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To celebrate the release of Jurassic World, let's take a look at 12 things you probably
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didn't know about the fourth film in the dinosaur franchise.
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Although movies now tend to use visual effects and CGI rather than animatronics, director
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Colin Trevorrow was keen to use an animatronic dinosaur in Jurassic World as a way of paying
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tribute to special effects legends like Stan Winston who brought to life Jurassic Park's
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T-Rex, Velociraptors and Brachiosaurus. And, on top of that, Trevorrow thought an
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animatronic dinosaur would help the actors achieve the right intensity in their interaction
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with the giant creature.
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An animatronic Apatosaurus was created over a period of about three months by John Rosengrant
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and his team at Legacy Effects. The completed Apatosaurus was operated by
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Rosengrant and a team of four puppeteers, thanks to whom the creature could lift and
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turn its head, breathe through its nose and mouth, and blink and twitch its eyes.
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In fact, Chris Pratt found the creature so life-like that it gave him goosebumps!
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In tribute to Richard Attenborough and his character, John Hammond, who featured in the
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first two movies as the creator of Jurassic Park, a memorial statue stands in front of
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Jurassic World's Hammond Creation Lab. Like in the original movie, in his hand, Hammond
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has a cane which features a piece of amber on top with a mosquito inside, a nod to the
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fact that dinosaurs were brought back to life through DNA found in amber-trapped mosquitos.
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Jurassic World's Main Street was built from scratch in the enormous parking lot of an
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abandoned Six Flags amusement park in New Orleans.
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The lot used was around the size of six football fields.
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While filming was taking place in Hawaii, four hundred craftspeople constructed the
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Main Street sets, which feature everything you'd find at a real theme park including
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restaurants and stores complete with all kinds of theme park merchandise.
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In the movie, Jurassic World visitors looking for something to eat have lots of restaurants
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to choose from including Winston's Steakhouse, which is a nice nod to special effects legend
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Stan Winston, who won an Oscar for his work on Jurassic Park.
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The huge raptor arena, where Chris Pratt's character Owen works, was built for real using
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steel and cement, rather than fake set walls. Chris Pratt was blown away by the design team's
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work on the arena and said it felt strong enough to hold real-life dangerous animals!
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Many of the movie's interior sets including the Visitors' Centre, Dr Wu's genetics lab,
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and the Control Room were built and filmed on six stages at Big Easy Studios, which is
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located at NASA's Michoud Assembly Facility in New Orleans.
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Other big movies that have filmed at the Louisiana-based studios include Dawn Of The Planet Of The
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Apes and Terminator: Genisys.
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The Control Room, from which Bryce Dallas Howard's character Claire watches over the
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park, was made as immersive as possible for the actors.
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For example, while they were filming scenes there, the control room's wall of monitors
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displayed real footage, a lot of which had been shot during the production.
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Often a movie would place that footage on the monitors during post-production rather
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than playing it live during filming.
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Like the first three movies in the franchise, Jurassic World filmed in Hawaii.
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Filming took place for just over 30 days on the islands of Oahu and Kauai, and began at
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Honolulu Zoo, which was turned into Jurassic World's petting zoo.
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The design team built a full-scale paddock for the movie's new genetically modified dinosaur,
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Indominus rex, at Kualoa Ranch, which was also used for exterior locations such as Gyrosphere
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Valley.
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According to producer Patrick Crowley, Jurassic World's filmmakers wanted to avoid a repeat
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of the hurricane that destroyed all the sets during filming of the first movie, Jurassic
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Park! So, on the first day of the shoot in Hawaii,
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the movie's crew took part in a spiritual blessing ceremony, which they believed would
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pay homage to the sacred lands where they were filming.
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World-renowned palaeontologist Jack Horner has been a consultant on all four Jurassic
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movies. In fact, Horner's book "Digging Dinosaurs"
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was an important part of author Michael Crichton's research when he was writing Jurassic Park,
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and the character of Alan Grant was partly based on Horner.
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Horner's current research focuses on dinosaur evolution and includes reverse-evolving a
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dinosaur from a chicken, as birds are dinosaurs' closest descendants.
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On Jurassic World, Horner worked with the filmmakers as a technical consultant, particularly
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on the movie's new genetically-modified hybrid dinosaur, Indominus rex, and on designing
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the educational displays in the park's visitor centre.
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According to Jack Horner, when the original movie hit the big screen back in 1993, palaeontologists
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were starting to discover that dinosaurs actually had feathers.
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Nowadays, it's known that many carnivorous dinosaurs likely did have feathers; however
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this is not reflected in the Jurassic films because, as Horner says, the dinosaurs 'have
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to be consistent through all of the different movies.'
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Well, there you have it, 12 things you probably didn't know about Jurassic World!
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Now, let me know in the comments below, which is your favourite dinosaur from the Jurassic
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movies? And what would you like to see happen in a
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Jurassic World sequel? If you enjoyed this video, do please share
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it, hit the thumbs-up button and subscribe for more things you didn't know, as well as
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movie reviews and interviews. Thanks for watching! Yippee-ki-yay, movie
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lovers!