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Malcolm: What? What did you expect to document? What did you expect to see?

Nic Van Owen: Animals, maybe... big iguanas.
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Iguana

Battle for survival — against brutal, bestial iguanas!


Making movies about giant monsters (often dinosaurs) is downright awesome. However, sometimes, the filmmakers just don't have the budget to make a somewhat convincing monster suit, or an animatronic puppet, or stop motion, or even a crappily animated CGI monster.

But, all hope is not lost. No.... you can just take an ordinary lizard, alligator or other non-extinct reptile (or, very rarely, other smallish animal), stick it in a costume or glue on a few cardboard fins and horns, and... ta-da! Instant dinosaur!

Of course, having an Adventurer Palaeontologist pointing to an iguana with horns glued to its head and calling it a "Brontosaurus" is just as convincing as it sounds, not to mention a complete and utter mockery of palaeontology. After all, if a five-year-old kid can tell the difference between a Tyrannosaurus Rex and an iguana, it's highly unlikely anyone is going to be convinced that your cardboard-taped-to-his-back monitor lizard is supposed to be a dinosaur. Especially if they have any understanding of the Square-Cube Law.

Still that's what makes these movies such cheesy fun anyway. A good source of Nightmare Retardant, many fans suspect that these films' animal stars are the film-makers' pets. Outside of parodies, this has been a Discredited Trope since 1960.

Examples of Slurpasaur include:


Advertising[]

  • Parodied in a series of ads for McDonald's in the UK, which showed people running from a superimposed cute Pug in a lizard costume. The idea being that this is what you got if you spent 99p on a special effects budget instead of their Pound saver menu.
  • Also in a Heinekin ad which showed a tortoise with stegosaurus plates glued to its shell.


Comics[]

  • One FoxTrot strip features Jason trying to make his iguana look like a dinosaur by taping a fan to its back. Another time, after failing to Follow the Leader after Air Bud by teaching him to play sports, he tried to make a Godzilla-esque monster movie by dropping him on a miniature city.


Film[]

