The Last Dinosaur: Difference between revisions

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{{Mtab
{{Tab
|soundtrack={{soundtracktab|soundtrack=The Last Dinosaur (Soundtrack)}}
|credits=The Last Dinosaur/Credits
}}
}}
{{Infopelicula
{{Infobox Film|ratings=yes
|type1        =Fire
|type1        =White
|type2        =White
|type2        =Fire
|header      ={{Rankin/Bass}}{{Slash}}{{Tsuburaya}}{{Slash}}{{Toho}} {{Kaijup}} {{Film}}
|image        =The Last Dinosaur Japanese Poster.jpg
|image        =The Last Dinosaur Japanese Poster.jpg
|caption      =Japanese The Last Dinosaur Poster
|caption      =A Japanese flyer for The Last Dinosaur
|nameoffilm  =''The Last Dinosaur''
|name        =''The Last Dinosaur''|titles=yes|alt-titles=yes
|dt          =''The Last Dinosaur''
|dt          =''The Last Dinosaur'' (1977)
|director    =Tsugunobu Kotani, Alexander Grasshoff
|jp-title    =''Sub-Polar Exploration Ship<br>Polar-Borer'' (1977)
|producer    =Noboru Tsuburaya,<br>Arthur Rankin Jr.,<br>Jules Bass,<br>Kazuyoshi Kasai,<br>Benni Korzen,<br>Kinshiro Ohkubo,<br>Masaki Izuka
|director    =[[wikipedia:Alexander Grasshoff|Alexander Grasshoff]], Tsugunobu Kotani
|producer    =[[wikipedia:Noboru Tsuburaya|Noboru Tsuburaya]], Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
|writer      =William Overgard
|writer      =William Overgard
|composer    =Kenjiro Hirose,<br>Maury Laws
|composer    =Maury Laws, Kenjiro Hirose
|distributor  =[[Toho Company Ltd.]]{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}},<br>American Broadcasting Company{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}
|produced    =[[Tsuburaya Productions]], [[Rankin/Bass]]|multiple=y
|rating      =Unrated
|distributor  =[[Toho-Towa]],{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}} ABC{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}
|budget      =?
|gross        =?
|runtime      =106 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>{{small|(1 hour, 46 minutes)}}<br>95 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br>{{small|1 hour, 35 minutes)}}
|runtime      =106 minutes{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>{{small|(1 hour, 46 minutes)}}<br>95 minutes{{sup|[[United States|US]]}}<br>{{small|1 hour, 35 minutes)}}
|designs      =[[ShodaiTirano]], [[ShodaiTorikera]], [[Pteranodon|ShodaiPutera]], ShodaiSeratopushian, ShodaiKame
|aspectratio  =1.85:1{{sup|[[Japan|JP]]}}<br>1.33:1{{sup|[[United States|US]] TV}}
}}
}}
'''''The Last Dinosaur''''' {{Nihongo|極底探検船: ポーラーボーラ|Kyokutei Tanken-sen: Pōrā-Bōra|lit. ''Expedition Under the Pole: Polar-Borer''}} is a [[1977]] {{Daikaiju eiga}} co-produced by [[Rankin/Bass Productions]] and [[Tsuburaya Productions]] and distributed by [[Toho Company Ltd.]]
{{Quote|A lost world!! Ruled by the largest man-eating monster of all!!|Tagline}}
'''''The Last Dinosaur''''' {{Nihongo|極底探険船ポーラーボーラ|Kyokutei Tankensen Pōrabōra|lit. "''Sub-Polar Exploration Ship Polar-Borer''"}} is a [[1977]] [[Japan]]ese-[[United States|America]]n [[tokusatsu]] [[:Category:Kaiju Films|kaiju film]] directed by [[wikipedia:Alexander Grasshoff|Alexander Grasshoff]] and Tsugunobu Kotani and written by William Overgard, with special effects by [[Kazuo Sagawa]]. Co-produced by [[Tsuburaya Productions]] and [[Rankin/Bass|Rankin/Bass Productions]], it stars Richard Boone, Joan Van Ark, Steven Keats, and [[Toru Kawai]]. The film first aired in the [[United States]] on ABC on February 11, 1977, and was released to [[Japan]]ese theaters by [[Toho-Towa]] on September 10 of the same year.
{{TOC}}
==Plot==
==Plot==
Wealthy big-game hunter Masten Thrust, using his company's advanced drilling vehicle, the [[Polar-Borer]], leads an expedition to a mysterious underground pocket beneath the North Pole which is inhabited by several dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures, including a tribe of primitive humans. The expedition takes a dangerous turn when a [[Tyrannosaurus rex]] destroys the Polar-Borer, leaving the crew stranded in a mysterious primitive world, where they are stalked by the T-Rex and various other dangerous creatures.
During an underwater oil drilling expedition, Thrust Industries' advanced submersible drilling vehicle, the [[Polar-Borer]], accidentally burrows into a gigantic underground cavern. The vessel's crew ventures out to explore, with one member, Chuck Wade, remaining behind in the Polar-Borer. However, the crew soon find themselves attacked in the jungle by a colossal predator, a ''[[Tyrannosaurus rex]]''. Wade manages to escape in the Polar-Borer, with all of his crew mates killed by the dinosaur. When Thrust Industries' CEO, multibillionaire Masten Thrust Jr., learns of the event, he orders a second Polar-Borer expedition to the strange underground world to investigate the presence of a prehistoric creature there, one on which he will be part of the crew. While as far as the public is concerned the expedition is for scientific purposes and grant closure for the crew members lost previously, Thrust - an accomplished big game hunter who had not faced a challenging hunt in years - intends to hunt the ''Tyrannosaurus'' himself and claim it as the ultimate trophy. Accompanying Thrust on the expedition are Wade, Japanese scientist Dr. Kawamoto, and an African tracker named Bunta. Francesca Banks, a journalist, convinces Thrust to bring her along on the expedition after seducing him.
 
