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September 2, 2011

The Dinosaur Revolution Will Be Televised



Dinosaur Revolution is Looney Tunes. I mean that literally. At the last Comic-Con International, Erik Nelson – the executive producer of Discovery’s new 4-part series – explained that at least one of the show’s vignettes was created as a reimagining of a 1942 Bugs Bunny cartoon, only this time with pterosaurs from the Early Cretaceous of Brazil. The animals themselves were real, but, true to the intent of the segment, they act like Mesozoic cartoon characters. Rather than being a silly one-off, the slapstick scene embodies the tone of the prehistoric miniseries.

I am not entirely sure what to call Dinosaur Revolution. “Documentary” doesn’t feel quite right. “Dinosaur tribute” might be a better fit. Whatever you choose to call it, though, it’s a program that employs the well-worn dinosaur playbook that has been in use for over a decade. Walking With Dinosaurs – the BBC’s 1999 docudrama – brought the idea of following the day-to-day lives of dinosaurs (with little to no human presence) into vogue, and Dinosaur Revolution continues in that tradition while adding a few unique quirks.

Discovery’s new dinosaur extravaganza is played out in four chapters. The first episode sets the stage with an over-the-top scene meant to represent the mass extinction at the end of the Permian period about 250 million years ago. This was the most devastating global extinction event in our planet’s history, and the one that, in time, opened up evolutionary possibilities that resulted in the evolution of dinosaurs (among other Mesozoic creatures). From there, the series sets up a number of vignettes that flow in more-or-less chronological order from the Late Triassic through the very Latest Cretaceous. Episode one features a family of the early dinosaur Eoraptor; episode two focuses on an injured Allosaurus living by a Late Jurassic watering hole; episode three tells the stories of pterosaurs, mosasaurs, feathered dinosaurs and other Cretaceous creatures; and the finale tracks a clan of Tyrannosaurus, as well as a pair of Troodon. The cast of dinosaurs is more extensive than what I have just mentioned here, though, and I was glad to see the inclusion of some recently-discovered taxa, such as the long-necked stegosaur Miragaia and the giant frog Beelzebufo.

From the rumors and buzz leading up to the release of the show, I thought Dinosaur Revolution was largely going to be a silent program that let the dinosaurs act out their stories without narration.  In essence, I had thought the show was going to be a movie version of the type of stories one of the show’s creators, Ricardo Delgado, had drawn up for the Age of Reptiles comic series. Apparently this idea was scrapped, or at least altered – the dinosaur storylines make up the bulk of each episode, but there are brief segments in which familiar talking heads are brought in to talk about different aspects of dinosaur lives. Sparse narration is also sprinkled over each episode, though the show’s narrator has the annoying habit of speaking in sentence fragments and often states the obvious. The show’s dinosaurs are certainly expressive enough to tell their own stories, but it would seem that Discovery got nervous about a lack of human presence in the show.

I have mixed feelings about Dinosaur Revolution. For one thing, the quality of the show’s animation is uneven. On the positive side, the level of detail each dinosaur has received is excellent, and some of the dinosaurs – such as an Allosaurus with a broken jaw that stars in episode 2 – have never looked better. (I never liked the dopey, thick-headed Allosaurus of the Walking With Dinosaurs series.) The trouble is that the dinosaurs are not always blended very well with the background environment. In the first and third episodes, especially, the dinosaurs appear to be living on a separate plane of existence than their surrounding habitats. Likewise, the way some of the dinosaurs moved could use a little more refinement. Small theropods, especially, run with a stiff, herky-jerky motion that looks exaggerated and silly. The dinosaurs look great when standing still, but it’s hard not to chuckle when they go bobbing off in their awkward gait. The creators of the show certainly deserve a lot of credit for giving their coelurosaurs feathers and not giving their theropod dinosaurs “bunny hands”, but some of the basic aspects of the dinosaur models make the show’s stars look out of place in the prehistoric world.

