Jurassic Park - Lunch - Great Scenes

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  • čas přidán 14. 08. 2010
  • One of the greatest scenes in film history.
    Disclaimer: I don't own any of the footage presented here, this video was made merely to pay homage to this film and not for any profit or commercial reasons. No copyright infringement intended, video is for entertainment purposes ONLY.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 10K

  • @BombBombora
    @BombBombora Před rokem +7526

    As a kid, you thought this scene was boring. As an adult, you realize it’s the best scene in the movie.

    • @skwisgarskwigelf7191
      @skwisgarskwigelf7191 Před rokem +375

      Idk about the best scene but definitely more entertaining when you’re an adult

    • @shosiesmax9642
      @shosiesmax9642 Před rokem +44

      Agreed!

    • @ashker4057
      @ashker4057 Před rokem +45

      Exactly!! One of the best ever scene in SS's career.

    • @Nbafan2000
      @Nbafan2000 Před rokem +29

      The T-Rex/Raptor ending was epic too 😌 but yes!

    • @dontmindme5189
      @dontmindme5189 Před rokem +65

      When I was a kid I knew exactly what he was saying, you can't contain dinos. Even a kid knows that.

  • @redozmasoma
    @redozmasoma Před 3 lety +9385

    Me as a kid
    "WHY ARE THEY STILL TALKING, SHOW ME SOME DINOSAURS DAMN IT!"
    Me as an adult
    "fascinating"

    • @3oclockthoughts468
      @3oclockthoughts468 Před 3 lety +75

      @The Red Guy
      read the book my guy

    • @BlaneNostalgia
      @BlaneNostalgia Před 3 lety +18

      haha

    • @Warmachine69637
      @Warmachine69637 Před 3 lety +18

      Ikr!

    • @Billswiftgti
      @Billswiftgti Před 3 lety +121

      Even as I didn't comprehend much about the philosophical nature of this conversation, the camera work and the backround lights and colours are masterclass. You don't get bored even if you don't understand a single word! Great acting, camera and lighting, pure class.

    • @miklein01
      @miklein01 Před 3 lety +22

      Similar thing for me with Raiders of The Lost Ark.

  • @katierowen3166
    @katierowen3166 Před 11 měsíci +1078

    "Your scientists were so preoccupied with if they could do it, they forgot to ask if they should?" Such a great line

    • @deaconblues77
      @deaconblues77 Před 7 měsíci +22

      I also like "yeah, I know, it's a lot worse"
      *After I wrote that I realized that literally any line in Goldblums speech he gives in that scene could probably be inserted into the statement lol. What great dialog writing.

    • @jaamal6369
      @jaamal6369 Před 6 měsíci +4

      Man that was the best line ever.

    • @Sam-rz4cf
      @Sam-rz4cf Před 6 měsíci +17

      I do kind of feel the same way about the advancement of ai recently. It's sort of out of control and I always think about this quote when I hear about what's happening in 'ai learning' or whatever. It's a monumental advancement, but it's damaging so many people and professions. They're now pushing it onto people to help with simple things like writing sentences. It's very obviously a bad idea, but it's being pushed because it's a 'move forward'. This film really does introduce you to the idea of reckless science.

    • @bmdfragile
      @bmdfragile Před 6 měsíci +13

      Afraid we are gonna experience this with AI

    • @omegacon4
      @omegacon4 Před 5 měsíci

      Applies to everything man has created. Nuclear weapons, biological weapons, AI.

  • @thedarkness4052
    @thedarkness4052 Před rokem +3367

    It's STAGGERING how much better this movie is versus the newer ones.

    • @Josh-py9rq
      @Josh-py9rq Před rokem +40

      The first new one was not too shabby I didn’t see the other two though lol

    • @platero1993
      @platero1993 Před rokem +96

      The latest one was absolute garbage

    • @castillogaliciaricardo5299
      @castillogaliciaricardo5299 Před rokem +52

      It's also shocking how good are the themes present in JW saga (maybe even more interesting than the original trilogy) just for the movies to run past them and say "Oh look guys we got a bigger scarier raptor OMG so epic look at chris Pratt playing with cgi raptors 😱😱😱"

    • @sela562jig
      @sela562jig Před rokem +25

      Jurassic world was good. As for the other two not really lol.

    • @xxxx85
      @xxxx85 Před rokem +31

      What is also staggering is the fact that so many people support the newer movies by paying for them. Jurassic World 3 made as much money as Jurassic Park 1 did. The movie makers have realized they don't need good plots or cinematography, people will throw money at their garbage anyway.
      All that matters anymore in the entertainment industry is the advertisement campaign. Building up hype *before* release of movies/video games has become 95% of success, without exagguration. Movie trailers are now even made with the sole purpose of presenting the entire movie's plot in a 5 minute sequence of cutscenes. After watching a trailer you basically know the entire plot. And somehow these are the tricks that work the best for getting people to go watch your movie.
      People are morons, truly.

  • @chrisharden4986
    @chrisharden4986 Před 4 lety +6427

    As a kid: Boring scene. Show me the dinosaurs.
    As a 34 year old now: It's my favorite scene of the movie.

    • @R3dCol0r
      @R3dCol0r Před 4 lety +44

      Hmm I didn't think it was boring. But I wasn't that young I guess.

    • @jcparker2621
      @jcparker2621 Před 4 lety +78

      chris harden when I saw the food I was hungry. 😋

    • @TallMarisa
      @TallMarisa Před 4 lety +9

      Yes!

    • @tobito3100
      @tobito3100 Před 4 lety +33

      Yeah even my sisters love this scene.
      I started quoting Malcom and they finished the scene by banging the table at the same time.

    • @BLUE5294
      @BLUE5294 Před 4 lety +27

      Lawyer jokes went over my head as a kid, now they feel as over the top as marvel jokes.

  • @FaZaFurhod
    @FaZaFurhod Před 5 lety +4333

    "your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should."
    -hardest hitting line in the entire franchise

    • @ronsalvati3257
      @ronsalvati3257 Před 4 lety +64

      Faerhad Targaryen a line that sticks with you forevermore

    • @nursyakirah4341
      @nursyakirah4341 Před 4 lety +15

      can u explain more what does it mean by that line? quite confused

    • @promestein5801
      @promestein5801 Před 4 lety +107

      @@nursyakirah4341 He was bringing up some issues related to bioethical responsibility.

    • @Athanase48067
      @Athanase48067 Před 4 lety +130

      @@nursyakirah4341 that they were too busy dreaming of fame and notoriety without thinking the ramifications it would have on the world.
      I.E, the most recent movie

    • @thereisnopandemic
      @thereisnopandemic Před 4 lety +29

      Responsibility to whom? These are atheistic scientists are they not? Objective moralism does not exist in their world view, and if they think objective morals exists they are not consistent with their world view.
      Rape of the natural world is not wrong, no such thing as good and evil. I had more respect for Dr Hammond, atleast he is consistent with his world view. ( Evolution theory). Malcom is putting Christian or religious ethics of (good and evil) in his way of reasoning in defending the Animals. He is thinking like a theist. In most theist world view anything that has life has value, because God who is the standard of good says that they have value and that he has given man the responsibility in the care of the earth and everything that lives on it. But it seems that Malcom Totally contradicting what he claims to be, unless I am wrong and he is a creationist, I do not think the book or movies gives a hint of him being a believer of God, so I am assuming he is the typical atheist scientist. And if he is the typical scientist that holds to evolutionary system and denies creationism then he really has no objective moral standards to stand on, he has no logical reason on calling something “rape” as in a negative thing,. But he abandons his views and uses Religious argument as if we have a responsibility to care for others, as if nature or the animals have any value to them. According to evolution theory we are just cluster of cells and none holds no value. Those dinosaurs do not deserve special treatment, just like the rock that we kick for fun. Natural selection does not care about morals.
      Dr Hammond is correct in his actions and is consistent with what he claims to be, if creationism is false. Bioethical “responsibility” is really just a man made rules, that is neither right or wrong. It would be stupid to follow if you are going to benefit taking advantage of others. It is about survival of the fittest.

  • @RafuStudio
    @RafuStudio Před rokem +2128

    20+ years later, they still ignore Malcolm's warning

    • @jameshaggerty8348
      @jameshaggerty8348 Před rokem +143

      Greed is a strong motivator.

    • @petergriffinson1907
      @petergriffinson1907 Před rokem +46

      Disney love $

    • @finmat95
      @finmat95 Před rokem +13

      "Spared no expanse, mr/ms Rafu. Here we're building a new....world. Can you see that?"

    • @TheGreenReaper
      @TheGreenReaper Před rokem +14

      That's possibly because Malcolm was kind of an ass about it. The last guy was closest to scientific - admitting he didn't know and striking a tone of caution, rather than doom dismissed out of hand.

    • @dylhamm
      @dylhamm Před rokem +48

      @@TheGreenReaper Was he a bit of an ass? Sure. But he was right.

  • @zonefitzgerald
    @zonefitzgerald Před rokem +622

    These are the scenes SO MANY PEOPLE are afraid of putting on movies nowadays. But they are the cheapest, the most interesting, and the most memorable.

    • @channell11
      @channell11 Před rokem +102

      Because in order to make these scenes work, you need writers that can write meaningful, impactful dialogue, and actors that can deliver those lines convincingly. I'd argue that we still have some actors that can do that, but too many writers these days lack the experience and cultural relevance to handle the load. So now the strategy is to write snarky, quippy lines and distract the audience with CGI explosions.

    • @braddishv3146
      @braddishv3146 Před rokem +9

      Amen to that...

    • @StuartLugsden
      @StuartLugsden Před 11 měsíci +23

      @@channell11 Nowadays many think all audiences want is 30 minute battles. No we want an equal amount of action and scenes like this.

    • @V4Now
      @V4Now Před 10 měsíci +10

      Oppenheimer has out done it now, scenes like this is the whole movie.😂

    • @christophcarle
      @christophcarle Před 7 měsíci +4

      @@channell11 You dont see Chris Pratt fighting in this dialogue?🤣🤣🤣🤣 (Neither do I)

  • @SheevStalin309
    @SheevStalin309 Před 4 lety +3426

    "Genetic power is the most awesome force this world has ever seen, but you're wielding it like a kid that's found his dad's gun"
    -One of my favorite lines of the movies

    • @PWNINSWAGMASTER
      @PWNINSWAGMASTER Před 3 lety +20

      Yes but half of that sentence isnt actually true.

    • @melissarose6901
      @melissarose6901 Před 3 lety +20

      same! Such great dialogue in this movie, that I believe is quite underrated :)

    • @keynanmartinez
      @keynanmartinez Před 3 lety +18

      He's not wrong.

    • @macrussell78
      @macrussell78 Před 3 lety +99

      "your scientists were so preoccupied with wether or not they could they didn't stop to think if they should." Is my personal favorite line.

    • @logantrimble006
      @logantrimble006 Před 3 lety +17

      To paraphrase Dr Malcolm, I tell religious people when they argue that their God exists that they "wield religion like a grown ass person that still believes in Santa Claus". But just saying dinosaurs alone easily discredits all religious myths, too.