The Polar-Borer is launched from Thrust Industries' oil platform Mother 1, and successfully bores through the polar ice and ocean floor until it surfaces in a lake within a jungle-covered underground cavern. Thrust, Wade, Bunta, and Francesca disembark to investigate, while Kawamoto remains behind to watch over their base camp. While exploring the jungle, they narrowly avoid being trampled by a stampeding ceratopsian. They later come upon a pond, where they find gigantic leeches, as well as a rock which they later discover is a [[List of minor monsters#Giant turtle|giant turtle]]. Meanwhile, the ''Tyrannosaurus'' that killed the crew of the last Polar-Borer discovers the expedition's base camp, killing Dr. Kawamoto and trashing the camp before making off with the Polar-Borer. The beast deposits its new prize in its lair, littered with the bones of other prey. Suddenly, a ''[[Triceratops]]'' erupts from underground and charges at the ''Tyrannosaurus'', goring it with its sharp horns. Despite sustaining injuries, the ''Tyrannosaurus'' kills its foe by biting down on its neck with its razor-sharp teeth, causing the ''Triceratops'' to bleed to death.
 
Thrust and the others soon find themselves stranded in the underground world, their every move stalked by both the ''Tyrannosaurus'' and a tribe of primitive humans. They are forced to camp in a cave and survive using the weapons they salvaged and hunting the local wildlife. Additionally, Francesca and Wade begin developing feelings for each other. When a large party of primitive men corner the trio, Thrust manages to kill their leader with a crossbow made from the ruins of Dr. Kawamoto's camp, convincing the others to stay far away from them from now on. However, a primitive woman takes an interest in the group, particularly Thrust, and follows them to their camp. Thrust is furious when the primitive woman tries to sleep with him and wants her thrown out of the camp, but Francesca decides to let her stay, naming her Hazel. One day as Hazel and Francesca are getting water from a lake, they are attacked by the ''Tyrannosaurus''. They narrowly manage to avoid its attack, convincing Thrust that they need to kill it. Thrust and Bunta begin preparing an elaborate trap for the ''Tyrannosaurus'', when Wade discovers the Polar-Borer in the monster's lair. He and Francesca try to convince Thrust to abandon his hunt and help them salvage the Polar-Borer, but find that Thrust's obsession has consumed him and that he wants nothing more than to kill the ''Tyrannosaurus'' himself. Wade and Francesca abandon Thrust to his hunt and manage to retrieve the Polar-Borer from the ''Tyrannosaurus'' ' lair using a pulley system, before finally pushing it back into the lake where it originally emerged. Wade begins repairs to allow the craft to escape, but Francesca goes back to try and convince Thrust to come with them.
 