But the dinosaur models and animation aren’t what really bothers me about Dinosaur Revolution. There have been far worse dinosaur models, and, given that the show is meant for popular audiences, it’s practically useless to worry about how much Triceratops really flexed its elbows, how tightly the skin on some dinosaur heads appears to adhere to the skull, or whether prehistoric mammals really could spray noxious liquid in the faces of predatory dinosaurs. At least the artists put feathers on Troodon, Velociraptor and other theropod dinosaurs, and I am thrilled the show does not shy away from making their dinosaurs bird-like. No, what gets me is that Dinosaur Revolution is being presented as a program about the latest dinosaur science when the actual scientific content is minimal.

One of the principal problems of communicating the science of paleontology to the public is that we have not done a very good job of explaining how our science actually works to the person on the street. People are constantly being bombarded with the end-products of fossil research – from skeletons in museum halls to restored dinosaurs on television – but how often do members of the public get to see the dinosaurian sausage being made, so to speak? Dinosaur Revolution claims to be based upon the latest dinosaur science, and the show makes infrequent references to “new techniques”, yet the series does not offer much insight into how we know what we say we know. Sound bites from professional paleontologists are used to back up certain claims, but this is merely using scientific authority to back up a premise – very little is actually explained this way.

This brings me back to my earlier comment that Dinosaur Revolution is more of a dinosaur tribute than a scientific documentary. Even though I have grown tired of the emphasis on violence in dinosaur documentaries, I understand that show creators need to get people to watch. Featuring dinosaurs just standing around isn’t going to do that. If eyeballs aren’t on the screen, educational opportunities are lost. Nevertheless, the animals in Dinosaur Revolution do not act like real animals. They are constantly fighting in an exaggerated, cartoonish style that often just looks plain silly. In episode two, for example, the large predatory dinosaur Torvosaurus tries to snag a juvenile sauropod and ends up setting off a dinosaur free-for-all in which the stegosaur Miragaia, an Allosaurus and an adult sauropod all end up taking turns beating on the predator. The scene has more in common with a WWE cage match than anything in nature. In another vignette, the sauropod Shunosaurus gets high on some funky mushrooms and is attacked by a pair of Sinraptor who are about as coordinated as The Three Stooges. Like the dinosaurs of Jurassic Park III, as well, the creatures of Dinosaur Revolution are adept martial artists capable of tossing their victims or enemies around. The dinosaurs are more monsters than animals, and their behavior reminds me of what I imagined for them when I was a five-year-old dinosaur nut playing in the sandbox.

Don’t misunderstand me – I don’t automatically have a problem with a program like Dinosaur Revolution depicting prehistoric creatures as monsters. From the time dinosaurs were first recognized by science in the early 19th century, they have often been restored as rapacious and bloodthirsty beasts, and violence has a deep, deep tradition in restorations of prehistoric life. What I object to is such scenes being presented as the best reconstructions of dinosaurs science can offer us. If Dinosaur Revolution was presented as a fun anthology of imaginary dinosaur stories, this review would be very different, but instead the show is meant to showcase the latest in paleontology. Fossil evidence is mentioned from time to time – what fossil site the animals in the show came from, or a specimen that inspired a particular story – but the methods by which paleontologists actually reconstruct prehistoric life are left undiscussed. There is a wide gap between the fossil as an object of interest and the restoration that is the end-product of a scientific process. Again, the products of paleontology are presented in full color, but how that knowledge is generated in the first place is obscured. Audiences are left to rely on the say-so of the scientists in the show, which, I believe, shortchanges viewers who want to know how we know what we say we know about dinosaurs.

And, as is too often the case, the gallery of scientific experts are entirely male and pale. (Paleontologist Victoria Arbour recently pointed out this persistent problem – which is sadly not unique to Dinosaur Revolution – in a review of the sensationalist program Dino Gangs.) For a program that is supposed to be about the “revolution” in dinosaur science, I would expect to see experts such as Karen Chin, Mary Schweitzer, Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan, Victoria Arbour, and others give their perspectives on how new discoveries and techniques are providing us with an unprecedented view of dinosaur lives. When there is such a diverse array of paleontologists doing interesting work, why does Dinosaur Revolution perpetuate the image of a paleontologist as a white male? Granted, not everyone who is asked to participate in a documentary is going say “Yes”, but I refuse to believe that, if they really tried, the creators of Dinosaur Revolution would have been unable to find scientists who differed from the stereotyped image of who a paleontologist is.

