Dinosaurs in the city


We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story (1993)

  • Cast & crew
  • User reviews
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IMDbPro

  • 1993
  • G
  • 1h 12m

IMDb RATING

6.0/10

15K

YOUR RATING

Play trailer2

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99+ Photos

AnimationAdventureComedy

A time traveling scientist goes back to prehistoric times and feeds dinosaurs a magic cereal that increases their intelligence - next they land in modern New York City for a series of comic ... Read allA time traveling scientist goes back to prehistoric times and feeds dinosaurs a magic cereal that increases their intelligence - next they land in modern New York City for a series of comic adventures. A time traveling scientist goes back to prehistoric times and feeds dinosaurs a magic cereal that increases their intelligence - next they land in modern New York City for a series of comic adventures.

  • Directors
    • Phil Nibbelink
    • Simon Wells
    • Dick Zondag
    • John Patrick Shanley
    • Hudson Talbott
  • Stars
    • John Goodman
    • Charles Fleischer
    • Blaze Berdahl
  • See production, box office & company info
  • IMDb RATING

    6.0/10

    15K

    YOUR RATING

    • Directors
      • Phil Nibbelink
      • Simon Wells
      • Dick Zondag
      • John Patrick Shanley
      • Hudson Talbott
    • Stars
      • John Goodman
      • Charles Fleischer
      • Blaze Berdahl
    • 41User reviews
    • 18Critic reviews
  • See more at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer 2:21

    Watch We're Back: A Dinosaur's Story

    Clip 2:25

    Watch We're Back, A Dinosaur's Story: You Want A Hotdog

    Photos118

    Top cast

    John Goodman

    • Rex
    • (voice)

    Charles Fleischer

    • Dweeb
    • (voice)

    Blaze Berdahl

    • Buster
    • (voice)

    Rhea Perlman

    • Mother Bird
    • (voice)

    Jay Leno

    • Vorb
    • (voice)

    René Le Vant

    • Woog
    • (voice)

    Felicity Kendal

    • Elsa
    • (voice)

    Walter Cronkite

    • Captain Neweyes
    • (voice)

    Joey Shea

    • Louie
    • (voice)

    Julia Child

    • Dr. Bleeb
    • (voice)

    Kenneth Mars

    • Professor Screweyes
    • (voice)

    Yeardley Smith

    • Cecilia
    • (voice)

    Martin Short

    • Stubbs the Clown
    • (voice)

    Nigel Pegram

    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)

    Jessica Angelson

    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)

    Zachary Ball

    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)

    Barbara Barnes

    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)

    Bendar Bashir

    • Additional Voices
    • (voice)
    • Directors
      • Phil Nibbelink
      • Simon Wells
      • Dick Zondag
      • John Patrick Shanley(screenplay)
      • Hudson Talbott(book)
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

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    Storyline

    Did you know

    • Quotes

      Professor Screweyes: Hey Stubbs! Where do you think you're goin'? Get back here!

      Stubbs the Clown: Oh, I forgot to tell ya. .. I QUIT! I quit! Ha! I resign! Are you gettin' this completely in your ear? I am PROFOUNDLY outta here! And this ain't about money. I ain't even complaining about my dry cleaning bill. But hang around with elephants all day and try to keep YOUR clothes clean!

      [audience laughs]

      Stubbs the Clown: But that's not the point. The point is, I quit. Quittski! Over-and-outski! That's all she wrote! KEEP MY LAST CHECK, BUDDY!

      [hands each item to Screweyes as he mentions it]

      Stubbs the Clown: Here's my shoes, my nose, my horn, my buzzer, my fake arm, my bug-eye glasses, my backstage passes, my hat, my rabbit, HIS backstage passes, my fake fangs, a few birds, my pogo stick, my donkey ears, my extending tounge gag, my rubber chicken; Ya can't even get these anymore; my lucky whale tooth, and a giant clam that opens to reveal the American flag held by a mermaid and her normal brother, Richard!

      [audience laughing]

      Stubbs the Clown: SO LONG! Oh, and by the way, in case you're wondering why I'm talking and they're laughing, let me explain it to ya. ..

      Stubbs the Clown: [Screams] THAT'S! COMEDY!

    • Connections

      Featured in Siskel & Ebert: A Perfect World/We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story/Mrs. Doubtfire/The Nutcracker/A Dangerous Woman (1993)

    User reviews41

    Review

    Featured review

    Kids, Dinosaurs, a Parade...It just can't lose!

    The basic plot: Four dinosaurs (made more intelligent by a kindly scientist) are given the chance to delight children by coming into the future to live with Dr. Bleeb at the Museum of Natural History.

    Why it works: Kids love dinosaurs (especially big cuddly talking ones that sound like John Goodman), kindly scientists, time travel, and (when given the chance) Natural History.

    The animation is good quality, the basic premise is fun, the music (with a surprise by Thomas Dolby) is good and well placed (no one bursting into an annoying song every 30 seconds) and the voice talents are wonderful, featuring well known actors such as Martin Short and Rhea Perlman, voices we know from elsewhere--Walter Cronkite and Julia Child, and veteran Voicers Yeardley Smith (the unsinkable Lisa Simpson) and the remarkable Charles Fleischer (Roger Rabbit).

    Some characters needed a little more character...a little more explanation (such as Professor Screweyes--who went mad and turned evil because he lost his eye--??). But hey, this is a kids' movie, right? Let it slide.

    Will kids' like it? Absolutely. And the adults? Relax and have a good time, and try not to think too much.

    helpful•18

    3

    • Cari-8
    • Jul 23, 1999

    Details

    • Release date
      • November 24, 1993 (United States)
      • United States
      • United Kingdom
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Chicos, estamos de vuelta
      • Amblimation - 207-211 The Vale, Acton, London, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Amblimation
      • Amblin Entertainment
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

      • $9,317,021
      • $3,707,770
      • Nov 28, 1993
      • $9,317,021
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Technical specs

    • 1 hour 12 minutes

      • Dolby
      • DTS

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        1993, Kids & family/Fantasy, 1h 12m

        16 Reviews 10,000+ Ratings

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        We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story Photos

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        Movie Info

        Four fun-loving dinosaurs take a trip to New York City, courtesy of Capt. Neweyes (Walter Cronkite). The time-traveling alien is intent on bringing some joy to the lives of the children of the Big Apple. After eating a potion to boost their smarts and cuddliness, Tyrannosaurus Rex (John Goodman), Triceratops Woog (René Le Vant), Pterodactyl Elsa (Felicity Kendal) and Hadrosaur Dweeb (Charles Fleischer) hit the town! But trouble soon arrives when Neweyes' evil brother hatches a devious plot.

        • Rating:

          G

        • Genre:

          Kids & family, Fantasy, Animation

        • Original Language:

          English

        • Director:

          Phil Nibbelink, Simon Wells, Ralph Zondag, Dick Zondag

        • Producer:

          Steve Hickner

        • Writer:

          John Patrick Shanley, Hudson Talbott

        • Release Date (Theaters):

           wide

        • Release Date (Streaming):

        • Box Office (Gross USA):

          $8. 6M

        • Runtime:

        • Distributor:

          MCA/Universal Pictures [us]

        • Sound Mix:

          Surround

        Cast & Crew

        John Goodman
        Rex
        Voice

        Jay Leno
        Vorb
        Voice

        Rhea Perlman
        Mother Bird
        Voice

        Blaze Berdahl
        Buster
        Voice

        Julia Child
        Dr. Bleeb
        Voice

        Walter Cronkite
        Captain Neweyes
        Voice

        Charles Fleischer
        Dweeb
        Voice

        Felicity Kendal
        Elsa
        Voice

        René Le Vant
        Woog
        Voice

        Kenneth Mars
        Professor Screweyes
        Voice

        Joe Shea
        Louie
        Voice

        Martin Short
        Stubbs the Clown
        Voice

        Yeardley Smith
        Cecilia
        Voice

        Phil Nibbelink
        Director

        Simon Wells
        Director

        Ralph Zondag
        Director

        Dick Zondag
        Director

        John Patrick Shanley
        Screenwriter

        Hudson Talbott
        Writer

        Steve Hickner
        Producer

        Kathleen Kennedy
        Executive Producer

        Frank Marshall
        Executive Producer

        Steven Spielberg
        Executive Producer

        Thomas Dolby
        Original Music

        James Horner
        Original Music

        Valerie McCaffrey
        Casting

        Nancy Nayor
        Casting

        Show all Cast & Crew

        All Critics (16) | Top Critics (8) | Fresh (6) | Rotten (10)

        Full Review… Daniel M. Kimmel Variety Full Review… Janet Maslin New York Times Full Review… Desson Thomson Washington Post Full Review… Jane Horwitz Washington Post Full Review… Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times Full Review… James Berardinelli ReelViews Full Review… Renee Schonfeld Common Sense Media Full Review… Steve Crum Video-Reviewmaster. com Full Review… Eric Lurio Greenwich Village Gazette Full Review… Alex Sandell Juicy Cerebellum Full Review… Dan Jardine Apollo Guide Full Review… Chris Hicks Deseret News (Salt Lake City)

        View All Critic Reviews (16)

        Audience Reviews for

        We're Back! A Dinosaur's Story
        • Dec 10, 2018

          Super Reviewer

        • Sep 06, 2010

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        • Jan 13, 2010

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        • Apr 11, 2007

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        About Audience Score

        Go back

        More trailers

        Dinosaurs in the city!

        How would the ancient reptiles behave if they got out of the “Mesozoic park” in the middle of a metropolis

        In popular culture, reptiles are portrayed as aggressive destroyers and brutal killers. Dinosaurs from "Jurassic Park" are purely engaged in hunting people, and snakes and crocodiles from Bulgakov's "Fatal Eggs" generally arrange a trip to Moscow (probably not satisfied with local animals).
        Of course, the purpose of these herpeto-apocalyptic works is not to document the life of extinct and modern reptiles, but to warn of how bad things can go for people if they go too far in their movement "against nature." But taking the same plot plot - reptiles broke free somewhere in the middle of civilization - you can get a completely different plot, more correct from the point of view of the behavioral sciences. Let's assume that this happened in Moscow.

        Strangers on the streets

        A few years ago, a bird lover from the Norwegian town of Moss had an Indian ringed parrot named Gunnar. Like most other caged animals, he was not happy about imprisonment, but as a representative of a highly intelligent species, he clearly sought to explore the world around him. At the end of the summer of 2014, Gunnar's cage, which was standing in the courtyard of the house, fell, its door opened, and the parrot, taking advantage of the moment, fulfilled both of his long-standing desires: he spread his wings and went to study the nearest object of interest to him. (Unfortunately, we do not know which one.)

        Naturally quick-witted, Gunnar learned how to get food from watching crows (even though they sometimes fought him). He also provided himself with shelter, otherwise he would hardly have survived the Scandinavian winter - and not one, but five.

        Gunnar is not the only parrot to "colonize" Europe. His relatives spread widely across the continent; there are also in the countries of the former USSR. Apparently, Indian necklace parrots generally easily adapt to the neighborhood with a person, and they are initially quite resistant to cold. Yes, and other birds sometimes survive outside their native range in anthropogenic landscapes, even if they grew up in completely different conditions.

        What do dinosaurs have to do with it? And despite the fact that birds are one of them. Therefore, when trying to model what would happen to a dinosaur if it got from some theme park to the streets of the city, it is quite possible to rely on data on the behavior of birds. And on the data of the behavioral sciences, in principle: animals can not only destroy and kill, they also want to eat, breed, explore new things. The reconstructions of the behavior of certain types of dinosaurs made by paleontologists on the basis of the fossil remains of these reptiles will also help us.

