You know a movie is in trouble when its big special effects set pieces are literally stock footage from another movie. Enter Raptor (2001), a film so lazy it doesn’t just phone it in—it steals someone else’s phone, pockets their minutes, and still leaves you with the bill. Directed by Jim Wynorski (a man who could probably shoot a feature film out of security cam footage if you gave him $50 and a Red Bull) and produced by Roger Corman (the godfather of schlock), Raptor is less a movie and more a ransom note made out of leftover Carnosaur clippings.
Plot? Sure, If You Squint
Eric Roberts stars as Sheriff Jim Tanner, which is already hilarious because nothing about Roberts screams “sheriff.” He looks like a guy who got lost on his way to a community theater rehearsal of Walker, Texas Ranger: The Musical. Sheriff Tanner and his assistant Barbara (Melissa Brasselle, doing her best “generic horror heroine #2” impression) stumble onto a series of vicious animal attacks plaguing their small town.
Now, when I say “animal attacks,” what I actually mean is “random scenes from Carnosaur spliced in like a high school PowerPoint project.” People get mauled by dinosaurs, but not the same dinosaurs. Not even the same film qualitydinosaurs. Sometimes you’ll see a grainy raptor puppet from 1993, and the next shot will be Wynorski’s fresh DV cam footage of Eric Roberts squinting into the sun like he’s trying to read a Waffle House menu.
The culprit? Dr. Frank Hyde, played by Corbin Bernsen, who delivers his lines with all the gravitas of a man who just realized his paycheck bounced. He’s a mad scientist continuing his dinosaur-cloning program after the government cut his funding. Because apparently, the Pentagon looked at “Project: Velociraptor” and decided, “Eh, maybe we’ll just stick with tanks.”
Dinosaurs by Way of Copy-Paste
The dinosaurs in Raptor deserve their own section because they are the true stars. Or rather, the true villains. Not of the story—of your patience. The effects aren’t just bad; they’re incoherent. A raptor will leap at someone in Carnosaurfootage, then smash-cut to a totally different shot of someone screaming in Wynorski’s footage. Continuity? Extinct. Lighting? Extinct. Your will to live? Also extinct.
Sometimes the dinosaurs change size mid-scene, because apparently Wynorski didn’t care that the puppet in one shot looked like the size of a turkey and the next shot made it bigger than a Honda Civic. Watching this movie is like trying to follow a drunk magician who keeps losing track of which hand the card is in.
And let’s talk about the deaths: people are mauled, eaten, clawed—except they’re not, because most of the gore happens in Carnosaur stock footage. Characters we just met disappear into recycled raptor jaws like they fell into a YouTube compilation of “Worst 90s Creature Effects.”
Sheriff Roberts and Deputy Wallpaper
Eric Roberts doesn’t so much act in this movie as he does exist near the camera while dialogue happens around him. His sheriff is the kind of lawman who should be giving you parking tickets, not facing cloned dinosaurs. He spends most of the film alternating between looking mildly concerned and deeply bored, like a man who just realized his Chili’s order was wrong but doesn’t want to make a scene.
Melissa Brasselle as Barbara, his trusty assistant, is there to ask questions the audience already knows the answer to and occasionally run away from stock footage. She also has the uncanny ability to appear in scenes where the dinosaurs aren’t, which is most of the movie.
Then there’s Bernsen’s Dr. Hyde, the villain. Imagine a man who’s supposed to be the genius mastermind behind weaponized dinosaurs but instead looks like he’s wondering whether he left the stove on. He’s evil, sure, but in the sense that he probably cuts in line at Starbucks.
Pentagon vs. Raptor Footage
When the Pentagon realizes Hyde’s still in business, they send a strike team led by Captain Connelly (Tim Abell), because nothing says “elite military operation” like stock footage of soldiers marching mixed with Wynorski’s footage of three extras in Army surplus gear. Watching them gear up to fight dinosaurs is like watching your uncle and his bowling buddies play paintball.
The climactic battles are stitched together like Frankenstein’s monster, except with fewer bolts and more visible seams. Soldiers fire offscreen. Dinosaurs roar onscreen. People die in completely different lighting conditions. It’s less “man vs. beast” and more “Windows Movie Maker vs. basic editing skills.”
The Real Horror: Production Value
Here’s the thing: Roger Corman built a career out of making dirt-cheap movies that were at least fun. Raptor skips fun entirely and instead opts for “confusion and nausea.” It’s like ordering a Happy Meal and getting a bag of gravel instead.
The sets look like abandoned offices and half-lit warehouses. The pacing lurches like a broken golf cart. The dialogue could have been written by a malfunctioning Speak & Spell:
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“Sheriff, these animal attacks don’t add up.”
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“Barbara, sometimes the truth is stranger than fiction.”
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“Doctor, your experiments are dangerous!”
No kidding.
Even the music feels like it was stolen from a public domain library labeled “Generic Suspense #14.”
Death by Montage
By the time the finale rolls around, the movie is just daring you to care. The sheriff and Barbara are in peril. Dr. Hyde’s evil plans unravel. Dinosaurs run around killing random people. None of it matters because you’ve already seen these dinosaurs kill people before—in Carnosaur. It’s like the film is eating its own tail, only less poetic and more like a snake that fell asleep halfway through dinner.
The climax features enough explosions, stock shots, and incoherent editing to make Michael Bay look restrained. And when it’s finally over, you feel less like you watched a movie and more like you survived a 90-minute PowerPoint presentation from hell.
Performances: “Who Needs Dignity?”
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Eric Roberts: cashing a check. He’s less sheriff, more mall security guard who accidentally wandered into the wrong movie.
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Melissa Brasselle: fine, but mostly there to remind you women exist in this film.
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Corbin Bernsen: spends the movie deciding whether to chew scenery or just chew Tums.
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Dinosaurs: recycled stars of Carnosaur. Ironically, they give the most consistent performance.
Final Thoughts
Raptor isn’t a movie—it’s a tax write-off that somehow escaped into your DVD player. It reuses old footage so shamelessly you half expect to see a watermark pop up mid-scene. The new footage only serves to remind you how much better the old footage wasn’t.
It’s a cinematic Frankenstein’s monster: cobbled together, stitched poorly, and lumbering around begging for death. Except Frankenstein’s monster had dignity. Raptor just has Eric Roberts in a cowboy hat.
If you want dinosaurs, watch Jurassic Park. If you want schlock, watch Carnosaur. If you want to punish yourself for sins you don’t remember committing, watch Raptor.
Bad Review Summary
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Dinosaurs: recycled, resized, ridiculous.
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Plot: Sheriff vs. Scientist vs. Editing software.
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Performances: phoned in from a payphone.
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Direction: Wynorski, but lazier.
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Overall: Carnosaur without the charm, Jurassic Park without the budget, and fun without the fun.
