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O Último Dinossauro

Título original: The Last Dinosaur
  • 1977
  • Not Rated
  • 1 h 46 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,3/10
1,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
O Último Dinossauro (1977)
Dinosaur AdventureActionAdventureSci-FiThriller

Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaA wealthy big game hunter and his group become trapped in prehistoric times where they are stalked by a ferocious dinosaur.A wealthy big game hunter and his group become trapped in prehistoric times where they are stalked by a ferocious dinosaur.A wealthy big game hunter and his group become trapped in prehistoric times where they are stalked by a ferocious dinosaur.

  • Direção
    • Alexander Grasshoff
    • Tsugunobu Kotani
  • Roteirista
    • William Overgard
  • Artistas
    • Richard Boone
    • Joan Van Ark
    • Steven Keats
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    5,3/10
    1,1 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    • Direção
      • Alexander Grasshoff
      • Tsugunobu Kotani
    • Roteirista
      • William Overgard
    • Artistas
      • Richard Boone
      • Joan Van Ark
      • Steven Keats
    • 45Avaliações de usuários
    • 39Avaliações da crítica
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Fotos32

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    Elenco principal17

    Editar
    Richard Boone
    Richard Boone
    • Masten Thrust Jr.
    Joan Van Ark
    Joan Van Ark
    • Francesca 'Frankie' Banks
    Steven Keats
    Steven Keats
    • Chuck Wade
    Luther Rackley
    • Bunta
    Masumi Sekiya
    • Hazel
    William Ross
    • Hal - Mother 1 Chief Technician
    Carl Hansen
    • Barney
    Tetsu Nakamura
    • Dr. Kawamoto
    Nancy Magsig
    • Thrust's Girl on Plane
    Don Maloney
    • Mother 1 Captain
    Vanessa Cristina
    • Reporter
    James Dale
    Hyôe Enoki
    Shunsuke Kariya
    • Caveman Leader
    Gary Gundersen
    Toru Kawai
    • Tyrannosaurus
    Katsumi Nimiamoto
    • Triceratops (front half)
    • Direção
      • Alexander Grasshoff
      • Tsugunobu Kotani
    • Roteirista
      • William Overgard
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários45

    5,31K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    8zillabob

    Fun...they don't make 'em like this anymore....

    The Last Dinosaur was one of those "out of nowhere" movie-of-the-week films in the 1970's that was pretty exciting for the time especially to fans of Japanese Tokusatsu films. Originally slated for a theatrical release (around when the Dino King Kong was out in the previous December) it was suddenly pulled and made into a Friday Night ABC Movie of The Week. Rankin Bass-who were no strangers to Japanese co-productions were the guns behind this production, co-produced with Tsuburaya Productions of Japan-the people who brought us Ultraman in various forms. Starring mostly an American cast including the late Richard Boone, Joan Van Ark and the late Steven Keats, it told the tale of a prehistoric pocket of time in what was a superheated volcanic caldera somewhere at the frozen arctic circle, containing dinosaurs. It plays a lot like the films The Land Unknown(1956) and The Land That Time Forgot(1975) in feel and pace. Sure the dinosaurs were guys in suits(A Triceratops with front knees!) but they were filmed in such a way, the music and score was so well done, and the cast did a fine job that this didn't matter much to many of us brought up on Godzilla. The film has a lot of class to it, from the opening score by Nancy Wilson "The Last Dinosaur" to the overall "big" feeling of the film-the locations at hot springs in Northern Japan were excellent and lush- and the undeniable feeling of Kaiju Eiga to it. There are some amazing set pieces-the T-Rex's "bone yard" and a tracking shot that takes us deep into the jungle to see the T-Rex eat a giant fish from a stream. Tsuburaya's FX people did their job in style here and aside from a few dodgy matte shots, they do their job well. This film is considered the best 1970's "kaiju" film from Japan, even over the five Godzilla films made during that decade. Rankin Bass did several other co-productions with Tsuburaya providing the creatures or miniatures- The Bermuda Depths(1978) and The Ivory Ape(1980)-but neither measured up to the epic look of this film.
    5BA_Harrison

    Stupid, but not boring (except for the bit where they are literally boring).