As Wade nearly completes repairs on the Polar-Borer, the ''Tyrannosaurus'' finds and kills Bunta and prepares to do the same to Thrust and Francesca. Thrust is able to spring his trap, which catapults a gigantic boulder into the ''Tyrannosaurus'' ' head. While at first it seems to have been effective in bringing the beast down, the ''Tyrannosaurus'' soon gets back to its feet and destroys the catapult before escaping. Francesca begs Thrust to leave with her and Wade, but he continues to refuse to go home empty-handed. Francesca pleads with him to leave the ''Tyrannosaurus'' alone since it is "the last dinosaur," but Thrust simply replies that so is he. Thrust sees Francesca and Wade off as the Polar-Borer submerges and returns to the surface world. As Thrust hears the ''Tyrannosaurus'' ' roar echo through the jungle, he prepares to continue his hunt and is surprised when Hazel approaches him. Rather than shoo her off like before, Thrust finally decides to let Hazel join him, and the two set off into the jungle together.
==Staff==
==Staff==
{{Main|The Last Dinosaur/Credits}}
{{Staffs
{{Staffs
|Directed by=Tsugunobu Kotani, Alexander Grasshoff
|Directed by|[[wikipedia:Alexander Grasshoff|Alexander Grasshoff]], Tsugunobu Kotani
|Written by=William Overgard
|Written by|William Overgard
|Produced by=Noboru Tsuburaya, Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass, Kazuyoshi Kasai, Benni Korzen, Kinshiro Ohkubo, Masaki Izuka
|Executive producers|[[wikipedia:Noboru Tsuburaya|Noboru Tsuburaya]], Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
|Music by=Kenjiro Hirose, Maury Laws, Nancy Wilson
|Associate producers|Kinshiro Okubo, Masaki Izuka, Benni Korzen, Kazuyoshi Kasai
|Cinematography by=Shoji Ueda
|Music by|Maury Laws
|Edited by=Minoru Kozono, Yoshitami Kuroiwa, Tatsuji Nakashizu
|Arranged and conducted by|[[Kenjiro Hirose]]
|Production design by=Kazuhiko Fujiwara  
*Theme song "[[The Last Dinosaur (song)|The Last Dinosaur]]"
|Assistant Directing by=Shohei Tojo
|*Performed by|Nancy Wilson
|Special Effects by=Kazuo Sagawa, Yoshiyuki Yoshimura
|*Composed by|Maury Laws
|*Lyrics by|Jules Bass
|*Arranged and conducted by|Bernard Hoffer
|Cinematography by|Shoji Ueda
|Edited by|Tatsuji Nakashizu, Minoru Kozono
|Production design by|Kazuhiko Fujiwara
|First assistant director|Shohei Tojo
|Director of special effects|[[Kazuo Sagawa]]
|First assistant director of special effects|Yoshiyuki Yoshimura
|Visual effects by|[[Minoru Nakano]], Michihisa Miyashige
}}
}}
==Cast==
==Cast==
{{Main|The Last Dinosaur/Credits}}
{{Cast
{{Cast
|Richard Boone|Masten Thrust Jr.
|Richard Boone|Masten Thrust Jr., CEO of Thrust Industries
|Joan Van Ark|Francesca Banks
|Joan Van Ark|Francesca Banks, newspaper reporter
|Steven Keats|Chuck Wade
|Steven Keats|Chuck Wade, [[Polar-Borer]] crew
|Luther Rackley|Bunta
|Luther Rackley|Bunta, tracker
|Masumi Sekiya|Hazel
|Masumi Sekiya|Hazel, Primitive Woman
|William Ross|Hal
|[[William Ross]]|Hal
|Carl Hansen|Barney
|Carl Hansen|Barney
|Tetsu Nakamura|Dr. Kawamoto
|[[Tetsu Nakamura]]|Dr. Kawamoto, inventor of the Polar-Borer
|Don Maloney|Captain of Mother 1
|Don Maloney|Captain of Mother 1
|Vanessa Cristina|Reporter
|Vanessa Cristina|Reporter
|Shunsuke Kariya|Primal Man leader
|Shunsuke Kariya|Primal Man leader
|[[Toru Kawai]]|[[Tyrannosaurus rex]]
|[[Toru Kawai]]|''[[Tyrannosaurus rex|Tyrannosaurus]]''
|Katsumi Nimiamoto|Head of [[Triceratops]]
|[[Tatsumi Nikamoto]]|''[[Triceratops]]'' (front end)
}}
===Japanese dub===
{{Cast|notice=no
|Shuichiro Moriyama|Masten Thrust Jr.
|Michiko Hirai|Francesca Banks
|Katsunosuke Hori|Chuck Wade
}}
}}
==Appearances==
==Appearances==
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{{Col-2}}
{{Col-2}}
===Monsters===
===Monsters===
*[[Tyrannosaurus rex]] ([[ShodaiTirano]])
*''[[Tyrannosaurus rex]]''
*[[Triceratops]] ([[ShodaiTorikera]])
*''[[Triceratops]]''
*[[Pteranodon]]
*''[[Pteranodon]]''
*[[Ceratopsian]]
*[[Ceratopsian]]
*[[Prehistoric Turtle]]
*[[List of minor monsters#Giant turtle|Giant turtle]]
*{{tt|Boneyard|The skeletons of various prehistoric beasts litter the Tyrannosaurus' lair}}
*[[List of minor monsters#Giant fish|Giant fish]]
*[[List of minor monsters#Boneyard|Various skeletons]]
{{Col-2}}
{{Col-2}}
 