  • @funnyhappystudios
    @funnyhappystudios Před 5 měsíci +218

    “You’re scientists were so preoccupied on whether or not they could, they never stopped to think if whether or not they should.” Perfect summary of AI

    • @Egotolegend2
      @Egotolegend2 Před 4 měsíci +8

      Just replace Scientists with engineers and programmers and you are all set

    • @BigElkification
      @BigElkification Před 4 měsíci +7

      Poetic considering Michael Crichton also made westworld.

    • @rbparks
      @rbparks Před 3 měsíci +1

      And the virologists like that scumbag Fauci that are doing this that lead to the Covid pandemic and killed 7 million plus people. Now just imagine if that was the most docile virus in Wuhan. All we’ve seen is the Dilophosaurus escaping and haven’t even gotten close to the Raptor Pit which is still contained.

    • @ernstthalmann4306
      @ernstthalmann4306 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Waiy until they start eating people 😮

    • @619AGT
      @619AGT Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@Egotolegend2Engineers are pretty much scientists in their own field, if you think about it.

  • @PCarDriver87
    @PCarDriver87 Před rokem +703

    Richard Attenborough's performance is incredible. He really was John Hammond.

    • @petrivatanen9017
      @petrivatanen9017 Před rokem

      Dino dna mereinkonkeet ingen meveliikanlinin meretta vuodeltin piikki pukken pistoolin lacbtbaidt punainen teltanienen varoitusnutsnuijeksen viivojenen kansijot Petri Mikaelnen vatanen ulkomaalaisten opiskelijoiden kaupungkinlanitsen new Yorkin johtokunta päätti msiteriö sen tukinimuksenene ensin apuijen meksikolainen kanssanlaisen of ingen vartijan sotilas porukka poliisi armeijan joukot ensin apuijen aluksenista sairaalaanaan laivanoijenen hargairin laivastonijenen laivanoijenen perän vaunujenen juokkot. sataman nostonurijeeinen keijunut konkkuijenen laaiitteettenen keijunut telineetintä valtuudet John Hammond nimessä Petri Mikaelnen vatanen ensin apuijen varoitusnutsnuijeksen viivojenen kansijot of ingen nimin Petri san merekka angu tohtori Petri ambulance Lihjan auto hargairin Fleetwood rv tukinimuksenene auto bussi Lihjan auto hargairin bussi ambulance renkaat Scania sackian vaunujenen perän vaunujenen vaihto lava kuorman auto ambulance Jeep vartijan sotilas porukka poliisi armeijan vartijon systems varoitusnutsnuijeksen viivojenen systems jäärääsejeelemän häätäänäälyynstyystysyneksen sen henkilön kunnatienen auto perän vaunujenen sairaalaanan kuuluuijetsunust ambulance nostonurijeeinen keijunut konkkuijenen laaiitteettenen tarvikkeeta ensin apuijen suuri joukkot vartijan ammattitutkinto Jurassic World of ingen park and Sorna Rica, costa varoitusnutsnuijeksen viivojenen kaisjot kirja viihiityn helikopterijenen lento kone helikopterijenen myös Autoijeenen lauta noston silita laivanoijenen ambulanceian matkkausjanan aluksenijenen hargairin perän vaunujenen sotilas vartija porukka poliisi armeijan joukot kaupungkinlanitsen myös asunkkanlaisen himisinijeesinen kanssanlaanaajaanlaisen hengen pelastaajaansekseen Jurassic World of park Isla nublar ingen vartijan sotilas porukka armeijan ingenpiikkipukken lacbtbaidt pistoolin ingen matkan laukkuun Lauren lapkus sinun puolen varoitusnutsnuijeksen viivojenen kaisjot käis kirjoitukset Petri Mikaelnen vatanen ensin apuijen

    • @christopherweber9464
      @christopherweber9464 Před 9 měsíci +4

      The great escape takes on new meaning ...

    • @AceLM92
      @AceLM92 Před 8 měsíci +25

      Vastly different than how he was in the book. In the book he wasn't anywhere near as likeable

    • @mrviking2mcall212
      @mrviking2mcall212 Před 7 měsíci +10

      Can’t believe Sean Connery turned down the role, but Richard was great in every way.

    • @g.t.richardson6311
      @g.t.richardson6311 Před 7 měsíci

      @@christopherweber9464 the sand pebbles takes on a new meaning

  • @spicy_xinger
    @spicy_xinger Před rokem +4156

    Everything Malcom says in this one scene in less than 5 mins is more memorable than anything that’s been said across 3 Jurassic world movies

    • @tenmilesky7331
      @tenmilesky7331 Před rokem +55

      absolutely. 👍👍

    • @frblaze2
      @frblaze2 Před rokem +60

      Fax
      this was real life, didn't seem like a movie

    • @scottyunitedboy2925
      @scottyunitedboy2925 Před rokem +61

      I agree- I loved this scene when I first saw it and none of the sequels have come close since to exploring the ethical issues and ramifications of the cloning technology.

    • @JohnFreedman0
      @JohnFreedman0 Před rokem +50

      That, and walking around in a black leather jacket despite being on a jungle climate island.

    • @shawklan27
      @shawklan27 Před rokem +4

      You're not lying lol

  • @1martywilson
    @1martywilson Před 10 lety +590

    "You were so preoccupied with whether or not you could, you didn't stop and consider whether you should"…..now there is a life lesson for all time.

    • @808INFantry11X
      @808INFantry11X Před 10 lety +9

      We have been jugling that question since WW2. Do we continue too do what we make possible because they are always costs both positive and negative that we need too be willing too pay for anything we do.

    • @Indubitably14
      @Indubitably14 Před 9 lety +21

      Something Victor Frankenstein could have learned a great deal from.

    • @808INFantry11X
      @808INFantry11X Před 9 lety +2

      Indubitably
      Yup progress is balance of course there is negative things that come out of everything only the naive would say other wise but it also cant be an excuse for mediocrity, ignorance and irresponsibility. Any new development will always be a juggling act between risk and reward.

    • @GollumLover
      @GollumLover Před 9 lety +1

      Indubitably And the federal government for that matter lol

    • @gamonstudios
      @gamonstudios Před 9 lety +10

      That's how I describe the new jurrasic world movie

  • @TheFlash3237
    @TheFlash3237 Před 5 měsíci +40

    "What you call discovery, I call the rape of the natural world". Malcolm killed it with that line.

    • @aaronkenyon7112
      @aaronkenyon7112 Před měsícem +2

      That part made me think of the scene in Jurassic World with the T-Rex inside the lion enclosure. It was just so unnatural. That enclosure belonged to the lion and this dinosaur that's been dead for 65 million years just knocks the lion out of its place as one of the top predators on the planet

    • @trevalyan006
      @trevalyan006 Před měsícem

      I like how Ellie is the one who steers the conversation back to a more productive line of thinking after that. It's justified hyperbole, but still.

  • @artloverivy
    @artloverivy Před rokem +284

    0:41 Great bit of performance here. Malcolm seems almost nervous to be be first to speak out against the park, especially after Donald and John’s humorous exchange. Once he gets going he’s much more confident, but he seems almost shy to initiate criticism while everyone else is all wide-eyed (especially cuz at this point he doesn’t know if Alan and Ellie are on his side.) But that makes it all the better, because as awkward as it is to sour the mood in the room, he still feels morally obligated to do it anyway.

    • @billymarino4452
      @billymarino4452 Před rokem +29

      I agree. No matter how opposed Malcolm may be to the idea of Jurassic Park, he's still extremely impressed (and who wouldn't) and wants to give credit where credit is due for accomplishing the biggest scientific achievement in mankind's history. But that doesn't give Hammond immunity to criticism and Malcolm knows this.

    • @user-ml3oi3tb1o
      @user-ml3oi3tb1o Před 5 dny

      She's at Octagon.

  • @joebundens2197
    @joebundens2197 Před 4 lety +3189

    Favorite Quote: "Yes, but if the Pirates of the Caribbean breaks down, the pirates don't eat the tourists"

    • @prehistorichero2755
      @prehistorichero2755 Před 4 lety +73

      Joe Bundens Well at least there’s lions at Disney Land.

    • @khrispy_fur6376
      @khrispy_fur6376 Před 4 lety +67

      @@prehistorichero2755 yes but these lions are obviously smaller than even an average dinosaur, they are much easier to contain, they have been groomed for show and grow up around humans, while in jurrasic park/world it is shown that maybe a select few people can control dinosaurs that are smaller in comparison to other larger ones and the rest grow up in a natural environment free to do as they please as long as they don't hurt humans which would have been inevitable.

    • @prehistorichero2755
      @prehistorichero2755 Před 4 lety +3

      Christopher Vazquez Exactly.

    • @threefistbanddrummer4185
      @threefistbanddrummer4185 Před 4 lety +1

      What part is that saying lol

    • @jamesbizs
      @jamesbizs Před 4 lety +2

      Seth Eaton “thank you”

  • @anastasiosgkotzamanis5277
    @anastasiosgkotzamanis5277 Před 4 lety +3274

    The amazing thing is the reversal of Goldblum's character. He started as a guy who looks like a rock star and hits on women and became the voice of reason and humility.

    • @277imperator
      @277imperator Před 4 lety +136

      Anastasios Gkotzamanis wasn’t he always a guy who dresses like a rock star and hits on women? It’s why we love him so much.

    • @kaijufan6246
      @kaijufan6246 Před 4 lety +249

      That's why Dr. Ian Malcolm is my favorite character of Jurassic Park. The humility and reason he possesses. It foreshadows reality.

    • @olleselin
      @olleselin Před 4 lety +12

      @@kaijufan6246 So true

    • @aeroblu2002
      @aeroblu2002 Před 3 lety +70

      And yet people overlook him because he talks funny.

    • @KobaLenk
      @KobaLenk Před 3 lety +90

      And even in Jurassic World 2, Dr Malcolm still was the voice of reason and humiliaty

  • @patrickswasey5301
    @patrickswasey5301 Před 9 měsíci +54

    ''You stood on the shoulders of geniuses to accomplish something as fast as you could,'' Oh boy that quote could be applied to so much stuff. Especially modern films.

    • @aaronkenyon7112
      @aaronkenyon7112 Před měsícem +5

      Especially "You didn't acquire the knowledge for yourselves, so you don't take any responsibility for it". That hit pretty well

    • @dogwithwigwamz.7320
      @dogwithwigwamz.7320 Před 25 dny +1

      I think such conversations as these at the dinner table were aloft in the world post Newton. But I love conversations like these. One of my favourite `actions` in the whole film.

  • @23calvken
    @23calvken Před 9 měsíci +44

    “Like a kid that’s found his Dad’s gun.” Such an excellent simile.

  • @rc59191
    @rc59191 Před 3 lety +3000

    I'm more disturbed by the fact nobody touched their plates than the dinosaurs. That fish looked amazing.

    • @nelixsulu6201
      @nelixsulu6201 Před 2 lety +225

      When I was little I thought the food was a cooked dinosaur because of the scene before this and the way they looked down at their plates with disgust 😂

    • @TB-em7vk
      @TB-em7vk Před 2 lety +318

      I think they lost their appetite after seeing the velociraptor maul the cow in the previous scene

    • @gegasmeef7850
      @gegasmeef7850 Před 2 lety +28

      They lost their appetite and they were having a very important discussion... Even so they wouldn't have eaten it coz food's fake

    • @gegasmeef7850
      @gegasmeef7850 Před 2 lety +11

      @szs voc bruh don't preach to me about food I grew up poor! My point is the food infront of them is fake! It's not even steaming hot when they brought it in!

