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Dinosaurs in Hollywood: from a 1914 cartoon to Jurassic World

From a simply drawn cartoon of a dinosaur named Gertie, to this weekend's release of Jurassic World, watch a brief visual history of dinosaurs on film over the last 100 years.

See how dinosaurs evolved over a century of film

Actors Nick Robinson and Ty Simpkins interact with some of Jurassic World's herbivorous dinosaurs in a scene from the latest of Steven Spielberg's groundbreaking Jurassic Park series. (ILM/Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment/AP)

Jurassic World, thefourth instalment in Steven Spielberg'sprehistoric dinosaur franchise, wentinto wide release Fridaywith the promise oftop-notch special effects that have been the series' hallmarksince Jurassic Park changed creature effectsforeverin 1993.

But dinosaurs werea favourite onthe silver screen long before filmmakers had technologythat could convey the majesty of a brontosaurusor showmalevolenceon the faceof a velociraptor.

The Indominus rex is about to attack in a scene from the film Jurassic World. (Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment/AP)

In chronological order, here's a look at the evolution of dinosaur special effects over the past100 years.As the trailer for No. 5on our listbellows,"See the fascinating, strange and fearful creatures who roamed the Earth a million years BC!"

Gertie the Dinosaur (1914)

This list mostly ignores animated films (sorry Land Before Time), but animated herbivoreGertiedeserves special note because it's one of the first films to star a dinosaur. DirectedbyWinsorMcCay, the 12-minute film features Gertiefollowing McCay's orders, including having a drink and doing a little dance. (Jump to the seven-minute mark to see Gertie in action.)

The Lost World (1925)

Created by special effects wizard Willis O'Brien, who would later work on the classic King Kong, the dinosaurs in The Lost World (and there are a lot of them)are among the first stop-motion effects ever on film.

King Kong (1933)

Deemed "culturally, historically and esthetically significant" by the U.S.Library of Congress, King Kong is the most critically acclaimed film on ourlist. The stop-motion battle between Kong and a tyrannosaurus, with FayWrayscreaming all the while,is one of the great special-effects sequences of its age. The film inspired13-year-old Ray Harryhausen, whobecame one of the most well-knownvisual effects creatorsof the last century.

The Lost World (1960)

We've focused on the effects that were the best for their time, but let's not forget there hasbeen lots of dinosaur dreck over the years too. Director Irwin Allen didn't usestop-motion effects for this version of Arthur Conan Doyle's story, instead making use ofan alligator, a gecko and some monitor lizards with a little foam rubber attached. The results are less than terrifying.

One Million Years B.C. (1966)

Here's Harryhausen at work, bringing to life the brontosaurus, pterodactyl, triceratops and other dinosaurs more convincingly than Raquel Welch's performance. Harryhausen created a form of stop motion calledDynamation that allowed much more subtle interaction between his creaturesand real-life scenes.This was the only film whereHarryhausenused both stop-motion animation and real creatures.

Baby: Secret of the Lost Legend (1985)

This largely forgotten Disneydud was madeafter Harryhausen's era (his last film was released in 1981) and before the groundbreaking technology of Jurassic Park. Ittakes another approach, trying to convey its baby brontosaurusthrough animatronics (a portmanteau of animate and electronic). Though the movie is by all accounts worthy of extinction, Roger Ebert(in a one-star review) said then thatthe film provided "surprisingly believable dinosaurs."

Jurassic Park (1993)

"Welcome to Jurassic Park!" Richard Attenborough's John Hammond says as characters in the film look on with the same awe that moviegoers had 22 years ago. While the film is rightly hailed as a breakthrough in computer animation, the film also uses animatronics (most notably with a life-sized tyrannosaurus) and even men in suits (for thevelociraptors).

King Kong (2005)

Peter Jackson's remake of the 1933 classic won an Oscar for best visual effects. While the original had Kong fighting one tyrannosaurus, the updated film has the giant gorillafighting three fictional vastatosaurus rex. It's fun to watch both and see what 72 years has done for special effects, though it's not clear the 2005 scene is any better.

Jurassic World (2015)

The critical consensus for the latest dinosaur film is only mildlypositive, but review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes says critics concede the film is "visually dazzling." Oscar-winning special effects artistPhil Tippett, who was involved in both the first Jurassic film and this one, told NPRthis weekthat not much has changed between the two films. "The tools are better, the animation software, the compositing software, storage space and all that kind of technical stuff has improved significantly," he said. "But the actual hands-on skill of animators and compositors and the technical directors that light the stuff is really a skill level thing."