurs led to numerous spin-offs in various media.
Walking with Dinosaurs - The Live Experience
WALKING WITH DINOSAURS - The Live Experience, based on the award- winning BBC Television Series is now on tour in North America and over one and a half million people have already seen the production since it opened in July 2007.
The show originated in Australia, where after years of planning, WALKING WITH DINOSAURS came to life at Sydney's Acer Arena in January 2007.
The production has won the 2007 THEA Award for Outstanding Achievement in Touring Event. The THEAs recognize excellence in the creation of compelling educational, historical, and entertainment projects.
Artistic Director William May developed the creative vision of the show based on an original idea by entrepreneur Bruce Mactaggart to create an arena version of the Walking with Dinosaurs television series.
A talented and experienced team of creative artists came together to produce WALKING WITH DINOSAURS - The Live Experience. The show is directed by Scott Faris, a Broadway veteran who has worked side by side with Harold Prince, Trevor Nunn, Michael Blakemore, Gene Saks, John Caird, Tommy Tune and Jerry Zaks. The creatures are designed and built by Sonny Tilders; the set and projected image design are by Peter England; the show's lighting is by John Rayment, our score was composed by James Brett; and Warner Brown wrote the script. Tim Haines, creator and producer of the original BBC series, which was seen by a worldwide audience of 700 million, serves as Project Consultant to WALKING WITH DINOSAURS - The Live Experience. The series won six Emmy and three BAFTA Awards.
WALKING WITH DINOSAURS - The Live Experience was originally produced in Australia by Gerry Ryan, Malcolm Cooke and Jill Bryant and is brought to North America by The Creature Production Company
The dinosaurs featured are:
- Allosaurus
- Ankylosaurus
- Brachiosaurus
- Iguanodon (shown dead)
- Liliensternus (not seen in documentary)
- Plateosaurus
- Ornithocheirus
- Stegosaurus
- Torosaurus
- Tyrannosaurus
- Utahraptor
Encyclopedia
Tim Haines and Paul Chambers have also written a Walking With... encyclopedia known as The Complete Guide to Prehistoric Life, featuring most animals from the series, including the specials, and the accompanies Walking with Monsters.
Prehistoric Planet
A child-oriented reversion of this series was released in America under the title Prehistoric Planet for the Discovery Kids Saturday morning line-up on NBC, with new narration read by Ben Stiller and Christian Slater over the same visuals. This version cut out the majority of the "violence" of the original.
The Walking With series
Because it was a big success, Tim Haines's direct follow-up in, what is known, the Walking with series. In 2001 the sequel Walking with Beasts, set in the Cenozoic era. This series featured extinct mammals and birds like Indricotherium and Gastornis. In 2005 the prequel Walking with Monsters, set primarily in the Paleozoic era, was produced.
Specials
Main articles: Chased by Dinosaurs, Sea Monsters, The Ballad Of Big Al, and Prehistoric ParkChased By Dinosaurs, featuring Nigel Marven, stars Argentinosaurus and Therizinosaurus in two episodes in which Nigel tries to track down the biggest dinosaurs and the longest claws. The Ballad Of Big Al follows the life of an Allosaurus (inspired by evidence found on a single Allosaurus skeleton). Nigel returns in Sea Monsters Trilogy, trying to survive the seven most dangerous seas of all time and meet the dangerous sea predators of the past -- Cameroceras, Cymbospondylus, Dunkleosteus, Basilosaurus, Megalodon, Liopleurodon and Tylosaurus. Nigel also stars in the latest special: Prehistoric Park, six episodes in which he tries to collect Tyrannosaurus, Mammoth, Smilodon, Microraptor, Arthropleura, and Deinosuchus for a prehistoric zoo known as Prehistoric Park.
Computer Games and Arcade games
Dinosaur World is a free downloadable, Walking with Dinosaurs game available at the BBC website.
Notes
- According to the website and companion book, the body shape is based upon a scaled-up version of Thrinaxodon. As stated in the book, the presence of cynodonts in the depicted region and the larger size of the reconstructed animal was based on fossil teeth which have subsequently been described as Kraterokheirodon. While considered to have been from a large cynodont at the time of filming, the affinities of these teeth are currently unknown.
- The Liopleurodon is oversized as 25 meters (82 feet) long and 150 tons
- Shown without feathers
- The species depicted was undescribed in 1999 but has subsequently been described as Tapejara navigans .
- The chapter was named Spirits of the Silent Forest in the book.
- (In the American version of the narration the polar allosaur in the fifth episode is based on an isolated astragalus. Also in the American narration of the episode, the dwarf allosaur is referred to as a carnosaur instead, while the book identified it as a "polar allosaur", but identified as a dwarf allosaur in the book)
- Pterosaurs in Victoria are based on fossils that are non-diagnostic to genus level.
- Shown without feathers
- It is shown as an albatross like fish eater, while in real life it would had been more like a stork
- Dinosaur World Walking with Dinosaurs video game. Accessed August 13, 2008.
See also
- Prehistoric Park
- Walking with...
- Walking with Monsters
- Walking with Beasts
- Sea Monsters
- Walking with Cavemen
- When Dinosaurs Roamed America
External links
- Australian copy of the now down BBC site
- "Walking with Dinosaurs - The Live Experience" Official Website
- IMDB information about The Ballad Of Big Al
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