===Weapons, vehicles, and races===
===Weapons, Vehicles, and Races===
*[[Polar-Borer]]
*[[Polar-Borer]]
*[[Mother 1]]
*[[Mother 1]]
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==Gallery==
==Gallery==
{{Main|The Last Dinosaur/Gallery}}
{{Main|The Last Dinosaur/Gallery}}
==Soundtrack==
==Alternate titles==
{{Main|The Last Dinosaur (Soundtrack)}}
*'''''The Last Dinosaur''''' {{Nihongo|最後の恐竜|Saigo no Kyōryū|alternate Japanese title, translated from English title}}
==Alternate Titles==
*'''''The Last Dinosaur: Sub-Polar Exploration Ship Polar-Borer''''' {{Nihongo|最後の恐竜 極底探険船ポーラーボーラ|Saigo no Kyōryū: Kyokutei Tanken-sen Pōrābōra|Japanese video title}}
*'''''Expedition Under the Pole: Polar-Borer''''' (Literal Japanese title)
*'''''Last Dinosaur - King of Monsters''''' (''Viimeinen Dinosaurus - Hirviöitten Kuningas''; Finland)
*'''''Last Dinosaur - King of Monsters''''' (''Viimeinen Dinosaurus - Hirviöitten Kuningas''; Finland)
==[[United States|U.S.]] Release==
==Theatrical releases==
[[File:Tumblr_mu1hkzlFk51qgckmbo1_500.jpg|thumb|right|200px|American ''The Last Dinosaur'' television ad]]
{{All Posters}}
''The Last Dinosaur'' was scheduled for theatrical releases in both [[Japan]] and the [[United States]], however it was decided at the last moment to release the film straight to television in the U.S. The film was aired on television by ABC, and had 11 minutes cut from its run time, while it was later released uncut theatrically in [[Japan]] by {{TohoCo}}. [[Warner Bros.]] finally released the uncut English version of the film in 2011 on DVD.
*West Germany - July 7, 1977{{Popup-poster|file=The_Last_Dinosaur_-_Posters_-_West_Germany.jpg|caption=German poster}}
*[[France]] - July 20, 1977{{Popup-poster|file=The_Last_Dinosaur_-_Posters_-_France.jpg|caption=French poster}}
*[[Japan]] - September 10, 1977{{Popup-poster|file=The Last Dinosaur Japanese Poster.jpg|caption=Japanese poster}}
*Finland - December 9, 1977{{Popup-poster|file=The_Last_Dinosaur_-_Posters_-_Finland.jpg|caption=Finnish poster}}
*Colombia - May 24, 1978
*United Kingdom - July 7, 1978
*[[Australia]] - July 10, 1980
*Brazil - December 25, 1980
==[[United States|U.S.]] release==
[[File:Tumblr_mu1hkzlFk51qgckmbo1_500.jpg|thumb|right|200px|U.S. ''The Last Dinosaur'' TV advertisement]]
''The Last Dinosaur'' was scheduled for theatrical releases in both [[Japan]] and the [[United States]]. However, it was decided at the last minute to release the film directly to television in the U.S. ABC aired the film and cut 11 minutes from it, while it was later released unedited theatrically in [[Japan]] by [[Toho-Towa]], a subsidiary of [[Toho]]. [[Warner Bros.]] finally released the unedited English-language version of the film in the U.S. on DVD-R in 2011 through its manufacturing-on-demand division [[wikipedia:Warner Archive Collection|Warner Archive]].
{{Clear}}
{{Clear}}
==Video Releases==
==Video releases==
'''[[Toho Company Ltd.|Toho]]''' DVD (2009)
'''[[Toho]]''' DVD (2009)<ref name="Ragone">[http://augustragone.blogspot.com/2009/05/last-dinosaur-strikes-again-toho-video.html  "THE LAST DINOSAUR" STRIKES AGAIN! Toho Video Issues Special Edition DVD - The Good, the Bad, and Godzilla]</ref>
*Region: 2
*'''Discs:''' 1
*Audio: Japanese
*'''Region:''' 2
'''[[Warner Bros.|Warner Archives]]''' DVD (2011)
*'''Audio:''' Japanese, English
*Region: 1
*'''Subtitles:''' Unknown
*Discs: 1
*'''Special features:''' Audio commentary by director Tsugunobu Kotani and actress Masumi Sekitani, message from actress Sekitani, interview with special effects director Kazuo Sagawa (13 minutes), behind-the-scenes footage narrated by Sagawa, production galleries, Japanese trailer
*Audio: English (2.0 Mono)
*Special Features: None
*Note: Made-to-order DVD-R.