  • The Trope Namer example (albeit by fans of the film), and the one where most of this footage comes from is One Million BC with Victor Mature and Carl Landis (remade by Ray Harryhausen and Charles Shneer as One Million Years B.C. featuring Raquel Welch). This film had a plethora of animals in makeup and/or visually enlarged to make them look monstrous. The image above is from this movie. Other examples from this film include an Elephant in fur as a Woolly Mammoth, a pig with glued on horns and a tail as a Triceratops, Alligator with a Glued on Fin (enlarged), various enlarged lizards (monitors, iguana, skinks) as Dinosaurs, a snake and enlarged Coati(the coati eats the snake on screen) and an (enlarged) armadillo with rubber horns. It also featured a Rubber Suit T-Rex which was NOT enlarged in any way. Yeah, it's So Bad It's Good. The FX from this film got reused from the 1940s through the 1960s in such well known films as: Tarzan's Desert Mystery, Two Lost Worlds, The Lost Volcano, the American version of Godzilla Raids Again, Jungle Manhunt, Untamed Women, Robot Monster, King Dinosaur, Teenage Caveman, Valley of the Dragons, Journey to the Center of Time, Horror of the Blood Monsters (the stock footage was tinted in color for this film), and the Mexican films Island of the Dinosaurs (La Isla De Los Dinosaurios) and Adventure at the Center of the Earth (Aventura al Centro de la Tierra). If you've seen much Mystery Science Theater 3000, you've probably seen the footage in question a few times.
    • The Harryhausen movie generally avoided this (favoring stop-motion instead), although a real lizard and spider were thrown in around the beginning to liven things up (and as an homage to the original film which did employ it). A few critics complained that the Archelon scene used a real turtle, but it didn't; Harryhausen just made a really good model.
  • A mammalian example would be the film The Killer Shrews. When the so-called giant shrews were not being played by cheap puppets, they were being played by dogs in very unconvincing costumes. This is hilariously pointed out in the Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode that featured this movie.
  • Another Mystery Science Theater 3000 episode that has an animal play the monster is The Giant Gila Monster, which more traditionally has a reptile play a reptile. Not a particularly good movie, but the monster looks okay — except for the fact that it isn't a gila monster. It's a Mexican Beaded Lizard.
  • The 1960 adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World is very notorious for this. Particularly when (as mentioned above), Claude Rains (who is just here for the Money, Dear Boy) identifies an iguana with plastic fins as a brontosaurus. The most definitely not-fake alligator vs. monitor lizard battle shows one of the main reasons why this trope isn't used anymore. This is the last real use of this trope in the classic sense.
  • In the 1959 film Journey to the Center of the Earth, optically enlarged lizards with fins glued to their backs play dimetrodons, a synapsid that actually looks... sort of like a lizard with a fin on its back (though the ones in the film are somewhat larger than their real-life counterparts). They don't actually look too bad.
  • In King Dinosaur (from 1955) an iguana plays a Tyrannosaurus Rex (which, for some reason, lives on another planet). Hilariously, the biologist identifies the obvious iguana as a tyrannosaur! As well as throwing in One Million BC Stock Footage.
  • The large fire-breathing dragon in 1971 Swedish fantasy comedy Äppelkriget/The Apple War is played by a little lizard. Then again, the special effects are really not the point of that film.
  • A similar example appears in the 1970s Czech fairy tale movie Princ a Večernice (The Prince and the Evening Star). During the prince's epic journey to fulfill his quest, he has to climb a high cliff at one moment. When he finally reaches the cliff's edge, a dragon-like monster appears before him... played by the all-time slurpasaur favourite — an iguana! This gets justified and subverted in an amusing way though : The "dragon" immediately vanishes, since it's just another illusion summoned by the evil wizard of the story, who's trying to discourage the prince from continuing further...
  • Parodied in Tim Burton's short film Frankenweenie. The film opens with the projection of the protagonist's homemade film, on it, "dinosaurs" made of handkerchief sock puppets "fight" and then the "monster" appears: the protagonist's dog in a costume.
  • Proving that it's possible to dress up an animal and make it work, the banthas from Star Wars were played by elephants draped with thick furs and puppet heads.
  • Arguably an inversion occurs in the Tristar Godzilla, which features what is supposed to be a mutant lizard looking and acting like a dinosaur.
  • The Land Unknown (1957) had two stegosauruses fighting each other which were obviously photographically enlarged monitor lizards.


Literature[]


Live Action TV[]

  • Subverted (in a way) in the Doctor Who story "Colony in Space". A robot with claws plus a hologram simulates a giant lizard attack.
    • The same plot point was used in the later story "Vengeance on Varos", only with a hologram (stock footage) of a fly instead of an iguana. Doctor Who also played the trope straight at least once.
      • One of the more infamous examples is from The Talons of Weng-Chiang, in which close-ups of a rat in a model sewer are meant to suggest a terrifying giant rat. A man in a rat costume is also used. Sadly, and predictably, the real rat and the rat suit of course look nothing alike.
  • Parodied in a Little Red Riding Hood-based skit on Monty Python's Fliegender Zirkus (also seen in Monty Python Live at the Hollywood Bowl) in which the Big Bad Wolf is played by a tired-looking dachshund with a piece of faux fur tied to its back.
  • The low-budget Canadian Hercules: The Legendary Journeys wannabe, The Adventures of Sinbad, used superimposed crows and iguanas as giant monsters for its first season.
  • One of the Time Travel episodes in Honey I Shrunk the Kids: The Series has the family being transported to "prehistoric times" and being promptly chased by a giant monitor lizard. The alleged Child Prodigy identifies it as a Tenontosaurus, which in reality was a vegetarian dinosaur. And then a caveman shows up.
  • An interesting case where this actually works is the BBC documentary series Monsters We Met. The giant Haast eagle is played by an enlarged Harpy eagle, and it's downright creepy.
  • An AFV submission spoofing Jurassic Park used dinosaurs played by guinea pigs. GUINEA PIGS.
  • An episode of Star Trek: The Original Series had a lovable alien creature played by...a pomeranian with a horn stuck between its eyes. Granted, it fulfilled its main requirement: it was cute, and could alternately be lovable/evil.
    • Its MAIN requirement was to die. And thus to allow De Forrest Kelley to say, for the very first time, "He's dead, Jim."
  • Merlin occasionally has Arthur fighting giant underground monsters, vaguely mammalian but with no hair and huge front teeth. They are actually naked mole rats filmed close-up and superimposed on the action. And this from a series that routinely includes a convincing CGI dragon.


