Chased by Dinosaurs

2002

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

EP1 The Giant Claw Dec 30, 2002

Nigel searches the deserts and forests of Cretaceous Mongolia for Therizinosaurus, an obscure dinosaur with massive fossil claws, believing it to have been a huge carnivore. Throughout his journey, Marven comes face-to-face with dinosaurs such as Saurolophus, Protoceratops, Mononykus, Velociraptor and Tarbosaurus, a close relative of the famous Tyrannosaurus rex. Once Marven finds live Therizinosaurus he discovers them to have been a bizarre type of giant plant-eating theropod dinosaur.

EP2 Land of Giants Jan 01, 2003

In Middle Cretaceous Argentina, Marven searches for the largest dinosaurs of all time. He encounters a herd of Argentinosaurus, one of the largest sauropod dinosaurs, and observes the long and drawn-out hunt of the sauropods by one of the largest predatory dinosaurs, Giganotosaurus. During his journey, Marven also uses a small plane to fly with pterosaurs such as Pteranodon and Ornithocheirus, and he also encounters the massive crocodyliform Sarcosuchus.
7.7| 0h30m| en| More Info
Released: 30 December 2002 Returning Series
Producted By:
Country:
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Synopsis

A Walking with Dinosaurs Special - broadcast in North America as Chased by Dinosaurs - is a two-part British documentary film series featuring Nigel Marven and his "team of fellow explorers" as time-travellers who encounter dinosaurs in the wild. Most of the creatures were not featured in the original Walking with Dinosaurs series.