'''[[Warner Bros.|Warner Archive]]''' DVD-R (2011)
*'''Region:''' N/A
*'''Discs:''' 1
*'''Audio:''' English (2.0 Mono)
*'''Subtitles:''' None
*'''Special features:''' None
*'''Notes:''' Made-to-order DVD-R. Contains the unedited English-language version.
==Videos==
==Videos==
===Clips===
{{Videos|
{{Videos|
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">AA-qufQQQlI</youtube>|Warner Bros. ''The Last Dinosaur'' promotional clip}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">https://youtu.be/V6X3ayHG-Jg</youtube>|Japanese ''The Last Dinosaur'' Trailer<br>}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">VdkSH75jLoM</youtube>|Warner Bros. ''The Last Dinosaur'' promotional clip}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">WjIWRoqcLCs</youtube>|Japanese ''The Last Dinosaur''<br>commentary by [[Tadao Takashima]]}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">pJGr4EqXvho</youtube>|Warner Bros. ''The Last Dinosaur'' promotional clip}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">AA-qufQQQlI</youtube>|[[Warner Bros.]] ''The Last Dinosaur''<br>promotional clip}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">VdkSH75jLoM</youtube>|Warner Bros. ''The Last Dinosaur''<br>promotional clip}}
{{vid|<youtube width="300" height="169">pJGr4EqXvho</youtube>|Warner Bros. ''The Last Dinosaur''<br>promotional clip}}
}}
}}
==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*This film was a co-production between [[Tsuburaya Productions]] and [[Rankin/Bass Productions|Rankin/Bass]], who previously collaborated with {{TohoCo}} to make ''[[King Kong Escapes]]'' ten years earlier.
*This film was a co-production between [[Tsuburaya Productions]] and [[Rankin/Bass]], the latter having previously collaborated with [[Toho]] to make ''[[King Kong Escapes]]'' 10 years earlier.
*This film is also the second non-Ultra Series film collaboration between Toho and Tsuburaya Productions, the first being ''[[Daigoro vs. Goliath]]''.
**This film is also the second non-''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Ultraman Series|Ultra Series]]'' film collaboration between Toho and Tsuburaya Productions, with the first being ''[[Daigoro vs. Goliath]]''.
*After this film, The [[Tyrannosaurus rex]] [[ShodaiTirano|suit]] was refurbished and re-used in two more Tsuburaya Productions - both times as recurring, but otherwise unrelated villains. The first being [[w:c:ultra:Ururu|Ururu]] (alias Emperor Tyrannos) in ''"[[w:c:ultra:Dinosaur Great War Izenborg|Dinosaur Great War Izenborg]]"'' (1977-1978), and later as [[w:c:ultra:Tyrannosaurus Jackie|Tyrannosaurus Jackie]] in ''"[[w:c:ultra:Koseidon|Dinosaur Squadron Koseidon]]"'' (1978-1979).
*After this film, the ''[[Tyrannosaurus rex]]'' suit was refurbished and reused in two more Tsuburaya Productions projects, both times as recurring but otherwise unrelated villains; first as [[wikia:w:c:ultra:Ururu|Ururu]] (a.k.a. Emperor Tyranis) in ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Dinosaur Great War Izenborg|Dinosaur Great War Izenborg]]'' (1977-1978) and later as [[wikia:w:c:ultra:Tyrannosaurus Jackie|Tyrannosaurus Jackie]] in ''[[wikia:w:c:ultra:Dinosaur Squadron Koseidon|Dinosaur Squadron Koseidon]]'' (1978-1979).
*The Tyrannosaurus rex in this film is portrayed by [[Toru Kawai]], who played [[Godzilla]] in ''[[Terror of Mechagodzilla]]'', while the front end of the [[Triceratops]] is portrayed by Katsumi Nimiamoto, who played [[Titanosaurus]] in the film.
**The Ururu / Emperor Tyranis version of the suit was faithfully recreated for the climactic segment of the 2017 documentary ''The Return of Izenborg''.<ref>[https://www.tsuburaya-prod.co.jp/en/news/documentary-of-izenborg/]</ref><ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_War_Izenborg#The_Return_of_Izenborg]</ref><ref>[https://maserpatrol.wordpress.com/2017/12/31/news-recap-to-ring-in-the-new-year/]</ref>
*In the Tsuburaya series ''Dinosaur Great War Izenborg'' and ''Dinosaur Warrior Koseidon'', in which the tyrannosaurus suit from this film was reused, the tyrannosaurus battles a triceratops as an homage to ''The Last Dinosaur''.
*The ''Tyrannosaurus'' in this film is portrayed by [[Toru Kawai]], who played [[Godzilla (Second Generation)|Godzilla]] in ''[[Zone Fighter (series)|Zone Fighter]]'' and ''[[Terror of Mechagodzilla]]'', while the front end of the ''[[Triceratops]]'' is portrayed by [[Tatsumi Nikamoto]], who acted opposite Kawai as [[Zone Fighter]] and [[Titanosaurus]] in the same two works, respectively.
{{Kaiju Movies}}
*The ''Tyrannosaurus'' utilizes a combination of Godzilla's roars and [[King Kong (King Kong vs. Godzilla)|King]] [[King Kong (King Kong Escapes)|Kong]]'s roars from ''[[King Kong vs. Godzilla]]'' and ''[[King Kong Escapes]]''.
{{Era|RB|TOH|SHO|FIL}}
*The boneyard that litters the ''Tyrannosaurus'' ' lair contains the remains of a wide variety of prehistoric creatures that are not seen living onscreen in the rest of the film. Among the remains are the skulls of a two-horned warthog, numerous mastodons, an ox with a singular horn like that of a unicorn, a separate ox skull with three unusual horns, an unspecified giant reptile, a long-faced cow, a sitting pair of bull skulls, a large headless humanoid skeleton hanging from a dead tree, numerous ''[[Pteranodon]]''s, the scattered jawbones of prehistoric rhinoceros-like mammals such as ''[[wikipedia:Embolotherium|Embolotherium]]'' and ''[[Arsinoitherium]]'', and skulls heavily resembling those of the [[wikipedia:Dire wolf|dire wolf]] (''Aenocyon dirus''), ''[[wikipedia:Archaeotherium|Archaeotherium]]'', ''[[wikipedia:Pakicetus|Pakicetus]]'', and ''[[wikipedia:Daeodon|Daeodon]]''.<ref>[https://youtu.be/B619J7VeYAY]</ref>
==References==
{{Reflist}}
{{Kaiju Movies|tab=JP}}
{{Comments}}
{{Era|RB|TSB|TOH|SHO|FIL}}
[[Category:Kaiju Films]]
[[Category:Kaiju Films]]
[[Category:Films]]
[[Category:Films]]