Many of my qualms about Dinosaur Revolution stem from problems that are not unique to this new show. For a decade, we’ve been seeing the same kind of dinosaur-driven, CGI storytelling that has become the new standard. Perhaps, if Dinosaur Revolution was the first show of its kind, I would have felt differently about it. And, in fact, I would actually love to see a show that didn’t take itself too seriously and paired top animators with excellent storytellers. (Can you imagine an animated dinosaur story written by David Sedaris or Sarah Vowell?) If Dinosaur Revolution had fully committed to that and presented itself as a fun restoration of prehistoric life in the vein of, say, “The Rite of Spring” sequence in Fantasia, I would have spent a lot less time quibbling over the program. There is certainly room for fun and imagination in dinosaur programs, but I get a bit prickly when science is used to back up fantasies without much explanation of where the science stops and the fiction begins.

As paleontologist Thomas Holtz says in the show, we need imagination in paleontology. If we restricted ourselves only to the actual evidence we have acquired, we wouldn’t get very far – at some point you have to hypothesize, speculate and infer to bring prehistoric animals to life. The creators of Dinosaur Revolution certainly had the technological know-how to do this in a new way, but the fact that the show is presented as a scientific program creates a tension between the feel of the program and its stated aim. Dinosaur Revolution is a fun – and often silly – fantasy that is informed by scientific discovery but is not itself overly concerned with communicating the nuts and bolts of science. The real story of the dinosaur revolution – how our understanding of dinosaur lives is growing deeper and more detailed by the day – has yet to be told.

The first two episodes of Dinosaur Revolution premiere on Discovery on September 4 at 9 p.m. eastern time, and the second two will air on September 11 at 9 p.m.



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23 Comments »

  1. I like the phrase “dinosaur tribute”; it is much more elegant than the description that I have given it elsewhere: “a series of fictional vignettes informed by scientific discoveries but written, directed, and paced as self-contained stories understandable with only a minimum of narration”.

    Spot on criticisms, I think. One thing to note, however: the fight at the watering hole is actually inspired by real natural events: the so-called “battle at Kruger” video. All the participants have their own independent, selfish motivation that nevertheless result in the appearance of concerted action.

  2. the diggler says:

    So sad. I had a lot of expectations for this one.

  3. Walter says:

    Well, darn. My expectations were lowered after seeing the clips, but I’ll still try to enjoy it for what it is. The good news we don’t have to wait much longer for Planet Dinosaur and Terra Nova. (crossing my fingers)

  4. Doug says:

    “…perpetuate the image of a paleontologist as a white male?”- Kathleen Springer (senior curator of geology at the San Bernardino County Museum) told me that she was approached by the makers of “Prehistoric Monsters Revealed” because their documentary was, as usual, a sausage fest (she did appear in it though).

  5. Jason S. says:

    If this series was broadcast on a channel like Cartoon Network, I think audiences would be more understanding to the intentions of this series. But the fact that the series is produced and distributed by Discovery Channel – a network that promises to provide some sort of informative programming – is a real abomination. I’m not completely surprised about this, given that Discovery Channel and its sister networks have broken that aforementioned promise and become disturbingly more populist (and thus less popular). Nevertheless, it just sad that the filmmakers know no clear distinction between fact and fantasy when making these types of “wildlife documentaries”. A good work in such a genre should have made the dinosaurs’ locomotion and behavior resemble those of living animals in the wild. But instead, Discovery has to sensationalize and anthropomorphize the whole experience just so that it can sell to the masses.

