Animated Feature Film
Dino Time
- by Adam Beechen et al., directed by ģµģ¤ģ and John Kafka
- (Cannes Film Festival, 14 May 2010)
Rocket-boarding Ernie Fitzpatrick is always pushing his momās rules to the limit (and beyond) along with his best friend Max (and usually tailed by his tattle-tale sister Julia). On one escapade, the trio accidentally activates Maxās dadās time machine and end up back in the age of friendly, anthropomorphic T. Rexes.
Although the film was made and initially released in Korea, it had a simultaneous, elaborate English production of the audio with an intention to release the work simultaneously in the US. In watching it, I wondered whether the animation software may have produced two versions of the lip movement for the two different languages, but I havenāt found any discussion of that. I guess I just donāt know the real details.: maybe the original was only English audio with Korean subtitles. The film does have both native English and native Korean writers and directors. With all that, it seems to be an example of a multiple-language version film, and we decided to list the Korean version as the primary with the English as a variant. Please fill me in if you can!
The English version was released as Dino Time around the same time as ė¤ģ“ė ø ķģ (a phonetic rendering of Dino Time). For some reason, though, the planned US release was delayed until 2015, when it was retitled Back to the Jurassic. āMichael Main
Although the film was made and initially released in Korea, it had a simultaneous, elaborate English production of the audio with an intention to release the work simultaneously in the US. In watching it, I wondered whether the animation software may have produced two versions of the lip movement for the two different languages, but I havenāt found any discussion of that. I guess I just donāt know the real details.: maybe the original was only English audio with Korean subtitles. The film does have both native English and native Korean writers and directors. With all that, it seems to be an example of a multiple-language version film, and we decided to list the Korean version as the primary with the English as a variant. Please fill me in if you can!
The English version was released as Dino Time around the same time as ė¤ģ“ė ø ķģ (a phonetic rendering of Dino Time). For some reason, though, the planned US release was delayed until 2015, when it was retitled Back to the Jurassic. āMichael Main
See that carving? Itās been dated all the way back to the Cretacious period. Which is weird, ācause who could have carved it? No humans were around 145 million years ago, just dinosaurs.
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