    The same year that George Lucas and his team developed groundbreaking special effects to bring audiences bizarre alien creatures and dramatic space battles in Star Wars, this US/Japanese co-production settled for far less advanced techniques to bring its dinosaurs to life, making it an embarrassingly clunky, yet still rather charming addition to the Lost World genre. Rivalling The Land That Time Forgot (1974) for worst movie dinosaurs of the decade, The Last Dinosaur features Tokusatsu-style men-in-rubber-suit monsters that are wholly unconvincing, but which will undoubtedly hold much appeal for fans of all things kaiju (the film's T-Rex even sounds like Godzilla).

    Richard Boone stars as Masten Thrust, the wealthiest man in the world (but still unable to hire a decent graphic designer to make his company a decent logo), who leads an expedition to a lost world in the polar region, where he hopes to find a living Tyrannosaurus Rex. Joining him on the journey into the unknown are geologist Chuck Wade (Steven Keats), scientist Dr. Kawamoto (Tetsu Nakamura), photographer Francesca Banks (Joan Van Ark) and brave Masai tracker Bunta (Luther Rackley). After navigating their way to the prehistoric land in a laser borer craft, the team are attacked by a tribe of savage cavemen and face danger from a T-Rex that steals their transport and stomps their camp.

    Entertaining for its sheer silliness, The Last Dinosaur features unrealistic miniatures, a laughably bad Pteranodon that endlessly circles the sky, and a triceratops that somehow conceals itself in a rock face to launch a surprise attack on the T-Rex. Other dumb moments include Francesca unknowingly standing on the back of a giant turtle, the T-rex stealthily sneaking up on its victims unheard, Masten ordering Bunta to find 200 yards of tough vine (that's 600ft, or 182 metres, but the ever resourceful Bunta comes through), the T-Rex being yanked off its feet by a tumbling boulder (attached to the dinosaur by that tough vine!), the speedy construction of a massive medieval-style catapult (I'm still not sure where that axe came from), and Chuck and Francesca miraculously transporting the steel (so presumably extremely heavy) borer over land to re-launch it in a lake.

    5/10 - it's silly, it's stupid, it's technically inept, but it's also quite fun as a result.
    7gharf-1

    classic 70s

    i was 9 when i first saw this on TV. on a Friday night. i remember the full page ad in the TV guide with the picture of the Rex. amazing how some things stick in your mind after 30 years. Anyway if your a kid who likes monster movies this one is entertaining enough especially with boone and Keats raging at each other. Special effects are no harryhausen but its worth the hour and a half if you find it somewhere on late night TV. Haven't seen it in a few years for some reason these classics fade from cable TV. If you do catch it on late night don't be too critical just grab some snacks and enjoy it. it might be cheesy but i thought it was a lot better than the kong remake that came out in the theaters a year before.
    8acevang40us

    Kind of Good movie

    This movie is kind of good. It seem that they used the Tyrannosaurus Rex like a blown up balloon, just like Godzilla, just maybe back in those 60-70's days, scientist haven't got enough info. on all sorts of dinosaurs. Back in those time scientist still making dinosaur, so I guess this movie was base on a Tyrannosaurus Rex movements back in the 60-70's. There even a part where a giant rock, fired by someone at the Tyrannosaurus Rex, it damage the Tyrannosaurus Rex and it was knock out for a little while. At the end, the Tyrannosaurus Rex went back to search for food. There is something wrong in the movie as well, like a rifle, how can one rifle kill a Tyrannosaurus Rex, when it could be 1,000-5,000 stronger than we are. If this film going to make a remake, I suggest make it more good and excited, because watching a old movie seems like to have a remake of it, if lucky.
    5TheUnknown837-1

    it can easily be enjoyed, if one judges it for what it is: a low-budget flick

    "The Last Dinosaur", the title for a particular late-70s science-fiction flick which was apparently (I'm guessing by a few details in the credits and in the film) a cooperation of American and Japanese film companies. This film was obviously made on an incredibly low budget, which you can judge by many aspects of it shown on the screen. "The Last Dinosaur" is preposterous, has campy effects, redone sound effects that still retain aspects of their original versions, and with the exception of Richard Boone, completely wooden acting. It is a mindless film, and yet, somehow, there is something classic and enjoyable about it. It's a film that cannot be forgotten by those who have seen it. And whether they loved it or hated it, they remember it for being so cheap. Why is it enjoyable, then? I myself don't really know the answer. There's just some things about some films like this that somehow in some way work out.

