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The film's estimation is off by a couple million years both in its extinction date and its oldest dinosaur fossil date. Dinosaurs the Terrible Lizards says that the oldest dinosaur fossils were about 225 million years old, as of 2024 a 233 million year old [1] dinosaur fossil was found in Brazil. The film says that dinosaurs went extinct 70 ...
Dinosaurs: The Terrible Lizards 1970 United States Short film [25] [26] Dinosaur World: ... The illustrated dinosaur movie guide (1st Titan ed.). London: Titan Books.
Hernán Cortés surrenders and demands a truce, but realizes they cannot understand him. He murmurs to himself that they are savages, not realizing the chief can understand Spanish, and is knocked out. Once he regains consciousness, he meets a Spanish-speaking female Aztec. She tells him the Aztecs call the Tyrannosaurs "Thunder Lizards".
Bad Dinosaurs is based on the web series Dinosaurs: Terrible Lizards, which was first published on YouTube in 2015.It was created by Joel Veitch, Alex Mallinson, and David Shute.
The first dinosaur fossils were recognized in the early 19th century, with the name "dinosaur" (meaning "terrible lizard") being coined by Sir Richard Owen in 1842 to refer to these "great fossil lizards".
Dinosaurs featured in the film include a Pteranodon; an Elasmosaurus; a pair of Stegosaurus, played by monitor lizards; and a Tyrannosaurus rex, played by Smyth. [4] A giant, carnivorous plant is depicted as well. The mammal found by the crew, then later eaten by the plant, is referred to as a tarsier, but is actually a loris.
Dinosaur (1980 film) The Dinosaur and the Missing Link: A Prehistoric Tragedy; Dinosaur from the Deep; Dinosaur! (1985 film) Dinosaurs the Terrible Lizards; Dinosaurus! Divinity (film) Dolly's Toys; Dom (film) Dragonslayer (1981 film) Dragonworld; Dreamscape (1984 film) The Dub Room Special; The Dungeonmaster
Reptilicus is the mutual title of two monster films about a giant, prehistoric reptile.A pair of Danish-American co-productions produced by Cinemagic [4] and Saga Studio, the Danish-language Reptilicus was directed by Poul Bang and released by Saga in Denmark in 1961, while the English-language Reptilicus was directed and co-written by Sidney Pink and released by American International ...