Latest revision as of 05:08, 31 December 2023

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Image gallery for The Last Dinosaur
Credits for The Last Dinosaur


The Last Dinosaur
A Japanese flyer for The Last Dinosaur
Alternate titles
Flagicon Japan.png Sub-Polar Exploration Ship
Polar-Borer
(1977)
See alternate titles
Directed by Alexander Grasshoff, Tsugunobu Kotani
Producer Noboru Tsuburaya, Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
Written by William Overgard
Music by Maury Laws, Kenjiro Hirose
Production companies Tsuburaya Productions, Rankin/Bass
Distributor Toho-Towa,JP ABCUS
Running time 106 minutesJP
(1 hour, 46 minutes)
95 minutesUS
1 hour, 35 minutes)
Aspect ratio 1.85:1JP
1.33:1US TV
Rate this film!
4.00
(19 votes)

A lost world!! Ruled by the largest man-eating monster of all!!
„ 

— Tagline

The Last Dinosaur (極底探険船ポーラーボーラ,   Kyokutei Tankensen Pōrabōra, lit. "Sub-Polar Exploration Ship Polar-Borer") is a 1977 Japanese-American tokusatsu kaiju film directed by Alexander Grasshoff and Tsugunobu Kotani and written by William Overgard, with special effects by Kazuo Sagawa. Co-produced by Tsuburaya Productions and Rankin/Bass Productions, it stars Richard Boone, Joan Van Ark, Steven Keats, and Toru Kawai. The film first aired in the United States on ABC on February 11, 1977, and was released to Japanese theaters by Toho-Towa on September 10 of the same year.