    The series hasn’t even been broadcast yet, and already I feel like I’ve seen it all by viewing the preview clips that have been popping all over YouTube. (By the time the Torvosaurus “WWE free-for-all” was on my computer screen, my will to live on this Earth any longer was fading fast.) To see such talent from the paleontologists and paleoartists involved wasted on such childish stuff is a disgrace to everyone else who is working their asses off bringing prehistory back to life.

    Hopefully the link below will cheer you up, Brian. Ah, thank God for Britain:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDAAbZonfOQ

  6. Oh come now fellas. What do you expect from a channel that starts a program (for example) with “Could this be the Loch Ness Monster?” or “Have We Been Contacted By Alien Civilizations?”… as IF.

    Maybe they should have stuck to MY perception of the paleobiz over at http://C4CS.tripod.com hee hee hee

  7. Kathy says:

    I watched the Dinosaur Revolution last night on TV. It was televised for 2 hours split into 2 sections. It was entertaining and clearly evident that they are appealing to a younger audience, which IMO is great.
    Most adults watching the program would have understood that artistic license was being taken and a lot of speculation went into making it. That is okay since the purpose of the program was to inspire and fascinate a young audience and urge them to go into paleontology or other related sciences. They will have time enough to discover where the ever-changing truth lies.

  8. Brett Booth says:

    I liked the second one so much I watched it again! And while I agree with the criticisms I think the dinosaurs were beautifully done, sure the scenes were a bit over the top, but they were at least entertaining. I fell asleep during Dinosaur Planet, twice. This had me waiting for the commercials to be over. I think that’s the first Torvosaurus in CG, and it was gorgeous! The twitching of the Allosaurus jaw, the way the hands were on the ground when it was stalking, the fact that it was stalking at all!

    Using the broken jaw like that on the Allosaurus was brilliant. It may appear not much real science got through, But some did, those finally look like the animals I’ve seen skeletons of. This so reminded me of the old Disney ‘documentaries’ of Africa, took me back. Over the top stories be darned!

    Best!

    Brett

  9. Robert Sloan says:

    I have to agree with this critique. However, one point about Dinosaur Revolution was very enjoyable to me. I loved the colors in the various animals. The artists lightened up and went to various bird and reptile sources for dramatic colors and markings. Just because large mammals tend to be shades of brown and gray doesn’t mean that archosauria couldn’t be iridescent peacock blue with red flashes.

    Yet the colors were reasonable too. I liked the seductive tail-tip fans on Eoraptor females and the gorgeous plumage on the bigger raptor – it reminded me of some bird of paradise mating sequences and was thoroughly splendid.

    Most of the critique is that it’s mislabeled as revolutionary science rather than a dinosaur tribute. I was itching for one, really liked it and enjoyed it despite those flaws.

    What I’d love to see in this vein is someone to turn “Raptor Red” into either a full length movie or a TV miniseries. The story was strong and brilliant, it could be done with a little narration and stay true to the feel of the book. Obviously there’d be some changes in how the Utahraptors and others are presented, plumage could be added to update it. I trust Professor Bakker to be up to date enough that he could work on the project and keep it true to the science as well as the story.

  10. Art Matthews says:

    Let me start by saying I love paleontology and am an amateur student in the field. But, Wow, who writes this crap? It must have been Disney due to the dinosaurs having human emotions that display love, compassion, jealousy, and strategy. If these animals over 230 million years ago had these emotions, wow what happened to evolving into bigger and better? I love the animations but get so sick and tired of these so called “Doctors of Paleontology” revealing these so called new understandings to us. The show claims evidence for these new findings but all I’ve seen is blue glowie Paleontology doctors telling me stories. There is a difference between theories and evidence. Great show though if you mute it. :)

  11. Dr.Dino says:

    Well, it certainly is a totally different format in dinosaur shows and I really don’t know what to feel besides “I like it! Bring it more!”.

    It needed more Miragaia and Octávio Mateus though. :P

  12. Vrahno says:

    I enjoyed the two episodes that have aired so far a bit more than I anticipated, but for me it still is an “It’s okay” kind of deal, not an “I want to see more” kind of one.

