Dinosaur Hunt Song

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Jan 10, 2000  After seeing a dinosaur movie, Jay Jay, Tracy and Herky decide to go on a hunt for a real-live dinosaur. When they spot mysterious footprints at the airport, they are convinced they're dinosaur footprints until learning the true nature about the dinosaurs' true life.

We know there are no dinosaurs living today, yet children love to pretend they are these gigantic creatures still roaming the Earth. They feel powerful and independent as they play and talk about these dinosaurs from long ago. Through play, toddlers begin to gain control over their excitement and fear, however there may be some little ones who are scared and shy away. This is OK – never push a child to participate in an activity where they are afraid. This article presents dinosaur activities to use throughout your curriculum that are fun and fearless. Make a Dinosaur HatIf a toddler wants to become a dinosaur, he needs to look like one. This simple hat project is one children love to wear.

Most of this project is done by the teacher with a little help from the children. It’s not the art project that is important here, it’s how the children feel when wearing it and use their dramatization skills in imaginary play. Use a paper bowl as the base of this hat.

Kudos 2 is the life-simulation strategy game from Positech Games (makers of Kudos, Democracy and Rock Legend).Kudos is the original inspiration for the game SimSocial by EA (also known as the myspace sims game). Kudos 2.

Make sure the size fits the toddler’s head. Help the toddlers paint the outside surface of this plate green. Attach a wide ribbon or fabric strip to the backside of the hat with a stapler. This ribbon should hang down to the shoulders. Cover the staple with tape to avoid scratches or pulled hair. Cut out spike or 'plates' from green construction paper and invite the toddlers to glue these onto the ribbon. Glue on two pom-poms to the front of the hat for dinosaur eyes.Go on a Dinosaur Fossil DigToddlers love to dig in the sandbox outdoors or in the sand table in the classroom.

Purchase plastic dinosaurs and hide them in the sand or cornmeal (as an alternative to sand in smaller containers). Tell the children they are on a 'fossil hunt' and to dig for the dinosaurs. Toddlers can use their hands, a plastic shovel, or large kitchen spoon. As they hunt, sing this fun song together to the tune of 'A Hunting We Will Go.' Dinosaur hunting we will go,Dinosaur hunting we will go.We’ll catch a dinosaur and look for more,And then we’ll let them go! Dinosaurs at Circle TimePlace some plastic or stuffed dinosaurs on the floor in the middle of your circle.

Have one player at a time choose a dinosaur to hug and give a pretend kiss. Let his game continue until all children have had a turn. Recite this verse as each child visits the dinosaurs.One day while walking down the street,Some lovable dinosaurs I did meet.One made a sound just like this (toddler makes a sound)So I took it home and gave it a kiss!Author Unknown (taken from On Dinosaur Days by Sherry Burrell First Teacher Press Print a Dinosaur BookletThere are a variety of dinosaur materials that can be used to make this booklet; think about dinosaur rubber stamps, cookie cutters, stickers, and precut foam shapes. Use this booklet as a pre-math activity. Staple several sheets of paper together.

Number each page. Page 1 should have a large number one drawn on the sheet and continue this process on all sheets.

You can be safe from 1 to 3 in a toddler booklet. Decide which art medium you want to use. Toddlers can use a dinosaur stamp or cookie cutter dipped in a small amount of non-toxic tempera paint and print one dinosaur on page 1, two dinosaurs on page 2, and so on. Foam or paper shapes can be glued on in the same manner. Of course stickers are the easiest to place on each page. Reinforce counting skills as you help the toddlers read their dinosaur booklets aloud.Enjoy these toddler activities with your little Paleontologists. This is sure to become that may be asked to be repeated from time to time.

Use these activities in conjugation with a. This subject will follow these children from grade to grade.Photo credit: https://www.hasslefreeclipart.com/clipartcartanim/dinosaur.html.

