It's a weird, awful film, starring #WillemDafoe: m.imdb.com/title/tt1703148 ...There's loads of unnecessary and far-fetched subplot, and totally illogically he kills the last #thylacine at the end, as though that's helping it. Then he somehow just adopts a kid he barely knows at the very end - like that's a thing welfare services allow.
Great movie but this footage is real mate, it may have been used in the movie but it wasn't filmed for the movie! I grew up in tassie and they are still there in really small numbers in really isolated spots!
+Mariah Cox Hi Mariah, unfortunately yes but there is always hope. I have heard that there have been sightings for the marsupial on the mainland. I don't know what the location was but there is a small possibility that there is perhaps a small remote population still alive and kicking. But we won't be sure until there is either video based evidence or perhaps even a capture of the specimen. We have got it wrong before plenty of times where we have thought species to have become extinct to then rediscover them again by accident at a later point in time. So there is always hope. I would love to think they still exist out there as I feel very sad that we are responsible for killing them off like they were.
They are definitely extinct - their gene pool and numbers would be irreparably small and isolated even if some survived. People need to move on and save the #TasmanianDevil from the horrific #DFTD before they're extinct too.
The tasmanian tiger was ASSUMED to be extinct and the last time I looked at a map, tasmania was a really big place and it still is with a lot of nature. It is possible that the animals survived.
They also live in pupua which is barely explored especially west papua and dingos don’t go into the jungle so they wouldn’t have to compete with those or humans
I probly does but it has survived becouse of human avoidance who knows what adaptation they have to avoid us could be very special as many catchers have to go into hiding
I have always found it hard to believe that the Thylacine was totally wiped out, given the vastness of the Tasmania Forests and wilderness areas. I am keeping my fingers crossed that there are still a few pockets of them thriving somewhere. After all it was 60 years from the first sighting of the Panda until it was seen again and formally located in China.
Also it didn’t just live in Tasmania. It was widespread throughout all of mainland Australia, and Papua new Guinnea aswell as Indonesia. Indonesia is also the east explored place on earth and many reports show evidence of populations there😊
The problem is that they were hunted too extensively & people also confused them for Tigers. The last one died in a Zoo early in the 19th century. The owners needed another as a replacement & issued a reward for one. But no one was able to locate one for them ever since the reward was issued. I think they are still around as footprint's have been spotted on numerous occasions. My friend photographed one more recently too. He didn't say where he found it because he didn't want it to be found out & hunted, he thought it may be one of the last so.
It's highly possible for an animal thought to be extinct to still be out there. Given the area, terrain and usually when an animal is pronounced extinct people generally stop looking for it. If a fish that was around in the Cretaceous period can appear in 1938. Then an animal that was last sighted in the 1930's can most certainly still be around.
It wouldn’t be the first time an extinct animal was spotted after a hundred or more years either. Supposed extinct breeds of large tigers have been found out there before, one of them was a mountain tiger but I forget which.
I just came back to and watched 'The Hunter' again today. What a phenomenal and touching movie. Superb acting by everyone involved. Especially Willem Dafoe and Sam Neill. It's a slow movie but well worth it if you appreciate good filmmaking. CZcams is offering free right now.
Just to clear this up depending on the elevation you are in it can range from summer to winter in the same day. You can experiance all for seasons in one day in Tasmania.
I don't care what anyone says, I can say with 100% certainty that there are TT in Southern NSW, I have seen one with my own eyes 4 - 5 metres from me. The encounter lasted a good two minutes until I tried to get closer and it ran into the bush
considering I didnt have a camera ,dont and never will own a mobile phone, it was about 2 am in the morning and I was a hundred miles or so from the nearest town would probably be the answer
I use to live in NSW and I've seen a Thylacine on six different occasions. The first one I ever saw is pretty much like the Thylacines you see in videos. It stopped, yawned, and went on it's way. The second time I saw a Thylacine or Thylacines, there were two of them. One was regular color and the other was only what I can describe as a king Thylacine. It had double the amount of stripping that a normal Thylacine would have and it blended together quite a bit (like in a king Cheetah). They were near a rocky outcrop and one saw me and then they both took off. The third time I saw one walking across the road. It looked at me and then proceeded along it's way. It was what I would call pseudo-melanistic. The strips were blended together and there was much more stripping, so it almost looked like blotches and not stripes (like a pseudo-melanistic Tiger). The fourth encounter was similar to the first. I cam across one on a hike, it yawned and walked away. This one was a chocolate color. The stripes were chocolate colored instead of black. The fifth time was one walking across my path on a very out of the way hiking trail. This one was a red color. The base color was more brown and the stripes were a dark brownish red (like a red Leopard). The sixth and last time I saw Thylacines was before I moved and I was exploring the brush. I came across four of them in a burrow and they bolted within a few seconds. I think it was a mother and three older offspring, but I'm not sure. All were normal colored, except for one, which was a strawberry color. It was a cream color with strawberry stripes (like a strawberry Leopard).
Cat Lover. Your descriptions of each encounter is too matter-of-fact to be made up. Unlike Jeremy, I accept your comment as genuine. So, at the very least, I believe that you believe it. Unfortunately, I can never conclusively confirm precisely what you saw. But, I will say this; thylacines are quite striking in appearance and they have features no dog could resemble, I don't care how feral it is. The tail alone is nothing like a dogs, it's more like kangaroos and tapers to the tip. Its body shape and stance are also quite striking, so much so, that if you would see one, they would stand out. The way they move and walk would appear to be unlike anything you are used to. Then there are the distinct stripes on their rear. This feature above all would most likely be the part you see, as they are prone to be running away from you when you spot one. I hope they're still alive, but I think it's best to remain a mystery. Let them be. Let them recover, without us to interfere. Humans have done enough damage.
