Rediscover the incredible world of dinosaurs with this superb Jurassic Park Film Poster, a cult classic!
- Paper characteristic:
- 🎨 Canvas: world standard in terms of printing and imitating a “painting canvas” appearance .
- By default, the poster contains a 4 cm white border for framing (frame not included). If you don't want it, please choose "without white border".
- ✅ Size: several choices available . ✅
- Great UV resistance .
- Maximum color vibrancy, without reflections .
- Recycled paper, guaranteeing respect for the environment.
- Poster carefully packaged and delivered in a protective tube for total protection .
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FREE STANDARD DELIVERY .
⚠️ Frame not included. ⚠️
Description of this Jurassic Park Movie Poster
Jurassic Park is a science fiction adventure film directed by American filmmaker Steven Spielberg and released in 1993. Based on the book of the same name by Michael Crichton, the film follows a group of people to an amusement park where find cloned dinosaurs created by a billionaire philanthropist and a team of genetic scientists. During an evaluation visit before opening to the general public, the dinosaurs escape and endanger the lives of the people present in the park.
Before its publication in 1990, four movie studios were interested in adapting Crichton's book, but Universal Pictures obtained the rights to the book and hired Spielberg to direct it and Crichton to adapt it for the big screen. The final screenplay was written by Koepp, who left out several explanatory and violent passages from the novel and made changes to the characters. Filming took place in California and Hawaii between August and November 1992, with a cast consisting primarily of actors Richard Attenborough, Sam Neill, Jeff Goldblum and Laura Dern. Post-production, supervised by Spielberg from Poland during the filming of Schindler's List, lasted until May 1993. It included innovative CGI and life-size animatronic models to recreate the film's dinosaurs, with the support from Industrial Light & Magic and Stan Winston. To design the film's sound, Spielberg invested in the creation of DTS, a company specializing in digital surround sound formats.
Jurassic Park proved to be a success grossing over $900 million worldwide during its original theatrical release and was ranked as the highest-grossing film in cinema history until its release. from Titanic (1997). Critics praised its groundbreaking special effects, John Williams' music and Spielberg's direction. He has also won more than twenty awards, including three Academy Awards for his technical achievements in visual effects and sound. After its re-release in 3D in 2013 to commemorate the 20th anniversary of its release, it became the 17th film to exceed $1 billion in revenue. In 2018, the Library of Congress recognized it as "culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant" and it was selected for preservation in the National Film Registry.
On Isla Nublar, located near Costa Rica, an employee of InGen - International Genetic Technologies, Inc. is killed by a dinosaur while being transported to Jurassic Park, an amusement park whose main attraction consists of dinosaurs cloned by geneticists. As a result, director John Hammond is being urged by the park's investors to carry out an investigation to ensure the site is safe before it opens to the general public.
Soon after, paleontologist Alan Grant, paleobotanist Ellie Sattler - whom he visits during a paleontological dig in Montana - mathematician Ian Malcolm and investor representative Donald Gennaro arrive on the island to analyze the specimens and Jurassic Park facilities. As part of their welcome tour, they are informed about the process used to clone dinosaurs from fossilized material found in prehistoric mosquitoes that fed on the blood of dinosaurs in the Jurassic era and were preserved in the amber since then. While most of the team is touring the park in electric vehicles with Hammond's grandsons, Lex and Tim Murphy, a tropical cyclone hits the park, causing heavy rain and leaving those who don't in solitary confinement. were not evacuated. At the same time, programmer Dennis Nedry crashes the park's computer security system to break into the labs alone and steal dinosaur embryos to offer to a rival company, InGen. Nedry's action disrupts the power supply to several of the facility's perimeter fences that protect the dinosaurs, and disables the vehicles transporting visitors right in front of the Tyrannosaurus rex facility.
The dinosaurs eventually escape the facility, including the T. rex, which Grant and Hammond's grandchildren manage to escape from after abandoning their vehicles, while Malcolm is injured and is later helped by Ellie and Robert Muldoon, park official. The next day, Grant and the children encounter wild dinosaur nests on the way to the visitor center, implying that the creatures procreated despite having their genetic material manipulated. In order to unlock the security systems, engineer Ray Arnold, Ellie and Muldoon go to the power distribution shack to manually activate the switches. Later, Ellie finds Grant, the children, Hammond and Malcolm in the computer control room. After calling for help by phone, velociraptors infiltrate the room, forcing the protagonists to go to the park's visitor center to find safety.
In the final scenes, the T. rex is seen attacking the velociraptors in the visitor center, while Ellie, Grant, Malcolm, Hammond and the children board a helicopter at the park's helipad and leave the island. On board the plane, the children fall asleep on Grant's lap as he watches the pelicans fly in the distance. It should be noted that the original storyline ended with a T. rex skeleton falling onto the velociraptors in the visitor center, shortly before Hammond arrived and shot them down with a shotgun. This conclusion having been considered simplistic, it was decided to incorporate the scene where the T. rex attacks the dinosaurs and allows the protagonists to escape the island by helicopter.