The Last Dinosaur
Directed byAlexander Grasshoff
Shusei Kotani
Produced byArthur Rankin, Jr.
Jules Bass
Noboru Tsuburaya
Written byWilliam Overgard
StarringRichard Boone
Joan Van Ark
Steven Keats
Music byMaury Laws
CinematographyMasaharu Ueda
Edited byMinoru Kozono
Yoshitami Kuroiwa
Tatsuji Nakashizu
Rankin/Bass
Tsuburaya Productions
Distributed byToho
  • February 11, 1977
92 minutes (U.S.)
106 minutes (Japan)
CountryJapan
United States
LanguageEnglish
Japanese (dubbed)

The Last Dinosaur (Polar Probe Ship: Polar Borer - 極底探険船ポーラーボーラ) is a 1977 Japanese/American tokusatsu co-production, co-directed by Alexander Grasshoff and Tsununobu Kotani, billed as Tom Kotani,[1] and co-produced by Japan's Tsuburaya Productions, and Rankin/Bass Productions. The film was filmed at Tsuburaya Studios in Tokyo.[1] The film was intended for a US theatrical release, but failed to find a distributor and ended up as a television film, airing on ABC on February 11, 1977 in an edited 95-minute run time. The film was eventually picked up for overseas markets by Cinema International Corporation, where it was released in the full 106-minute version as a double bill in the UK with the edited-down version of Sorcerer (considered a remake of 'The Wages of Fear'). Toho also picked up distribution rights to The Last Dinosaur in Japan for a theatrical release utilizing the 106-minute uncut version in English language with subtitles, and later debuted on Japanese television dubbed in Japanese.

The film stars Richard Boone and Joan Van Ark. William Overgard wrote the screenplay. The score was composed, as was most of the music for all Rankin/Bass specials and series, by Maury Laws, while the title song 'He's the Last Dinosaur', with lyrics by Jules Bass, was sung by Nancy Wilson, and arranged and conducted by Bernard Hoffer.

Plot[edit]

Wealthy big-game hunter Maston Thrust (Richard Boone) has a multimillion-dollar company, Thrust Inc., which drills for oil under the polar caps with a manned laser drill, called the 'Polar Borer'. Following one expedition, only one man, geologist Chuck Wade (Steven Keats), returns; he explains that the drill was going through a routine check in the icecaps when it surfaced into a valley super-heated by a volcano. When the crew, except for Wade, began exploring the area, they were devoured by a giant Tyrannosaurus rex. Thrust decides to go there himself to study the creature. He brings with him Chuck; Bunta (Luther Rackley), a Maasai tracker; Dr. Kawamoto (Tetsu Nakamura); and Frankie Banks (Joan Van Ark), a Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer selected by the Press Pool. Thrust is initially unwilling to let Frankie join the crew, but she manages to convince him to allow her on the expedition by seducing him.

Dinosaur Hunt Song

Upon arriving at the isolated valley using the Polar Borer, the group notices flying Pteranodons. Once they raft to shore, they are almost killed by a Uintatherium. After setting up camp, Maston, Chuck, Bunta, and Frankie go out looking for the T. rex while Kawamoto remains at the camp. The party encounters the T. rex and narrowly escape from it. Afterwards, the T. rex comes across the camp, destroying it and killing Kawamoto. It then attacks the Polar Borer and throws it into a canyon containing a bone field. While he continues his attack on the Polar Borer, a Triceratops unearths itself from the canyon and the two clash. After a fierce battle, the T. rex kills the Triceratops, first by tearing into its side with its foot claws, then, for the coup de grace, by biting into its neck.

The group returns to the destroyed camp and notice Kawamoto is gone, as well as the Borer, which they mistakenly believe was sunk. Enraged, Thrust vows to kill the dinosaur. After a few months pass, the group is now living in a cave and has a number of encounters with cavemen in the area, but are able to turn them away with a handmade crossbow. They also befriend a cavewoman (Masumi Sekiya), which they name Hazel. While Hazel helps Frankie wash her hair, the T. rex returns. Frankie is able to flee to a cave, with the T. rex trying to get in. Thrust, Bunta, and Wade are able to turn it away with a large boulder tied to its tail. Thrust decides to kill the T. rex once and for all with a catapult.

