The reason Suskityrannus (before it was named) was split into two characters is similar to the Megarachne situation in Walking with Monsters; it was discovered halfway through production that the Zuni coelurosaur wasn't a dromaeosaur but it was too late to change the animation, so the filmmakers added some quick scene with the small generic coelurosaur as a compromise, hence why doesn't really do anything in the segment beyond existing.
The nothronychus dying from the fire always upset me. It clearly got away from the inferno, and then it looks like it just blunders into a singular flame and dies instantly. They didn't have to do my boy like that
The poor Ceratosaurus, I agree it's seemingly abused by Allosaurus in every single documentary it's in. This documentary was also my first introduction to Zuniceratops, and the so called raptors eating till they burned to death was....very ridiculous. It's always nice to see a new dinosaur related video on your channel! Please keep reviewing dinosaur models that have been in programs. :)
I’ve always disliked this portrayal of allosaurus, grossly oversized and treated more like some type of terrible monster. It wasn’t double the size of Ceratosaurus but rather one or maybe two meters larger in general (not talking about Saurophaganax and other possible allosaurus Maximus). It would have been better to simply not include it and present the Morrison formation with more obscure dinosaurs.
@@IChaseIRU-vid i agree it’s weirdly oversized and awesomebrofied compared to the relatively accurate other dinosaurs Too bad since WDRA introduced some very good designs like the dilophosaurus for example
This was really cool! Nice to have more longer, in-depth videos alongside the model reviews, and I’m super excited to see you review more documentaries 😁.
I think the monkey puzzle forest of chile was a better setting for the morisson formation than the redwood forests. I prefer the scenes in Time of the Titans that were filmed in Chile. They somehow found a part of that landscape with lots of horsetails. Perfect fit.
4:05 Tasmania. Is that Cradle Mountain in the background and Dove Lake in the foreground? Eastern Quolls are Australian carnivorous marsupials, in case you didn't know! Great video!
I hope that they make another great documentary series like this one day. All the new ones either really to heavily on the paleontologist cutaways or barely have them at all.
@IapetusMC exactly. They want some sort of eye candy (which is completely understandable). And there aren't any up-to-date documentaries they could watch. The newest ones that got any sort of popularity were planet dinosaur and dinosaur revolution. Dinosaur revolution was to unrealistic and planet dinosaur was kinda boring (in my opinion). Neither of them even had the practical effects like the old BBC docs with planet dinosaur even being fully CGI. The last good one I think was the discovery channels dinosaur planet but that one had many of its own issues.
I’d like to see more documentaries in which Quetzalcoatlus feeds on dinosaur babies. To my knowledge, only the maligned Clash of the Dinosaurs shows this behavior.
Maybe you could review walking with beasts? And then review some prehistoric mammal models based off the creatures in the series if you haven't done that already?
@@HodgePodge7 Awesome! I'm unfortunately thinking your nearing the end of dinosaur documentaries to review now. Unless. You ventured into planet dinosaur done by the BBC in 2013. But even then that's only one documentary. If only we had some new dinosaur documentaries coming out! :/
@@HodgePodge7 Oh okay excellent I'm glad to hear that. :) 🦖🦕 I wanted to add, I'm surprised when you discussed Ceratosaurus you didn't mention how it could be partially semi-aquatic. Unless that's fallen out of favour now with the scientific community?