Skip to content
Answering Your Questions About Reactor: Right here.
Sign up for our weekly newsletter. Everything in one handy email.

Deleted Scene From 65 Has Adam Driver Trying to Keep Everyone Calm Inside a Dead Dino

Deleted Scene From 65 Has Adam Driver Trying to Keep Everyone Calm Inside a Dead Dino

Home / Deleted Scene From 65 Has Adam Driver Trying to Keep Everyone Calm Inside a Dead Dino
News news

Deleted Scene From 65 Has Adam Driver Trying to Keep Everyone Calm Inside a Dead Dino

By

Published on May 5, 2023

Screenshot: Sony Pictures
Screenshot: Sony Pictures

Did you, like me and pretty much everyone else, miss seeing the movie 65 when it was in theaters? If so, the good news is that the film—starring Adam Driver trying to survive a spaceship crashing into Earth during the age of the dinosaurs—is now available for digital purchase. And to celebrate the occasion, Sony released a deleted scene from the film that has Driver and his co-star, the young Ariana Greenblatt, just trying to survive in a world chock full of dinos.

The clip has the two in the forest, where we see and hear inklings of an apex predator (a T-Rex, I think?) lurking up on them. The two hide in the carcass of a long-dead dino, and Driver pulls his best Pedro Pascal impression by taking on the role of protective dad in the face of monstrous threats.

Need more of a refresher about what 65 is all about? Here’s the synopsis:

After a catastrophic crash on an unknown planet, pilot Mills (Adam Driver) quickly discovers he’s actually stranded on Earth… 65 million years ago. Now, with only one chance at rescue, Mills and the only other survivor, Koa (Ariana Greenblatt), must make their way across an unknown terrain riddled with dangerous prehistoric creatures in an epic fight to survive.

65 comes from the writers of A Quiet Place, was written and directed by Scott Beck & Bryan Woods, and, along with Beck and Woods, was produced by Sam Raimi, Deborah Liebling, and Zainab Azizi. Sony marketed the movie as a chilling sci-fi thriller, but according to folks I know who’ve seen it, it’s actually a family film? (It’s rated PG-13, after all.)

You can judge for yourself if you want—the movie is now available for digital purchase everywhere digital movies are sold.


Buy the Book

The Archive Undying

The Archive Undying

About the Author

Vanessa Armstrong

Author

Vanessa Armstrong is a writer with bylines at The LA Times, SYFY WIRE, StarTrek.com and other publications. She lives in Los Angeles with her dog Penny and her husband Jon, and she loves books more than most things. You can find more of her work on her website or follow her on Twitter @vfarmstrong.
Learn More About