Dino Time
Three children face a strange adventure in their lives when they have had the opportunity to return in the prehistoric period. Through the time machine, the children were able to come into the world of dinosaurs where they face strange paths and different adventures to find a way to escape
12 May 1966, Massapequa, Long Island, New York, USA
21 February 1963, Massapequa, Long Island, New York, USA
5 March 1971, Alliance, Ohio, USA
4 September 1968, North Plainfield, New Jersey, USA
13 July 1977, Hoisington, Kansas, USA
25 August 1982, Los Angeles County, California, USA
31 October 1963, San Francisco, California, USA
24 August 1973, Fort Ord, California, USA
31 October 1970, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
16 October 1966, Newark, New Jersey, USA
9 July 1966, New York City, New York, USA
10 June 1980, Los Angeles, California, USA
31 August 1962, Bloomington, Indiana, USA
14 July 1960, Dolton, Illinois, USA
12 February 1973, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
13 August 1961, Brooklyn, New York, USA
13 July 1962, East Syracuse, New York, USA
9 August 1957, New York City, New York, USA
11 August 1975, Orange County, California, USA
May 18, 2015
There are lightly delivered lessons for both parents and progeny; it nicely balances a message about allowing your kids to plough their own path with one about appreciating maternal sacrifice.
May 21, 2015
Driven by some half-decent action scenes, Dino Time is no must-see, but it will comfortably while away a wet afternoon.
May 21, 2015
Displays early flickers of wit in zapping squabbling kids back to their hometown as it was in the Cretaceous era, before a drab quest narrative kicks in, cueing more plodding than any 70-minute should.
May 21, 2015
Some rudimentary computer animation, a B-list voice cast and a surfeit of narrative ambition are the defining features of US-South Korean co-production Dino Time.

