Official Jurassic World Thread

Regular_P

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They actually took great liberty with the material from both books. Conceptually, each movie covers the basic trappings of the book.

Book 1: There's a park, people go, shyt goes down, evacuation

Book 2: Site B exists, dinos on it, another genetics company is trying to get their first.

Beyond that, the specifics are by and large completely different and better for the most part in the books. They're able to get away with more gore, and gloom and doom without having to cater to the expectations of delivering a hollywood movie/ending.

First 10-15 pages of JP set a dark tone for the book. You'll be reading like :gladbron::whoo::merchant:
Man, I read The Lost World before the movie came out and I was so fukking hyped for the film. I loved that book.

The movie was so terrible, especially compared to the book. :scust:

I have really low expectations for the new one.
 

Dominic Brehetto

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Yea I definitely get that about reviewers. But you know me breh. I love playing devils advocate so I have no problem watching a movie and disagreeing with what the reviews say. It's like watching the news. I'll watch local news and see stories, but take them with a grain of salt until I actually go online and research the story for myself and see all the sides reporting on it before I take a side on the issue. And I'm usually the guy that likes movies that get panned by critics (Interstellar) and dislikes over hyped movies (Gravity).
Interstellar was not panned by critics. A 72% on rt and 74 on metacritic is the opposite of panned.
 

Dominic Brehetto

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I haven't checked out Andromeda, read Congo a long time ago probably 4-5 years after the movie came out and loved it, read Timeline, loved it. I'm putting Andromeda on my short list though


Just read the synopsis for Andromeda:whoo:...Shocked it never got a movie adaptation
Andromeda strain got a movie adaption.
 

Jx2

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http://www.digitaltrends.com/movies/jurassic-world-review/


DT
Digital Trends

JURASSIC WORLD REVIEW
Jurassic World’s supercharged DNA brings the dino franchise back from extinction
By Ryan Waniata — June 10, 2015

It’s been 14 years since the last Jurassic Park film, and 22 years since Steven Spielberg changed everything with the original. Even so, many of us still hold a special place for that monumental original film — one of the first to successfully meld CGI with animatronics for an adventure unlike anything before it. In fact, long before I sat down to watch Jurassic World, I couldn’t stop calling it Jurassic Park. And I’m not alone — I heard others do the same following the Jurassic World screening, and no one batted an eye.

That hallowed history, along with some epic trailers (and red-hot star, Chris Pratt), has made Jurassic World one of the most anticipated blockbusters of the summer. These days, though, if you’re looking for classic Amblin entertainment (Spielberg’s production company) you’re more likely to get it from an upstart director who grow up watching the master than the man himself (See Super 8, produced by Spielberg, and directed by a young turk named JJ Abrams).

As the camera rises to reveal this fully operational dinosaur theme park in all its glory, we were hooked.

It’s clear in the first five minutes of Jurassic World that director and Amblin newcomer, Colin Trevorrow, is very much in that camp. And while the new film only has the bones of the original film to carbon date it, it retains many of Spielberg/Crichton’s charms. From the second the camera rises to reveal this fully operational dinosaur theme park in all its glory – set to John Williams’ classic theme (who’s also absent aside from his musical legacy) — the hook is set, and we’re ready for another ride.

The movie is set 20 years after the catastrophe that befell Jurassic Park, built by the lovable but arrogant John Hammond. In its new evolution as Jurassic World, the theme park has become a roaring success under the command of eccentric billionaire Simon Masrani (Irrfan Khan). Utilizing state-of-the-art technology, and several new dinosaurs created by the original park’s bioengineer, Dr. Henry Wu (BD Wong), the new park has fulfilled Hammond’s dream, becoming a magnificent thrill ride that hosts 10s of thousands of guests at a time.

Incredibly, however, the park is struggling to keep up with an incessant demand for increasing profits. In a world where a trip to a dinosaur theme park has become nearly as unremarkable as a jaunt to the zoo, regular attractions are becoming old hat, particularly for teens who’d rather text than watching a mighty T-Rex devour a sacrificial goat, or kayak amid herds of herbivores.


Enter our heroine, Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard), a stiff business woman bordering on robotic, whose job it is to continually find new ways to keep cash pouring in for shareholders. She’s so consumed by that job, in fact, that she has no time for her visiting nephews, brilliant 11 year-old Gray (Ty Simpkins), and indifferent 16 year-old Zach (Nick Robinson), who’s one of the park’s many bored teens, more interested in girls than monstrous reptiles from the past.

To keep the park raking in piles of cash, Claire’s team has created a new frontier in dino-engineering: A super-predator called the Indominus Rex (it’s a dumb name, but that’s acknowledged in the film), designed to garner corporate sponsorship, keep eyes wide with amazement, and ensure dollars roll in at an ever-faster pace.