I didn't say I was buying it, I said I believe they believe it. Then I added it's impossible for me to confirm exactly what they saw. Your comment forced me to do what I should have done from the start. Google. So, I Googled "Tasmanian tiger New South Wales" the results were interesting. The first link was made just over a week ago and it's about sightings all over Australia, but NSW has had over 70 sightings. The fact is, fossil evidence indicates that thylacines lived in Australia too. Don't let the name fool you. They are called Tasmanian tigers because when Europeans first arrived in that part of the world, the thylacine population was confined to a few parts of Tasmania. Australia has a vast wilderness and a creature that has learnt to fear man could easily hide from us. I live in the UK. My home is up on the Saddleworth Moors. I know there are foxes in the area, but I've only seen them a handful of times. Polecats also live in the area and I have yet to see one. In fact, I only spotted them one time and it was far from my home. It was a mother with her young and the group was tightly packed as they walked. They are very nimble and have long thin bodies, so as they walked they were kind of weaving their bodies around each other and make a distinct squeaking sound. It was quite an unusual site. The UK isn't as vast as Australia, yet there is wildlife on my doorstep that remains hidden. This forces me to believe it's possible for the thylacine to still exist. Although, I must add that my suspicion is, they will confirm this, but in New Zealand. There's been some interesting clips I've watched from there that show an unusual creature resembling a thylacine. It's the tail and the way they move that stands out.
The numerous indicators in your text say to me that although you postulate your self as someone who claims to have seem Thylacines I would argue that in fact you have seen either wild dogs or maybe dingoes. You are obviously not Australian (although that does not necessarily preclude you from having observed such an animal) I find it impossible to believe you have observed this animal on six separate occasions, seemingly within a relatively short space of time. A Thylacine is a marsupial and as such is usually nocturnal. I was born in Tasmania and have lived here all my life. I do firmly believe the Thylacine could still exist in some of the remote areas of Tasmania, of which there are many, the animal even when abundant in the past had a reputation of being shy and reclusive, not, I would suggest, showing the behaviour you have described. Having said that, if you believe you can evidence you claim beyond the text above, I would invite you to do so.
This is why no one believes people who have actually seen them. Because you lie about seeing them six times. Humans haven't seen them n almost a century but YOU saw one six times. Lol. Clown.
I would like to know where in NSW you allegedly saw these animals. My story is something ran across the road that was not a cat, dingo, dog or fox while driving in Northern NSW near the Qld Border. This happened in 2006 near the top of the Summerland Way at about 10.30 pm. After you go over Mt Lindsay, there is is a lot of dense bush that starts changing into paddocks as you turn off toward Kyogle. It was only 500 metres after turning off that I saw it. Growing up in the country I know what feral cats, dingos, dogs and foxes look like; it wasn't any of them. Was not driving tired either. Never seen anything like it since.
We went to Tasmania for our honeymoon. I recommend it to everyone, absolutely beautiful. You get all 4 seasons in one day. We stayed at a lodge in Cradle Mountain & it was snowing, they had cabins with fireplaces & spa's out on the deck. So you could be toasty warm in a spa with Champagne in hand looking out over snow covered fields & watching the native animals scamper about. IT WAS TOTALLY AWESOME.
while I am disappointed that this is not really a Tazzy tiger I am excited that you have mentioned this movie "the hunter", which i have never seen. I get really excited when I'm recommended a movie I haven't seen yet. Thanks guys.
I must say its not a movie for every one. Especially for animal lovers. However to get the most out of the film, one must go into it without any emotion, and an egresses to watch. Thats the best way to watch The Hunter. Have a nice time.
Beautiful animal majestic, powerful, resilient And just for the record I've been in the bush all my life I'm 32 years old now and when I was 23 I heard one of those animals one night and the sound made the hair stand up on the back of my neck eventhough I had a loaded rifle sitting in arms reach even the dogs had they're tails between they're legs whimpering It's a sound I'll never forget as long as I live
@@TheCrackedJoker You will find, the older you get, that you are totally outnumbered by people who decide what is true based on what sounds best to them. Kudos to you for actually thinking.
Of course it is fake, we are all here discussing more than the simple obvious fact, that the footage is from the movie The Hunter.... read the conversations before you comment.
Yes, I saw the movie "The Hunter." It's one of my favorite movies. I didn't remember this scene, but it doesn't matter. Because what I want to call to everyone's attention about this clip is, that the distance scenes were so clear and the close-up of the thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger) was very blurry. Has anyone noticed that about most legendary creatures, such as the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot, and aliens (E.T.s).
To me it just looks suspicious because of the placing of those stripes - that looks a lot like something placed around the animal - piece of striped cloth ? It just looks odd, and not like the stripes in the old films of actual thylas - so I'm not convinced - is this a rigged dog perhaps ?
The two original photos that set off the myth of the Loch Ness monster, both taken in the 1950s, were fake. One proven fake by scientists, the other admitted fake by the bloke who took it, after he retired. Basically the locals did it for tourism.
Although this was the end of a very moving movie I still come back to this beautiful video, I remember learning of this animal in kindergarten and it still moves me. Imagine if you saw one, imagine if you knew it was the last one so beautiful, so hunted, what would you do? imlyingiswear may have mislead us but what a fantasy was brought to us. Namaste.
my brother and his mate saw one about ten years ago now in the hills somewhere sth gippsland while out shooting deer , they didnt want to shoot it they just watched it disappear into the bush with amazement , and a bloke i use to work with in the mid 80,s saw one up the peninsula on his way to cape shank , the more you speak about the more you find out that a lot of other people have seen them too , they have been on the mainland all along and are still here in the great dividing range right up to the blue mountains away from civilization up in the bush
yeah I heard another BS story about two tasmania men with hunting rifles out to kill rabbits and basically any other creatures they could see then they seen a tylacine aka tasmania tiger..both lower their rifles both jaws wide open, both let it pass, both full of BS.
