Walking With Dinosaurs
In
my view, it is the most awesome science program ever produced. Nothing
before ever made for television even approaches it, so breathtaking
is its scope, its thoroughness and its authenticity. It is an incredible
three-hour journey into prehistory that, while as provocative as
any fictional account of dinosaurs that has ever been made, is,
more importantly, a wildlife documentary that stands on its own
as an unprecedented achievement for natural history. The "it"
I'm referring to is the BBC/Discovery Channel mini-series Walking
With Dinosaurs; which, by all measures of television entertainment
will, like what Jurassic Park did for motion pictures, be
hailed as one of the most scientifically significant technological
benchmarks in broadcast television for many years to come.
Comparisons to Jurassic Park are sadly
inevitable but, as such, I am happy to report that Walking With
Dinosaurs is simply stunning -- almost unbelievable -- even
for the most jaded dinosaur fans out there. The computer generated
animation wrought for these creatures, handled by the British firm
FrameStore, is so astonishingly true to life that paleontologists
hired to facilitate the making of the show ended up writing new
chapters for "the book" on dinosaurs as a result. And
it is, by all accounts, the first time ever that a production of
this magnitude has tried so diligently to recreate the natural ecosystems
in which dinosaurs lived, e.g. how they hunted, bore offspring,
etc. So much so that the experience of watching Walking With
Dinosaurs is veritably no different than what one would expect
from watching say, a wildlife documentary about hippos or lions
in Africa; except that these animals lived over 65 millions years
ago!
In fact, Walking With Dinosaurs has been heralded by some
scientists as being the most credibly accurate depiction of dinosaur
life ever produced, theatrical, TV or otherwise. And, if
this is any indication of the excellence of the production crew
that put the show together, it was all done on a production budget
of less than $10 million. So, if you're asking, how on Pangaea did
they do it, Virginia? Read on. And stop calling me Virginia.
Big Thunder (Lizards) on a Small Budget
In Hollywood, the litmus test of a successful dinosaur show is how much box office the dinos can generate. Jurassic Park, for example, made into the many hundreds of millions of dollars on receipts for both that picture and its sequel, Jurassic Park 2. Yet only 7 to 8 minutes of the first picture and 10 minutes of the sequel showed any dinosaurs at all, despite the motion pictures' relatively large budgets. So why not more dinos? Too expensive to make, as the BBC would come to find out.
When first approached in 1995 to do the job, the CG dinosaur factory of Industrial Light & Magic, which had done the dinos for both Jurassic Park movies, quoted the BBC a whopping $10,000 per second to do the CG. At $10,000 a second for two and a half hours, you do the math. Not many producers at BBC could justify a tenth of that kind of expense, so imagine the dilemma facing Tim Haines, BBC Science Producer in charge of making Walking With Dinosaurs. Considering the show's total running time of 180 minutes, 150 minutes of it CG, what was one to do?

























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