Wouldn’t you know it, the plan doesn’t turn out so well.

It only has the bones of the original story, but Jurassic World retains much of Spielberg’s charm.

As the story unfolds, we see Caitlin struggling to keep the new hyper-dinosaur – which she refers to as “the asset,” secure. For assistance, she reluctantly recruits Owen (Chris Pratt), an ex-Navy vet on the island who has the extraordinary job of training a young pack of Velociraptors. Owen is, by all accounts, a badass. He’s the alpha of his pack, though his raptors are still wild, evidenced by the fact that they almost rip him to shreds when he goes after an intern who falls into the raptors’ pen early on. As Owen starts picking apart the security of the I-Rex’s domicile, this new predator of mysterious makeup gets free — and that’s when all hell breaks loose.

There’s no escaping the similarities of Jurassic World’s plot and the footing of the film itself. The movie enters the summer blockbuster race in an age when tsunami tidal waves make cruise ships look like bath toys in San Andreas, and the liftoff of an entire city floating through the air under the command of a fully robotic villain barely warrants the bat of an eye in Avengers: Age of Ultron. There is no doubt that both inside Jurassic World‘s alternate universe of living dinosaurs, and here in the real world, the film had to be bigger, and the new dinosaurs, absolutely monstrous.

“No one’s impressed by a dinosaur anymore,” as Claire says.






There’s also no doubt that Jurassic World is up to the challenge. In virtually every way, the film ups the ante over its predecessors. These new monsters are breathtaking in both their scope and their realism. And, despite the assault of wave after wave of massive blockbusters in the last two decades, there are several moments of true marvel, and even a touch of terror. More than once, I glanced over at the five-year-old a few seats over wondering how he was handling the reptilian chomp fest. Suffice it to say, you shouldn’t get too close to any characters in this movie – they may not last long.

Related: Jurassic World is no joke for Chris Pratt, and he told us why

Still, while epic action translates into big cash overseas, here in the United States, films require a deeper human connection to strike a chord with. Luckily for us, for the most part, the film succeeds in that effort.

Even beyond the inherent nostalgia of the original, there’s enough emotional gravity here to hang your hat on. Bryce’s android persona finally gives way when her character’s nephews are in trouble, and while she teeters toward full-on sex symbol near the end, she does so with aplomb and strength.


For Pratt’s part, his goofball antics are suppressed much more here than in his stepping-stone film, Guardians of the Galaxy. In fact, at a press conference, Pratt said Trevorrow was set on limiting his character’s comedic interaction to his scenes with Claire. He’s asked to play the full-on action hero, and for fans of Parks and Recreation (myself included) it’s less engaging than his lighthearted turn as Star Lord. After all, you don’t have to be serious to be a hero — no one ever told Indiana Jones to quit cracking wise back in the day. Still, Pratt eventually pulls off the hero bit, and strikes enough chemistry with Bryce along the way to keep things interesting.

Even beyond the inherent nostalgia of the original, there’s enough emotional gravity here to hang your hat on.

There’s some believable writing and performances elsewhere in the film, as well, which help carry the flick beyond its splashy scenes of CGI carnage, and soften the blow of the occasional moments of all out disbelief in which dinosaurs seem to show near human-level intelligence. Sibling relationships, in particular, are drawn with some real dimension here. That includes the relationship between the two boys — which is vital, as they’re tasked with leading a lot of the plot — as well as the interaction between Claire and her sister (the boys’ mother), played by the brilliant Judy Greer. Both interactions ring true, recalling moments I’ve shared with my own siblings.

Vince D’Onofrio brings an affable performance to his trope-laced bad guy (you knew he’d play the bad guy) Hoskins, which is pretty two-dimensional, and could’ve easily gone south with another actor. And, though Pratt leaves a lot of his usual antics at home, the job is filled brilliantly by Jake Johnson (New Girl, Safety Not Guranteed), who cracks wise with enough skill to lighten the load.

With a formidable cast and storyline, striking effects, and just enough nostalgia to tickle your arm hairs, Jurassic World is just as fun as you’d hoped it would. Nobody’s winning any Oscars, and the movie won’t rewrite special effects like the original, but behind all the hype, Jurassic World is a well-crafted addition to the franchise (I’d argue the best since the original) and well worth your money in what will be a haze of summer blockbusters.
 

Jx2

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http://www.usmagazine.com/entertain...ratts-flick-is-massively-entertaining-2015106




3 1/2 stars (out of 4 stars)

Shhhh . . . You hear that sound? That thump getting progressively louder?

Those are the footsteps of a vicious dinosaur running straight for the visitors at the world’s premier theme park — as well as the incoming boom of an incredible, massively entertaining, and, yes, dino-mite blockbuster.

