The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997) Poster

Julianne Moore: Sarah Harding

Photos 

Quotes 

  • [after re-capturing the baby T-Rex in San Diego] 

    Sarah Harding : How do we find the adult?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Just follow the screams.

  • [Eddie finds Ian, Sarah, and Nick trapped in a trailer hanging over a cliff] 

    Eddie Carr : What do you need?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Rope!

    Eddie Carr : OK, rope! Anything else?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Yeah, three double cheeseburgers with everything!

    Nick Van Owen : No onions on mine!

    Sarah Harding : And an apple turnover!

  • Sarah Harding : You know, I have made a career out of waiting for you.

    Kelly Malcolm : You know, Sarah does have a pretty good p...

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : It's so important to your future that you not finish that sentence.

  • Dr. Ian Malcolm : Why don't people listen to me? I use plain and simple English, I don't have any accent that I'm aware of...

    Sarah Harding : Oh, shut up.

  • Sarah Harding : I need something pliable... Spit.

    [Holds out her hand] 

    Nick Van Owen : [Spits saliva into her palm] 

    Sarah Harding : [Disgusted]  Your *gum*!

  • Ian Malcolm : Hey, when the adult sees us once again with his baby, uh, isn't he gonna be like, "You"? You know, there may be some, uh, angry recognition.

    Sarah Harding : Who knows? He may be just happy to see us.

  • Sarah Harding : I love you. I just don't - need you right now.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : I'll tell you what you *need*, a good anti-psychotic!

    Sarah Harding : I'll be back in five or six days.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : No, you'll be back in five or six *pieces*.

  • Sarah Harding : What's everybody looking at?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : [spots the T-Rex transfer ship speeding towards the harbor] 

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : We should've stayed in the damn car.

  • Sarah Harding : [to Ian]  I've worked around predators since I was 20 years old. Lions, jackals, hyenas... you.

  • Sarah Harding : Hey, don't light that! Dinosaurs pick up scents from miles away. We're here to observe and document, not interact.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Ah, which, by the way, is a scientific impossibility. The Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. Whatever you study, you also change.

    Sarah Harding : Well, you know, I'll risk it. I'm sick of scratching around in rock and bone and making assumptions and deductions about the nurturing habits of animals that have been dead for 65 million years. I'm sick of it, man. Then you show up and fill my head with stories for four years. So, of course I'm going to come down here. What do you expect?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Stories of mutilation and death. Weren't you paying attention?

    Sarah Harding : Oh, please! Don't treat me like I'm a grad student. I've worked around predators since I was 20 years old. Lions, jackals, hyenas - you.

  • Sarah Harding : [about the baby T-Rex]  He's too drugged.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : He's never gonna know we have it if the thing doesn't make some kind of sound.

    Sarah Harding : Come on. Wake up. Come on. Come on. Wake up.

    [baby T-rex growls. Adult T-Rex sniffs the air then roars in their direction] 

    Sarah Harding : He knows.

  • Dr. Ian Malcolm : Sarah, when Hammond called you, uh, why didn't you say something to me?

    Sarah Harding : Because I knew you would have stopped me from coming.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : I would have tied you to the bed. Right.

    Sarah Harding : I figured out how the animals survive without lysine.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : I don't care!

  • Sarah Harding : [referring to the T-Rexes]  This isn't hunting, Ian, it's searching. They're looking for their infant.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Let's not disappoint them.

  • [while luring the T-rex to follow them to the docks] 

    Sarah Harding : Ian, slow down.

    [Ian looks behind him and sees the T-rex coming] 

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Uh... I don't think so.

  • Dieter : Wait, what's that, veloc-o-?

    Dr. Robert Burke : Velociraptor. Carnivore, pack hunter. About two meters tall, long snout, binocular vision, strong, dextrous forearms, and killing claws on both feet.

    Sarah Harding : And the rex may continue to track us, too, if they perceive a threat to themselves or to their infant.

    Dr. Robert Burke : No, no, you're wrong there, Dr. Harding. We'll lose them once we leave their territory.

    Sarah Harding : No, don't bet on it. Tyrannosaurs got the largest proportional olfactory cavity of any creature in the fossil record with the exception of one.

    Dr. Robert Burke : Right, right, the uh, turkey vulture. Could scent up to ten miles.

    Peter Ludlow : Right, this is all very thrilling, but I say we should push on to the village, hmm?

  • Sarah Harding : [Nick rescues an injured dinosaur]  Are you out of your mind?

