Gallagher's
Forum
By
Jon Gallagher
Jurassic
World (Amblin/Universal,
2015) – Director: Colin Trevorrow. Writers: Rick Jaffa, Amanda
Silver, Colin Trevorrow, & Derek Connolly (s/p). Rick Jaffa &
Amanda Silver (story). Michael Crichton (characters). Stars: Chris
Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Vincent D’Onofrio, Ty Simpkins, Irrfan
Khan, Jake Johnson, Omar Sy, B.D. Wong, Judy Greer, Lauren Lapkus,
Brian Tee, Nick Robinson, & Katie McGrath. Color and 3D, 124
minutes, Rated PG-13.
It’s
a lazy Sunday afternoon and the theater in our small town is offering
matinees for a buck off the regular $5 admission price. Jurassic
World has just been held over for a second week and my
oldest daughter and two oldest grandkids have recommended it. Then
again, I have to remember that they recommended Transformers,
so I gather my four bucks together and walk across the street.
Jurassic
World is the fourth installment in the Jurassic Park
franchise which began all the way back in 1993 with Stephen Spielberg
directing Michael Crichton’s screenplay of his own novel. Sequels
would follow in 1997 and 2001 with Jurassic Park: the Lost
World and Jurassic Park III.
SPOILER
ALERT: No lawyers are eaten during this movie. Damn!
The
other movies followed a similar plot path: scientists recreated
dinosaurs, put them on display for the public to see, and then were
surprised when the dinosaurs broke loose and started munching on
people. I wondered what a fourth movie would add that was new.
The
answer is, “not much.”
In
this movie, scientists have genetically engineered a dinosaur, bigger
than any previously known overgrown lizard. This one is bigger,
badder, faster, more intelligent, and seemingly unstoppable.
Fortunately, he’s in a special pen on the north side of the island.
The
south side of the island has reopened to tourists and features the
very latest in dinosaur technology. There’s a petting zoo (I did
not make that up), an archeological dig, and a “ride” where you
are seated in a “hamster ball” that keeps you upright all the
time but rolls amongst the roaming wild dinosaurs.
Bryce
Dallas Howard plays Claire, an administrator with the Jurassic World
owners who is trying to increase attendance at the theme park while
playing host to her two teenage nephews who are visiting her while
their parents sort out a potential divorce. She is in charge of the
project that will unveil the “Indominus Rex,” the villain of the
movie who is available for naming rights. The teens are played by
Nick Robinson and Ty Simpkins.
There
are plenty of mid-level bad guys to choose from as well. Irrfan Khan
is Masrani, one of the owners of the park; Vincent D’Onofrio, who
plays the military guy who sees the new creation as the Army’s new
secret weapon; and B.D. Wong, who is the guy who mixed the DNA to
create the new species.
Our
hero is Owen (Pratt), a bad ass animal trainer who has developed a
relationship with four Velociraptors (a velociraptor whisperer???)
who also somehow has all the skills of a special ops/Jedi knight.
The
plot goes the way of all these types of movies whether
it’s Jaws or Predator. The big bad
freak of nature (or the lab or aliens as the case may be) gets loose
and starts to terrorize innocent people. The administration keeps
denying the danger until the body count is too high to ignore at
which point the good guy (Owen) starts to right the ship. In this
case, the two teenagers are in the park in danger and Claire enlists
Owen’s help to try and rescue them. Meanwhile, the Indominus
Rex is able to survive attacks from other dinosaurs, humans,
and machines with no real damage.
The
movie is heavy with CGI, but then, where do you find stock footage of
dinosaurs attacking each other and terrorizing humans? If you go into
the movie accepting that fact, you’ll like it a lot better than if
you don’t. If you can’t accept the CGI, then you may expect Fred
and Barney to come rolling to the rescue at any moment.
Pratt
is nothing special in the starring role. Of course, they weren’t
looking for Academy Award winning performances here. This movie was
driven by visuals and not by plot nor performances. Owen is a
likeable hero, but he really brings nothing special to the role. I
think any of today’s leading men could have been put in the role
and the results would have been the same – a likeable hero.
D’Onofrio
is quite different from his Law & Order character
and does show off some of his acting chops here. His character comes
off as being a little to the left of insane, creeping that way inches
at a time till his true character is finally revealed.
The
movie on a whole was fun and enjoyable. It was just different enough
from the original three to keep me entertained, and it offered the
traditional roller-coaster of emotions expected from a thriller. It
also left the possibility open to sequels, and no doubt will, given
the box office draw this movie enjoyed.
I’ll
give it a solid B. I wasn’t
thrilled with the last couple lines of dialogue, as they brought to
mind the end of San Andreas (which I previously reviewed). Had they tried to develop the characters a little
more and not tried to impress me so much with the CGI, it might have
gotten into the A range.
About
25 other people from town also decided that it was a lazy Sunday
perfect for taking in a movie. It was a good mix of ages from
pre-teen to grandparent age, and everyone seemed to enjoy the film.
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