Short of the DayThe dopest doc ever about being homies with a deer.
About a year or so ago, a teenager named Kelvin was kicking it in his back yard shooting some hoops, when lo and behold he discovered a deer with big ol’ antlers kicking it back there too. Naturally, he gave it a name — “Money,” because Kelvin loves money and he loves the deer — and made it his homie. Over the series of the next couple of months, Kelvin recorded himself and his human friends feeding Money and his family (Lola, Bm, Money Jr, Bambi, Canela, and Tequila) a variety of food including crackers and powdered donuts, then eventually organic corn and fruits, and posted his videos all over social media where they went instantly viral, catapulting Kelvin’s follower numbers from 1,500 to 150,000 overnight.
So of course, someone had to make a doc about this baller and his cervine crew.
Matt Larsen...
About a year or so ago, a teenager named Kelvin was kicking it in his back yard shooting some hoops, when lo and behold he discovered a deer with big ol’ antlers kicking it back there too. Naturally, he gave it a name — “Money,” because Kelvin loves money and he loves the deer — and made it his homie. Over the series of the next couple of months, Kelvin recorded himself and his human friends feeding Money and his family (Lola, Bm, Money Jr, Bambi, Canela, and Tequila) a variety of food including crackers and powdered donuts, then eventually organic corn and fruits, and posted his videos all over social media where they went instantly viral, catapulting Kelvin’s follower numbers from 1,500 to 150,000 overnight.
So of course, someone had to make a doc about this baller and his cervine crew.
Matt Larsen...
- 1/18/2017
- by H. Perry Horton
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
Chicago – When the skeletal remains of a long-lost animal is discovered and pulled from the earth, does anybody really own it? That is the question in the new documentary, “Dinosaur 13,” directed by Todd Miller. It’s the story of discovering those dinosaur bones and the implications for the person who exhumed them, Peter Larson.
“Dinosaur 13” ended up being “Sue” – named for the actual person who first saw the bones, Susan Hendrickson – the most complete Tyrannosaurus Rex specimen ever discovered. Sue now resides in the Field Museum in Chicago, but her journey to the final resting place was fraught with the 20th Century notion of who owned her. Director Todd Douglas Miller combines archival footage, news reports and re-creations to unfold the only-in-America story of the final journey to rest of a long dead creature.
Peter Larson Works on Sue Around the Time of Discovery in ‘Dinosaur 13’
Photo...
“Dinosaur 13” ended up being “Sue” – named for the actual person who first saw the bones, Susan Hendrickson – the most complete Tyrannosaurus Rex specimen ever discovered. Sue now resides in the Field Museum in Chicago, but her journey to the final resting place was fraught with the 20th Century notion of who owned her. Director Todd Douglas Miller combines archival footage, news reports and re-creations to unfold the only-in-America story of the final journey to rest of a long dead creature.
Peter Larson Works on Sue Around the Time of Discovery in ‘Dinosaur 13’
Photo...
- 8/15/2014
- by adam@hollywoodchicago.com (Adam Fendelman)
- HollywoodChicago.com
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.