1 Jurassic Park Line Has An Incredibly Tragic Origin

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Jurassic Park has all kinds of quotable lines, but one joke actually has a tragic real-life connection to one of the crew members of the film.

Jurassic Park is overall an upbeat and exciting movie, but one line has an incredibly tragic origin. Jurassic Park is a special effects titan, with the massive film requiring all kinds of groundbreaking developments in the fields of computer animation, puppetry, animatronics, and more. The members of Jurassic Park's various special effects teams greatly influenced the movie, with one sad behind-the-scenes moment forever making its way into the story of Jurassic Park.

SCREENRANT VIDEO OF THE DAY Jurassic Park is one of Steven Spielberg's most popular movies, with the film spawning a franchise that continued to get sequels up until 2002's box office hit, Jurassic World Dominion. Spielberg's film is full of iconic moments and lines, with Jurassic Park being one of the most quotable movies of all time. Unlike most of the Jurassic Park script, though, one line exchange in the original film actually has a much deeper and more tragic meaning.

After seeing Jurassic Park's initial CGI tests, special effects supervisor Tippett had one response: "I think I'm extinct." Tippet is a stop-motion legend in Hollywood, working on some of the biggest and most iconic films throughout the 1970s and 1980s. However, when seeing the potential of CGI, Tippett quickly realized that his medium would soon be replaced, leading to the comment.

Did Jurassic Park Actually Kill Stop Motion? Jurassic Park may have been the film that made Tippett realize that stop-motion was dying, but that doesn't mean that it actually killed it. 1985's The Young Sherlock Holmes, 1989's The Abyss, and other pre-Jurassic Park movies feature fully CGI characters that previously could have only been done with stop motion.

Although Jurassic Park was a contributing factor to CGI replacing stop-motion, it didn't kill the medium entirely. Stop-motion still thrives today, just in other ways. Fully stop-motion animated films like Mad God and Wendell & Wild are still releasing to this day, with stop-motion strengths having changed from realistic live-action effects to stylized animation.

 

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