        An accident in a Mesozoic park

        Imagine that in the beautiful Moscow of the near future, Zaryadye has become a theme park — not even of the Jurassic period, but of the entire Mesozoic era. Problems with the poor preservation of ancient DNA were overcome, and surrogate mothers for dinosaur embryos were also found. Unlike Jurassic Park, not only females, but also males were immediately recreated here. Thus, each species is represented by several individuals at once.

        Another pandemic - swine flu, or maybe bird flu - reaches the capital of Russia. Theme park employees are “going into self-isolation,” and only the attendants come once a week to visit the former prehistoric, and now living reptiles again. One of them once, leaving, forgets to put the alarm on the premises.

        She won't help much either. Compsognathus cubs were made too large an aviary, as they once made a mistake with the size of the cage for Mongolian gerbils on the Bion-M1 satellite. As a result, the dinosaurs reached through the holes in the wall to the wires that were connected to the electronic locks of the doors of the enclosures, gnawed through them and freed all the inhabitants of the Mesozoic park.

        What happened on the "Bion-M1"

        Bion is a series of Russian biological experiments in space that began at 1973 and continues to this day. Within its framework, scientists launch various animals into space to find out how such a flight will affect them.

        Bion-M1 was launched in 2013 with 45 mice, 8 gerbils, 15 geckos, snails, crustaceans, fish and various microorganisms on board. The gerbils died in flight. An investigation into the causes of their deaths showed that the animals got out of the cage and gnawed through the cable in the life support system.

        As is known N + 1 from sources related to the experiment, the gerbil compartments were sized more for rats - and they are three to five times larger. Apparently, the wires could be reached through holes in the walls, where the muzzle of a rat would not have crawled through, but crawled through a gerbil. Considering these animals' outstanding ability to gnaw and dig (and they "dig" holes in the walls of a plastic cage in a week) and the desire to do this, such an outcome was obvious to anyone who watched their behavior for a long time.

        Lights are not turned off, food and water in the enclosures are still there. Adults, who grew up in an impoverished environment (of course, they had toys, but still there are not so many different stimuli in the park as in the wild), continued to sit in enclosures: this is their territory. And the fact that the doors can now be opened, they did not notice. To do this, you need to go to the door and push on it.

        Random freedom

        At one time, cats got out of the Thorndike problem box by rubbing against its walls when they saw familiar experimenters, and not because they really wanted to get out or eat. The same is true of our dinosaurs: only a few days after the “sabotage” of the Compsognathians, a young three-meter-high Allosaurus accidentally touched the enclosure door with its tail, opening it slightly. At first, the animal did not attach any importance to this, but after a couple of days, when he really wanted to eat, and there was no new food, he began to walk along the boundaries of the site and noticed that there was something outside the familiar nook - and you can get there.

        Having explored the corridors of the pavilion, the allosaurus found a pen with stegosaurs by smell, pushed its door, opened it and tried to attack the cubs: the hunger was already very strong. However, the adults who were in the same place managed to rebuff him. Then the Allosaurus went to other rooms. In one of the incubator rooms for those who had difficulty breeding themselves or did not incubate eggs, he smelled a strong smell of decomposing meat, began to scrape the surfaces close to its source and made his way inside. The smell came from protoceratops cubs. They hatched from eggs, but there was nothing for them to eat in the incubator, and they died of starvation. For an Allosaurus, such corpses are quite acceptable food, because, like other large theropods, it did not shun carrion.

        At this time, the stegosaurs ate everything that was in the feeder, and moved outside the enclosure in search of plant food - the allosaurus wide open their door, showing the way out. After eating several orchids in pots in the hall (they turned out to be tasteless), some individuals tried to leave the building through the panoramic windows: they did not notice the glass. But they were noticed by an employee of the management company, who was sent to mow the lawn. Not afraid of large animals, he did not take flight, but began to threaten them with a lawn mower from the street.

