Age Of Dinosaurs

Age Of Dinosaurs

A former firefighter turned security officer, Gabe Jacobs currently resides in Los Angeles with his teenage daughter Jade. He takes his daughter with him to a demonstration held by Justin, the Chief Executive Officer of Geneti-Tech. Justin claims that they have uncovered miracle regeneration techniques in which he stands up and walks out of the wheelchair. Then, he gives an example that they have already employed the same methods to fashion dinosaurs.

But some backstage here and there missteps occur and the dinosaurs break loose from the pen and begin to eat the visitors. Allowing his daughter to stay in a safe place with other children and women, Gabe wants to escape the Centre but looks for the exit after the security seal button is pressed on the convention hall.

What surprises many about Age of Dinosaurs is that it is not one of The Asylum’s mock-busters. The film comes two years before Jurassic World started moving in 2015, something that for The Asylum who usually release their mock-busters just a few days or at the most a week before their original counterparts is a long time.

The film, however, takes heavy inspiration from Jurassic Park (1993) businessman shows the world a dinosaur, dinosaurs break loose from their containment and its chaos. The key distinction is that Age of Dinosaurs has distinct B-level production values, and confined the romp to a convention center in Isla Sonora before the dinosaurs scream out into downtown Los Angeles.

Given that this film bears the Asylum trademark, the slung result is that the Age of Dinosaurs is not among the bad films of the studio and can even be rated as reasonable in the middle. Although the special effects are well executed on average, ranging from average to good. The reason for this is because the film was directed by Joseph J. Lawson, who was better known as the Visual Effects Supervisor for The Asylum, although he has had a crack at directing on several occasions on movies such as Nazis at the Center of the Earth (2012), which is one of the best services that the Asylum have ever delivered, Age of the Hobbits (2012), Alone for Christmas (2013) and Ardennes Fury (2014).

Therefore, it comes as no surprise how he is able to animate the dinosaur effects because out of all the Asylum directors, Lawson’s approach is a cut above the rest. And the opening his at a pretend demonstration goes well; C.E.O. Ronny Cox, who is in a wheelchair, stands up and demonstrates that the formula works and that goes downhill when the dinosaurs are on the loose.

People will have some fun as a T-Rex bears down on Treat Williams’ SUV through city streets towards the end. Most notably, there are some great shots of the dinosaurs battling with helicopters in an alley and some great wide shots of buildings’ destruction as they scale the structure in downtown Los Angeles.

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