Plot

During an underwater oil drilling expedition, Thrust Industries' advanced submersible drilling vehicle, the Polar-Borer, accidentally burrows into a gigantic underground cavern. The vessel's crew ventures out to explore, with one member, Chuck Wade, remaining behind in the Polar-Borer. However, the crew soon find themselves attacked in the jungle by a colossal predator, a Tyrannosaurus rex. Wade manages to escape in the Polar-Borer, with all of his crew mates killed by the dinosaur. When Thrust Industries' CEO, multibillionaire Masten Thrust Jr., learns of the event, he orders a second Polar-Borer expedition to the strange underground world to investigate the presence of a prehistoric creature there, one on which he will be part of the crew. While as far as the public is concerned the expedition is for scientific purposes and grant closure for the crew members lost previously, Thrust - an accomplished big game hunter who had not faced a challenging hunt in years - intends to hunt the Tyrannosaurus himself and claim it as the ultimate trophy. Accompanying Thrust on the expedition are Wade, Japanese scientist Dr. Kawamoto, and an African tracker named Bunta. Francesca Banks, a journalist, convinces Thrust to bring her along on the expedition after seducing him.

The Polar-Borer is launched from Thrust Industries' oil platform Mother 1, and successfully bores through the polar ice and ocean floor until it surfaces in a lake within a jungle-covered underground cavern. Thrust, Wade, Bunta, and Francesca disembark to investigate, while Kawamoto remains behind to watch over their base camp. While exploring the jungle, they narrowly avoid being trampled by a stampeding ceratopsian. They later come upon a pond, where they find gigantic leeches, as well as a rock which they later discover is a giant turtle. Meanwhile, the Tyrannosaurus that killed the crew of the last Polar-Borer discovers the expedition's base camp, killing Dr. Kawamoto and trashing the camp before making off with the Polar-Borer. The beast deposits its new prize in its lair, littered with the bones of other prey. Suddenly, a Triceratops erupts from underground and charges at the Tyrannosaurus, goring it with its sharp horns. Despite sustaining injuries, the Tyrannosaurus kills its foe by biting down on its neck with its razor-sharp teeth, causing the Triceratops to bleed to death.

Thrust and the others soon find themselves stranded in the underground world, their every move stalked by both the Tyrannosaurus and a tribe of primitive humans. They are forced to camp in a cave and survive using the weapons they salvaged and hunting the local wildlife. Additionally, Francesca and Wade begin developing feelings for each other. When a large party of primitive men corner the trio, Thrust manages to kill their leader with a crossbow made from the ruins of Dr. Kawamoto's camp, convincing the others to stay far away from them from now on. However, a primitive woman takes an interest in the group, particularly Thrust, and follows them to their camp. Thrust is furious when the primitive woman tries to sleep with him and wants her thrown out of the camp, but Francesca decides to let her stay, naming her Hazel. One day as Hazel and Francesca are getting water from a lake, they are attacked by the Tyrannosaurus. They narrowly manage to avoid its attack, convincing Thrust that they need to kill it. Thrust and Bunta begin preparing an elaborate trap for the Tyrannosaurus, when Wade discovers the Polar-Borer in the monster's lair. He and Francesca try to convince Thrust to abandon his hunt and help them salvage the Polar-Borer, but find that Thrust's obsession has consumed him and that he wants nothing more than to kill the Tyrannosaurus himself. Wade and Francesca abandon Thrust to his hunt and manage to retrieve the Polar-Borer from the Tyrannosaurus ' lair using a pulley system, before finally pushing it back into the lake where it originally emerged. Wade begins repairs to allow the craft to escape, but Francesca goes back to try and convince Thrust to come with them.

As Wade nearly completes repairs on the Polar-Borer, the Tyrannosaurus finds and kills Bunta and prepares to do the same to Thrust and Francesca. Thrust is able to spring his trap, which catapults a gigantic boulder into the Tyrannosaurus ' head. While at first it seems to have been effective in bringing the beast down, the Tyrannosaurus soon gets back to its feet and destroys the catapult before escaping. Francesca begs Thrust to leave with her and Wade, but he continues to refuse to go home empty-handed. Francesca pleads with him to leave the Tyrannosaurus alone since it is "the last dinosaur," but Thrust simply replies that so is he. Thrust sees Francesca and Wade off as the Polar-Borer submerges and returns to the surface world. As Thrust hears the Tyrannosaurus ' roar echo through the jungle, he prepares to continue his hunt and is surprised when Hazel approaches him. Rather than shoo her off like before, Thrust finally decides to let Hazel join him, and the two set off into the jungle together.

Staff

Main article: The Last Dinosaur/Credits.

