Dinosaur Island (1994) is a campy, independent B-movie co-directed by cult filmmakers Fred Olen Ray Jim Wynorski and produced by "King of the B's" Roger Corman
Why does this matter for the keyword? Because for years, Wikipedia and IMDb had conflicting data. Many users searching for "Dinosaur Island 1994 movie" are actually looking for the 1994 TV film The Lost World or the 1995 Full Moon feature. The confusion is so deep that several lost media forums are still trying to locate a clean VHS rip of the actual 1994 Rapid Film version. If you have a copy, you are sitting on a goldmine. Dinosaur Island -1994-
Have you ever played Dinosaur Island -1994-? Share your memories of the tar pit glitch or the secret "Triceratops Taxi" Easter egg in the comments below. Dinosaur Island (1994) is a campy, independent B-movie
While the arcade game was an action title, the Sega CD’s Dinosaur Island (released December 1994 exclusively in North America) was an FMV (Full Motion Video) interactive movie. It was developed by a now-defunct studio called Digital Pictures (creators of Night Trap). The confusion is so deep that several lost
"Dinosaur Island" was produced by Concorde Pictures, a company known for producing low-budget films. The movie was shot on a relatively low budget of $4 million, which is approximately $7.5 million in today's dollars, adjusted for inflation. The film's special effects were created by Jim Wynorski and Mark Dippé, who used a combination of animatronics and CGI to bring the dinosaurs to life.
Grade (retrospective): A- for ambition / B for playability (patched)
Best played: With a CRT, lights off, and the Jurassic Park soundtrack playing faintly in another room.