    The title of the film isn't completely accurate, according to the storyline. The so called "last dinosaur" of the film is a humanoid tyrannosaurus rex who sounds uncannily like Godzilla, and is portrayed by a man in a rubber suit. But we see lots of other creatures on screen. We see pterosaurs (which technically aren't dinosaurs, but are still prehistoric creatures), a giant reptilian mistaken to be a ceratopsian. And then we see an actual ceratopsian, a triceratops. So evidently, this T-rex is not alone in his prehistoric world.

    The special effects on the film are simply laughable. We are humored by the dinosaurs more than we are frightened by them. There are several instances when the rubber heads of the creature get pushed in and then bounce back out into perfect form again, totally impossible in real life, considering that heads are made of skulls. There is a point in the film when a triceratops falls over onto its side and although we were more than obvious to the fact that it was made by two men in a heavy suit, standing one behind the other, it becomes more obvious in the mentioned scene. First, the guy in the front falls, yet the second guy apparently wasn't timing himself, for the back legs were still standing for a while before they finally realized they had to fall over too.

    Casting and acting was wooden, not counting Richard Boone, who was popular as a cinema villain. Here, he is kind of an anti-hero. A womanizer, hunter, tough guy. Yet, even Boone doesn't really save the cast. It's not his acting that was the problem, it was the lines he was given to say. "That's not an alligator, it's a crocodile, and yet I shot it too.", "You ding-dong!", "a great scientific mind was killed by a beast with a brain the size of a dried pea!", and so on and so forth. The other actors were simply horrible at their jobs, maybe excepting the dark-skinned actor who didn't have any dialogue to say. But those people dressed up as a cavemen were perhaps the most hilarious part of the film. Not only being totally unnecessary, but not unexpected plot points, they made me laugh as I watched them walk slowly, swaying their arms from side to side with their mouths hanging open. A lot of characters were also totally unintelligent. Such as a press conference scene, where reporters did not ask enough questions. No logical questions. They didn't even ridicule the idea of a live dinosaur, as they do in most sci-fi flicks.

    While "The Last Dinosaur" is totally ludicrous and lacking in intelligence, it is somehow entertaining. Once again, I'll state that I don't know why I enjoyed it. Maybe I just like old cheap monster movies. This is cheaper than any of the old late-60s and 70s Godzilla films in all regards. But whatever, the case, "The Last Dinosaur" was an okay 70s monster movie. It will meet people halfway in terms of their outlooks upon the film. But everybody will describe it as cheap.

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    Enredo

    Editar

    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      This was originally scheduled for theatrical release in the United States. The release was cancelled and the film premiered, in edited form, as a TV-movie on U.S. network television. This edited version became the U.S. version used for television showings and video releases.
    • Erros de gravação
      When hit in the head by a boulder, the tyrannosaurus' head visibly dents and then pops back into shape.
    • Citações

      Wade: You told me! You swore to all of us that we were not going to harm the dinosaur! We were only supposed to take film and study it!

      Thrust: You ding-dong!

    • Versões alternativas
      The very rare Japanese laserdisc (released by Columbia) is in English, uncut (running 106mins) and properly letterboxed (at a ratio of 1:85). On the downside, their are japanese subtitles on the very bottom of the picture (not black bar area).
    • Conexões
      Featured in Brandon's Cult Movie Reviews: Godzilla vs. Monster Zero (2012)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      The Last Dinosaur
      Sung by Nancy Wilson

      Music by Maury Laws

      Lyrics by Jules Bass

      Arranged and Conducted by Bernard Hoffer

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    Perguntas frequentes14

    • How long is The Last Dinosaur?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 25 de dezembro de 1980 (Brasil)
    • Países de origem
      • Japão
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • El último dinosaurio
    • Locações de filme
      • Japão
    • Empresas de produção
      • Rankin/Bass Productions
      • Tsuburaya Productions
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

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    • Tempo de duração
      1 hora 46 minutos
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • Mono
    • Proporção
      • 1.85 : 1

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