DVD Review: Dinosaurs - The Complete Third and Fourth Seasons

There are two types of “nostalgic” TV show DVD releases; the first type of show provides an instant hit of nostalgia then quickly gets old, leaving the viewer wondering what they ever saw in the program initially. These are the “it’s dumb but it has a soft spot in my heart because I liked it when I was a kid” shows. But then there are programs like Dinosaurs that, while still providing that initial, strong hit of nostalgia, go on to reveal themselves to still be entertaining and worth watching today.

Dinosaurs ran on the ABC network for four seasons in the early 1990s. The elaborate brainchild of Jim Henson, it showcased “live” anthropomorphic dinosaurs living a caricature of our modern suburban lifestyle. Part The Simpsons, part The Flintstones, and part The Muppet Show, Dinosaurs took familiar elements and fused them together into a family sitcom that was unlike anything anyone had seen before or since.

Fortunately, because of the show’s clever writing and amazing puppeteering performances, Dinosaurs remains just as funny, witty, and enjoyable today as it was over a decade ago. Viewers who remember watching the show as a kid (like me) may even be pleasantly surprised that the show is actually better than they remember.

Seasons three and four of the show arrive on DVD this week and the four-disc set is stuffed with 36 half-hour episodes (7 of which never aired as part of the network line-up and only saw the light of day later on in syndication on The Disney Channel), two funny and insightful audio commentaries and behind-the-scenes features.

In addition to episodes where the dinosaur Sinclair family deals with “issues” such as potty training and monsters under the baby’s bed, the series frequently attempted to satirize more far-reaching concerns. Like The Simpsons, many of the storylines on Dinosaurs served as a kind of social commentary, caricaturing overzealous corporations, environmental irresponsibility, and ineffectual couch potato members of society. In “Life in the Faust Lane,” dopey father Earl sells his soul to acquire a mug from a home shopping channel, an item he never knew he needed until the TV told him his life wouldn’t be complete without it. In “The Greatest Story Ever Sold,” the elders of dinosaur society attempt to combat the growing uncertainty dinosaurs are having about their existence by trying to get them to unquestioningly worship a potato. In the series finale, “Changing Nature,” the dinosaurs wind up bringing about the ice age (and with it their own eventual extinction) due to their gross mishandling of the environment.

Exploring subject matter seldom seen on network TV in its day, Dinosaurs went after hot topics as fervently as a hungry carnivore hunting its prey. And the show wasn’t afraid to bite the hand that fed it (the Walt Disney Company), either. In “Variations on a Theme Park,” the show savagely tears apart the perception of theme parks as good places for families to bond. In “Network Genius,” Earl chides greedy corporate network executives, all the while standing directly in front of a clearly displayed ABC logo.

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Article Author: Sombrero Grande

This writer is a member of The Masked Movie Snobs, a collective that fights a never-ending battle against bad entertainment.

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  • 1 - Brad Schader

    May 01, 2007 at 1:35 pm

    Is it this collection that has the "plant" episode, or was it in the first collection. I do not remember the show that much, but I do remember that one episode very well. From "there is nothing left but seeds and stems" to "kids, please stop using drugs so sitcoms can stop doing these special episodes and go back to being funny."

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