Just to give you how much wilderness there would be in Tasmania for Americans, Tasmania is about the same size as the state of Maine without its offshore islands, but with less than half the population. Anyone who has been hiking or camping in Maine will understand the really vast wilderness that is entailed in Tasmania.
Yep from a movie. I did like where they placed the tiger, South East of Cradle mountain thru the small lake country and down into the wooded valley. A good place for a big cat.
Yes., I thought the hunter was a terrible impression of a Tasmanian Tiger as I have personally seen on whilst hunting myself. I was maybe 14 and had the gun confiscated for not shooting what my Father believed to be a Kangaroo but through the scope I could clearly distinguish is as not being a Roo yet being similar in movement. It took a few more years before I realised what it was and I am glad I never fired at it
Sorry to be a bearer of bad news, but this video clip is from the movie "The Hunter" with Willem Dafoe. I just watched it and started a search for the Tasmanian Tiger.
This I from the movie The Hunter... Though I do believe thylacine does still live today. This clip isn't the proof though, it's from a movie. I'm not starting any fights, so don't take this the wrong way
Smh they killed the Tasmanian tigers for nothing. and now we're about to watch regular Tigers go the way of the dinosaurs along with a bunch of other animals just so people can have nice clothes to make fashion statements people suck
This is good footage. The stripes on the back go from visible to not visible depending on the motion. A trait that the Thylacine have (not well known), but seen in film footage from the 1930. Thanx Corwin Black; Arizona Boom Stick Company
I think that there is a high possibility that the Tasmanian Tiger is hiding. If a species notices that humans are killing them, of course they will go into hiding. And lets not forget the amount of species that humans have not discovered...
+Connor Hafoka: Wrong mate, it snows plenty of time in the summer in Tasmania and particularly in the mountains. Ask the families who,s kids died in a blizzard from exposure on the overland trail on a summer trek around the early 70s. It was also snowing in Hobart on the day I was born on 18th Dec.
It does not matter that the footage is fake from "The Hunter " It is a good combination, of good music and conscience of a system we are all a part of.
Thanks for sharing this, have not made my mind up whether I think they are gone or not, heard a few park rangers who said they have seen glimpses. There are still huge swathes of land in the Southwest that are largely unexplored. Many species still undocumented.
@@Wemissjericho I miss irony every single time. Should have picked yours up. I hope so, too. I just wish there were fewer fake clips out there. Apparently, they're going to try to clone one again. Better technology this time, or less decayed specimen. Something that gives them hope.
The thylacine was shy and secretive and always avoided contact with humans. The thylacine was a meat-eater - in fact, the world's largest marsupial carnivore since the extinction of Thylacoleo,the marsupial 'lion'. Its diet is believed to have consisted largely of wallabies, but included various small animals and birds.
Why cut off the feet? The photographer meticulously and precisely avoids the feet. Why not release a couple seconds of the feet? Still working on it? Because it's by far the hardest part to CGI, interfacing with the ground/snow/rocks. BTW the body doesn't seem to be bending/in synch with the curves of the terrain. But I need the feet to be sure.
. I hope it can only be true. He's BEAUTIFUL. Here's hoping they have survived the ravages of mankind. Humans are at fault for the extinction of so many animals. Human encroachment is REAL. Tooooo many babies are being born every day and the world is over-crowded because of it. There should be laws that prevent people from over breeding. The world population is out of balance w/ other living creatures.
Lol it's not a matter of population it's just how inefficient we are with obtaining resources to maintain the population, with the amount of overfishing going on in the world, if it continues at the same pace were looking at wide ecological collapse in our oceans and even the extinction of most ocean life, drastically affecting every other food web on the planet and here were worried about one species that will most likely be brought back in due time with the rate of succession of genetics
Sadly this is from the movie the hunter also to tell if some one is plagiarising is when they zoom in the quality is really shitty where if it was first person there would still be a reasonable amount of pixels
I though January was high summer in Tasmanian, if so why is there snow on ground, and plants life isn't high altitude.I do believe that somewhere within Australasian Tasmanian tiger still lives.
The clip of the Thylacine (or Tasmanian Tiger) was from the movie "The Hunter". Go look it up. (SPOILER ALERT, read at your own risk) The main character kills it.
Having grown up seeing them often...and knowing they are not yet extinct , nevertheless , I've not seen one with stripes quite like that...suspect faked /altered photo.
the Hunter that was a really good movie featuring two adorable kids, a depressed lazy mother, a notorious bunch of job conscious extras and one extinct cgi animal who had built up the entire movie but shows up only at the end, just to die immediately when it gets shot by the main character.
MegaGary1960 Because even though your comment was about Tasmanian Tigers you somehow made my reply out to be discussing all Tigers in general... I meant (and in case you hadn't picked up on this) that Tasmanian Tigers were declared officially extinct since 1936.
MegaGary1960 They were deemed extinct on the Mainland years before being claimed extinct in Tasmania. Think of it this way, if they were not all extinct (which they are) then why the fuck do some many people claim that they are extinct?
Austrains3820 Wow, some people are fucking idiots. You've explained yourself (on something they should have known to begin with) and they're still going to respond with dumb comments. Pathetic. Look it up morons.
Because of the land bridge that existed once between Australia an Papua new guinea there are remanent population of thylacine still roam around the highlands of Papuan mountains
You know what I think? I think it would of been nice if all those extinct animals were still alive (not dinosaurs) because they're amazing and interesting but no some idiots just HAD to go and kill them and ruin it all
And thanks to digital cameras and smart phones , enormous number of photos and movies can be made at very low cost . The Tasmanian Tiger can be caught on camera .
I would like to believe this. My mother was alive when they were around. When my grandma was around in the early part of last century . They were around. I hope they still are.
The fact that a species has gone extinct does not automatically make it a noble creature. I for one would not want a bunch of these things roaming around anywhere near me. Look at the size of this things jaws when it is yawning.
"Look, honey! There's a Tasmanian Tiger, quick, grab the shittest camera we own so we can get proof!." No. This is a scene from The Hunter.
Lol I’m the first to comment
lol im the second to comment
lol I’m the 3rd
Lol I'm 4th
Lol I’m 5th
While I'd like to believe the Thylacine is still around, his is obviously from the movie, "The Hunter" Which, by the way was very good.
I was just going to say that! But you confirmed it for me
It's a weird, awful film, starring #WillemDafoe: m.imdb.com/title/tt1703148
...There's loads of unnecessary and far-fetched subplot, and totally illogically he kills the last #thylacine at the end, as though that's helping it. Then he somehow just adopts a kid he barely knows at the very end - like that's a thing welfare services allow.
Looked like a legit image, if it’s faked it’s very good
Oh god, please I really wish for them to be around still, them and the Dodo I'd love to see them still around.
@@goatlps mate get fucked that movie is masterpiece
This is from the movie The Hunter. Look it up
They used this footage in the movie? That's fantastic
+Ethan Manning
I just Watched the movie. You are right it is a scene from that movie. This shows you how fucking stupid and gullible
human beings are
+Ethan Manning The Hunter was a surprisingly touching film.
+Roy Griffis I agree it was great
Great movie but this footage is real mate, it may have been used in the movie but it wasn't filmed for the movie! I grew up in tassie and they are still there in really small numbers in really isolated spots!
God how frustrating that this was cut from a movie
is that a true statement. I was hoping on hope they are out there.
+Mariah Cox Hi Mariah, unfortunately yes but there is always hope. I have heard that there have been sightings for the marsupial on the mainland. I don't know what the location was but there is a small possibility that there is perhaps a small remote population still alive and kicking. But we won't be sure until there is either video based evidence or perhaps even a capture of the specimen. We have got it wrong before plenty of times where we have thought species to have become extinct to then rediscover them again by accident at a later point in time. So there is always hope. I would love to think they still exist out there as I feel very sad that we are responsible for killing them off like they were.
i wish they where still alive
There are sightings and footprints cast all over Tasmania and Austrailia...they may not be as extinct as they say.
They are definitely extinct - their gene pool and numbers would be irreparably small and isolated even if some survived.
People need to move on and save the #TasmanianDevil from the horrific #DFTD before they're extinct too.
The tasmanian tiger was ASSUMED to be extinct and the last time I looked at a map, tasmania was a really big place and it still is with a lot of nature. It is possible that the animals survived.
They also live in pupua which is barely explored especially west papua and dingos don’t go into the jungle so they wouldn’t have to compete with those or humans
Same thing about the Ivory Billed Woodpecker, i think I saw the bird alive outside in my backyard.
@@ciaragarrity6425 that is really interesting
I probly does but it has survived becouse of human avoidance who knows what adaptation they have to avoid us could be very special as many catchers have to go into hiding
@@LeviVanSluijs it better not be explored
I have always found it hard to believe that the Thylacine was totally wiped out, given the vastness of the Tasmania Forests and wilderness areas. I am keeping my fingers crossed that there are still a few pockets of them thriving somewhere. After all it was 60 years from the first sighting of the Panda until it was seen again and formally located in China.
Also it didn’t just live in Tasmania. It was widespread throughout all of mainland Australia, and Papua new Guinnea aswell as Indonesia. Indonesia is also the east explored place on earth and many reports show evidence of populations there😊
Been a few sighting around
The problem is that they were hunted too extensively & people also confused them for Tigers.
The last one died in a Zoo early in the 19th century.
The owners needed another as a replacement & issued a reward for one.
But no one was able to locate one for them ever since the reward was issued.
I think they are still around as footprint's have been spotted on numerous occasions.
My friend photographed one more recently too.
He didn't say where he found it because he didn't want it to be found out & hunted, he thought it may be one of the last so.
Tassie or its forests are not vast. Its not the amazon down here
no the people described as tiger dogs @@brantleyfoster021
I met a werewolf in London with a Chinese menu in his hand.
this was a brexit werewolf!
Was it a sweet & sour moment 😝😖
Robert Bachelor huh, I’d like to meet his tailor
He was looking for a place called Lee Ho Fook's...and his hair was perfect.
I'd love to meet his taylor...
The music is a dead give away that it's fake as fuck. No one would get actual footage of a tiger then upload it with gay music over it.
you're a fucking moron!
aww you hurt my wittle feewings.
it's good,,,the song.
Musical taste is subjective. I think the song is crap. Had to mute it.
It's actually a scene from the movie The Hunter. It's really good, on netflix
The scene is from "The Hunter" But I'm still holding on for they can excist
Me to
same
universe is weird same
they probably do exist
universe is weird me too
It's highly possible for an animal thought to be extinct to still be out there. Given the area, terrain and usually when an animal is pronounced extinct people generally stop looking for it. If a fish that was around in the Cretaceous period can appear in 1938. Then an animal that was last sighted in the 1930's can most certainly still be around.
I thought it odd they hadnt found a similar creature in the Blue Mountains or Snowy River Areas.