... View More
Stream Online

The movie is currently not available onine

Director

Producted By

AD
AD

Watch Free for 30 Days

All Prime Video Movies and TV Shows. Cancel anytime. Watch Now

Trailers & Images

Reviews

tankace Chased by dinosaurs is a two part series ,in which as I understood the creators of Walking with Dinosaurs decided to make in order to focus in some dinosaur species, who did not had scene time in the Original series. Personally I think this was a great idea and even greater was to have as presenter Nigel Marven ,who with his energy and love of his work was the ideal person for the job. My only complain is the fact that the series ended so quickly, I mean I like they did not made it in to a cash cow ,but with so many weird species in the archosaurs family, I feel a bit cheated. Nevertheless this safari-style like the Walking with Dinosaurs was perfect and works to the show advantage the fact that is more of a focus on a specific dinosaurs rather than a tour of their kingdom though time. In the end, I loved it and recommend it for you ,Happy Dino-hours.
John Panagopoulos Simply put, "Chased by Dinosaurs" (hereafter CBD) is a mind-boggling, wondrous pseudo-documentary about dinosaurs and other extinct creatures. CBD works not just because we encounter well-rendered spectacular creatures like the gargantuan 100-ton sauropod Argentinosaurus, or the mega-crocodilian Sarcosuchus, or the genuinely freakish herbivorous theropod Therizinosaurus - renditions every bit the equal of the BBC "Walking..." series. CBD succeeds because our Australian host, the appealingly ebullient zoologist/adventurer Nigel Marvin brings an unforced natural realism to the proceedings. Unlike his late, animated compatriot, the "Crocodile Hunter" Steve Irwin, Nigel treats his fantastic adventures matter-of-factly like any other wildlife documentary, with awe, yes, but also with cooler professionalism and authority (no knock against Mr Irwin, of course). He employs known and tested wildlife capture and observation techniques (i.e. those he would use on modern animals) on prehistoric beasts as well. For example, he puts a sock over the head of a bipedal ostrich-like ornithiscian Mononykus to calm it down and examine it. For the most part, however, Nigel is not there to trap any beasts, as he did in "Prehistoric Park". He is there just to observe and give his audience detailed and amazing information about the animals.More tellingly, Nigel does not pretend to have all the answers. In "The Giant Claw" episode, set in Mongolia and China, Nigel discovers 3-foot, wickedly curved claws that would put Wolverine to shame and thinks he is on the trail of a carnivorous dinosaur even more fearsome than T-Rex. When he finally catches up to his quarry, called Therizinosaurus, he realizes that his hypothesis does not quite match up. This illustrates the scientific guesswork and trial-and-error involved in paleontological studies of long-gone animals and how our perspective of them constantly shifts as we learn more about them.After witnessing fantastic dinosaurs and crocodiles, what do you do for an encore? Well, Nigel turns to the ocean to try to determine the seven deadliest ocean creatures of all time. Oscillating back and forth through time from the Devonian era to the Oligocene era (I think), Nigel finds and rates truly fabulous water freaks, such as the killer-whale sized fish Dunkleosteus (with bear trap jaw), the ancient sea-serpent-like giant whale Basilosaurus, and a 20-foot spiral-shelled crab-like arthropod Orthocone. Some of his choices are unexpected; Nigel finds an ornery two-horned Arsinoetherium, which looks like a rhino, is semi-aquatic like a hippo, but is actually distantly related to the elephant. Again, Nigel employs modern equipment and traps to lure the sea beasts for their close-up. Despite the seriousness of his quests, Nigel is not afraid to show his comic side. CBD frequently shows him narrowly escaping being bitten or gored. In particular, during the Megalodon (a sperm-whale sized shark related to the great white) sequence, when he initially fails to attach an underwater camera to its dorsal fin from a boat, he gets exasperated and calls one of the crew members who caused him to miss "an idiot" (he apologizes afterwards). But generally, Nigel gets along with the people who aid his dangerous quests. With their help, Nigel finally does get to the deadliest sea creature. I won't reveal what it is, but it lives in what Nigel calls "Hell's Aquarium" and is certainly a sight to see. As in the "Walking..." series and "Prehistoric Park", CBD has its cliffhangers and morbid humor, especially at the very end of "Chased by Sea Monsters".In addition to Nigel's romps, CBD has two more conventional paleontology episodes; the first one concerns the discovery in Argentina of the (to date) world's largest herbivorous and carnivorous dinosaurs (Argentinosaurus and Giganotosaurus). The second one explores the hypothesis by paleontologist Phillip Currie that carnivorous dinosaurs like Albertosaurus and T-rex were not solitary hunters, but formed cooperative packs.In conclusion, if you are a paleontology, wildlife, dinosaur, prehistoric beast, or Nigel fan, give yourself a treat and watch CBD. Both your emotions and your brain will thank you.
seenit-694-66980 After three ground-breaking programmes that utterly redefined television documentary making, along came this mess of a show. Clearly the objective was to build upon the populist daring of the likes of the late Steve Irwin. Only one problem though: Irwin had charisma, this guy has none. And I mean none. Even the mosquitoes steal some scenes.But, I hear you saying, haven't the dinosaurs got even better? Sadly no. If anything they're actually reduced to a walk on role in long shot or "chasing" the host. I estimate 70% of screen time has Nigel mumbling something either uninteresting or unfunny or warning us about what could happen when the dinosaurs do turn up. Trying to "scare" us in other words. He doesn't need to try. This show IS scary, but for the wrong reasons. It's contrived and boring and an embarrassment to all involved. Don't even bother trying YOUTUBE. Save your money and download limit.
userwithnoname I applaud the producers' efforts in this production. I'm a fan of the whole "walking with..." series in general -- I own nearly all of them on DVD! Yes, I did buy this because it was a spin-off and was therefore skeptical at first. After all, sequels are rarely good and certainly not the same standard as the other productions in the series. Like all those who have reviewed this on Amazon I was quite surprised...Unlike the earlier productions, this show features Nigel Marvin. Basically he goes back in time and visits...well the animals of his or the producers' choosing....in other words, the more interesting animals! In the first show, we get Argentinasaurus and Giganotasaurus, not to mention Sarcosuchus. The second features Tarbosaurus and Therizinsaurus, and the third part presents a series of seven "sea monsters" of prehistory. All this of course is hardly in keeping with WWD or WWB, both of which uses detailed narratives and delves deeper into each subject. Instead of a prehistoric wildlife show, we get a prehistoric safari! At first, this might sound contrived and unrealistic, but you come to realize that the idea was to truly recreate the "walking with dinosaurs" experience. A lot of us are fascinated by prehistoric life and the real way to appreciate the sheer scale and magnificence of these animals is to walk with them, literally! This was the appeal of Jurassic Park, both the idea and the film; but movies naturally sacrifice detail or accuracy for drama and action. For example, we actually get to see the correct 3ft Velociraptor and the Protoceratops in this! Chased by Dinosaurs is about as accurate as the series (accuracy typical of BBC documentaries), yet presents man and dinosaur interacting on screen. What's more, the CGI and SFX are of very good standard, comparable to all other such productions.My interest in this series was the cast...heh...Nigel was a great actor ;-) but I really meant the animals! Argentinasaurus and Giganotasaurus were the two giant dinosaurs discovered not long ago, still holding the titles of biggest plant-eater and meat-eater respectively. I didn't really know about Therizinsaurus, but I assumed it was not unlike Deinocheirus (terrible hand) which has long been the anomaly of paleontology. Sarcosuchus was the "supercroc", the brief appearance of which was one of the best parts of the show. Others like Megalodon, Dunkleosteus, Leedsichthys and Archelon are other highlights, the greats and bigs, familiar to casual readers and followers of paleontology, not to mention shark and turtle lovers....One can imagine Hollywood producing big budget movies featuring prehistoric animals in the future, utilizing either the time-travel or living fossil story lines -- a number of them already exist. However, my preference for this subject has always been with the scientific documentaries. Fortunately, as the technology becomes cheaper and available we will no longer have to rely on movies for realistic recreations of the prehistoric world….