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The Land That Time Forgot (1974 film) The Land That Time Forgot (2009 film) The Land Unknown; The Last Dinosaur; The Last Dragon (2004 film) Legend of Dinosaurs & Monster Birds; Lost Continent (1951 film) The Lost World (1925 film) The Lost World (1992 film) The Lost World (1998 film) The Lost World (2001 film) The Lost World (1960 film)
Cowboys vs Dinosaurs: 2015: United States [citation needed] The Crater Lake Monster: 1977: United States [citation needed] Creation: 1931 United States [18] [19] David Attenborough’s Natural History Museum Alive: 2014 United Kingdom Documentary [20] [21] Destroy All Monsters: 1968: Japan: Godzilla Franchise [citation needed] Dino Dana: The ...
Cinematic films Title Running time Director Year released Notes Resan (The Journey) : 873 min (14 hr, 33 min) Peter Watkins: 1987 [1]Exergue – on documenta 14: 848 min (14 hr, 8 min)
This is a list of monster movies, about such creatures as extraterrestrial aliens, giant animals, Kaiju (the Japanese counterpart of giant animals, but they can also be machines and plants), mutants, supernatural creatures, or creatures from folklore, such as Bigfoot or the Loch Ness Monster.
Howard Thompson of The New York Times wrote, "If ever there was a tired, synthetic, plodding sample of movie junk, it's this 'epic' about two prehistoric animals hauled from an underwater deep-freeze by some island engineers." [3] The film was adapted into a comic book of the same name. [7] It was parodied by RiffTrax on August 28, 2014. [8] [9]
Supersaurus was likely the world's longest dinosaur — around 137 feet, on average, from nose to tail. Scientists crowned the world's longest dinosaur — a Supersaurus longer than 3 school buses ...
For documentaries about avian dinosaurs see Category:Documentary films about birds. Pages in category "Documentary films about dinosaurs" The following 15 pages are in this category, out of 15 total.
Argentinosaurus (meaning "lizard from Argentina") is a genus of giant sauropod dinosaur that lived during the Late Cretaceous period in what is now Argentina.Although it is only known from fragmentary remains, Argentinosaurus is one of the largest known land animals of all time, perhaps the largest, measuring 30–35 m (98–115 ft) long and weighing 65–80 t (72–88 short tons).