It wouldn’t be the first time an extinct animal was spotted after a hundred or more years either.
Supposed extinct breeds of large tigers have been found out there before, one of them was a mountain tiger but I forget which.
I just came back to and watched 'The Hunter' again today.
What a phenomenal and touching movie.
Superb acting by everyone involved. Especially Willem Dafoe and Sam Neill.
It's a slow movie but well worth it if you appreciate good filmmaking.
CZcams is offering free right now.
This makes me so Nostalgic but sad at the same time
This is from the movie "The Hunter" look it up.
It is lel I watched it yesterday good movie
I just saw that movie trailer and remembered this fake sighting
Yeah I was going to say it but could not remember the name of it
Just to clear this up depending on the elevation you are in it can range from summer to winter in the same day. You can experiance all for seasons in one day in Tasmania.
I don't care what anyone says, I can say with 100% certainty that there are TT in Southern NSW, I have seen one with my own eyes 4 - 5 metres from me. The encounter lasted a good two minutes until I tried to get closer and it ran into the bush
why didn't you film it ?
considering I didnt have a camera ,dont and never will own a mobile phone, it was about 2 am in the morning and I was a hundred miles or so from the nearest town would probably be the answer
isn't it pitch black at 2 am ? how did you see the tasmanian tiger ? did you have a torch light or something ?
FFS i pulled over on my motorcycle would you like to know what colour my undies were as well go to sleep
Nauman Ashraf
... is it pitch black on full moons?? .. on other words it is rarely pitch black at night ... it varies ......
I use to live in NSW and I've seen a Thylacine on six different occasions.
The first one I ever saw is pretty much like the Thylacines you see in videos. It stopped, yawned, and went on it's way.
The second time I saw a Thylacine or Thylacines, there were two of them. One was regular color and the other was only what I can describe as a king Thylacine. It had double the amount of stripping that a normal Thylacine would have and it blended together quite a bit (like in a king Cheetah). They were near a rocky outcrop and one saw me and then they both took off.
The third time I saw one walking across the road. It looked at me and then proceeded along it's way. It was what I would call pseudo-melanistic. The strips were blended together and there was much more stripping, so it almost looked like blotches and not stripes (like a pseudo-melanistic Tiger).
The fourth encounter was similar to the first. I cam across one on a hike, it yawned and walked away. This one was a chocolate color. The stripes were chocolate colored instead of black.
The fifth time was one walking across my path on a very out of the way hiking trail. This one was a red color. The base color was more brown and the stripes were a dark brownish red (like a red Leopard).
The sixth and last time I saw Thylacines was before I moved and I was exploring the brush. I came across four of them in a burrow and they bolted within a few seconds. I think it was a mother and three older offspring, but I'm not sure. All were normal colored, except for one, which was a strawberry color. It was a cream color with strawberry stripes (like a strawberry Leopard).
Cat Lover. Your descriptions of each encounter is too matter-of-fact to be made up. Unlike Jeremy, I accept your comment as genuine. So, at the very least, I believe that you believe it. Unfortunately, I can never conclusively confirm precisely what you saw. But, I will say this; thylacines are quite striking in appearance and they have features no dog could resemble, I don't care how feral it is. The tail alone is nothing like a dogs, it's more like kangaroos and tapers to the tip. Its body shape and stance are also quite striking, so much so, that if you would see one, they would stand out. The way they move and walk would appear to be unlike anything you are used to. Then there are the distinct stripes on their rear. This feature above all would most likely be the part you see, as they are prone to be running away from you when you spot one. I hope they're still alive, but I think it's best to remain a mystery. Let them be. Let them recover, without us to interfere. Humans have done enough damage.
I didn't say I was buying it, I said I believe they believe it. Then I added it's impossible for me to confirm exactly what they saw. Your comment forced me to do what I should have done from the start. Google. So, I Googled "Tasmanian tiger New South Wales" the results were interesting.
The first link was made just over a week ago and it's about sightings all over Australia, but NSW has had over 70 sightings. The fact is, fossil evidence indicates that thylacines lived in Australia too. Don't let the name fool you. They are called Tasmanian tigers because when Europeans first arrived in that part of the world, the thylacine population was confined to a few parts of Tasmania. Australia has a vast wilderness and a creature that has learnt to fear man could easily hide from us.
I live in the UK. My home is up on the Saddleworth Moors. I know there are foxes in the area, but I've only seen them a handful of times. Polecats also live in the area and I have yet to see one. In fact, I only spotted them one time and it was far from my home. It was a mother with her young and the group was tightly packed as they walked. They are very nimble and have long thin bodies, so as they walked they were kind of weaving their bodies around each other and make a distinct squeaking sound. It was quite an unusual site. The UK isn't as vast as Australia, yet there is wildlife on my doorstep that remains hidden. This forces me to believe it's possible for the thylacine to still exist. Although, I must add that my suspicion is, they will confirm this, but in New Zealand. There's been some interesting clips I've watched from there that show an unusual creature resembling a thylacine. It's the tail and the way they move that stands out.
The numerous indicators in your text say to me that although you postulate your self as someone who claims to have seem Thylacines I would argue that in fact you have seen either wild dogs or maybe dingoes. You are obviously not Australian (although that does not necessarily preclude you from having observed such an animal) I find it impossible to believe you have observed this animal on six separate occasions, seemingly within a relatively short space of time. A Thylacine is a marsupial and as such is usually nocturnal. I was born in Tasmania and have lived here all my life. I do firmly believe the Thylacine could still exist in some of the remote areas of Tasmania, of which there are many, the animal even when abundant in the past had a reputation of being shy and reclusive, not, I would suggest, showing the behaviour you have described. Having said that, if you believe you can evidence you claim beyond the text above, I would invite you to do so.
