There’s a lot to love about the new dinosaur film Jurassic World. Mostly, it doesn’t
pretend to be anything more than what it is—a fun and fast-paced action film
about a dinosaur theme park that bites off more than it can chew when it
creates a new and better dinosaur, Indominus
rex, to attract larger audiences. The new dinosaur has four different kinds
of DNA in its genome, all of which have produced a cunning killer that appears
to be unstoppable. Part of the fun is finding out what kind of DNA the
scientists have used to create this monster. And as always in these kinds of
films, scientists come off as the bad guys who can be bought, either by the paranoid
military or by greedy companies or both. When you go to see these kinds of
films, you know that within about thirty minutes after the start, it’s all
going to go to hell, the dinosaurs are going to start eating people, and panic will
ensue. And it does. Jurassic World is
a dinosaur disaster film with a hero who gets to do the coolest thing I’ve seen
on film so far—ride his motorcycle in the midst of the velociraptors that he’s
been trying to train (with very limited success since they are cunning killers
themselves). Their help is enlisted when it becomes clear that the velociraptors
are perhaps the only creatures that can bring down Indominus Rex. But there is a neat twist here once the raptors meet
Indominus, and I won’t give it away. The
film is worth seeing, the special effects are very good, the plot is fairly
predictable, the acting a bit stiff, but overall it’s a fun 3D ride. We all
know that what is said is not nearly as important as what is done in these
kinds of films. Action is what counts; in that regard, Chris Pratt will be a
good addition to the genre for the future films. When I saw the first Jurassic Park film, and Sam Neill and
the children stood watching the dinosaurs from a distance, I remember commenting
to my husband that it would be so cool if humans could actually travel in the
midst of the different kinds of dinosaurs, at their level if you will. In Jurassic World, they can and they do, with
the help of the Gyrosphere, a computer-controlled sphere-shaped ride that has
room for two people to sit in it, and that moves along the ground so that the
park visitors can get a real feel for the dinosaurs. I’m looking forward to the
subsequent films, although I cannot for the life of me figure out what ground
the filmmakers are going to cover next. But I’m sure it will be one heck of a
ride.