Brontosaurus

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Brontosaurus
A herd of brontosauruses in King Kong (2005)
Alternate names Apatosaurus
Species Brontosaurus
Height 4.6 meters
Length 22 meters
Weight 15 tons
Forms None
Controlled by None
Relations None
Allies Other brontosauruses
Enemies Venatosaurus
Created by None
Played by Stop-motion, CGI
First appearance King Kong (1933)
Latest appearance King Kong (2005)
Design(s) None

Brontosaurus is a famous genus of extinct large herbivorous dinosaurs that lived during the late Jurassic period. A brontosaurus famously appeared in the 1933 film King Kong, while multiple brontosauruses appeared in the 2005 remake of the same name.


History

King Kong (1933)

A Brontosaurus chasing after the Venture crew in King Kong (1933)

While the Venture crew pursued King Kong across Skull Island to rescue Ann Darrow, they came upon a large swamp. The men created a raft and attempted to cross the swamp, but a brontosaurus' head suddenly emerged from the water and destroyed the raft, grabbing several of the men in its mouth and tossing them away like ragdolls. The surviving men swam to the shore and proceeded to run away into the woods.

King Kong (2005)

A herd of Brontosauruses in King Kong (2005)

While searching for Ann Darrow, who had been kidnapped by King Kong, Carl Denham and his crew came upon a herd of brontosauruses grazing. Denham attempted to film the dinosaurs, but the brontosauruses suddenly became agitated and began to stampede. The crew ran from the herd, with many of the men being trampled beneath the brontosauruses' massive feet. Denham and the others soon learned what the brontosauruses were running from; a pack of venatosauruses, small predatory dinosaurs descended from dromeosaurs like velociraptor. The venatosauruses pounced on their prey, causing the brontosauruses to fall over, crushing the humans beneath them and causing rock slides, while some of the men where mauled by the venatosauruses. Eventually, Denham and some of his crew managed to escape the stampeding herd and continued their trek through the island.

Filmography

Video Game Appearances

Gallery

Screenshots

King Kong (1933)

Post-Production

King Kong (1933)

Trivia

  • At the time the original King Kong was made, it was believed that brontosaurus was too large to be able to live on land and support its own body weight. For this reason, the brontosaurus in the film is portrayed as an aquatic dinosaur, and is also portrayed as being violent and carnivorous. Scientists now know that brontosauruses were fully terrestrial herbivorous dinosaurs.
  • The depiction of Brontosaurus in the original King Kong represent the animal at a time when it was sometimes considered to be in a distinct genus from the Apatosaurus, a related sauropod dinosaur. It was later decided that as a whole, the Brontosaurus was just another species of Apatosaurus, and thus the genus fell out of usage in the first half of the 20th century. However, in the early 21st century, the genus was revived again and determined by another team of paleontologists to be separate from Apatosaurus.

Real World
Era Icon - RKO.png
Era Icon - Universal.png
Kaiju