This is why no one believes people who have actually seen them. Because you lie about seeing them six times. Humans haven't seen them n almost a century but YOU saw one six times. Lol. Clown.
I would like to know where in NSW you allegedly saw these animals. My story is something ran across the road that was not a cat, dingo, dog or fox while driving in Northern NSW near the Qld Border.
This happened in 2006 near the top of the Summerland Way at about 10.30 pm. After you go over Mt Lindsay, there is is a lot of dense bush that starts changing into paddocks as you turn off toward Kyogle. It was only 500 metres after turning off that I saw it.
Growing up in the country I know what feral cats, dingos, dogs and foxes look like; it wasn't any of them. Was not driving tired either. Never seen anything like it since.
We went to Tasmania for our honeymoon.
I recommend it to everyone, absolutely beautiful.
You get all 4 seasons in one day.
We stayed at a lodge in Cradle Mountain & it was snowing, they had cabins with fireplaces & spa's out on the deck.
So you could be toasty warm in a spa with Champagne in hand looking out over snow covered fields & watching the native animals scamper about.
IT WAS TOTALLY AWESOME.
The less humans there, the better, so no I would never recommend that.
Anti - Ethnic Cleansing 🤣🤣🤣 Your disapproval of others is just a reflection of your own self worth. I suggest you start there ❤️
@@chance666ify you don’t care about Thylacines I can tell by the message
@@chance666ify but I do wonder what happened after your honeymoon
Bette middle the rose trailer
That footage is actually from the Willem Dafoe movie The Hunter.
You nailed it Trench Man. I was just about to write the same, then I saw your comment; spot on. This video is a fake. It's from the movie The Hunter.
Thanks for commenting, and just saying that was a dam good movie and book.
while I am disappointed that this is not really a Tazzy tiger I am excited that you have mentioned this movie "the hunter", which i have never seen. I get really excited when I'm recommended a movie I haven't seen yet. Thanks guys.
I must say its not a movie for every one. Especially for animal lovers. However to get the most out of the film, one must go into it without any emotion, and an egresses to watch.
Thats the best way to watch The Hunter. Have a nice time.
Haha that sounds like the cold blooded c I already am, maybe all the movies and video games have desensitized me. Thanks for the good advice.
Beautiful animal majestic, powerful, resilient
And just for the record I've been in the bush all my life I'm 32 years old now and when I was 23 I heard one of those animals one night and the sound made the hair stand up on the back of my neck eventhough I had a loaded rifle sitting in arms reach even the dogs had they're tails between they're legs whimpering
It's a sound I'll never forget as long as I live
AWESOME
Could it have been a yawee?
How could you know it was a Thylacine (Tasmanian tiger) when there are no known recordings of what they sounded like?
@@TheCrackedJoker You will find, the older you get, that you are totally outnumbered by people who decide what is true based on what sounds best to them. Kudos to you for actually thinking.
with a loaded rifle! omg you'd be the one to kill the last of something. gun owners equal idiots
This is soooo fricken FAKE it is a scene from the movie "The Hunter" it is found at the end of the movie find it on Netflix
just need a performance by willem dafoe
Of course it is fake, we are all here discussing more than the simple obvious fact, that the footage is from the movie The Hunter.... read the conversations before you comment.
This is not a fake thylacine tasmanian tiger is live
Yes, I saw the movie "The Hunter." It's one of my favorite movies. I didn't remember this scene, but it doesn't matter. Because what I want to call to everyone's attention about this clip is, that the distance scenes were so clear and the close-up of the thylacine (Tasmanian Tiger) was very blurry. Has anyone noticed that about most legendary creatures, such as the Loch Ness Monster, Bigfoot, and aliens (E.T.s).
To me it just looks suspicious because of the placing of those stripes - that looks a lot like something placed around the animal - piece of striped cloth ? It just looks odd, and not like the stripes in the old films of actual thylas - so I'm not convinced - is this a rigged dog perhaps ?
This is a clip from the movie, "The Hunter". Its CGI
The two original photos that set off the myth of the Loch Ness monster, both taken in the 1950s, were fake. One proven fake by scientists, the other admitted fake by the bloke who took it, after he retired. Basically the locals did it for tourism.
Although this was the end of a very moving movie I still come back to this beautiful video, I remember learning of this animal in kindergarten and it still moves me. Imagine if you saw one, imagine if you knew it was the last one so beautiful, so hunted, what would you do? imlyingiswear may have mislead us but what a fantasy was brought to us. Namaste.
So this video clip is from a film? What a shame. I'd hoped it was genuine. Thanks for clarifying.
my brother and his mate saw one about ten years ago now in the hills somewhere sth gippsland while out shooting deer , they didnt want to shoot it they just watched it disappear into the bush with amazement , and a bloke i use to work with in the mid 80,s saw one up the peninsula on his way to cape shank , the more you speak about the more you find out that a lot of other people have seen them too , they have been on the mainland all along and are still here in the great dividing range right up to the blue mountains away from civilization up in the bush
I hope, you're right! ❤️
yeah I heard another BS story about two tasmania men with hunting rifles out to kill rabbits and basically any other creatures they could see then they seen a tylacine aka tasmania tiger..both lower their rifles both jaws wide open, both let it pass, both full of BS.
@@frankgallacher6598proof it's BS?
@@purpleX-q proff it's not B.S
@@purpleX-q proof its not B.S
Just to give you how much wilderness there would be in Tasmania for Americans, Tasmania is about the same size as the state of Maine without its offshore islands, but with less than half the population. Anyone who has been hiking or camping in Maine will understand the really vast wilderness that is entailed in Tasmania.
its from the movie "the hunter"
This is from the movie "The Hunter"
The video is actually from a movie with William Defoe.
