EVOLUTION of T-REX in MOVIES & TV: Size Comparison (1918-2022)
FilmCore FilmCore
1.23M subscribers
15,358,338 views
0

 Published On Premiered May 1, 2022

#PaidAd For a chance to win a $200 amazon gift card and also an exclusive Jurassic World Figure, download Jurassic World Alive using my link on your mobile device or tablet: https://bit.ly/JWAFilmCore
If we get to 5000 downloads using my link above, I will do another giveaway!

For exclusive updates, follow Jurassic World Alive on social:

Facebook:   / jurassicworldalive  
Instagram:   / jurassicworldalive  
Twitter:   / jworldalive  
YouTube:    / jurassicworldalive  

To enter for a chance to win a $200 amazon gift card and the Jurassic World figure, DOWNLOAD using my link above, screenshot yourself at level 5 AND collect a T-rex (Gen1) and DM me on Twitter! Or send it to this email - [email protected]

If you're a pre-existing player then we ask you to: uninstall your current game and REINSTALL with my link, use your current account, then level up a further 11,100 XP pts and send screenshots before and after, and level up your T-rex by 150 DNA pts and send screenshots before and after

My alliance is named: AllianceCore

- 3 winners will be selected in one month since publish date and each will receive 1 $200 Amazon Gift Card and 1 T-rex Figure!

Jam City and Universal Studios Licensing are NOT SPONSORS of this sweepstakes. Terms and conditions apply.

© 2018-2022 Universal City Studios LLC and Amblin Entertainment, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

Helps out the channel a lot! Thank you! :D
A 3D comparison of all the different depictions of T-rex in movies and television (1918-2022)! Hope you enjoy! :D
Help Support me on PATREON! -   / filmcore  
Discord -   / discord  

Its important to note that Gwangi and some others from early on are typically falsely attributed to be Allosaurus, but that's not the case. Ray Harryhausen, the creator of Gwangi, stated that he envisioned Gwangi as the off spring of a T-rex and an Allosaur, describing him as an "Allo-rex." The design is based off of early T-rex paleoart, but with the size of an Allosaurus. As for the Meat-Eater and some of the other early ones, the knowledge of theropods was pretty lacking in the early 1900s, which is why T-rexes at that time were depicted with 3 fingers instead of 2, and the names were used kind of interchangeably. But the size of them really shows which dinosaur its supposed to depict, as only the T-rexes were that large.

Credits:
Special thanks to Zul for help on some of the models -   / zulhazreenzulk1  
All others made by me! :)

If I missed any credits please email me and I'll do my best to correct it! Cheers!

#JurassicWorld
#T-rex
#Evolution of
#PrehistoricPlanet

Animated in Blender 3.0, rendered in Unreal Engine 5, edited in Adobe CC.

Interesting to note that the vast majority of the sizes for the rexes weren't declared, so I used stills from their respective sources to size them up accurately where possible. Namely seeing how they compare in wide shots to objects or persons that we know the height or size of. Hence why most of the estimates for the rexes that star in movies with people should be pretty accurate, for example the V-rex from King Kong (used Naomi Watts in a wide shot to size appropriately), Carnosaur (used the Bobcat he fights in the movie in a wide shot to compare), and most others from the silver screen. For things like Fantasia or Gwangi, I used their sizes in comparison to the height of other dinosaurs they share the scenes with to compare. The ones that were impossible to really size accurately however were the ones in Dinosaur documentaries, as there just isn't something concrete to size them up to. No people share the shot. So for these they're pretty much all sized up to 12m/40 ft in length, and then seeing what their height is at the hip. I think this works though as those docs tend to be going for scientific accuracy, and most rexes found are around that length ballpark. Also I use as much reference as possible when making the models, so that should minimize any sizing errors, at least any egregious ones, as they should be pretty accurate to their on screen counterparts. Its then funny to see when the source itself is completely wrong. For example the Clash of the Dinosaurs rex is labeled as 40ft in length, and 18 ft tall. But sizing my model to 40 ft long revealed that the height is much lower, at about 14ft or so tall. I've thought of adding like an official FIlmCore seal of approval for the "estimates" as I do actually go to some lengths to make sure its as accurate as possible. Thought of maybe like an "FC estimate" but it'll look weird if I can't explain it I think. I hope that makes sense, and that it's at least somewhat interesting. Its hard to explain without pictures the process I go through. I actually think its kind of interesting. Anyways, really hope you enjoyed!

Become a member! Exclusive perks!
   / @filmcore  

show more

Share/Embed