    Nick Van Owen : She's got a broken leg. Let's get in the car before they hear us.

    Sarah Harding : Are you out of your mind?

    Nick Van Owen : Shh.

    Sarah Harding : Do you have any idea what that is?

    Nick Van Owen : Come on, open the door.

    Sarah Harding : You're nuts. Oh, man. Ian's not gonna like this.

  • Sarah Harding : If you wanted to rescue me from something, why didn't you bail me out of that fundraiser at the museum three weeks ago like you said you would?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Uh... this is a slightly different situation.

    Sarah Harding : Or... or why not rescue me from that dinner with your parents that you never showed up for? Why not rescue me when I really need it? Actually be there when you say you will?

  • Sarah Harding : I'm trying to change 100 years of entrenched dogma. Dinosaurs were characterized very early on as vicious lizards. There's a great deal of resistance to the idea of them as nurturing parents. Robert Burke said that the T. Rex was a rogue who would abandon its young at the earliest opportunity. I know I can prove otherwise.

  • Dr. Ian Malcolm : Okay, we're high. And, uh, this is the safest place you can be, I think. Remember what Sarah said before, these plants make it so the animals won't even know you're here.

    Kelly Malcolm : You're just trying to make me feel better. I remember all those stories you told me.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Oh, no, no. This is nothing like that. We're in a completely different situation right now.

    [hearing a Tyrannosaurus roar] 

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Eddie, is there any way we can communicate with the trailers?

    [Eddie hands him a landline receiver] 

    Nick Van Owen : [in the trailer, helping Sarah treat an injured T-Rex baby]  He's moving again. Give more morphine.

    Sarah Harding : We have no idea what his metabolism is. We'll kill him with too much. We'll put him into respiratory arrest.

    [the landline rings and Nick moves to answer it] 

    Sarah Harding : Nick, I need your hands here. Right here. Put some pressure there.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : No answer. What a surprise.

  • Kelly Malcolm : You practically told me to come here.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : I... I what?

    Kelly Malcolm : You said to me, "Don't listen to me." I thought you were, like, trying to tell me something or...

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Kelly, Kelly. You knew exactly what I was talking about. You have no idea...

    Sarah Harding : What, you want to lock her up for curiosity? Where do you think she gets it?

    Kelly Malcolm : Thank you, Sarah.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Hey, don't start the teaming-up thing about this. Out of the conversation. Please. Really.

  • Sarah Harding : [in San Diego, a T-Rex breaks free of its containment]  Why the hell wasn't it tranquilized?

    InGen Worker : It was. Roland hit it with two darts of concentrated carfentanil. Over ten milligrams.

    Sarah Harding : Ten milligrams should've put it into a coma.

    InGen Worker : It stopped breathing, so we gave it naltrexone to counteract the effects, but we didn't know how much to give it.

    Sarah Harding : You administered an antagonist without knowing the proper dosage? You put the animal in a narcoleptic state. The thing's a locomotive now.

  • Sarah Harding : What bothers you is that I'm not afraid of this place and you are.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Of course I am. That's the whole thing.

  • Sarah Harding : Ian, don't be mad. I was gonna call you in a day or two to let you know where I was. I always do, don't I? Come on. I'm the best kind of girlfriend there is: one who travels a lot. You like that, right? You love your independence.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Well, I've gotten used to being apart, but that doesn't mean that that's how I want to, uh, live.

  • Sarah Harding : [using the baby T-Rex to lure its parent to the waterfront]  This guy's almost fully awake. Do you know where you're going?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Yeah. The waterfront's right on the other side of these warehouses.

    Sarah Harding : Is there any way through?

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Oh, God, there could be.

  • Sarah Harding : Don't light that! Dinosaurs pick up scents from miles away. We're here to observe and document, not interact.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Which is a scientific impossibility.Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle. What you study, you change.

    Sarah Harding : I'll risk it. I'm sick of scratching around in rock and bone... making assumptions about the nurturing habits of animals... that have been dead for 65 million years. Then you fill my head with stories. Of course I came down here.

    Dr. Ian Malcolm : Stories of mutilation and death. Were you paying attention?

    Sarah Harding : Please! Don't treat me like a grad student. I've worked around predators since I was 20. Lions, jackals, hyenas, you.

  • Sarah Harding : I'll be right back, baby. I promise.

See also

Release Dates | Official Sites | Company Credits | Filming & Production | Technical Specs


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