“The Dinosaurs” Brings a Spielberg-Backed Prehistoric Epic to the Screen

“The Dinosaurs” promises an epic, Spielberg-backed journey through prehistory.

“The Dinosaurs” premieres March 6, 2026, on Netflix and aims to make prehistory feel huge again. The four-part documentary series promises a sweeping look at the rise and fall of dinosaurs across hundreds of millions of years. It also brings major star power behind the mic and behind the scenes.

Morgan Freeman narrates the series. His voice gives the story a grounded, storybook feel, even as the timeline stretches into deep time. The logline calls it an “epic journey into a lost world,” and the series aims to deliver that scale in every episode.

A Four-Part Story Told Like a Global Event

Each episode runs 60 minutes, for a total of four installments. The series comes from executive producer Steven Spielberg and Amblin Documentaries, with production by Silverback Films. It also reunites key creatives from the award-winning team behind “Life on Our Planet,” which should tell viewers what kind of ambition to expect.

The showrunners are Dan Tapster, Keith Scholey, and Alastair Fothergill. Series director Nick Shoolingin-Jordan guides the overall vision across the four hours. Together, they aim to turn scientific history into a clear, cinematic narrative.

Big Visuals, Big Sound

The series leans into modern craft to rebuild a vanished world. Industrial Light & Magic handles visual effects and animation. That choice signals a premium approach, with detailed creatures and environments that can hold up on a big screen.

Composer Lorne Balfe scores the series. His music often mixes scale with emotion, which fits a story built on survival, dominance, and extinction. The goal feels simple: make the audience feel the wonder, not just learn the facts.

Across four episodes, “The Dinosaurs” spotlights a wide range of prehistoric life, from Marasuchus, Plateosaurus, and Mamenchisaurus to Stegosaurus, Ankylosaurus, Allosaurus, and Tyrannosaurus rex, plus ocean giants like Pliosaurus and mosasaurs. It also includes early feathered fliers such as Anchiornis and Longipteryx, tying that evolution to modern birds.

Who Is Behind “The Dinosaurs”

Executive producers include Spielberg, Scholey, Darryl Frank, and Justin Falvey. Silverback Films and Amblin Documentaries produce the series, with a documentary format that keeps the focus on story and spectacle.

“The Dinosaurs” has a clear pitch. It wants to take familiar icons and make them feel new again. With Freeman narrating, ILM building the visuals, and a seasoned documentary team running the show, this one looks set to be must-watch viewing for anyone who ever wondered what ruled Earth before us.



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Sean Tajipour is the Founder and Editor of Nerdtropolis and the host of the Moviegoers Society and Reel Insights Podcast. He is also a member of the Critics Choice Association. You can follow on Twitter and Instagram @Seantaj.

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