Class: Cars, Chassis Cab — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
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◊ 2015-06-22 09:46 |
Possibly a C-Series? |
◊ 2015-06-22 12:17 |
It is. |
◊ 2015-06-22 14:43 |
And from the left we see the rare Viewersaurus... |
◊ 2015-06-22 19:00 |
That's actually in the movie. |
◊ 2015-06-22 19:44 |
Oh silly me, I thought you filmed that in the cinema. Anyways, rather than "Construction" I think it should rather read |
◊ 2015-07-12 13:48 |
CGI Not CGI... -- Last edit: 2015-07-12 17:21:17 (Sandie) |
◊ 2015-07-12 23:51 |
Could this be C-2500 by these wheels? |
◊ 2015-07-14 11:34 |
well, creating dinosaurs must be expensive.... |
◊ 2015-07-14 13:39 |
Looks like rounded dashboard |
◊ 2015-07-14 21:37 |
The vehicles seen at Site B (in the second and third films) are almost exclusively 1960s-1980s era vehicles. Site B itself was "the factory floor" where the dinosaurs were actually made, meaning it was of paramount importance to the future of Jurassic Park. In addition, it was up and running until '93. Despite this, no vehicle newer than 1993 appears there that isn't brought in from the outside by the expedition(s). Admittedly, 1985 in 1993 isn't as old as 1990 in 2015, but still, there's precedent for using older vehicles. -- Last edit: 2018-08-03 15:11:58 |
◊ 2015-07-14 22:25 |
It has the 1997+ dash. You guys are overthinking the model year issue. Construction trucks aren't always new or the most up to date. They're made for utility, not looks. But the most likely explanation is that this was what the production found cheap enough to destroy. |
◊ 2015-10-02 05:35 |
The Chevy post-thrashing, from an Entertainment Weekly article featuring some behind the scenes photos: |
◊ 2016-09-30 00:01 |
Some behind the scenes stuff, including a shot of the full-size Chevy prepped for being dropped from a crane: |