Metacritic Film

Dinosaur

Starring Julianna Margulies, D.B. Sweeney, Joan Plowright, and Ozzie Davis

MPAA RATING: PG for intense images

Buena Vista Pictures
Family/Kids
82 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters May 19, 2000

Set at the end of the dinosaur period when the killer comet arrives, the film deals with the legacy the dinosaurs leave for the emerging mammals and the planet.

WRITTEN BY
John Harrison
Robert Nelson Jacobs

DIRECTED BY
Eric Leighton
Ralph Zondag

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

56 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 New York Daily News
For sheer bravura film making, for creating a cartoon world with real air, flesh, blood and the exhilarating cycle of fear and escape, Dinosaur is tops.
88 Boston Globe
Throughout the history of film, nothing turns campier faster than dinosaur movies. This one will have a much longer shelf life than most.
83 Entertainment Weekly
Doesn't offer anything to adult viewers as thrilling, as shivery, as satisfyingly primal as Steven Spielberg's intricate predator choreography in the original ''Jurassic Park.''
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Too bad they didn't skip the gags and one-liners, along with the songs, and go the distance in making this an authentic dinosaur world.
80 Variety
An eye-popping visual spectacle that serves up a vivid picture of what the planet might have looked like when reptiles ruled the Earth.
78 Austin Chronicle
It's a visually stunning film. For every kid everywhere, and for every adult still a kid at heart, the dinosaurs are the thing, and here, finally, Disney does justice to our dreams.
75 Charlotte Observer
It offers a grim view of prehistoric life: Carnivores slaughter herbivores, though we're spared most direct shots of this violence.
75 Philadelphia Inquirer
An undeniable and, indeed, unprecedented technical feat that's a feast for the eye, Dinosaur is less easy on the ear.
75 San Francisco Chronicle
For all the eyepopping splendor and in-your-face reality, this film leaves the viewer unsatisfied and feeling a little cheated out of compelling drama.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
I was entertained, and yet I felt a little empty-handed at the end, as if an enormous effort had been spent on making these dinosaurs seem real, and then an even greater effort was spent on undermining the illusion.
75 New York Post
An expensive demonstration that all the spectacular effects in the world aren't enough to make a great film - but it's worth seeing for that stunning half-hour alone.
75 San Francisco Examiner
Parents should note the PG rating. There's little bloodshed, but several fight scenes, lots of loud roaring and some overwhelming special effects sequences could vex younger viewers.
75 TNT RoughCut
Does exactly what it should: Take the wee ones on a vicarious trip through an adventure both visually terrifying and emotionally thrilling at the same time.
70 The New York Times
As luxuriant and intoxicating as a theme park ride; more remarkably, it feels like a real movie.
63 Chicago Tribune
Of course, you expect talking animals in a Disney cartoon; you just may not initially realize that Dinosaur is the three-dimensional equivalent of one.
60 Village Voice
Dinosaur amounts to 80 minutes of discouraged Cretaceous trudging, punctuated by the occasional fight or stampede and one pyrotechnic coup: a truly thrilling meteor shower.
50 Portland Oregonian
If you've seen more films in your life than you have fingers, much of it will be forgotten by the time you floss the last popcorn skin from between your teeth.
50 Miami Herald
Unfortunately, disappointingly dull, a lumbering Bore-us-saurus of a movie.
50 Film.com
A truly stunning technical experiment.
50 USA Today
Fossilized script spoils effects.
50 Mr. Showbiz
The script is pure Disney formula. Dinosaur offers next to nothing in the way of variation.
50 Film.com
A cool movie and a must-see for anyone who wants to see the next stage in computer-generated animation. But it could have been so much more.
50 LA Weekly Gerg Burk
There are plenty of gorgeous real-life vistas for adults to look at while stuffing popcorn in their ears to avoid the oversignifyin' music and the hurtin' dialogue.
40 Rolling Stone
In story terms, Dinosaur lays an egg.
40 Los Angeles Times
A technical amazement that points computer-generated animation toward the brightest of futures, it's also cartoonish in the worst way, the prisoner of pedestrian plot points and childish, too-cute dialogue.
40 TV Guide
An old-fashioned dinosaur opera, in the worst sense of the term. An obviously formulaic effort, designed more as a cash machine than a piece of cinema.
40 Washington Post
The occasional big moments are stunning, and kids from the ages of, say, 6 years to 6 years and 3 days will love it. Anyone younger will be scared; anyone older, bored.
38 Baltimore Sun
Offers jaw-dropping visuals, but its troubling images of violence may cause this revolutionary effort to miss the evolutionary boat.
30 Chicago Reader
This movie's story must have been computer generated along with its animation.
30 Time
Maybe kids will like the movie; their lust for dinolore appears to be insatiable. But the rest of us will yearn for Robin Williams' giddy goofing in "Aladdin."
30 Salon.com Michael Sragow
"Bambi" meets "Godzilla": Disney goes for the goo in a by-turns gory and sappy new epic of computer-generated images.
20 Dallas Observer M. V. Moorhead
May find it hard to sit without embarrassment through this bizarre mixture of paleontology, preposterous anthropomorphism, and fuzzy-headed New Age myth-making in which the only thing missing is the show tunes. Thank God for small favors.

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