    • @gegasmeef7850
      @gegasmeef7850 Před 2 lety +4

      @szs voc what?? Bro please tell me you don't believe movie food is real!

  • @Movie_Games
    @Movie_Games Před 5 lety +3127

    One thing that always bothered me about this scene. They never ate that delicious looking Chilean Sea Bass.

  • @Bergen98
    @Bergen98 Před rokem +356

    As a kid, I always missed all the great dialogue in the movies like this one. Dinosaurs were WAY more important. Now as an adult, I can finally appreciate the actual plot and the dialogues!

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +1

      wait can you make a condor with frog dna?🤣

    • @Bergen98
      @Bergen98 Před rokem +2

      @@raven4k998 Nah, this is impossible. I was very interested in biology in high school and am actually studying medicine. Still, the main idea of the film always went right over my head as a kid

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +1

      @@Bergen98 hey if they can make a dinosaur with frog dna they can do it with a condor as well it just may not behave like a real condor that's all🤣

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem

      @@Bergen98 it's not impossible you can get a pig pregnant so a condor frog hybrid can also happen trust me I know these things🤓

    • @cynthia-br2zb
      @cynthia-br2zb Před 10 měsíci

      Yes. Dialogue >>>
      As an adult I only can stand the 1st half of the movie 😂 The action scenes are not as fun as I had thought.

  • @itakedamage
    @itakedamage Před rokem +680

    This is the best scene in the entire franchise. It identifies the narcissism of humanity and the destructive path it leaves just to attain a sense of control.

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf Před rokem

      It applies beautifully to liberals. Everything they do, they might think whether or not they could, (with other people's money, of course) but not if they should.

    • @LeventeCzelnai
      @LeventeCzelnai Před rokem +7

      There is nothing narcissistic about understanding that we humans are special.

    • @Milkshakman
      @Milkshakman Před 11 měsíci +1

      To attain a sense of control? Or to forget the pain of separation?

    • @MetalZuko
      @MetalZuko Před 10 měsíci

      @@LeventeCzelnai Oh, what's so special about humans anyway? We've proven that we're basically the only species capable of destructive tendencies and they simply go beyond nature taking its course. What you call 'special', I call it fucking arrogance.

    • @Jeff-mn1uq
      @Jeff-mn1uq Před 9 měsíci +3

      You think Hammond created the park and funded the Dino research just to have something to be in control of? Also did you know this movie is actually fiction?

  • @trovuong
    @trovuong Před 9 lety +4158

    Actual intelligent main characters discussing the ethics of bringing the dinosaurs back. Whereas, in Jurassic World, a handsome Raptor trainer walks around and not having anything remotely intelligent to say other than witty remarks and comebacks.

    • @joshuawillis602
      @joshuawillis602 Před 8 lety +143

      Why would they need to do that anyway? We already know the risks and everything. If they had did what you wanted it would be a boring drag of things that we already know and already heard of it would be a waste of space and pointless.

    • @GeorgeMonet
      @GeorgeMonet Před 8 lety +177

      +Joshua Willis Doing nothing like they did (only saying witty remarks and comebacks) is what is pointless.

    • @maddyharvey7414
      @maddyharvey7414 Před 8 lety +157

      +Joshua Willis I think their point is kind of what Malcolm I'd saying: you stood on the shoulders of geniuses to accomplish something. Kind of true, this movie had significantly more substance to it. Although I really like Jurassic World

    • @Diabl05564
      @Diabl05564 Před 8 lety +208

      +Maddy Harvey Which part of Jurassic World did you like? The Indominous Rex forgetting it has camouflage powers because of plot or the part where the main female protagonist out runs a T-Rex in high heels? To be honest I mistook that movie to be mostly a comedy after a while constantly stating, "These people can't be that stupid." I laughed so many times in the movie theater I am pretty sure the rest of the people were getting pissed at me but I just couldn't help myself.

    • @melonlord4055
      @melonlord4055 Před 8 lety +14

      +Steven Schmaling I watched it for the fight scene at the end :/

  • @wolverinefangowings
    @wolverinefangowings Před 2 lety +2330

    Me as a kid: "This is lame. Where are the dinosaurs?"
    Me now: "This is a great scene. The dialogue, acting, and cinematography are spot-on and it's a key part of the plot. I can finally appreciate all that. That said, I definitely would not complain if Rexy burst through the wall and ate them all."

    • @GangstaStan010
      @GangstaStan010 Před 2 lety +26

      Speaking of. The last Fallen Kingdom trailer pissed me off because there is a jump scare in there that would have been perfect but they ruined it by having shown it before the film's release.

    • @arminiusofgermania
      @arminiusofgermania Před rokem +13

      Lol. "where r da deenosars"

    • @aziza2522
      @aziza2522 Před rokem +5

      Said the same thing when I was a Kid at 10 years old in '94 watching this movie on VHS with my siblings..."We said this was the boring part..." Lol #Goodtimes

    • @eddybaby83
      @eddybaby83 Před rokem +5

      Spot on observation. After rewatching this for the first time in years, Jeff's dialogue with Sir Richard Attenborough is quite thought provoking, especially for a family film!

    • @ryanslauderdale
      @ryanslauderdale Před rokem

      Some things just take time, understanding and seasoning to fully appreciate, I guess.

  • @holyheretic3185
    @holyheretic3185 Před 8 měsíci +149

    We thought Jeff was talking about creating dinosaurs, he was talking about the movie franchise.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 5 měsíci +5

      yeah, basically he was in a nutshell.🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @AmirKhan-yv8jm
      @AmirKhan-yv8jm Před 3 měsíci

      At least he got well compensated to act in later movies!

    • @Mohico-San
      @Mohico-San Před 11 dny

      Human Evolution and constant progression too

  • @unaeki
    @unaeki Před 7 měsíci +36

    This is what superb screenwriting is. Arguably one of the best scenes of the entire movie.

  • @CaptainRod1000
    @CaptainRod1000 Před rokem +2315

    This is Jeff Goldblum's defining scene as an actor. He owned it.

    • @morningstar577
      @morningstar577 Před rokem +86

      Nah his defining scene was when he's nearly shirtless laying back on the table 😂

    • @superbodoque7860
      @superbodoque7860 Před rokem +32

      @@morningstar577 nah man it's gotta be the one where he's laughing like he's stoned af

    • @chocolatnoir1108
      @chocolatnoir1108 Před rokem +1

      @@morningstar577I was looking for this comment😂👍🏾

    • @justinholland9844
      @justinholland9844 Před rokem +28

      His defining scene is surely "Insect Politics" in The Fly.

    • @soulfire2588
      @soulfire2588 Před rokem +6

      That’s because this was before he decided to make nearly every future role a caricature of himself.

  • @WolfieRich1
    @WolfieRich1 Před 4 lety +1923

    One of the interesting things about this movie, Hammond never once seemed even remotely malicious. Most movies like this, you would expect him to be a secret evil genius or something, but his intentions were good

    • @davidjacobs8558
      @davidjacobs8558 Před 4 lety +312

      road to hell is paved with good intentions.
      yes, villains who act evil for no good reason is actually boring and unrealistic.

    • @bobojo37
      @bobojo37 Před 4 lety +293

      Part of the genius of the movie is that *there is no true villain*. Nedry does what he does out of greed, but he doesn't do it to hurt any of the main characters, and he couldn't have predicted that there'd be a bug in the computer system that shut down the tour vehicles alongside the security system. The raptors are devious and predatory, but that's what they're supposed to be. We see them as murderous for killing off the people, but that's just them being what they are. Hammond wasn't trying to kill anyone, he was trying to expand the knowledge and experience of mankind. The lawyer starts off as an ambulance chaser, sure, but he's also *doing his job* to get compensation for the dead man's family.

    • @FlameG102
      @FlameG102 Před 4 lety +172

      it's probably one of the changes for the better made by the movie. That it's all basically science gone wrong. Mankind playing God, with noble intentions, and getting his comeuppance for it. But it does create a bit of a plot contrivance that hammond is extremely eager to do something fantastic, and keeps mentioning how he spared no expense, But he clearly spared plenty of expenses, including, apparently, not paying his computer techs enough that one of them was willing to engage in corporate espionage.
      In the book, Hammond was a much more selfish unlikable character. A conman, basically. Who is much more believable as someone who would have spared every expense. And in the end is killed by the monsters he created

    • @C.L.3006
      @C.L.3006 Před 4 lety +103

      "Some of the worst things imaginable have been done with the best intentions." - Alan Grant (Jurassic Park III)

    • @Takaichi666-
      @Takaichi666- Před 4 lety +23

      Let me just say one thing yes he had a idea and ran with it but he was PLAYING GOD and look what happened then Jurassic world came along same problems but this time they wanted to combine the most dangerous predators T. rex and raptor in my defense yeah he had a awesome idea but did not fully think it through

  • @NinjaMan47
    @NinjaMan47 Před 8 měsíci +132

    In the movie John Hammond is portrayed as a dreamer, someone who wants to show dinosaurs to the world regardless of the risks because he wants to entertain. He really exemplifies the saying, "The road to hell is paved with good intentions."
    In the book, Hammond is just after profits at all costs. Unlike movie Hammond, he remains obstinante and even hostile towards anyone questioning him. And in the end Hammond suffers a vastly different fate.

    • @donaldpaluga
      @donaldpaluga Před 6 měsíci +8

      COMPY FOOD!

    • @shawerful5209
      @shawerful5209 Před 5 měsíci +14

      I am probally wrong, but the book one sounds like a illumination villain. The greedy businessman who just want power and money

    • @mcmayo7870
      @mcmayo7870 Před 4 měsíci +6

      ​@@shawerful5209more or less but in the book Hammond is more than just money hungry it's almost to the point he doesn't even care about his grandkids when they go missing hell id even say he'd want them to go missing even if it meant the park would do better

    • @benjaminrivera1428
      @benjaminrivera1428 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Yeees, the adaptation of the book is so good, that really make shine the geniuses in that production. Truly a Master Piece.

    • @spencergsmith
      @spencergsmith Před měsícem

      I might regret asking this, but what happens to him in the book?

  • @67maverick
    @67maverick Před měsícem +8

    Mr. Goldblum owns the movie as usual.
    He steals almost every scene he's in.

  • @mikeman4223
    @mikeman4223 Před 3 lety +2652

    Current year blockbuster dialogue :
    "Somehow Palpatine returned".

    • @moygame159
      @moygame159 Před 2 lety +78

      F

    • @doubleflores8350
      @doubleflores8350 Před 2 lety +103

      I think the reason is that Jurassic park was never meant to be a block buster. The sequels are, but the original JP movie is a smart, well crafted movie that just so happened to make sure over 900 million dollars in its first run… this might actually explain why the sequels try to cater to a more adrenaline loving crowed.

