By: Robert Murphy
I would be hard
pressed to find one kid out in the world today who hasn’t thought how amazing
it would be to see dinosaurs once again roam the Earth. These monolithic beasts
were rulers of the land, sea and air making it very hard to believe that
homosapiens would end up being the dominate life forms today. 22 years ago
Steven Spielberg brought these creatures back to life with the first Jurassic Park movie where John Hammond sought to
bring every child’s dream to life of seeing a real life dinosaur for
themselves. It, of course, ended in tragedy as the park failed and the animals
escaped from their habitats causing people to lose their lives. Now though it
would appear the vision that Hammond
set out to create all those years ago has come true and the new Jurassic World is a fully functioning
attraction which brings people from all around the world to it. People no
longer fear being eaten; they ride on dinosaurs backs, pet them like in a
regular petting zoo and even get front row seats to being splashed in a giant
wave by one of these gigantic killing machines that died out all those years
ago. But, that lack of fear and excitement may turn out to be the downfall of
this newest park as the pressure to amp up the wow factor will lead to things
that should not be tampered with.
Despite the many
disasters that have come from the experimentation and work of InGen over the
years Jurassic World still became a
reality, proving that money can make just about anything go away. InGen and the
park are now separate but slightly connected entities in this latest film as
InGen has moved to more militaristic work and the park has been taken over by a
new eccentric billionaire Simon Masrani (Irrfan Khan) who shared Hammond ’s dream of a park
that would bring fun and happiness to people and not just the extremely
wealthy. This would definitely appear to be achieved as you see kids get wowed
at the sight of a Tyrannosaurus Rex digging into a goat (one of the less but equally
enjoyable throwbacks the film makes) and others explore out into the park to
see the creatures in their natural habitats in wonderful gyroscopic creations.
However, you can only wow someone for so long as Jurassic World expertly points out that people, especially teens,
need something new to keep them coming back to the park and make them actually
get invested in the amazing things that they are experiencing. Well, returning
lead scientist Dr. Henry Wu (B.D. Wong) is prepared to make sure that the next
attraction will be the biggest of them all as his team of scientist genetically
create a terrifying creature, the Indominus Rex. This, of course, would prove
to be a terrible idea as the creature gets out and begins a park wide massacre
of not only the other dinosaurs but the innocent people in the park.
For the most part
our resident showrunner dino is a pretty believable creature. It was created with
the soul intent to frighten and impress everyone who came to see it and what
little glimpses you receive of it early on certainly inspires that reaction. It
has the large body of a super predator like the Spinosaurus in Jurassic Park 3, the physical build of a T-Rex,
terrifyingly long claws and would end up being the largest dinosaur ever
created, oh and it is an albino white color. The more unbelievable bits are
kept a secret up until the point where you find out just how this beast escapes
from it’s captivity but for the most part I did not spend too much time eye
rolling at the creature and actual spent more time with my jaw on the floor as
everything fell into chaos the minute it gets out.
This factor is
what is great about a movie like Jurassic
World because you aren’t going out on a limb with too many of the concepts
that you’re presenting to your audience. This even includes Owen (Chris Pratt)
driving a motorcycle to a dense forest with highly trained Raptors at his side.
An idea which peaked my interest immediately but would most definitely be
something to normally gawk at but this isn’t the case once you witness the
connection he builds with the animals before hand and realize he’s worked with
them for years to get to that point. Even while it’s happening he still doesn’t
fully trust the situation or agree with it so it isn’t just for show. Pratt
does a brilliant job as the sarcastic but strong character that presence most
of the voice of reason for the film and knows just how intelligent they can be.
A fact that leading lady and head of the park Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard)
seems to ignore as she is more of the control freak business woman and less of
touchy feely type that would get emotionally invested with the animals at the
park or even her two nephews that are their visiting at the time of the break
out.
Claire does change
the most throughout the story though as much of the turmoil surrounding her
makes her see things in a new light. The turning point for her is probably when
she first realizes she hasn’t checked on her nephews in forever and now has to
save them. That along with the touching scene where she and Owen come across a
field of dead dinosaurs that the Indominus killed for nothing other than pure
sport also changed her quite a bit. It makes her more aware of just what these
creatures are and what they are like, it grounds her character more and Owen
also brings her down as well. The two are that classic mismatched pair and it
inspired sort of an Australia romance where Owen is the gruff muscle
man who you would not expect to end up with the uptight and cultured Claire but
it somehow works. Their ever growing romance doesn’t feel forced at any point
and I was totally on board with it up until the cheesy line at the end but it
was far too late for me to not enjoy what the two had together for the entirety
of the film.
What did feel
frankly subpar was with Claire’s two nephews and some of the other secondary
character you will see. Zach (Nick Robinson) and Gray (Ty Simpkins) do both of
their parts fairly well and have a good bond with one another that shows when
they end up being stranded in the original films decaying park and try to
escape certain death at the hands of our main dinosaur. Zach also does a great
job of displaying the type of teenager that just isn’t impressed by most of the
things that are going on in the park and that he’s more interested in the girls
walking around than anything else. There is a weak subplot though where it is
revealed their parents are getting divorced and it feels entirely unnecessary
to the story along with including the odd suffering relationship between Claire
and her sister. We then have the overly eager Hoskins (Vincent D’Onofrio) who
represents the current InGen and wants to unleash some of the dinosaurs as
weapons to fulfill their government contracts. You get the sinking feeling that
he is up to far more than he’s telling you throughout the story and later on he
makes a mess of what was a seemingly smooth plot up until that point.
That being said Jurassic World doesn’t lose too much
momentum as it moves forward with its new ideas and revisiting some old
nostalgic pieces. Old call backs and appearances made me smile and were clearly
meant to bring back touching moments for those who loved the original. Then you
have the new gritty action scenes which weren’t afraid to punctuate on some
human casualties but not to a degree that made it into a Hollywood
bloodbath of shock and awe. Things were clearly in the right hands as the ideas
and vision of the first film return but are finally brought to life in ways
that I never thought possible.
Good:
- Chris Pratt and
Bryce Dallas Howard were a great pair
- Just the right
amount of nostalgia trickled throughout the story
- The Indominus Rex
and all the action and chaos that followed with it
Bad:
- Subplots and the
secondary characters
- The new InGen and
their evil schemes
Scully Rating: 8.0
out of 10
No comments:
Post a Comment