Dinosaur (Disney)
Dinosaure is the 65e feature film of animation of the studios Disney, but he is not regarded as a " Traditional " because realized by the subsidiary company cgi, Secret The Lab.
Left in 2000, it is entirely carried out in Synthesized images and decorations natural.
Synopsis
The Earth, sixty-five million years ago. A colony of lemurs carrying out a peaceful existence on a paradisiac island discovers by chance an egg of dinosaur. When the shell fissures, it is small a Iguanodon which in fate… The Lémurien S collect it and baptize it " Aladar". This one grows among them, until the day when a meteorite destroys the island and constrained everyone with the exile. They find refuge near a group of dinosaurs travelling to the research of the Ground of the Nests . Very quickly, Aladar runs up against Kron, the pitiless chief of the troop. Famished, threatened by terrifying carnataures and shaken by internal dissensions, the troop has only little hope of survival. Unless agreeing to listen to Aladar…
Data sheet
- Title: Dinosaur
- original Title: Dinosaur
- Realization: Ralph Zondag and Eric Leighton
- Scenario: Walloon Green, Thom Enriquez, John Harrison, Ralph Zondag and Robert Nelson Jacobs
- Design graphic:
- Artistic director: Cristy Maltese
- designer Production: Walter Martishius
- Design of the characters: Ricardo Delgado, Mark Hallett, David Krentz, Ian Gooding and Doug Henderson
- Animation:
- Supervision: Marck Anthony Austin, Trey Thomas, Tom Roth, Bill Fletcher, Larry White, Eamonn Butler, Joel Fletcher, Dick Zondag, Michael Belzer, Gregory William Griffith and Atsushi Sato
- Animation of the characters: Jason Anastas, Jay Davis, Amy McNamara, Darrin Butters, Chad Ferron, Eric Strand, Greg Maguire, Sean Mahoney, Luci Napier, Peter Lepeniotis, Christopher Oakley, the Major, Yuriko Senoo, Alex Tysowsky, Sheryl Sardina Sackett, Henry Sato Jr., Doug Bennett, Jason Ryan, Rebecca Wilson Bresee, Sandra Maria Groeneveld, Tony Smeed, Owen Klatte, Brian Wesley Green, Darrin Butts, James Michael Crossley, Angie Glocka, Bobby Beck, Stephen Buckley, Kent Burton, Gift Waller, Chris Hurtt and Paul Wood
- special Effects: Neil Krepela (supervision)
- numerical Effects: Neil Eskuri (supervision)
- Sound: Christopher Boyes (supervision)
- Assembly: H. Lee Peterson, assisted Mark Hester
- Music:
- Type-setter: James Newton Howard
- Songs: Orange Blue and Fahrenheit
- vocal Arrangements: Lebo M
- Orchestrations: Brad Dechter, Jeff Atmajian and James Newton Howard
- Co-producer: Baker Bloodworth
- Producing deputy: WFP Marsden
- Production: Walt Disney Pictures
- Distribution: Buena Vista Pictures Distribution
- Budget: approximately 127.500.000 US$
- Format: Colors - 1,85:1 - Stereo Dolby
- Lasted: 79 minutes
- Comings out date: The United States: May 13rd 2000; France: November 15th 2000
Note: The list of the " crédités" with the credits being too long to be quoted in exenso here, we took again only principal the contributeurs.
Distribution
Original voices
- max Casella: Zini
- D.B. Sweeney: Aladar
- Alfre Woodard : Plio
- Ossie Davis: Yar
- Hayden Panettiere : Suri
- Samuel E. Wright: Kron
- Julianna Margulies : Neera
- Peter Siragusa: Bruton
- Joan Plowright : Baylene
- Della Reese: Eema
French voices
- Jamel Debbouze : Zini
- Bruno Choel: Aladar
- Micky Sébastian : Plio
- Med Hondo : Yar
- Marie Sambourg: Suri
- Richard Darbois: Kron
- Ninou Fratellini : Neera
- Marc Alfos: Bruton
- Lily Baron: Baylene
- Perrette Pradier : Eema
Songs of film
- Edge Somebody Such Me - Orange Blue
Rewards and Nominations
August 1st
Exits Cinema
August 1st
Videos out
August 1st
Dinosaurs with the cinema
It is in 1905 qu ' appears one of the first dinosaurs to the screen in Prehistoric Man . In 1914, Winstor McCay carries out a cartoon, Gertie the Dinosaur , while one year later, Willis O' Brien starts its first tests with prehistoric creatures. Its creations, used by Harry Hoyt in 1925 in the world Lost , mark a new stage in the cinematographic career of the dinosaurs.Consequently, one sees some more and more with the screen: King Kong (1933), One Million B.C. (1940), Fantasia (1940), the Monster of wasted times (1953), Voyage in the center of the ground (1959), Le Monde lost (1943), the Sixth continent (1975), without forgetting Jurassic Park (1993) and Le Monde lost: Jurassic Park (1997) and King Kong in its new versions (1976 and 2005).
Did you know?
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James Newton Howard received a ASCAP Award for the composition of film.
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