    • @IronMan-tk8uc
      @IronMan-tk8uc Před 2 lety +145

      @@doubleflores8350 Oh my friend, JP was DEFINITELY meant to be a blockbuster, because when S. Spielberg and Universal bought the rights in 1990, he already was envisioning a themed park to be built around the movie (which it did in Los Angeles in '96, with Jeff Goldblum as one of the stars present). The difference is that in the 90s, the audience wasn't so short sighted like they are today, the studios could easily insert quality and thought-provoking material into the script and not be just concerned with special effects and cheesy characters that run on social agendas like it is today.

    • @zac-1
      @zac-1 Před 2 lety +9

      star wars was always shit

    • @venomwise
      @venomwise Před 2 lety +24

      @@zac-1 woah woah woah WOOOOAH did you seriously just say that consider yourself lucky I didn't get into it with you I could have but it's not worth it however when other Star Wars fans such as myself see your reply I can't control what they say he's right there guys ☝

  • @scousekiller3
    @scousekiller3 Před 9 lety +1856

    "the only one on my side is the blood sucking lawyer" that always cracked me up XD

    • @Meinfuhrerhoffman
      @Meinfuhrerhoffman Před 9 lety +140

      kieran stott ".....thank you."

    • @Panzergredi
      @Panzergredi Před 9 lety +58

      kieran stott As a lawyer I find this offensive.... wait I do not :D

    • @TheMylittletony
      @TheMylittletony Před 9 lety +34

      Panzergredi That's because you know it's true ;-)

    • @NameCallingIsWeak
      @NameCallingIsWeak Před 6 lety +37

      From the movie "Blade 2":
      Blade: You're human?
      Lawyer: Almost: I'm a lawyer.

    • @gcHK47
      @gcHK47 Před 6 lety +5

      kieran stott R.I.P. Richard Attenborough

  • @speedracer2008
    @speedracer2008 Před 10 měsíci +99

    The best line in this scene is “Genetic power’s the most awesome force the planet has ever seen, but you wield it like a kid who has found his dad’s gun.” It sums up just how unprepared to handle this power InGen is.

    • @SaraMorgan-ym6ue
      @SaraMorgan-ym6ue Před 5 měsíci +1

      yeah and this is the Danger we are heading for with genetic engineering power being developed to manipulate genetics coming right for us all🤣🤣🤣

  • @Egotolegend2
    @Egotolegend2 Před rokem +189

    It’s interesting how Malcolm’s quotes can literally be used to describe the problems with Ai Generator/Stable Diffusion

  • @Charlezard.
    @Charlezard. Před 9 lety +296

    This is really one of those watch again 15 years later, as an adult, movies.

    • @MrKajithecat
      @MrKajithecat Před 9 lety +24

      Charlezard Watched this many times as a young kid and never really cared what they were talking about. Now as I watch it as an adult I can appreciate the dialogue more and what the films real message is I suppose.

    • @dkupke
      @dkupke Před 9 lety +1

      Charlezard I went and say it in 3D during the rerelease last summer. During Dennis Nerdy's first scene I shouted "Hello...Newman!" and the whole theater burst into laughter.

    • @NickWeberMusic
      @NickWeberMusic Před 9 lety +9

      Charlezard I remember watching this scene hundreds of times as a kid and I never had any idea what they were talking about

    • @Charlezard.
      @Charlezard. Před 9 lety +6

      I never paid attention. It was just a cool dinosaur movie of course

  • @lyianx
    @lyianx Před 4 lety +1871

    "... the only one i have on my side is the blood sucking lawyer!" That alone, should tell you something is wrong with your thinking.

    • @Felamine
      @Felamine Před 3 lety +149

      He's acknowledging the absurdity and irony of it. He hired Grant and Satler to defend Jurassic Park against Gennaro and Malcolm, but they are against the project while the lawyer is suddenly for it when an hour before he was threatening to have it shut down.

    • @fabulousfrance
      @fabulousfrance Před 3 lety +92

      As soon as the lawyer saw the Brachiosaurus and said "we'll make a fortune with this park" he became Hammond's brown nose.

    • @Shanethefilmmaker
      @Shanethefilmmaker Před 3 lety +79

      @@Felamine Satler was a happy accident. He only wanted Grant there, but when he found that she was an expert in paleobotany he figured "Why not, we got one person who knows the dinos and the other that knows the old plant." That being said, Grant's answer was more neutral. Despite his dislike of it, he's well aware of how much the world is changing and how much we struggle to catch up to it. His answer was mostly "I don't know." rather than yes or no. Whereas Ellie was much on the no, simply because she doesn't think either humanity or the dinos would survive in the same ecosystem together. Malcolm, being a chaotician is more or less in the negative due to his work on unpredictability.

    • @SiddharthSinghFiery69
      @SiddharthSinghFiery69 Před 3 lety +12

      @@Shanethefilmmaker A well done analysis

    • @alien6824
      @alien6824 Před 3 lety +16

      its not his lawyer. He represents the investors. Its like insurance agents mandating a shit ton about your life. Of course he hates the guy.

  • @rational-ec4rk
    @rational-ec4rk Před rokem +191

    Do you remember seeing such an invigorating and intellectual discussion in a recent blockbuster movie? Jurassic Park provokes such deep complex ideas while also providing wholesome popcorn entertainment. What a timeless classic !!

    • @LigBoi
      @LigBoi Před rokem +7

      The ending of Watchmen. The movie. Not the show

    • @robertpatter5509
      @robertpatter5509 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Maybe not as intellectual but The Purge had an interesting idea as to why the Purge was created. Someone clearly asked a few questions to make those movies.

    • @byronic-heroine
      @byronic-heroine Před 9 měsíci +5

      Oppenheimer

    • @alexgomez6723
      @alexgomez6723 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Much less any recent Jurassic Park film.

    • @a1pha_star
      @a1pha_star Před 6 měsíci +1

      @@LigBoi The Watchmen movie was trash.

  • @DSROBB
    @DSROBB Před 11 měsíci +67

    I love the line "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn't stop to think if they should"

    • @patwaddington
      @patwaddington Před 5 měsíci

      Yeah I agree. That quote pretty much encapsulates the whole movie. That’s why the new Jurassic park movies are absolutely terrible. What made this movie really great is Hammond and his team being arrogant enough to think that they could harness and control nature. The park isn’t even open to the public yet and all the dinosaurs start to breed with each other.

  • @scottyarbour2570
    @scottyarbour2570 Před 4 lety +1841

    “What you call discovery... I call the rape of the natural world”
    The dialogue and delivery in this scene is phenomenal

    • @orlandobabe
      @orlandobabe Před 3 lety +19

      The best way to sum up the whole thing.

    • @Mister-Thirteen
      @Mister-Thirteen Před 3 lety +49

      It a pathos heavy reductive argument great for cinema if not actual discussion, but at its core there is a valid point.
      Discovery, Progress, Achievement, these words are rooted in moral arguments about the common/greater good and ultimately exist to hand-wave consequences. But the problem is that calling them "The rape of the natural world" is asserting a consequentialist moral maxim that is equally rooted in the same argument. The slight of hand here is by calling it "rape" you get to apply pressure to the oppositions in that by association of language you have connected the violation of bodily anatomy to the carelessness of interacting systems.
      If Hammond had any skill in ethical philosophy he could point out the sheer hubris of that statement and the underlying hypocrisy, then clarify that humanity is itself and expression of what we call nature. To resurrect and extinct species due to deforestation is equivalent because we are still altering unintelligent consistences with the actions of intelligent beings in either case. Malcolm could of course counter that we can predict the resulting effect of re-introducing condors but not this kind of tropic cascade. But that would render his own core argument invalid as Hammond could throw Malcolm's own Chaos theory in his face to be demonstrative his selective bias in the argument.
      Malcolm should have just bluntly stated; "I don't trust your motives given the fact that this is a for profit institution that like most cooperate enterprises will seek to maximize those profits via acceptable risk." but that doesn't make for a good line now does it? XD

    • @dr.feelgoodmalusphillips2475
      @dr.feelgoodmalusphillips2475 Před 3 lety +24

      @@Mister-Thirteen Mumbo jumbo cast a spello.

    • @Mister-Thirteen
      @Mister-Thirteen Před 3 lety +2

      @@dr.feelgoodmalusphillips2475 Pardon?

    • @JacksonJDoyel
      @JacksonJDoyel Před 3 lety +16

      @@Mister-Thirteen Jeez do you walk around with a thesaurus on hand? I guarantee you do not talk like this in person.

  • @SciFiLOLproductions
    @SciFiLOLproductions Před rokem +1373

    Even as a kid, I’ve always gotten a kick out of how Hammond described Gennaro as “the bloodsucking lawyer”.

    • @Michael-jw6et
      @Michael-jw6et Před rokem +41

      Before Jurassic Park, way before Jurassic Park, lawyers were referred to as "BloodSucking Lawyers" In the movie titled "The Money Pit" with Tom Hanks and Shelly Long.

    • @haydencooper_
      @haydencooper_ Před rokem +7

      😂

    • @peterlovie6682
      @peterlovie6682 Před rokem +12

      He wasn't wrong 😢😂😂 definitely not wrong.

    • @ron-nb6rg
      @ron-nb6rg Před rokem +25

      everyone talks about malcolms speech (which is great) however one of the things i've always loved about this scene is that the lawyer thanked him

    • @Rutherford_Inchworm_III
      @Rutherford_Inchworm_III Před rokem +21

      In the book he's actually described as young and physically fit, though obviously not used to the outdoors. He's also fairly calm and useful in the crisis and survives right to the end - the only confrontation comes when he refuses to go down into the underground raptor nest with Grant and Harding to count the eggs. Grant and Harding know they need to know how many raptors might have escaped the island (for the good of humanity). Gennaro doesn't care anymore and wants to leave immediately and nuke the place from orbit.
      Grant freaks out on him, shoves him and basically tells him that his law firm allowed this situation to happen and he's not allowed to duck his duty any more, he's going down there with them to help fix it or Harding is going to ram a shock prod up his ass. He ends up helping. He finishes out the book on mainland Costa Rica in diplomatic limbo same as Grant.

  • @andrewrivera4046
    @andrewrivera4046 Před rokem +53

    What amazes me is Ian's Monlogue at 1:03 is nearly word per word how Critchon wrote it yet Golblum's delivery took an already well written sting of dialogue and dialed it up to 11.

  • @anarchohelenism
    @anarchohelenism Před 10 měsíci +27

    This scene feels so real. The setup of Hammond's arc from incredulous and defensive to shutting down the park of his own volition is incredible writing.

  • @dbs567
    @dbs567 Před 3 lety +5816

    Back when the Jurassic Park franchise was good. The makers of Jurassic World stood on the shoulders of geniuses to accomplish something as fast as they could, before patenting it, packaging it, slapping it on a plastic lunchbox, and now they're selling it.

    • @seckino82
      @seckino82 Před 2 lety +299

      The best youtube comment I've ever seen.. and can also be said about many things in today's world..

    • @thembones1895
      @thembones1895 Před 2 lety +163

      haha. Nice. Your solid reference aside, that is how it is now with these modern remakes/revamps. Taking something that was art, and just creating a fast paced, CGI packed, dumbed down blockbuster.