After building the catapult, they wait for the dinosaur. Out hunting, Wade finds the Borer and realizes it is still operable. However, Thrust refuses to leave, wanting to kill the T. rex first. Wade and Frankie leave the camp to get the Borer fixed and then leave, while Thrust and Bunta remain. Once the Borer is launched back in the water, Frankie goes back to convince the others to leave with them one last time. While tracking the T. rex, Bunta is eaten. Frankie reunites with Thrust and helps him use the catapult on the T. rex, but it only injures it. The T. rex then goes on a rampage and destroy their catapult.

In the wake of the destruction, Wade arrives and states that they have to leave now or they will be stuck in the valley. Frankie pleads with Thrust to go with them and to leave the T. rex, as it is the 'last one'. However, Thrust replies 'So am I..' and is therefore left behind with Hazel.

Cast[edit]

(in credit order)

  • Richard Boone as Maston Thrust Jr.
  • Joan Van Ark as Francesca 'Frankie' Banks
  • Steven Keats as Chuck Wade
  • Luther Rackley as Bunta
  • Masumi Sekiya as Hazel (cavewoman)
  • William Ross as Hal (mother 1 chief technician)
  • Carl Hansen as Barney
  • Tetsu Nakamura as Dr. Kawamoto
  • Nancy Magsig as Thrust's girl on plane
  • Don Maloney as mother 1 captain
  • Vanessa Cristina as reporter
  • James Dale
  • Hyoe Enoki
  • Shunsuke Kariya as caveman leader
  • Gary Gundassen
  • Toru Kawai as the Tyrannosaurus
  • Katsumi Nimiamoto as Triceratops (front end)

Production[edit]

Unlike other bigger-budgeted movies that have used state-of-the-art effects (i.e.: Stop Motion, puppets, etc.) for the dinosaurs, this movie uses the cheaper 'man in a suit' method, much like the Godzilla movies of the 1960s and 1970s. (The sound department have even borrowed Godzilla's trademark roar and occasionally mixed it into the T. Rex's cry.) The 'ceratopsian' (Uintatherium), as well as the Triceratops were done through the 'two guys in a horse-suit' technique. The scale (size) of the Tyrannosaurus also changes literally from scene to scene, in some cases it appears to be over 40–50 feet tall (when it attacks the borer) and can carry it in its mouth, when the Polar Borer is easily well over 10 feet in diameter. However, they do correctly state in the beginning of the movie that a Tyrannosaurus Rex is 20 feet high and 40 feet long.

The suit of Tyrannosaurus was created by Tsuburaya Production, and was later used for Ururu of the TokusatsuAnimeDinosaur War Aizenborg. Also, while the film featured mostly an English-speaking cast a Japanese dub was created for the television release in Japan. The Japanese theatrical release as well as the Japanese laser disc used the English voice cast with Japanese subtitles.

Release[edit]

On May 22, 2009, Toho Video released the movie on DVD for the first time anywhere in the world. The DVD contains both English and Japanese audio tracks as well as an audio commentary in Japanese. This release uses an anamorphic 1.78:1 widescreen transfer of the uncut 106-minute theatrical release prepared by U.S. rights holder Warner Bros., and also contains a 13-minute interview with visual effects director Kazuo Sagawa, a photo gallery (which includes storyboards, production designs, and behind-the-scenes photos), a 15-minute behind-the-scenes production reel narrated by Kazuo Sagawa, and the original Japanese release trailer.

In the U.S., Warner Home Video released the movie on DVD through their Warner Archive Collection as a 'made to order' DVD on March 22, 2011. This release uses the same widescreen transfer of the 106-minute uncut version as the Japanese Toho release, but lacks supplemental materials.

Related[edit]

  • Journey to the Beginning of Time (1955)

References[edit]

  1. ^ abGalbraith, Stuart (1994). Japanese Science Fiction, Fantasy and Horror Films. McFarland. p. 379.

External links[edit]

  • The Last Dinosaur on IMDb
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