        Probably the dinosaurs would have been afraid of him without it, but the noise and the sight of the lawn mower raised in the air terrified them (similarly, displays of frilled lizards affect their enemies). Stegosaurs began to rush around the hall and the corridors of the pavilion. Bumping into doors, they opened them, and therefore the most agile and curious dromaeosaurids immediately got out of the enclosures.

        Adaptation and losses

        Those who could - ocher-red Sinornithosaurus and blue-black Microraptors - flew from the Soaring Bridge to the other side of the Moskva River (it was lucky that the wind was weak). Some of them stayed on Sofiyskaya Embankment and adapted to eat what they found in the garbage dumps of local cafes (at that time they worked for delivery) and rats, which also ate this food. Local workers, in principle, did not notice anything quite unusual: pugnacious crows were met here before, and the fact that some of them look strange was attributed to the peculiarities of the ecological situation of our time.

        A few weeks later, dinosaurs could be found already in Muzeon, from there they moved first to Gorky Park, and then to Sparrow Hills.

        The Compsognats, the same ones that started it all, gnawed a few more holes in the walls of their dwelling and also broke out. Due to their young age, exploratory behavior often started in them. Secretive and cautious, like most predators, they went unnoticed for a long time. Pretty soon they figured out that mice and rats were good food. Thus, they had no problems with food.

        True, not everyone was lucky: someone wandered into the territory of the dog packs and was attacked. Many managed to get away. People usually did not pay attention to such skirmishes. Well, for those who walked their pets, dinosaurs (not only compsognathans) tried not to catch the eye - it was too scary.

        This is how the smallest dromaeosaurids and theropods that joined them reached the Moscow park massifs. There, for several weeks, they hardly met people: the townspeople were forbidden to leave their apartments, and only individual joggers and dog owners violated this ban. Gradually, there were more and more visitors to the parks, garbage and leftovers, too, and small dinosaurs got used to such a neighborhood.

        Bird lovers were the first to notice unusual creatures. It was they who defended those who escaped from the Mesozoic park, asked not to exterminate them and not to return them to captivity. By the time of discovery, the animals had already managed to adapt to their new environment. Judging by the fact that some of them performed some kind of mating dance (during the mating demonstrations they were discovered), the urban dinosaurs did not experience much stress. Otherwise, breeding programs would be suppressed.

        https:www.youtube.com/embed/Ljq3U1A5naw

        Utahraptors were the worst. It was much more difficult for them to hide due to their size, so some of them were encountered at night by visitors to bars and clubs, going out to smoke. As a rule, people were in such a state that they attributed what they saw to too high doses of alcohol and other substances (and they did not go to the Mesozoic park and did not think that they would ever see its inhabitants on the streets). Utahraptors did not attack them: an unknown, unpredictable and also very noisy species, the nutritional value of which is not clear, is a bad prey.

        Several of these dinosaurs were run over by cars. Others died of starvation: apart from people, they did not encounter large prey, and garbage containers did not provide enough food.

        But what did the tyrannosaurs do?

        To the credit of the lawn mower, he tried to inform the keepers (those who work with animals) about what happened in the park by calling the numbers indicated on the doors of the building. It turned out that these were reception phones, and since there was no one there, they did not answer him. It's good that the duty officer came after six days. He immediately called for help - cleaners who helped clean up broken orchid pots, stegosaurus droppings and other runaways.

        It was not difficult to drive some herbivorous sauropods into their native enclosures: they began to build nests and preferred not to stray far from them. With small predators that did not run away, it was more difficult: I had to scare them with mops. What they ate in the half-empty building is a mystery, but it is possible that it was local rats.

        And most importantly, the keeper saved the tyrannosaurs. They, of course, were also already hungry and realized that the enclosure was open, but they could not get out: the door was designed for people, and the reptiles were placed in the enclosure even when they were small.