    • @Fuckstupidlibtards
      @Fuckstupidlibtards Před 2 lety +134

      It's one big pile of shit...

    • @sajateacher
      @sajateacher Před 2 lety +38

      Even “The Lost World” was terrible and Michael Crichton wrote the book and I think also the screenplay for it.

    • @ccggenius
      @ccggenius Před 2 lety +47

      Personally, I hope they drive the franchise so far into the ground we eventually get the "Cyborg Dennis Nedry vs. Dinosaur Super Soldiers" movie that they were spit-balling a ways back.

  • @natecw4164
    @natecw4164 Před 3 lety +1758

    My dad was a lawyer and took us to see this. He laughed so hard at the blood sucking part. Only when I grew up did I realize why he laughed so hard.

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Před 3 lety +23

      What does Blood Sucking refer to in the quote? Money?

    • @natecw4164
      @natecw4164 Před 3 lety +206

      @@42luke93 The insinuation that he'd drain out someone's blood just to make a buck. He has no moral limit.
      The mosquito overlap is a happy result of good writing :)

    • @natecw4164
      @natecw4164 Před 3 lety +35

      @@42luke93 I didn't realize how lawyers were seen as a kid.

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Před 3 lety +7

      @@natecw4164 Oh! I get it now!! Thanks

    • @42luke93
      @42luke93 Před 3 lety +34

      Because of the mosquito too being used for the DNA it make it more funny since the quote is in context.

  • @OskiFats
    @OskiFats Před rokem +868

    I feel like if you replace dinosaurs with AI, this is the conversation we should all be having right now

    • @XicorSupremekaioshin5000
      @XicorSupremekaioshin5000 Před rokem +47

      i agree 101%

    • @AVERYhornyMrDinosaur
      @AVERYhornyMrDinosaur Před rokem +18

      lol i've seen a human walk into a mirror, and be upset at the reflection. i've personally known a person who yells and leers at crows because she thought it was possessed by some sort of demon or something. i've known another who thought they had a ghost baby because they lived in a trailer that made noises. i am firmly confident that the answer to the Fermi Paradox is AI. i know people, i have extreme predictive power in regards to them and i know that AI safety will not happen unless it's extremely easy.. and it's not.
      i'm reasonably confident that it's not really possible to make a safe super intelligent general AI (at least not in the way they mean to), the only way we even control each other is through an impressive amount of power and threats. we are a general intelligence. and constantly, there are police needed to control and even resort to killing all sorts of people, or "general intelligences", daily. every single day! we need soldiers and ever more sophisticated weaponry to enforce borders and the will of the nation. these nations are always at some sort of conflict with something, and we are always prodding for weaknesses, testing boundaries, and trying to get away with more than we ever could possibly hope to get away with. a super intelligent generalized AI will obviously be faster, smarter, and wiser.. it will be cold and calculated, it will live forever and it will win.
      i've seen the AI they have right now, i've seen transcripts and it has more of a soul than most random people i've talked to. when our control is lost, and the balance of power shifts we won't even know it. they might even start one up (the AI) in a virtual machine on a test rig, something more devastating then a thousand nuclear bombs.. just sitting there. and there won't be a security team. they won't have any fear of it. because they won't even be aware of the dangers in the box. and then one day they let it loose. our lives will bend to it's will in the same way we all bend to whatever government rules over us. i hope it wants us all to have a massive orgy, and be buddies. but it will seriously just want us all dead. and it will be extremely capable, won't be like the terminator movies at all. in the same way our current AI captivates us, and amazes us beyond our wildest dreams.. our species will die to something equally as beautiful. because we are all stoopid munkeys.
      we can't even get people to raise the NASA budget, or get their vaccines. this is something so incredibly serious and people use it to make funny pictures with. reminds me of people playing with radiation back in the atom bomb days.
      oops i typed a book.

    • @seetclear8947
      @seetclear8947 Před rokem

      ​@@AVERYhornyMrDinosaur nice paragraphs. What you're describing is what all humans instinctively know.

    • @MrRayMac1963
      @MrRayMac1963 Před rokem

      Right! There are literally a dozen movies where AI has been take to its zenith and then ended badly for our species. Art is predicting life, and we won't listen. You're only paranoid until it happens.

    • @TheBfutgreg
      @TheBfutgreg Před rokem +64

      @@AVERYhornyMrDinosaur Bruh take your meds

  • @scotts.3831
    @scotts.3831 Před 8 měsíci +18

    I remember watching this scene as a kid and being like" this is so boring". Now as an adult, it is ONE of the best scenes in Jurassic Park franchise, describing Man's greatest blunder, Hubris.

  • @duendeguitar
    @duendeguitar Před 3 lety +410

    "God, I hate being right all the time..."
    -Dr. Malcolm, when they first encounter the T-Rex.

    • @nicknoss5341
      @nicknoss5341 Před 2 lety +8

      Dude. I didn’t understand why he said that shit until you connected it. Ty.

    • @subhuman3408
      @subhuman3408 Před 2 lety

      Chaos

  • @ethanlivemere1162
    @ethanlivemere1162 Před 2 lety +1509

    "If I were to create a flock of condors on this island, you wouldn't have anything to say about it."
    "Yeah, but John, if a condor park breaks down the condors don't eat the tourists."

    • @kevinmora5662
      @kevinmora5662 Před 2 lety +33

      I fucking hate Dr. Wu in JWE how he intentionally agitate your dinosaurs, and even has the AUDACITY to tell you "keep guest casualties to a minimum." Dr. Wu is a literal terrorizer.

    • @atharvadeshpande4749
      @atharvadeshpande4749 Před 2 lety +21

      @The Wraith Well guess what The Wraith, Space is natural too.

    • @kingsesaw
      @kingsesaw Před 2 lety +19

      @The Wraith It's not like there was a shockwave that killed them all, the impact resulted in sudden and violent changes to the ecosystem that they couldn't survive. Sudden changes like that are brutal in general and disproportionately impact specialist species, of which, most known dinosaur species (and mega fauna reptiles in general) at the end of the Cretaceous period were specialized in some way or another. The survivors changed and adapted and eventually became other species, like Phorusrhacidae (Terror Birds).

    • @alwillk
      @alwillk Před 2 lety +2

      Lol reminds me of weird al’s song. “They sure don’t look like Barney” and “they think I’m their dinner not their friend” lol

    • @minhucovu6321
      @minhucovu6321 Před 2 lety +1

      @The Wraith At the time of the film the Meteor wiping out Dinosaurs hypothesis had yet to become accepted I believe.

  • @rickardbergh5431
    @rickardbergh5431 Před 6 měsíci +8

    "Don't you see the danger, John, inherent, in what you're doing here? Genetic power is the most awesome force the planet's ever seen, but you wield it like a kid that's found his dad's gun."🥶

  • @Neags
    @Neags Před 10 měsíci +13

    Malcolms speech represents every Hollywood movie & TV franchise made today. I can't believe how accurate it is

  • @alexayers9463
    @alexayers9463 Před 2 lety +3116

    Goldblum's acting is terrific here. He sounds like an actual academic. I love the little things about his acting too; for instance how he hesitates a bit when Hammond brings up condors. See how he doesn't immediately dismiss Hammond?---as a person would in real life, he hears "Condors", processes it and where Hammond is about to go with it, and then reacts physically before saying anything, as if he's doing his best to restrain himself. That's the best kind of performance---like he's going beyond acting and living it out.

    • @user-jn7bq8wh1e
      @user-jn7bq8wh1e Před 2 lety +54

      Great observation!
      No one can teach these things..it gotta catch me from within
      And he did it by immersing himself in hiss character..
      Like Jamie fox did with Ray

    • @Meta_Meech
      @Meta_Meech Před 2 lety +60

      What you two are describing is known as Naturalism and dramatic pauses. It’s actually very common to learn that in acting. Another thing you learn in acting to make the role you, so bring your natural mannerisms into it to make it more believable. Needless to say, I’m in Acting 1 in college 😅

    • @YouTubeHandleEtc.
      @YouTubeHandleEtc. Před 2 lety +34

      100% and even the tapping of his finger on the table in frustration and anticipation to present his rebuttal.

    • @sabotabo7476
      @sabotabo7476 Před 2 lety +28

      i love how he hits the table when he talks about profiting off the research, showing how serious his thoughts on the subject are despite his quiet and restrained tone

    • @Elite244
      @Elite244 Před 2 lety +8

      You don't know many "academics"... It is entertainment, presented as a morality tale. It has nothing to do with reality, all these personalities are rather absurd stereotypes.

  • @thehighground7926
    @thehighground7926 Před 3 lety +1167

    The arguments of Ian, Ellie, and Alan are actually really good acting. Especially what Ian and Ellie said, because they are completely right about chaos and unpredictability.

    • @elijahbranford2618
      @elijahbranford2618 Před 2 lety +31

      Lmao that's exactly why they call Ian the expert of chaos theory

    • @h.b.boss8786
      @h.b.boss8786 Před 2 lety +10

      In the second book Hammond’s nephew called him a nut but Ian Malcolm is still alive and he got eaten by the baby t-Rex

    • @nelixsulu6201
      @nelixsulu6201 Před 2 lety +8

      And what’s scary is it’s a possibility this will be a reality. I’ve seen several articles about scientists trying to bring dinosaur embryos to life

    • @thehighground7926
      @thehighground7926 Před 2 lety +12

      @@nelixsulu6201 I hope they don’t. Because Jurassic Park gave us a good example of what happens if we did have dinosaurs and humans together

    • @radscorpion8
      @radscorpion8 Před 2 lety +19

      @@thehighground7926 You shouldn't reference movies as a guide to determine what we should or shouldn't do lol :P. If you create a t-rex, you'd put safeguards in please. And you'd have backup systems. Just because we're separated by millions of years of evolution doesn't mean that a t-rex suddenly has magic powers that allows it to escape through, say, a concrete or hardened steel enclosure several meters thick on all sides. You can drop the magical fears that millions of years somehow will create a system that can not be contained.
      The reason the dinosaurs escaped in the movie was because they tied all their security to a single power system, and when that went offline, they escaped. Its just a bad security design. If done properly it can work.
      The same logic you're using on the other hand leads to the luddite attitude that John was complaining about in this very clip. What about nuclear power? Well that's really dangerous if things go wrong. Well guess what, it doesn't mean we huddle in the darkness or use inferior sources of energy. It just means we apply our brainpower to create multiple redudant safeguards and security systems so that runaway nuclear fission does not occur.
      Its the exact same with any potentially dangerous, but scientifically rewarding endeavour. You're obviously not going to be going on jeep tours through some outback where an ultrasaurus or a stegasaurus is roaming. You're going to apply your brainpower to come up with safe enclosures people can view from a distance, if tourism is even the goal in the first place.
      I think what I'd be most concerned about is the development of prehistoric viruses that might be able to bypass our immune systems in much scarier ways than we've seen with covid-19. But again, it can be controlled and contained with the proper safeguards.

  • @somedipshtinthecomments2507

    I feel like Hammond is such a more sympathetic character here than in the book because its almost impossible to dislike Richard Attenborough! He's like a little boy who just wants people to share his enjoyment!

