Thursday, June 11, 2015

Jurassic World Review


I will never forget leaving the theatre after seeing Jurassic Park when I was 8 years old; from the first moment we saw the Brachiasaurus, the swell of John Williams famous theme, and the nightmares the raptors gave me, Jurassic Park made the world believe in dinosaurs. Years later we got to explore The Lost World and once again feel the same magic as the first movie. Regrettably Jurassic Park 3 became reality, and the series made us want to forget it's final installment. But Jurassic World brings back some of the magic, some of the heart, and a new reason to love the series all over again.

Jurassic World is the start to a new chapter in the history of Jurassic Park. It takes place 22 years after the original park was destroyed. A new owner appointed after the death of John Hammond has "spared no expensive" in bringing the dinosaur theme park to the masses. The park is now an established tourist attraction, complete with rides, tours, feeding schedules, restaurants, hotels, cruises, and Starbucks, product placement, and advertisements galore. The film has a very specific message about product placement and it doesn't like it, yet throughout the entire film we see enough product placement to make you sick. At first it was clever having "Verizon presents the Indominus Rex," as satire for real life, but the film negated this by having products everywhere. Even the main visitor center was presented by Samsung. The message got lost after the heavy-handed and self-aware moment passed, but it seemed important enough to have a few minute conversation in the movie about it.

Like all Jurassic Park movies, family plays an important role. Jurassic World is no exception. It comments on the the state of family today and questions what is a normal family. It deals with the separation and distance between two very different brothers. This ties the film together, the relationship between Zach and Gray and how in a world filled with distractions, divorce, and dinosaur them-parks, they can still find a common bond, protect and learn from each other, and be brothers. Spielberg dealt with the unconventional family in all his movies and I was happy to see this theme prevail in Jurassic World.

It also deals with the idea of control. The writers made sure we didn't miss this point after saying it so many times in the movie, but it remains valid. Claire, the park manager, is all about control. She is in control, wants control, and wishes to maintain control. Everything to her can be managed and dealt with and the dinosaurs are a means to an end, not living creatures. However, in a park full of unpredictable creatures and something all together new, control simply vanishes. But we have the counter to the obsessive control Claire needs in Owen (Chris Pratt). Owen exercises control, especially with the Raptor Squad (Blue, Delta, Charlie, Echo) but with respect. Respect to the creatures he wants to control and those around him. He is practical, straight forward, and is the only level head in all the chaos. We learned this lesson from the first movie but it needed to make a whole new set of mistakes to hit it home.

The Raptor Squad is a huge highlight in the movie. As I don't like to ruin things for our readers, you'll just have to go see it.

The Indonimus Rex is another welcome addition. Cunning, clever, and full of surprises, the newest
abomination is intelligent and ferocious. However, the new Rex was an unsympathetic character. While they tried to build her up as a lonely, isolated, tragic figure, that was quickly abandoned for mindless killing and a more horror like approach. I feared that Jurassic Park 3 was beginning to creep into this movie. I understand why some scenes were created, to up the stakes, to make the feat just a little more impossible, and build suspense, but ultimately it was filler. I wanted to feel for the Indonimus Rex. It was created from a mix of other animals to be thrown into the modern world and a fake dinosaur world, and expected to cope. Owen sheds some light on the creature but I just didn't feel the sympathy it should have deserved. The dinosaurs were never the villian and thats why Jurassic Park 3 failed, they became the villain. The same happens to the Indonimus Rex. The real villains are the people that created the dinosaurs. In Jurassic Park and The Lost World, those who harmed the dinosaurs got what was coming to them. In Jurassic World, the real villains escape, opening up room for the series to continue.

Michael Giacchino does not disappoint with a fantastic score. The original Jurassic Park theme intact, I can't help but get goosebumps when I hear it. It has a strong presence in the movie but he also introduces us to some new themes as well. The soundtrack includes the attraction music as an added bonus, making Jurassic World feel more real.

There was a single moment when the whole theatre clapped and shouted as an unforgettable scene unfolded. I know I was glad the real star got the limelight. 

I would have liked to see more practical effects in the movie, but overall the dinosaurs were believable.

Overall, Jurassic World is entertaining, terrifying, and heart-felt fun. It builds suspense, offers laughs, and lets you escape back into the park we all wish we could visit.  It is a welcome addition to the Jurassic Park family.


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