When a museum accident transports Ally on an adventure back in time to explore the terrain and territory of life-size dinosaurs, she is thrust literally nose-to-nose with the largest and most realistic dinosaur ever to appear on a movie screen - the 20 foot tall, 15-ton Tyrannosaurus Rex. Read more
| Starring | Peter Horton, Liz Stauber, Kari Coleman |
|---|---|
| Director | Brett Leonard |
| Genres | Drama |
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Not quite what I expected but the kids enjoyed it. The content is just not up to what I expected when viewing other IMAX films
Special effects change so quickly these days - when this was produced the dinosaurs would have appeared breathtaking on a large screen, but now virtually any TV movie could match the CGI effects in this. It is also in standard ratio instead of widescreen, and a mere 45 minutes long - even the extras only add a few more minutes. What I couldn't understand was that this is a double-sided disk, with the same material on each side - what is the point?
Special effects change so quickly these days - when this was produced the dinosaurs would have appeared breathtaking on a large screen, but now virtually any TV movie could match the CGI effects in this. It is also in standard ratio instead of widescreen, and a mere 45 minutes long - even the extras only add a few more minutes. What I couldn't understand was that this is a double-sided disk, with the same material on each side - what is the point?
Not quite what I expected but the kids enjoyed it. The content is just not up to what I expected when viewing other IMAX films
Special effects change so quickly these days - when this was produced the dinosaurs would have appeared breathtaking on a large screen, but now virtually any TV movie could match the CGI effects in this. It is also in standard ratio instead of widescreen, and a mere 45 minutes long - even the extras only add a few more minutes. What I couldn't understand was that this is a double-sided disk, with the same material on each side - what is the point?