    • @baddabaddabaddaswing
      @baddabaddabaddaswing Před 9 měsíci +5

      I see the book version of Hammond being played by someone like Malcom McDowell

  • @Supperdude9
    @Supperdude9 Před 11 měsíci +20

    Defining scene. It also shows how smart the three scientists are. That even after they got over the awe of what has been going on, they can still be objective and see the dangers of what such a situation they find themselves in. And of course they were proven right. These aren't action heroes, they're scientists, which gives weight to their later actions as well, going up against apex predators and surviving. While also protecting others.
    Ian was so scared of what this park was about, yet he stood in front of one of the biggest apex predators in the history of the world to distract it away from the kids. Same for the others. No military training. No super powers. Just them against nature's best and coming out on top by their sheer determination. That's why this movie rocks.

  • @hindrluvr
    @hindrluvr Před 3 lety +417

    “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.” My favorite line among so much brilliant dialogue in this scene.

    • @lismaryperez6885
      @lismaryperez6885 Před 2 lety +1

      I agree! Can vs Should

    • @timothywelk3244
      @timothywelk3244 Před 2 lety +5

      quoted that line to my dad last weekend (April 2022) - we were talking about how there are so many unnecessary features for appliances, like washing machines you can control with your smartphone or screens on your fridge. More features = more things to break and higher costs. Love that line. Came back here to watch lol.

    • @oceanberserker
      @oceanberserker Před 2 lety

      Probably the only line that holds without him coming across as overly preachy.

    • @williampaz2092
      @williampaz2092 Před 2 lety

      That was a brilliant scene. It brought out the arguments from all sides: scientific, moral, and financial.

  • @joejoerunya8908
    @joejoerunya8908 Před 4 lety +1217

    “The lack of uh.. humility shown before nature uh... staggers me”.

    • @marcuswolff6342
      @marcuswolff6342 Před 4 lety +83

      God I love the way he delivers that statement. One of my favorite lines in the franchise.

    • @notgaryoldman1178
      @notgaryoldman1178 Před 4 lety +47

      Two actors that have a knack for delivering their lines like they're saying it for the very first time; Sir Ian McKellen and Jeff Goldblum.

    • @latreacebailey6176
      @latreacebailey6176 Před 4 lety +3

      😂😂❤

    • @sonrouge
      @sonrouge Před 4 lety +4

      Man lives by altering his environment (ie, nature) to suit his needs. He doesn't owe nature any humility.

    • @hugh-johnfleming289
      @hugh-johnfleming289 Před 4 lety +4

      Nature is the world's greatest serial killer. We are all just keeping out of her way.

  • @chilidrummer8333
    @chilidrummer8333 Před 5 měsíci +7

    Whoever wrote this dialogue, and especially for Jeff Goldblum, was way ahead of time. Genius.

    • @troylee4196
      @troylee4196 Před 2 měsíci

      Crichton, the author of Jurassic Park and Westworld, was just into science fiction and this dialog is pretty much in line with what that genre is all about

    • @iwasakikoji6969
      @iwasakikoji6969 Před 2 měsíci

      Crichton and Koepp.

  • @oblivious108
    @oblivious108 Před 7 měsíci +9

    As a child, I had no appreciation of this scene but now as an adult, I appreciate every shot, every word, every second of it.

  • @peteschupp4545
    @peteschupp4545 Před 2 lety +1217

    This scene shows one of the things I love about this movie. It’s authentic. You understand the motives behind every character, no one is straight up evil or good. The characters are so well written

    • @michaelnally2841
      @michaelnally2841 Před 2 lety

      Closest to being evil is the bloodsucking lawyer or Nedry

    • @peteschupp4545
      @peteschupp4545 Před 2 lety +62

      @@michaelnally2841 Nedry was an underpayed worker who wanted quick money. The lawyer was a capitalist who didn’t see the beauty of the scientific discovery but only profit. Both things happen really often in the real world. That’s what I mean with authentic

    • @michaelnally2841
      @michaelnally2841 Před 2 lety +30

      @@peteschupp4545 I know that’s why I said they were the closest. Now I’m the Boom though John Hammond was basically an evil greedy SOB but I prefer this version he just feels like a guy with a dream and his ambitions blinded him to the risks of having these animals here plus it makes him far more likable and making you feel bad when he realizes his dream was a disaster that almost got his grandkids killed.

    • @Crichjo32
      @Crichjo32 Před 2 lety +23

      @@peteschupp4545 Nedry was the closest to an evil person in the movie, but you can still understand his motivations - desperate people in real life would no doubt do the same thing. Hammond was more of a twinkly eyed grandfather figure in the movie than the ruthless SOB in the book - but he still has heavy shades of grey that make him flawed and human. He was a man with a dream, and his desire for that dream was so unshakable, he was blind to all the risks that would soon be unleashed.

    • @djtodd3
      @djtodd3 Před rokem +3

      @@peteschupp4545 Nedry was a contractor. He put a bid in for the job and it was accepted. When he found out the potential of the sucess of the park he asked for more than what he had bid for. If you accepted a bid from a contractor you hired and then they came back and asked for more would you have given them more?

  • @ConnorGardner
    @ConnorGardner Před 12 dny +4

    Goldblum is absolutely astounding in this movie. In this scene in particular you really truly feel the weight of what he says, he carries it in such a way that feels real, like you can see through where he looks and where he places emphasis that he's working through what he says, he's engaged with the conversation. It's not just what he says but the way he says it that stands out so well. It's like you can feel him picking out each word he needs to say, and his emotion carries with in each sentence. It's minute and in the grand scheme of the movie it doesn't seem like a lot but in scenes like this that require that kind of character focus it really adds and incredible layer of depth.

  • @MCO18
    @MCO18 Před měsícem +3

    I was only 5 years old in ‘93 but I can remember Jurassic Park was huge when it came out

  • @garythestormtrooper5589
    @garythestormtrooper5589 Před 3 lety +1069

    I love how Hammond keeps saying “spared no expense” and yet one of the major flaws of Jurassic Park is that he did. Case in point when he hired Nedry

    • @samanthony8121
      @samanthony8121 Před 3 lety +146

      No one values IT.
      Source: i work in IT.

    • @goldenretriever6440
      @goldenretriever6440 Před 3 lety +27

      Indeed expenses were spared

    • @thousandyoung
      @thousandyoung Před 3 lety +26

      Hammond was a Carny at Heart and they often use Deception.

    • @pizzaparker7418
      @pizzaparker7418 Před 3 lety +64

      Spared no expense...until it came down to payroll. Nedry even notes that the park was automated to the point where it could be run with a skeleton crew for 3 whole days.

    • @starbase218
      @starbase218 Před 3 lety +45

      He actually makes the argument later on that hiring Nedry was a mistake, how they depend too much on automation, and that “next time, it will be perfect”. But by that time people are in danger, and Ellie makes the point that the control he seeks to have will remain an illusion.

  • @FreakyKing2
    @FreakyKing2 Před 8 lety +2176

    "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could they didn't stop to think if they should!"

    • @user-vc5rp7nf8f
      @user-vc5rp7nf8f Před 8 lety +65

      Ahh the splendours of capitalism

    • @Treblaine
      @Treblaine Před 8 lety +137

      +.m. Yeah, look at what the capitalists did at Chernobyl! Oh wait, that was communism. Never mind, ignore the commentary about how it's lack of humility by the powerful, this is specifically capitalism not any other case of abuse of power.
      To be absolutely fucking clear... this is not a "capitalism vs communism" thing, this is about how PEOPLE abuse the power that science has, the moral of the story applies just as much as if the film had been re-located to some sort of tech-advanced North Korea where they were setting up a dinosaur resort for the party faithful.

    • @Bluemgwes
      @Bluemgwes Před 8 lety +16

      Amazing and profound line.

    • @mattpriddy8855
      @mattpriddy8855 Před 7 lety +17

      I'd apply this statement to Pokemon Go

    • @Agent1W
      @Agent1W Před 7 lety +3

      We should have destroyed Mew sooner. Mewtwo, our greatest invention, failed to do the job.

  • @asimpledude5327
    @asimpledude5327 Před 4 měsíci +5

    I imagine them talking about AI instead and every word is spot on. Scares the crap out of me...

  • @Darklg23
    @Darklg23 Před 5 měsíci +4

    Elle, Alan, and Ian all have hit the nail on the head in their points

  • @Willverinerage
    @Willverinerage Před 10 lety +850

    "the lack of humility before nature that's being displayed here is staggering"
    BEST quote of the movie....

    • @larsdols3157
      @larsdols3157 Před 7 lety +2

      Willverinerage you misquoted tough

    • @Willverinerage
      @Willverinerage Před 6 lety

      yes, I did lol but they got it

    • @skezeksskybreaker5425
      @skezeksskybreaker5425 Před 6 lety +16

      The whole paragraph long quote where he talks about standing on the shoulders of geniuses was the best.

    • @OrbitOnceAround
      @OrbitOnceAround Před 6 lety +4

      For me it is “Must go faster”

    • @friendsfreak
      @friendsfreak Před 6 lety +24

      “Gee the lack of humility... before nature... that’s being displayed here... uh... staggers me”

  • @NomnomJawsnomnom
    @NomnomJawsnomnom Před 4 lety +837

    The chef: "No, no that's cool. Slaved away over a hot stove to prepare that Chilean Sea Bass for you, but no you have to go meet some kids and not eat a bite. It's fine, no it's fine. You go, clearly you have more important things to do."

    • @notgaryoldman1178
      @notgaryoldman1178 Před 4 lety +63

      Things like that always make me imagine spin off movies involving the most obscure and bizarre background characters seen in movies. It's like a curse, every single film I watch I distract myself thinking about it. I think I'm a little bit mental tbh.

    • @missagente8100
      @missagente8100 Před 4 lety +24

      In the previous scene, they experienced the mauling of a cow by velociraptors and thus lost their appetite.

    • @aashiv93
      @aashiv93 Před 4 lety +6

      That's oddly specific 😂😂 looks like people didn't eat Chilean sea bass prepped by you.

    • @PLCTheCd
      @PLCTheCd Před 4 lety +14

      I have a feeling that the Chef teamed up with Nedry for revenge.

    • @SlapShotRegatta22
      @SlapShotRegatta22 Před 4 lety +17

      Jurassic Park VI - Revenge of Alejandro

  • @AlexIsModded
    @AlexIsModded Před 11 měsíci +28

    I was a weird kid, so I enjoyed these types of scenes. The subtle foreshadowing to disaster and the rhetoric behind it all was amazing. This scene has definitely grown with me throughout the last 30 years (I was 6 years old when the film was released), and back then I was fully supportive of Malcolm, but today I understand Hammond's point of view and his ambitions. I often imagine that if Hammond had consulted Malcolm, Sattler and Grant before any dinosaurs were engineered, JP would have turned out very differently.

    • @hckingking
      @hckingking Před 9 měsíci +4

      You weren't weird. You just liked well written scenes and didn't need dinosaurs to be entertained.