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Directed by   Alexander Grasshoff, Tsugunobu Kotani
  • Written by   William Overgard
  • Executive producers   Noboru Tsuburaya, Arthur Rankin Jr., Jules Bass
  • Associate producers   Kinshiro Okubo, Masaki Izuka, Benni Korzen, Kazuyoshi Kasai
  • Music by   Maury Laws
  • Arranged and conducted by   Kenjiro Hirose
  • Theme song "The Last Dinosaur"
    • Performed by   Nancy Wilson
    • Composed by   Maury Laws
    • Lyrics by   Jules Bass
    • Arranged and conducted by   Bernard Hoffer
  • Cinematography by   Shoji Ueda
  • Edited by   Tatsuji Nakashizu, Minoru Kozono
  • Production design by   Kazuhiko Fujiwara
  • First assistant director   Shohei Tojo
  • Director of special effects   Kazuo Sagawa
  • First assistant director of special effects   Yoshiyuki Yoshimura
  • Visual effects by   Minoru Nakano, Michihisa Miyashige

Cast

Main article: The Last Dinosaur/Credits.

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Richard Boone   as   Masten Thrust Jr., CEO of Thrust Industries
  • Joan Van Ark   as   Francesca Banks, newspaper reporter
  • Steven Keats   as   Chuck Wade, Polar-Borer crew
  • Luther Rackley   as   Bunta, tracker
  • Masumi Sekiya   as   Hazel, Primitive Woman
  • William Ross   as   Hal
  • Carl Hansen   as   Barney
  • Tetsu Nakamura   as   Dr. Kawamoto, inventor of the Polar-Borer
  • Don Maloney   as   Captain of Mother 1
  • Vanessa Cristina   as   Reporter
  • Shunsuke Kariya   as   Primal Man leader
  • Toru Kawai   as   Tyrannosaurus
  • Tatsumi Nikamoto   as   Triceratops (front end)

Japanese dub

  • Shuichiro Moriyama   as   Masten Thrust Jr.
  • Michiko Hirai   as   Francesca Banks
  • Katsunosuke Hori   as   Chuck Wade

Appearances

Monsters

Weapons, vehicles, and races

Gallery

Main article: The Last Dinosaur/Gallery.

Alternate titles

  • The Last Dinosaur (最後の恐竜,   Saigo no Kyōryū, alternate Japanese title, translated from English title)
  • The Last Dinosaur: Sub-Polar Exploration Ship Polar-Borer (最後の恐竜 極底探険船ポーラーボーラ,   Saigo no Kyōryū: Kyokutei Tanken-sen Pōrābōra, Japanese video title)
  • Last Dinosaur - King of Monsters (Viimeinen Dinosaurus - Hirviöitten Kuningas; Finland)

Theatrical releases

View all posters for the film here.

  • West Germany - July 7, 1977  [view poster]German poster
  • France - July 20, 1977  [view poster]French poster
  • Japan - September 10, 1977  [view poster]Japanese poster
  • Finland - December 9, 1977  [view poster]Finnish poster
  • Colombia - May 24, 1978
  • United Kingdom - July 7, 1978
  • Australia - July 10, 1980
  • Brazil - December 25, 1980

U.S. release

U.S. The Last Dinosaur TV advertisement

The Last Dinosaur was scheduled for theatrical releases in both Japan and the United States. However, it was decided at the last minute to release the film directly to television in the U.S. ABC aired the film and cut 11 minutes from it, while it was later released unedited theatrically in Japan by Toho-Towa, a subsidiary of Toho. Warner Bros. finally released the unedited English-language version of the film in the U.S. on DVD-R in 2011 through its manufacturing-on-demand division Warner Archive.

Video releases

Toho DVD (2009)[1]

  • Discs: 1
  • Region: 2
  • Audio: Japanese, English
  • Subtitles: Unknown
  • Special features: Audio commentary by director Tsugunobu Kotani and actress Masumi Sekitani, message from actress Sekitani, interview with special effects director Kazuo Sagawa (13 minutes), behind-the-scenes footage narrated by Sagawa, production galleries, Japanese trailer

Warner Archive DVD-R (2011)

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English (2.0 Mono)
  • Subtitles: None
  • Special features: None
  • Notes: Made-to-order DVD-R. Contains the unedited English-language version.

Videos

Japanese The Last Dinosaur Trailer
Japanese The Last Dinosaur
commentary by Tadao Takashima
Warner Bros. The Last Dinosaur
promotional clip
Warner Bros. The Last Dinosaur
promotional clip
Warner Bros. The Last Dinosaur
promotional clip

Trivia

References

This is a list of references for The Last Dinosaur. These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

Comments

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