        Tyrannosaurus rex were intelligent enough to remember the people who usually looked after them, and expected food from them, not a dirty trick, and did not try to attack them. However, they were so exhausted that they could not do this even if they wanted to. Keeper was very glad that his beloved pets had not gone anywhere - after all, a meeting, for example, with cars, could end for them in the same way as it happens with deer and elk: death or at least serious injuries. The tyrannosaurus would not have found food in the city anyway - obese mammals do not walk down the street in Moscow. And having met a person, he would, out of habit, begin to beg for food from them, and they would be afraid of him - and sooner or later they would start shooting (and he would sooner or later try to bite): this happens with bears on Sakhalin.

        Instead of an epilogue

        This story is nothing more than a fantasy. It is likely that a professional paleontologist will find errors in it or supplement it with the latest information. It will not be possible to accurately reconstruct the behavior of dinosaurs, but it is quite possible to model it based on the structure of their remains and what we know about the habits of their closest living relatives - birds and crocodiles. Therefore, we think that some dinosaurs incubated eggs and/or cared for offspring; that some of them behaved differently in their youth than mature individuals; that some of them were territorial, and some (like the Allosaurus, judging by the damage to its limbs) moved a lot and probably wandered; and many many others.

        Considering how many types of dinosaurs there were, it is impossible to talk about their behavior as something homogeneous. Nevertheless, like any other living organisms (including those that do not have a brain

        ), these reptiles probably behaved adaptively: they hid from potential dangers, they were afraid of the new, although sometimes interest in the unusual overcame this fear, specially attracted the opposite sex. Probably, some dinosaurs made themselves shelters, and some even showed playful behavior,

        like crocodiles

        . In any case, their behavior was not limited to senseless acts of aggression. In a sense, they were the same as us - and this, perhaps, is their main charm.

        Svetlana Yastrebova

        YURKIN PARK - a park of moving living dinosaurs for recreation and entertainment for the whole family Kirov

        Fascinating trip
        to the world of dinosaurs

        Visit the new
        all-season outdoor theme park and entertainment
        0005 For children and adults

        , find out more than

        Paleontological trail with “revived” giant figures of dinosaurs

        43 “Live” figures of dinosaurs in a real amount of

        At the same time more than 10 young paleontologists can conduct historical excavations

        Souvenir boutique

        Large foot court area: Yurkin Grill, Yurkin Bublik

        Unforgettable flight over the pond and dinosaurs.

        Master-classes

        At weekend thematic and cognitive master classes

        Ferris wheel

        Fishing

        Come on fishing yourself and take your children!

        Waterslide

        Exciting fun and great gift for kids

        Rope city

        For those who are not looking for easy ways. For those who love challenging challenges! Hurry up to test yourself!

        Robots and birthdays

        Bright and memorable holidays.

        Bright Weekends and Festivals

        Science show, flash mobs, quests, festivals, competitions.

        Inflatable obstacle course

        For adults and children! 47 meters long! Especially for those who like to jump for happiness!

        Excavations of fossils in Yurkina Sandbox

        Feel like a paleontologist!

        Yurkin Grill

        How about a delicious Dinner?

        Boutique

        Lots of toys, clothes, souvenirs, sweets and even growing dinosaurs!

        Roller coaster!

        SOON! Unreal impressions on mind-blowing turns and high-speed descents!

        Climbing wall

        Do you want to take a vertical step? Do you want to conquer the rocks? This winter, the wizards of Yurkin Park built a climbing wall! Forward! We conquer the heights!

        This is a luxurious spacious hall for your celebration, with a picturesque outdoor area and a pond!

        The best place for your event in the park-hall “WE ARE FOR YOU” .


        Learn more


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    North Coast Community Services
    710 Fraser Street, Prince Rupert, BC V8J 1P9
    Ph: 250.627.7166 | Fx: 250.627.7482

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