Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Stock Footage]] - You'll be seeing that shot of the mountain dragon's head entering the frame, then turning to face something a ''lot''. Sometimes it's flipped so she's looking the other way. Along with several other shots recycled several times (curiously, only the mountain dragon segment has this reuse of footage).
* [[Stock Footage]] - You'll be seeing that shot of the mountain dragon's head entering the frame, then turning to face something a ''lot''. Sometimes it's flipped so she's looking the other way. Along with several other shots recycled several times (curiously, only the mountain dragon segment has this reuse of footage).
* [[Tiger Versus Dragon]] - A literal case; {{spoiler|dragon}} wins.
* [[Tiger Versus Dragon]] - A literal case; {{spoiler|dragon}} wins.
* [[Together in Death]]: {{spoiler|In the end, the mother dragon and the daughter dragon that was discovered and studied was put in a museum exhibit together.}}
* [[Together in Death]]: {{spoiler|In the end, the mother dragon and the daughter dragon that were discovered and studied were put in a museum exhibit together.}}
* [[Tyrannosaurus Rex]]: A rival predator of the Prehistoric Dragon.
* [[Tyrannosaurus Rex]]: A rival predator of the Prehistoric Dragon.
* [[Vertebrate with Extra Limbs]] - Most species shown have six (four legs and two wings). The "Prehistoric Dragon" they presumably descend from has four (two wings and two legs) and the extra legs came to be via a later, somewhat massive mutation that affected the Homeobox genes that regulate growth and development in animals.
* [[Vertebrate with Extra Limbs]] - Most species shown have six (four legs and two wings). The "Prehistoric Dragon" they presumably descend from has four (two wings and two legs) and the extra legs came to be via a later, somewhat massive mutation that affected the Homeobox genes that regulate growth and development in animals.

Revision as of 02:09, 16 October 2016

Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real (aka The Last Dragon and Dragon's World) is a 2004 British-American Mockumentary describing the finding of an actual dragon carcass frozen in the mountains of Romania, its study and subsequent explanations (via CGI re-creations a la Walking with Dinosaurs) of the anatomy, ecology and evolutionary history of these mythical creatures, ending with their final extinction in the 15th century. Or did it?

Patrick Stewart narrates the U.S. version and Ian Holm the British version.

Notable for leading many viewers to think that everything told in the documentary was truth, and therefore dragons actually existed. This might have been fueled by some format similarities with Impossible Pictures Walking with... series and the fact that it was aired on educational TV stations like Animal Planet and the Discovery Channel.


Tropes used in Dragons: A Fantasy Made Real include: