
One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing
1975 • Action, Adventure, Comedy, Drama, Family, Mystery, Thriller • G
Escaping from China with a microfilm of the formula for the mysterious "Lotus X", Lord Southmere, a Queen's Messenger, is chased by a group of Chinese spies.
Runtime: 1h 34m
Why you should read the novel
If you enjoyed the whimsical chaos of the film, you'll love immersing yourself in the source novel, The Great Dinosaur Robbery. The book delivers a sharper, more satirical wit, and offers more daring escapades set against a sophisticated backdrop. Crafted with adult humor and intricate plotting, the novel explores layers of intrigue and international espionage that the film adaptation omits.
Reading The Great Dinosaur Robbery offers readers a more complex and mature experience. The characters, motives, and suspense are crafted for an adult audience, making the story's twists and reveals far more rewarding. The prose delivers clever narrative tricks and nuanced dialogue that film simply cannot translate.
For those who appreciate character depth and clever plot mechanics, the book is a must-read. Enjoy the original tone and thrills of this Cold War-era caper and discover dimensions to the story and characters that never made it to the screen.
Adaptation differences
The most significant difference between the adaptation and the novel is the target audience and overall tone. The Great Dinosaur Robbery is written for adults, laced with dark humor and intricate Cold War intrigue, while the film One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing reimagines the story as a lighthearted children's adventure, removing most mature elements.
In the novel, the theft of the dinosaur skeleton is orchestrated by a group of American spies in London, intent on securing a secret formula hidden inside the bones—a plot thick with espionage and danger. The film downplays espionage in favor of slapstick comedy and replaces the American agents with bumbling British nannies and inept Chinese spies pursuing a secret microfilm, making the tone considerably more whimsical.
Characterization also differs significantly. The book’s protagonists are motivated, cunning, and embroiled in genuine peril, whereas the film's characters—chiefly the nannies—are more caricatured and engage in farcical set pieces. The stakes are much higher and the atmosphere much more suspenseful in the book, while the film is playful and ultimately safe.
Lastly, the film shifts the setting to a more fantastical, fictionalized version of 1920s London, discards the sharp social satire of the book, and offers a simplified plot. The book’s nuanced subplots and underlying messages about espionage and cultural clashes are largely excised, resulting in a vastly different viewing and reading experience.
One of Our Dinosaurs Is Missing inspired from
The Great Dinosaur Robbery
by David Forrest