Puppet Shows[]

  • In Team America: World Police, all the characters are puppets, so when they need the characters to get attacked by panthers, they use regular black kittens with Mighty Roars dubbed over them. Played for Laughs, of course.
    • And the Shark Pool is full of little dogfish — you can't say they aren't sharks!
  • Thunderbirds episode "Attack of the Alligators" features an accident with some kind of Super Serum getting into the water table near a laboratory somewhere in Louisiana. Live baby alligators were employed on model sets alongside miniatures of the characters, but since working around the limitations of models and miniatures was what Gerry Anderson Productions did, it actually worked fairly well. Have a look.
    • It doesn't hurt that alligators are actually scary on their own. (Although it's rather easy for reptile aficionados to tell that they're babies.)
    • Actually, a Super Serum that only affects creatures while they're still growing makes more sense anyway... which suggests the giant 'gators were going to get bigger.


Web Original[]


Western Animation[]

  • Parodied by Olive Jar Animation's Gila Monster! Each episode of this stop-motion animation series ended with the director letting his pet iguana (obviously not gila monster) wander through the dollhouse-sized sets. Best episode ended with the iguana "tasting" part of the scenery. D'awww...
  • Also parodied in the South Park "The Startling" story arc, which really needs to be seen to be believed.
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 "Guinea Dragon!!!"

"Run for your lives! It's a Guinessaurus rex!"

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  • In one episode of Doug, Doug and Skeeter were making a monster movie in their backyard. They attached a cardboard shark fin, tail, and jaws to Porkchop, to make him into a "shark dog".


Real Life[]

  • Leonardo da Vinci supposedly glued some wings onto a lizard and told his friends he'd found a real dragon, before revealing the truth. Imagine him telling them all they'd been punk'd.
    • Not as big a stretch as it seems, as the idea of dragons having wings had only recently emerged, following the importation of preserved Draco lizard specimens ("baby dragons") as curiosities from Asia.
  • The Fiji Mermaid, a hoax created by sewing together the corpses of a fish and a monkey.
  • When platypus specimens were sent to Europe shortly after Australia was settled they were widely believed to be an example of this.
  • Another hoax was the Jenny Haniver; it's actually just a mangled carcass of a skate or ray, but they got paraded around by curiosity-cabinets and such for years as some kind of bizarre new monster.
  • Ever wonder why you know exactly what a unicorn horn looks like, with the spiral running down it? It's because during the Middle Ages, "unicorn horns" were common both in Wonder Cabinets and in rich people's home-remedies (mostly for impotency)--actually came from narwhals.
  • Not even people are exempt! During the 1800's especially, actors would be pretend to be 'wild men' from jungles, islands, and so on. One from the San Fransisco Barbary Coast era was known only as Oofty Goofty, the only words he spoke while in costume; his handlers first covered him in tar, then stuck horse hair into it. In the end, he had to go the hospital because it wouldn't come off, and he wound up having to soak in chemical thinners on the hospital roof for a few days. The end result of which killed off most of his pain receptors on his body, allowing him to think up his next great act: have people pay to hit him with a baseball bat since he 'felt no pain'. This act lasted until a pro baseball player gave him a whack and cracked several ribs.