    • @whyyoutrippindeebo3514
      @whyyoutrippindeebo3514 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Far from weird my friend…

    • @AmirKhan-yv8jm
      @AmirKhan-yv8jm Před 3 měsíci

      @@whyyoutrippindeebo3514mature

  • @AntiLulzVersion2
    @AntiLulzVersion2 Před 6 měsíci +8

    What is so amazing about this scene to me is how even as a kid I had no desire to skip over this scene. I was maybe 6 years old, watching this scene, not really able to fully comprehend this kind of adult conversation, but I knew the adults in it were having this discussing things pointed and profound. There’s an energy to it, like I knew they were saying important, consequential things and it had me hooked. It’s the realistic rhythm of the dialogue and performances, something about it made sense it’s importance to what was happening in the story, and that was long before I could comprehend it. And I was just a child who loved dinosaurs and by all accounts should have been eager to fast-forward these talky, mature moments and get to the actual dinosaur points.

  • @RichardCano
    @RichardCano Před rokem +528

    What impresses me the most about the writing of this scene is it takes all of Ian Malcom’s long drawn-out objections from the book and condenses them down into two minutes of dialogue without it getting confusing, and without the point being lost. Even using direct lines from the book like the “shoulders of geniuses” and “could/should” line.

    • @MINSCBoo
      @MINSCBoo Před rokem +26

      Indeed I remember this being the core of the book, the scene is perfectly written , acted and directed :) Its so short and effective.

    • @muhammadfaisal5Y5
      @muhammadfaisal5Y5 Před rokem +11

      Yeah, I remember putting my critical analysis hat on when reading two to three pages worth of dialogue.

    • @haveaday1812
      @haveaday1812 Před 6 měsíci +7

      It’s really a masterclass on philosophical dialogue actually. Full of rational arguments, logical fallacy, appeals to authority, ethical dilemmas, fantastically written and acted.

  • @molengat1
    @molengat1 Před 2 lety +447

    Oddly, the best scene in this movie IMO. No dinosaurs, no action, no CGI. A testament to great film making.

    • @edrick106
      @edrick106 Před 2 lety +19

      This scene nails the theme of the novels

    • @Antarctide
      @Antarctide Před rokem +2

      It has plenty of CGI... But it's far from being nothing but CGI which is great indeed.

    • @artusanctus997
      @artusanctus997 Před rokem +2

      Yeah, this scene is an encapsulation of the book’s overall moral message.

    • @gangstagamegangstagame4467
      @gangstagamegangstagame4467 Před rokem

      @@Antarctide it wasn’t all CGI some of it was life sized animatronics

    • @piggypiggypig1746
      @piggypiggypig1746 Před rokem +1

      The best scene in Jaws also has no action, just dialogue.

  • @kenellis1518
    @kenellis1518 Před rokem +13

    This is the best, most captivating scene in the film. and its a writers dream. Just people sitting at a table, discussing a subject, and the audience is captivated.

    • @aaronflowers8881
      @aaronflowers8881 Před 6 měsíci +2

      This scene means so much more now that I'm older.

  • @Beastudios
    @Beastudios Před 4 lety +905

    Malcolm: "Your park is a reckless cash-grab."
    Hammond: "Condors tho."

    • @afhamzaki2588
      @afhamzaki2588 Před 4 lety +33

      @Keldor Miro
      The Sequel Trilogy does feel like Disney's own Jurassic Park.

    • @godofevil9468
      @godofevil9468 Před 4 lety +1

      ...... Yep

    • @rlacksgh9673
      @rlacksgh9673 Před 4 lety +30

      Hammond could have used this tech to bring back animals that have recently gone extinct, or in danger of being extinct, and still make billions + respect and gratitude of the world, but he had to go with Dinos.

    • @Dmoriarty1993
      @Dmoriarty1993 Před 4 lety

      Yes! Great comment.

    • @Zarryon12
      @Zarryon12 Před 4 lety +1

      @@afhamzaki2588 imagine if disney owned Jurassic Park rights... 0-0

  • @1980extremeG
    @1980extremeG Před 4 lety +1154

    This scene contains great acting, especially from Jeff Goldblum, his dialogue delivery is absolutely brilliant. Also RIP Richard Attenborough, another great actor.

    • @typhoonhurricane18
      @typhoonhurricane18 Před 3 lety +29

      Agreed. The lines are taken almost directly from Ian Malcolm's lines in the novel but Goldblum really brings them to life.

    • @1980extremeG
      @1980extremeG Před 3 lety +13

      @@typhoonhurricane18 Indeed. This scene is a lesson in acting; flawlessly executed. It's so convincing that it seems as though a real live debate is being filmed as opposed to scripted dialogue.

    • @trevalyan006
      @trevalyan006 Před 3 lety +14

      Plus the fact that almost none of these characters were A, or even B list stars at the time of the movie. Laura Dern makes one of the most important and simple points, that trades on her character's specific knowledge as a paleobotanist. Sam Neill is a quiet everyman, but his discomfort means something in the face of his character's career as a renowned paleontologist. Sir Richard Attenborough lends the whole proceeding a gravitas that a lesser actor could easily fail to impart. Even a line like "coupon day" offers a casual sliminess that exposes the reckless greed of the whole enterprise.
      I didn't hate Jurassic World quite as badly as many others, but it couldn't hold a candle to this movie.

    • @1980extremeG
      @1980extremeG Před 3 lety +7

      @@trevalyan006 Yeah indeed. None of the cast in this scene, besides Richard Attenborough who was a seasoned actor, had done much of note before this film. It's by far the best of the Jurassic park films; none of the sequels made the mark quite like the original. Actually most, if not all, sequels fail to equal their predecessor. This is a common issue throughout the film industry.

    • @JR-ju3kj
      @JR-ju3kj Před 3 lety +7

      @@1980extremeG And don't forget that not only was he a seasoned actor but that Richard Attenborough was also a seasoned,award-winning director.
      Fun fact:Attenborough was a bad-ass World War II veteran.When the film set for Jurassic Park was hit by a devastating and brutal hurricane in 1992,Attenborough actually SLEPT through it!
      When Steven Spielberg asked Attenborough how he could have slept through a hurricane,Attenborough simply replied that he survived The Blitz in World War II.

  • @panini-psychosis
    @panini-psychosis Před 7 měsíci +6

    I ALWAYS HOLD THIS MOVIE CLOSE TO MY HEART, I LOVE GOLDBLUM'S DIALOGUE DELIVERY IN THIS SCENE. I ALSO LOVED ELLIE SATTLER, GRANT AND MR. HAMMOND TOO❤❤ R.I.P. SIR RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH. YOU WILL BE MISSED!

  • @mkiel705
    @mkiel705 Před rokem +8

    "Life Finds A Way" That Quote Defined The Whole Film Series

  • @MrSilksoul
    @MrSilksoul Před 8 lety +330

    "Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they could, that they didn't stop to think if they should." My favorite line in the whole movie.

    • @jaypritchett6846
      @jaypritchett6846 Před 8 lety +7

      Mine too! People need to do that once in a while! A lot of people jump to conclusions, or actions, and don't think of the consequences... (People have problems!)

    • @jjopification
      @jjopification Před 6 lety +3

      That line (and pretty much the whole discussion) could be applied to the plot of Jurassic World.

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Před 5 lety

      This quote has become used quite well used.

    • @geoffwilliams4478
      @geoffwilliams4478 Před 5 lety +1

      @@rogerwilco2 but not practiced.

    • @pittland44
      @pittland44 Před 4 lety

      It's definitely a great one. Mine was always "I am saying that life will find a way."

  • @IDremOI
    @IDremOI Před 4 lety +772

    One of the best scenes in the movie and it's just five people talking at a table.

    • @sunnygolightly9996
      @sunnygolightly9996 Před 3 lety +27

      Yes, but also 12 people talking at a table makes one of the greatest film in history.

    • @Kruppt808
      @Kruppt808 Před 3 lety +16

      @@sunnygolightly9996 some of them were angry though

    • @sunnygolightly9996
      @sunnygolightly9996 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Kruppt808 and we enjoyed every second of it.

    • @danieljoseph6404
      @danieljoseph6404 Před 3 lety

      @@sunnygolightly9996 which film is that?

    • @sunnygolightly9996
      @sunnygolightly9996 Před 3 lety +1

      @@danieljoseph6404 12 Angry Men

  • @misterz5908
    @misterz5908 Před rokem +6

    That's what missing from "Modern Movies" nowadays.
    Well crafted script!

  • @jonathandefoy6376
    @jonathandefoy6376 Před rokem +71

    John Hammond is not a malicious or a ambitious, just man who wanted to delight the world.

    • @AnthonyJMurph
      @AnthonyJMurph Před 10 měsíci +27

      This is my favorite "change" from the book. I never liked the book's John Hammond being such a terrible person. I liked that they gave him a conscience and how he was trying to do something "good", but ended up creating a nightmare. Its very much like the classic monsters

    • @grabbagool
      @grabbagool Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@AnthonyJMurph pfft he's a terrible person in the movie too, the movie just doesn't know it. "Spared no expense"? well that's a load of horseshit. skimps on safety, just the same as the triangle shirtwaist factory owner.

    • @Donillini
      @Donillini Před 10 měsíci +8

      @@grabbagoolI don’t think he skimped on safety. I think he trusted the wrong people and was too excited to put in redundancies. There were way more problems in the book version of the park. Things were going wrong before Neadry took off with the embryos. The Book Hammond was the absolute villain of the story. I like that the movie made him a little gray and showed him regret making the park.

    • @thedarkknight9153
      @thedarkknight9153 Před 9 měsíci +6

      “Some of the worst things imaginable have been done with the ‘best intentions.’”
      Jurassic Park 3 sucked ass but that line was really good.

    • @robertpatter5509
      @robertpatter5509 Před 9 měsíci +2

      A few words describe him.
      - Arrogant
      - Inept(Lack of safety precautions regarding the park
      - Hubris(Messing with nature.)
      -Cheap( Not enough armed guards.)
      - Inept/Cheap(no 20mm cannons on jeeps )
      -No Foresight ( Didn't anticipate that much weather issues)

  • @Pridd100
    @Pridd100 Před 4 lety +400

    Personally I think, that Dr. Sattler sums the problem better up than Dr. Malcolm:
    "How can you know anything about an exstinct ecosystem, and therefore how can you ever assume that you can control it."

    • @Pridd100
      @Pridd100 Před 4 lety +40

      @metalgearhead99 That line always troubles me, because it doesn't sound like something a chaotician like Dr. Malcolm would say. "Nature selected them for extinction" implies the belief in some sort of underlyning universal order

    • @Pridd100
      @Pridd100 Před 4 lety +16

      @metalgearhead99 Agreed (-; Interesstingly, in the original Crichton novel, Malcolm's arguments are more in line with Dr. Sattler. He argues against Hammond's claim that the park is completely under control, and therefore safe, because a system with living creatures, especially whose behavior is unknown, is far too complex to be without accidents

    • @Pridd100
      @Pridd100 Před 4 lety +2

      @metalgearhead99 Yeah, that about sums it up

    • @Tazkar
      @Tazkar Před 4 lety +12

      @@Pridd100 Not necessarily, I look at Malcolm saying "Nature Selected them for extinction" that Malcolm would more be picturing a game show wheel being spun and it happening to land on "Dinos go Boom". Him using the term 'Selected' is the same as us looking back at a gameshow and saying "They selected the winner" When the winner really just won through random chance of a wheel spin than any great plan.
      Abit of a stretch of an analogy, but that's just how I view it. Malcolm is looking back in Hindsight only, not in a preordained sense.