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Now face it, Jurassic Park was a disaster. Not the classic 1993 movie, obviously. The theme park envisioned by John Hammond in which living dinosaurs are on display to the public. It took a hungry, lawyer-chomping Tyrannosaurus rex to prove that a species extinct for 65 million years and humans can’t coexist. Or maybe the man was onto something, after all? Welcome . . . to Jurassic World, now the fully realized destination of the late pioneer’s dreams. A tourist attraction still located on a secluded island off Costa Rica, it hosts about 22,000 visitors a day and boasts such familiar comforts as Starbucks, Jamba Juice, and Jimmy Buffett’s Margaritaville.



Chris-Pratt-Jurassic-World-467.jpg

Chris Pratt in Jurassic World
Credit: Universal Pictures


This Disneyland-meets-Sea World complex is so popular that visitors have grown blasé about interacting with the carnivores. (Perhaps the filmmakers wisely projected this same notion onto audiences who ignored the lesser two sequels.) To lure more customers and create more buzz, its new owner opens a new exhibit every few years. The latest one features a big bad dino called the Indominus rex. If you don’t remember reading about this breed as a kid, that’s because it was genetically engineered in the Jurassic World lab. (Dr. Wu, played by B.D. Wong, is the only returning cast member from Jurassic Park. He’s the one who showed off the hatching egg in the original.) No way the public can resist oohing and aahing over a ferocious, color-changing beast that ate her own sibling. But before the whopper of an exhibit can open, Navy-trained specialist Owen (the always-winning Chris Pratt) must declare it safe and sound.

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Spoiler alert: It isn’t.

Hold on to your butts. During Owen’s visit, he realizes that the Indominus rex has figured out a way to escape the high-security gates. From there, the events unfold like a traditional horror film. The rarely seen villain constantly outsmarts its victims. Innocents get ripped apart. Heroes emerge. Chief among them is Pratt’s Dino Whisperer, who has a special way of communicating with the Velociraptors. It’s up to him to not only save the thousands at the park, but also rescue its uptight operating manager and his ex, Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard). Plus, wouldn’t you know it, Claire’s two generically cute and slightly annoying moppet nephews are also visiting that day. Problem is, the underdeveloped human characters can’t quite carry the dramatic load. The fallout is steep, as Pratt has better chemistry with the raptors than he does with Howard. And why wouldn’t he? At times, she’s more cold-blooded than the dreaded T. rex.

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Bryce-Dallas-Howard-Jurassic-World-467.jpg

Bryce Dallas Howard and Chris Pratt in Jurassic World
Credit: Chuck Zlotnick/Universal Pictures


Not that you won’t sink your teeth into this pic. Executive produced by Steven Spielberg himself, this installment is visually just as awe-inspiring as his masterpiece. His fingerprints are all over it, from the imaginative set pieces to the accessible-but-not-dumbed-down narrative to the warmth at its core. The film, in fact, pays homage to the original in inspired ways: Jake Johnson’s smart-aleck technician wears the familiar bare-boned dinosaur T-shirt (you bought one back in the day, didn’t you?), and John Williams’ spine-tingling theme plays at the outset. When Claire’s nephews stumble upon a few artifacts from the original Jurassic Park, their discovery stirs memories of watching the film in the theater. To be able to reawaken that youthful wonder is nothing short of astonishing.

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The groundbreaking special effects, meanwhile, flat-out amaze. In this day in which all of California can crumble to smithereens in San Andreas thanks to CGI, it’s important to appreciate the wizardry here. The dinosaurs give the realistic appearance of sneering, breathing creatures with distinguishable personalities. (You’ll even cheer for them!) Just try not to jump out of your seat and yell each time a leaping lizard darts into the camera frame. And, heads up, they emerge from all directions.

What a ride, indeed.
 

RJY33

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Seeing this in IMAX Sunday :banderas:

I would see it even if it had a 0% on rotten tomatoes but these reviews got me hyped hat it might actually be good :leon:
 

Jx2

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http://www.ew.com/article/2015/06/10/jurassic-world-review

Entertainment Weekly: B+

http://variety.com/2015/film/reviews/jurassic-world-film-review-1201515439/

http://mashable.com/2015/06/10/jurassic-world-review/

Mashable: "If you're a parent of a certain age who's just dying to share the awe and wonder you felt in 1993 with your own little dino-crazed hatchlings this weekend, well ... you might want to consider lining up a babysitter instead.

Because kids, Jurassic World is not your father's dinosaur movie. This is a grisly, highly stylized slasher film dressed up in computer-generated raptor hide." :whoo::gladbron::blessed:


http://www.polygon.com/2015/6/10/8756325/jurassic-world-review-chris-pratt

Polygon: JURASSIC WORLD REVIEW: A WORTHY POPCORN MOVIE
 
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Interloper

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