Awesome, good to know there are still some in existence :)
This is from the film "The Hunter" (2011)
Thats a clip from 1 hour and 26 mins into the movie The Hunter
On another note, this is the video that introduced me to Little Dragon which has now become one of my favorite bands 💖
I believe Tasmanian Tiger is still alive in Tasmania, out there I wish I could go, and find Tasmanian tiger one day.
You’re all wrong! It’s not from the movie The Hunter!! It’s from the move Working 9to5 staring Dolly Parton
From the movie "the hunter" just watched it last night.
The footage is an animated model, it's a scene from the documentary "cloning the Tasmanian tiger"
the best part of this is the music from one of my favorite groups Little Dragon!
I thought they were extinct. They are so beautiful.
Sadly this was cut from a movie
It's alive.
What a beautiful animal. So happy they are still around somewhere in the world.
It’s from a movie
@@user-dznuts They used this footage in a movie?
@@Feususksusnd dude💀
It's Fake
Oh. That's too bad. Oh well.
This is from the movie The Hunter. That white stuff on the ground is snow. It doesn’t snow in the summer months.
It really gives us hope that thylacine is still alive and waiting to be rediscovered.
I don't know why I want to cry seeing extinct animals
It's OK to cry.
I cried when I saw this to
This is from the movie the hunter
What does "hybriding them" mean? I think you mean "cloning" them. It has been talked about but it has not happened yet.
Beautiful music for a beautiful sight for sore eyes.
this is from The Hunter. a really good movie, 9/10
Yep from a movie. I did like where they placed the tiger, South East of Cradle mountain thru the small lake country and down into the wooded valley. A good place for a big cat.
I know that this is fake,but I still hope that there is some tasmanian tigers in australian nature...
Yes., I thought the hunter was a terrible impression of a Tasmanian Tiger as I have personally seen on whilst hunting myself. I was maybe 14 and had the gun confiscated for not shooting what my Father believed to be a Kangaroo but through the scope I could clearly distinguish is as not being a Roo yet being similar in movement. It took a few more years before I realised what it was and I am glad I never fired at it
Sorry to be a bearer of bad news, but this video clip is from the movie "The Hunter" with Willem Dafoe. I just watched it and started a search for the Tasmanian Tiger.
Guys, look up the movie "The Hunter" with Willam Defoe. This footage is CGI and taken from that movie.
This I from the movie The Hunter... Though I do believe thylacine does still live today. This clip isn't the proof though, it's from a movie. I'm not starting any fights, so don't take this the wrong way
from the film "the hunter"
Best recent footage I've seen. That is 100% a Thylacine, clear as day.
yeah... it's CGI from the movie "The Hunter" LOL
Bro, 12 years later and everyone knows that scene is from a movie, right?
Yup, I thought so, it's a cut from the movie The Hunter. Not even a nice try uploader.
Smh they killed the Tasmanian tigers for nothing. and now we're about to watch regular Tigers go the way of the dinosaurs along with a bunch of other animals just so people can have nice clothes to make fashion statements people suck
Yeah, I wear my tiger coat all the time!
Wrong.
Ok if I'm wrong, where are your reasons, your rebuttal?? You have the IQ of mustard crust go fuck yourself.
Lol you mad bro?
Oh I forgot they are also hunted for trophy purposes, but not clothes.
This is the ending scene of The Hunter and that movie is from 2013
Kristoffer Petersen We all know that fact..... read before posting
This is good footage. The stripes on the back go from visible to not visible depending on the motion. A trait that the Thylacine have (not well known), but seen in film footage from the 1930.
Thanx
Corwin Black; Arizona Boom Stick Company
I think that there is a high possibility that the Tasmanian Tiger is hiding. If a species notices that humans are killing them, of course they will go into hiding. And lets not forget the amount of species that humans have not discovered...
@ Sid, you obviously don't know much about animals, especially wild ones.
@@GypzyJack seems you don't thats what makes it ironic
Bruhh says its frm jan but thats summer doesn't snow in summer
+Connor Hafoka It's obviously a fake video. However, It does often snow in the Tasmanian highlands during summer.
+Connor Hafoka: Wrong mate, it snows plenty of time in the summer in Tasmania and particularly in the mountains. Ask the families who,s kids died in a blizzard from exposure on the overland trail on a summer trek around the early 70s. It was also snowing in Hobart on the day I was born on 18th Dec.
January is winter -_-
Princess CutieAJ in the northern hemisphere it is, not southern where Australia is
Connor Hafoka hey maybe he or she was in the mountains
This Video was cut from the movie ‘the hunter’
This is from a movie.....its on netflix and its called "the hunter"
its the ending clip from the movie hunter I watched it 15 times I even have the movie so toltaly fake
looks like a scene from the hunter
It does not matter that the footage is fake from "The Hunter " It is a good combination, of good music and conscience of a system we are all a part of.
0:24 is from The Hunter 12/12
Thanks for sharing this, have not made my mind up whether I think they are gone or not, heard a few park rangers who said they have seen glimpses. There are still huge swathes of land in the Southwest that are largely unexplored. Many species still undocumented.
This is from a movie
Dude rly?
@@Wemissjericho "The Hunter" with Willem Defoe.
@@nevillewran4083 ik ive seen it thats why i commented that i do believe theres a chance it still exists
@@Wemissjericho I miss irony every single time. Should have picked yours up.
I hope so, too. I just wish there were fewer fake clips out there.
Apparently, they're going to try to clone one again. Better technology this time, or less decayed specimen. Something that gives them hope.
