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The Valley of Gwangi
A Wild West showman (James Franciscus) and his cowboys find dinosaurs near a Mexican town and put one in a Mexican circus. His victim, called the Gwangi, turns out to have an aversion to being shown in public.
23 July 1956, Marylebone, London, England, UK
29 April 1912, Albert Lea, Minnesota, USA
29 December 1907, Nottingham, England, UK
1940, Kraków, Malopolskie, Poland
5 September 1923, Montevideo, Uruguay
14 December 1908, Thames Ditton, Surrey, England, UK
31 January 1934, Clayton, Missouri, USA
8 February 1923, Paddington, London, England, UK
April 06, 2006
It says something about the production and about Harryhausen's artistry when we realize that Gwangi, the snarling dinosaur created from a tabletop model, is the most realistically alive character on the screen.
November 28, 2003
Cowboys and dinosaurs! Too bad we root for the dinos, but the cowboys win.
August 02, 2011
Best thought of as one of the pictures to get out of the way later rather than sooner when you decide to see everything Ray Harryhausen did.
December 29, 2003
How can a dinosaur fan of any age not love 'Gwangi,' in which the title Allosaurus makes his public debut with the unscheduled addition of a screaming dwarf between his jaws?
January 01, 2016
An implausible B film fantasy sci-fi venture. But it should delight the fans of special effects maven Ray Harryhausen more than others.

