Dinosaur 13 is a 2014 American documentary film directed and produced by Todd Douglas Miller. The film premiered in competition category of U.S. Documentary Competition program at the 2014 Sundance Film Festival on January 16, 2014.
Dinosaur 13 | |
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Sundance Film poster | |
Directed by | Todd Douglas Miller |
Produced by | Todd Douglas Miller |
Music by | Matt Morton |
Cinematography | Thomas Petersen |
Edited by | Todd Douglas Miller |
Production company | Statement Pictures |
Distributed by | CNN Films Lionsgate |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
After its premiere at the Sundance Film Festival, CNN Films and Lionsgate acquired distribution rights of the film. In 2015 Dinosaur 13 won the Emmy for Outstanding Science and Technology Programming at the 36th Annual News and Documentary Emmy Awards.
Screenplay
The film depicts the event of 1990, when American paleontologist Sue Hendrickson working with Pete Larson and his team discovered the largest and most complete Tyrannosaurus rex ever found (nicknamed "Sue") while digging in the badlands of South Dakota. The skeleton was seized from Larson by the federal government, followed by a ten-year-long battle with the FBI, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and Maurice Williams, the landowner on whose property the bones were discovered. Pete Larson also spent 18 months in prison, on unrelated charges of international money laundering and trading fossils on the black market.
The film received positive response from critics. Dennis Harvey, in his review for Variety, called the documentary "engrossing". Duane Byrge of The Hollywood Reporter gave the film positive review and said that it involves a "story of scientific discovery and petty politics". Eric Kohn from Indiewire in his review said that "A subset of the recent scientific-documentary-as-thriller tradition epitomized by The Cove and Blackfish, Todd Douglas Miller's Dinosaur 13 is both awe-inspiring and tragic."
After the film aired, The Society of Vertebrate Paleontology, a society of professional paleontologists that depend largely on government grants for research, issued a statement of full support for legally-protecting fossils on public land and criticized Dinosaur 13 for implying that government ownership of fossil specimens impedes paleontological science.