The thylacine was shy and secretive and always avoided contact with humans. The thylacine was a meat-eater - in fact, the world's largest marsupial carnivore since the extinction of Thylacoleo,the marsupial 'lion'. Its diet is believed to have consisted largely of wallabies, but included various small animals and birds.
and this material was taken while filming a scene in a movie called "The Hunter".
Why cut off the feet? The photographer meticulously and precisely avoids the feet. Why not release a couple seconds of the feet? Still working on it? Because it's by far the hardest part to CGI, interfacing with the ground/snow/rocks. BTW the body doesn't seem to be bending/in synch with the curves of the terrain. But I need the feet to be sure.
ritio hero........
. I hope it can only be true. He's BEAUTIFUL. Here's hoping they have survived the ravages of mankind. Humans are at fault for the extinction of so many animals. Human encroachment is REAL. Tooooo many babies are being born every day and the world is over-crowded because of it. There should be laws that prevent people from over breeding. The world population is out of balance w/ other living creatures.
Lol it's not a matter of population it's just how inefficient we are with obtaining resources to maintain the population, with the amount of overfishing going on in the world, if it continues at the same pace were looking at wide ecological collapse in our oceans and even the extinction of most ocean life, drastically affecting every other food web on the planet and here were worried about one species that will most likely be brought back in due time with the rate of succession of genetics
Yawn
Sadly this is from the movie the hunter also to tell if some one is plagiarising is when they zoom in the quality is really shitty where if it was first person there would still be a reasonable amount of pixels
That is definately the Loch Ness monster. That's Nessie alright. Good old Nessie, I'd recognise her anywhere!
Certain animals from the same place in Australia where considered extinct but 20-35 years reappeared...
I though January was high summer in Tasmanian, if so why is there snow on ground, and plants life isn't high altitude.I do believe that somewhere within Australasian Tasmanian tiger still lives.
Those scenes that show the tiger are from a willam dafoe movie called The Hunted. Fake ass shit!
Nice clip from the movie "The Hunter". Pretty good CGI
The clip of the Thylacine (or Tasmanian Tiger) was from the movie "The Hunter". Go look it up. (SPOILER ALERT, read at your own risk) The main character kills it.
I hope he is still alive and the species can recover!
Having grown up seeing them often...and knowing they are not yet extinct , nevertheless , I've not seen one with stripes quite like that...suspect faked /altered photo.
Lmao get the fuck out of here you lying asshole
the Hunter
that was a really good movie featuring two adorable kids, a depressed lazy mother, a notorious bunch of job conscious extras and one extinct cgi animal who had built up the entire movie but shows up only at the end, just to die immediately when it gets shot by the main character.
Everyone wants to believe that the Tiger is still alive and it is in our hearts or is it really alive somewhere hidden
death penalty for anyone poaching or hunting tasmanian tigers.
It's the rich people who will continue the slaughter because the poor will always be tempted.
I also just saw a video of a guy getting eaten off a toilet by a t-Rex. Nice to see more extinct animals making comebacks.
I saw that too. Did you know they used REAL dinosaurs during the filming of Jurassic Park? They also travelled back in time to get some of them.
That footage was taken from the movie the hunter you can see it on Netflix it stars William Dafoe
This is from the movie, “Scooby Doo Goes to Tasmania “.
whats so strange if its a Tasmanian tiger it would be seen in Tasmania if it was seen in London now that would be strange
What's so strange is is that they were supposed to be made extinct nearly 100 years ago...
tigers are not extinct
MegaGary1960 Because even though your comment was about Tasmanian Tigers you somehow made my reply out to be discussing all Tigers in general...
I meant (and in case you hadn't picked up on this) that Tasmanian Tigers were declared officially extinct since 1936.
MegaGary1960 They were deemed extinct on the Mainland years before being claimed extinct in Tasmania. Think of it this way, if they were not all extinct (which they are) then why the fuck do some many people claim that they are extinct?
Austrains3820 Wow, some people are fucking idiots. You've explained yourself (on something they should have known to begin with) and they're still going to respond with dumb comments. Pathetic. Look it up morons.
the movie is called THE HUNTER MADE IN 2011
This is from the movie The Hunter. Not real footage.
This can be a scene from movie The Hunter (2011). I have seen that one.
This is literally just a clip from a movie called the hunter.
Because of the land bridge that existed once between Australia an Papua new guinea there are remanent population of thylacine still roam around the highlands of Papuan mountains
You know what I think? I think it would of been nice if all those extinct animals were still alive (not dinosaurs) because they're amazing and interesting but no some idiots just HAD to go and kill them and ruin it all
superimposed virtual effect from that remastered 'caged' last tasmanian thylacine movie segment
tasmanian tiger live !!!!!! Love 🙂👍👌
There are still Tassie Tigers. Most definately.
And thanks to digital cameras and smart phones , enormous number of photos and movies can be made at very low cost . The Tasmanian Tiger can be caught on camera .
I would like to believe this. My mother was alive when they were around. When my grandma was around in the early part of last century . They were around. I hope they still are.
On Facebook I get these people saying they have been spotted in Africa, Bangladesh, and Indonesia
I'm sure I saw one on my property just the other day. Hang on, I'll ask Bigfoot if he agrees. He lives in my garden too.
The Hunter was an awesome film, highly recommend, and this footage loks like a reference from that movie :)
The fact that a species has gone extinct does not automatically make it a noble creature. I for one would not want a bunch of these things roaming around anywhere near me. Look at the size of this things jaws when it is yawning.
I think there is a difference in "going extinct" and "HUNTED to extinction".....
Was this initially CGI'd, and only about 10 seconds long. Doesn't seem authentic to me.
Ed Salinas
It’s apparently from a movie