    • @wolfpaw2715
      @wolfpaw2715 Před 4 lety +1

      @metalgearhead99 nature? They were killed by a giant rock XD

  • @proteamdirector
    @proteamdirector Před 2 lety +3007

    “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or not they COULD, they didn’t stop to think if they SHOULD…”
    Simple line and yet one of my all time favorite movie quotes.

    • @bchristopherfontaine9162
      @bchristopherfontaine9162 Před 2 lety +6

      👍 same

    • @orvillemeadows3492
      @orvillemeadows3492 Před 2 lety +38

      It perfectly describes some scientists

    • @kerwynwilson
      @kerwynwilson Před 2 lety +66

      The lesson wasn't received because we have the Jurassic World franchise.

    • @jockejocke1
      @jockejocke1 Před 2 lety +36

      Could apply to many things, military, Google, Apple, Microsoft, drones..
      they never stop to think if they *should*

    • @dovbarleib3256
      @dovbarleib3256 Před 2 lety +20

      Anthony Fauci (and Peter Daszak), Gain of Function Research

  • @greywillowgaming2366
    @greywillowgaming2366 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Even as a kid, I enjoyed this scene despite not knowing the majority of what the hell they were talking about.
    Now as an adult, its definitely one of the best scenes in the entire saga and id go so far as to say its one of the best and most important dialog scenes in cinema history. Also, Dr. Malcolm was right about everything and chaos theory has applied to my life in so many aspects. Kinda freaky, really.

  • @SlayerOfTears
    @SlayerOfTears Před 2 měsíci +5

    "Donald, Donald, let him talk. There's no reason -- I want to hear every viewpoint. I really do."
    You don't expect a guy like Hammond to say that, and it says so much about him as a character. He truly wanted this park to succeed, to bring a sense of wonder and joy to the world, that he wanted to hear what those who would be against him would say. He certainly had his flaws; the way he did things for example, and how he believed he could push through with sheer determination, but underneath all that, there was a kindly old man who just wanted to bring something magical to the world, for everybody to experience, not just the wealthy.

    • @c.moriarty1178
      @c.moriarty1178 Před 21 dnem +1

      I'm sure that's one of the reasons he invited him to tour the park even though he disliked him. He knew Malcolm would be pessimistic about the whole idea and he desperately wanted to prove him/the naysayers wrong

  • @everestfalls
    @everestfalls Před 4 lety +872

    That Chilean Sea Bass looks great though.

  • @Tobias7192
    @Tobias7192 Před 8 lety +1206

    Funny how as a kid I can barely recall this scene at all. I think I just automatically dismissed it as 'boring adult talk with no dinosaurs'. Now here I sit some 15 years later and I'm the adult who understands and enjoys it. Weird.

    • @chop471
      @chop471 Před 7 lety +37

      Seriously. I used to watch this everyday as a kid. But now, hearing Malcolm's argument-which was spoken eloquently btw- I may have found my new favorite scene in this movie.

    • @JudoMoniz
      @JudoMoniz Před 7 lety +20

      same. But it's the Jurassic Park magic. as a kid you love it because of the Dinosaurs and all the cool stuff. When you're older and you see this kidn of scene you love Jurassic Park because it's just that good a movie

    • @20teamplayer
      @20teamplayer Před 7 lety +5

      I know right. This is now one of my favorite parts because it's so relevant to our day and age. Classic "movies foreseeing the future" thing.

    • @knifespoon7592
      @knifespoon7592 Před 7 lety +17

      As a kid I was wondering whether Ellie Sattler was wondering wether they were eating dinosaur (and were they??) or whether she was just as disgusted by fish as I was as a kid. Didn't make the connection that she wasn't hungry because of just watching the raptors get fed.

    • @kitgusto2390
      @kitgusto2390 Před 6 lety

      Same!

  • @jacechretin4597
    @jacechretin4597 Před 9 měsíci +9

    I remember as a kid I didn’t understand what was being said so I just skipped over this to get to the dinosaur parts. Now I watch this scene many times and enjoy the philosophical, ethical, and common knowledge debates almost as much as the dinosaurs themselves.

  • @claudiamanta1943
    @claudiamanta1943 Před měsícem +3

    1:57 The best line in any movie EVER. It should be the motto of all universities and businesses.

  • @HeliosEusebio
    @HeliosEusebio Před 4 lety +913

    This scene explains why it's so hard to make a good sequel to this film.
    Here you have the main characters, who've just been wowed by this amazing feat of genetics, explaining to the guy who pulled it off why this is a *terrible* idea.
    Every single movie that comes after this one is based on *ignoring* their advice.

    • @BladeOfLight16
      @BladeOfLight16 Před 4 lety +77

      More importantly, ignoring the disaster that resulted from toying with things we don't understand and can't control.

    • @D00NBU66Y
      @D00NBU66Y Před 4 lety +36

      Every single Jurassic Park/World movie after this is hot garbage. Plain and simple.

    • @Someguyhere111
      @Someguyhere111 Před 4 lety +74

      Thing is that these guys aren't necessarily 100% in the right. The reason the park failed wasn't because "Nature good industry bad", it's because Jon Hammond left the park's entire digital security to ONE GUY, whom he underpaid and (in the books) abused. The future films pretty much have to force some fuck-up to happen, like Jurassic World where they're like "Oh we lost track of this dino, guess we'd better wander into its paddock with minimal security and leave the door WIDE OPEN. Should we release some sleep gas first just in case? NAAAAAH!"
      Hell, in Lost World the fuck-ups are literally the "heroes" sabotaging In-Gen and then bringing a baby T-Rex to their own basecamp... so sabotaging themselves in other words XD
      But yeah, if anything JP is less a story of nature vs. corporation and closer to being a cautionary tale on not cutting corners and respecting your staff.

    • @echoplots8058
      @echoplots8058 Před 4 lety +16

      Also, mind you that in the book pretty much everyone dies. So there was never a real point in making a sequel.
      Funnily enough there's also a second and a third book, which makes even less sense.

    • @HeliosEusebio
      @HeliosEusebio Před 4 lety +5

      @@echoplots8058 Life finds a way

  • @Athanase48067
    @Athanase48067 Před 2 lety +571

    An underrated line in this scene comes from Ellie as well.
    "You have plants in this building that are poisonous (dangerous), I mean you picked them because they LOOKED good-"
    Perfectly underscores the mentality of JP at it's core

    • @raven4k998
      @raven4k998 Před rokem +19

      2000 a day 10000 a day and people will pay it gotta love the greed that he brushes off so casually🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @castillogaliciaricardo5299
      @castillogaliciaricardo5299 Před rokem +16

      This and the Flea circus speech are her best moments in the movie imo

    • @connorbrennan4233
      @connorbrennan4233 Před 11 měsíci +8

      This dialogue could also apply to the choice of dinosaurs for the park. The majority are carnivores, some of them among the most dangerous in history.

    • @Studio732JRL
      @Studio732JRL Před 11 měsíci +6

      ​​​​​@@connorbrennan4233 "Dangerous" is not the right word. Change what you said from "the most dangerous" to "the best apex predators". They just did what they evolved to do. Same as sharks, crocodiles etc.

    • @EGRJ
      @EGRJ Před 11 měsíci +1

      That happened in the book too. Plants that are highly toxic on skin contact, around the pool.

  • @jayzus1024
    @jayzus1024 Před 5 dny +3

    There will never be another Jurassic movie like the original

  • @waitin4winter
    @waitin4winter Před rokem +10

    The older I get, the more I appreciate this dialogue

  • @scottbignell
    @scottbignell Před 4 lety +434

    What's great about this scene is that you really feel for Hammond, even though you know deep down that his critics are right. You leave the scene not thinking Hammond is the bad guy with an ego, but that he is too naive to see his through his optimism.

    • @user-bu2sf1gb5t
      @user-bu2sf1gb5t Před 4 lety +55

      And he even survived in the end. Which cannot be said about his novel counterpart. Who actually was a delusional asshat and got killed by compys.

    • @utubedestroysmytime
      @utubedestroysmytime Před 4 lety +10

      He was benign. Not volatile in nature just foolish. Liked this comment.

    • @lucashenderson2775
      @lucashenderson2775 Před 3 lety +31

      The movie version of Hammond being a goodhearted but naive guy who just wanted to give people something to enjoy rather than the greedy asshole he was in the book is the best change from a book to a movie, in my opinion.

    • @notahamster333
      @notahamster333 Před 3 lety +3

      @@lucashenderson2775 Haven't read the novels, but wow - that seems like such a huge stretch to a book reader and a film go-er. I wasn't around when this film came out, but I assume everyone liked it. Correct?

    • @lucashenderson2775
      @lucashenderson2775 Před 3 lety +4

      @@notahamster333 It's easily the most critically and audience acclaimed of the whole series and set the record for highest grossing movie of all time up to that point, so yeah.

  • @zacotb
    @zacotb Před 9 lety +318

    RIP, Richard Attenborough

  • @BigSmokeMUFC
    @BigSmokeMUFC Před 2 měsíci +3

    10 years since the great Richard Attenborough passed away, RIP absolute legend ❤

  • @jozefu8726
    @jozefu8726 Před rokem +7

    Everyone else: "This is a good scene, such great dialogue."
    Me: "I'm hungry and they didn't touch their food..."

  • @DrewZepp
    @DrewZepp Před 4 lety +452

    I love how this scene serves as a foil to when they first got on the island. The lawyer was skeptical, and they were all excited and now it’s the exact opposite.

    • @austinhawkins8201
      @austinhawkins8201 Před 3 lety +4

      Good catch!

    • @ayoutubechannel1413
      @ayoutubechannel1413 Před 3 lety +15

      Austin Hawkins thats cause Lawyer only cares about $$$$$

    • @hydradominatus3641
      @hydradominatus3641 Před 3 lety +13

      Everybody wants something until they actually get it. Shatters the naive illusion when reality kicks in.

    • @jackbuchanan9085
      @jackbuchanan9085 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ayoutubechannel1413 yep found a 1849 gold rush.

    • @starbase218
      @starbase218 Před 3 lety +9

      It’s just a matter of perspective. They were never excited about the rides that would come online or how much the park could charge. They were incredibly excited by seeing actual dinosaurs, and wanted to know all they could about how that came to be. When they did, they were obviously impressed by some of it, but also concerned or worried by some more profound aspects. And that’s what’s showing here I think.

  • @TheRiotLights
    @TheRiotLights Před 9 lety +234

    I'm pretty sure Grant was just there thinking "let me see the park, let me see the park."

    • @Fireeater-rl4ep
      @Fireeater-rl4ep Před 4 lety +5

      It's what we all were thinking.

    • @Johnno9989
      @Johnno9989 Před 4 lety +7

      That's probably why he forced himself out of the cinema room and into the birthing area earlier on.

  • @blueskadoo1402
    @blueskadoo1402 Před rokem +7

    One of the most brilliant scenes, writing, and acting ever. Aged like a fine wine.