Film review: Walking With Dinosaurs 3D
The six-part journey into a lost world populated by majestic beasts, like the Stegosaurus, Ankylosaurus and the gargantuan Brachiosaurus, captivated viewers and won numerous awards, including two BAFTAs and three Emmys.
Shot on location in Alaska, Walking With Dinosaurs – The 3D Movie is the next evolution, employing dazzling visuals to explore a familiar story of triumph against adversity in the Late Cretaceous period.
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Hide AdScreenwriter John Collee roasts a hoary narrative chestnut – the journey of a runt of the litter – for a simplistic script. It emphasises the educational aspects by freeze-framing the action to provide us with the genus, English translation and feeding classification of each dinosaur.
Humour is pitched at younger audiences, with occasional concessions to parents, like when the film’s hero stares at a picturesque landscape and gushes, “This is one of the most beautiful things I’ve ever seen!”.
“It’s a future oilfield, so don’t get too attached,” replies his feathered sidekick tartly.
Walking With Dinosaurs – The 3D Movie is visually arresting edutainment that makes fleeting use of the eye-popping format. Thus, a Pterosaur almost pokes our eye out with its beak and moths flutter inches from our face.
Scenes that might be a tad scary for the very young are preceded by a verbal warning, giving parents sufficient time to create a cuddle cage from the necessary bloodshed.