    Having re-watched some of the segments a handful of times, though, I must say the animation for the first episode was indeed horribly bad at places. The animals just slid across the terrain, almost every jump seemed to be defying the laws of physics, and the interaction with the environment was pitiful. In a way, these reminded me of the primitive animations I once tried to make, only that, you know, I made those in like three days, not three years.

    But this just made watching the second episode more of a visual delight.

  13. [...] Dinosaur Revolution, Discovery’s four-part prehistoric miniseries, was originally meant to be a different kind of show. No narration, no talking heads, no humans whatsoever—just dinosaurs and their contemporaries acting out stories in a restored Mesozoic world. Frustratingly, worries about the show’s appeal forced the original vision of the show to be scrapped, and this is not the first time a wordless dinosaur drama has been turned into something else. [...]

  14. [...] have already said plenty about Discovery’s new prehistoric tribute, Dinosaur Revolution, but my paleo-blogging [...]

  15. Miller Donaldson says:

    “If this series was broadcast on a channel like Cartoon Network, then I think people would understand. But the fact that this series is produced and broadcast by Discovery Channel, a network that promises informative programming, is a real abomination.” Have you even seen the show?! Don’t just make random assumptions about a show you only know from one mediocre review. This review is wildly exaggerated, by the way. In fact, the only two instances in the show that I found the least bit cartoony were the Tom and Jerry style rivalry between the Ornitholestes and the Rhamphorhynchus and the clip I saw on their website that included an Anhanguera flying straight into a cliffside. And this isn’t anything like you’d see on Cartoon Network. You probably also assume they talk, don’t you. The dinosaurs look realistic and are anatomically correct. Saying that this belongs on Cartoon Network is like saying that Walking with Dinosaurs belongs on Cartoon Network. And Discovery Channel hasn’t at all broken its promise that it will display only informative programming, Dinosaur Revolution is very informative. Why don’t you go criticize Jurassic Fight Club, now that was a bad documentary. Sorry if this comment was slightly dramatic, but at least watch the show before you submit such criticism.

  16. Trying to spread the word: just got the word this morning that the network executives have decided to postpone episodes 3 and 4 so that they won’t air on the tenth anniversary of Sept. 11. I’ll be back here with additional information when the new date is announced.

  17. Follow up: rescheduled date is Tuesday Sept. 13, 9-11 pm.

  18. Correction to the correction: it will be on The Science Channel, not Discovery.

  19. The animation was done by several different companies and some was not what was hoped for, to be polite. But the second episode and much of what is yet to come is as good as it gets, I feel- and have you ever seen better LOOKING dinosaurs anywhere? Much of the gripes need to be pointed at the network, not the creators, not that it matters in the end— but there may be a “creator’s cut” version in the future that will put everything right so if you find the show “to your liking BUT…” stay tuned!

  20. Chuck says:

    “Correction to the correction: it will be on The Science Channel, not Discovery.”

    Great. Way to leave us with basic cable out in the cold.

  21. [...] before. The genus Troodon is a common staple of dinosaur books and documentaries (including Dinosaur Revolution), and it looks like a more slender version of more imposing predators such as Deinonychus. [...]

  22. Tiina Aumala says:

    I finally got to see the first episode and a large part of the second one. I think I could have enjoyed it as what it is – pure fiction with some misleadingly realistic-looking dinosaurs used as the main characters – if not for the tacked on narrator constantly pointing out the bleedingly obvious. It doesn’t take long to realize Dinosaur Revolution has more in common with Disney’s Dinosaur than Walking With Dinosaurs, but the pretense it’s somehow still a scientific documentary is jarring, and the bits with the talking heads constantly break the narrative flow.

    If they released a pure cartoon cut with the narration and other extras edited out, I’d buy it. And place it on the animation shelf next to Rango. As it is, I’m not sure if I want to watch another whole episode.

  23. [...] have been on-screen quite a bit lately. Dinosaur Revolution, Terra Nova and Planet Dinosaur have all brought a number of the prehistoric creatures—mostly [...]

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