Dr. Ian Malcolm: [after the T-Rex failed to appear for the tour group] You see a Tyrannosaur doesn't follow a set pattern or park schedules, the essence of chaos.
Dr. Alan Grant: [the Triceratops] Ellie, this one was always my favorite when I was a kid. And now I've seen one, its the most beautiful thing I ever saw.
Lex: [the T-Rex has just killed a Gallimimus] I want to go now.
Dr. Alan Grant: Look how it eats.
Lex: Please!
Dr. Alan Grant: [to Tim] I bet you'll never look at birds the same way again.
Dennis Nedry: [Nedry walks into a tree branch] Oh, Jesus Christ!
[hears something]
Dennis Nedry: Hello?
[a dinosaur pokes its head out from behind the tree]
Dennis Nedry: Yeah, yeah that's nice. Gotta' go!
[the dinosaur is right behind Nedry now]
Dennis Nedry: Hello, nice boy. Uh, nice
boy. Nice dinosaur. I thought you were one of your big brothers, you're not so bad. You're not so bad. What do you want? What do you want? You want food? Look at me. I just fell down a hill. I'm soaking wet. I don't have any food. I have no food on me. I have nothing on me. Go on.
Lex: [Brachiosaurs hearing Grant imitate they're singing look up in his direction] Sh. Sh. Don't let the monsters come over here.
Dr. Alan Grant: They're not monsters, Lex. They're just animals. And these are herbivores.
Tim: That means they only eat vegetables, but for you I think they'd make an exception.
Ray Arnold: Um... It's OK.
[looking at one of the computers in the control room]
Ray Arnold: Look, see that. It's on. It worked.
Dr. Ian Malcolm: What... what do you mean, it worked? Everything's still off.
Ray Arnold: Well, maybe the shutdown tripped the circuit breakers. All we have to do is turn them
back on. Reboot a few systems in here. Telephones. Security doors, and a half dozen others but it worked. The system's ready.
Muldoon: Where are the breakers?
Ray Arnold: Maintenance shed. At the other end of the compound. Three minutes, and I can have power back on in the entire park.
John Hammond: Well, just to be safe I
want everyone in the emergency bunker, until Mr Arnold returns, and the whole system's up and running again.
John Hammond: We've made living biological attractions so astounding that they'll capture the imagination of the entire planet.
Dr. Ellie Sattler: I can't wait any longer. Something went wrong. I'm gonna' get the power back on
Muldoon: You can't just stroll down the road, you know?
Dr. Alan Grant: I hate computers.
Dr. Ellie Sattler: The feeling's mutual.
Dr. Ellie Sattler: [after entering the maintenance shed] Mr Arnold? Mr Arnold? John, I'm in.
John Hammond: [over Ellie's radio] Great. Now, ahead of you, is a metal staircase. Go down it.
Dr. Ellie Sattler: OK, I'm going down.
John Hammond: After 20 or 30 feet, you come to a T-junction. Take a left.
Dr. Ian Malcolm: Just have her follow these cables...
John Hammond: I understand how to read a schematic.
Dr. Ellie Sattler: But you can't think your way through this, John. You have to feel it.
John Hammond: You're right. You're absolutely right. Hiring Nedry was a mistake, that's obvious. We're over-dependent on automation. I can see that now. Now, the next time, everything is correctible...
Dr. Ellie Sattler: John...
John Hammond: Creation is an act of sheer will. Next time it'll be flawless.
Tim: [a Brachiosaur] It looks like it has a cold.
Dr. Alan Grant: Yeah, maybe.