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- The Jurassic World
- http://urllio.com/qylhi
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- The new Jurassic World, owned by the corporation of Simon Masrani operates in Isla Nublar, Central America, with dinosaurs genetically created by the InGen Company. The workaholic and uptight manager Claire Dearing receives her nephews Gray and Zach in the park, but she is too busy to give attention to them and asks her assistant to escort the boys. Meanwhile the dedicated Owen Grady is training four velociraptors and the InGen security guard Vic Hoskins believes that the animal can be trained for military use. When Owen and two other employees go to an isolated paddock to evaluate the new attraction of the park, the hybrid dinosaur Indominus Rex, the animal lures them, kills the two men and flees from the spot. Owen escapes and asks Masrani to kill the Indominus, but he believes his security team can contain and capture the animal that cost lots of money. However the team is destroyed by the Indominus and Claire orders the evacuation of the tourists from the island. But the dangerous pterosaurs escape from the aviary and the place goes havoc. Meanwhile Gray and Zach are riding a gyro-sphere in the restricted area and Claire and Owen seek them out. With the chaos in the island, Vic assumes the command and decides to use the four velociraptors to locate and destroy the Indominus. Will his plan work?
- Jurassic World has been running with great success for more than a decade in the wake of the disaster that haunted the island 22 years ago. The park's geneticists have once again broken scientific and ethical boundaries in order to raise attendance for the park, now experiencing a decline in happy customers. Convinced that the new attraction will bring in many more people, but having crossed the line once again, the results may be devastating.
- There is a very B Movie vibe about Jurassic World.<br/><br/>Everyone is at a sub-par level; director, writers, actors, music composer, production design and editing. Only the visual effects people seem to be doing a good job.<br/><br/>Colin Trevorrow does not seem to be a very good director when it comes to directing actors, almost as bad as George Lucas. I think he's a hack. I didn't like his direction and his editorial choices in Safety Not Guaranteed either, huge chunks of that film should have been removed.<br/><br/>The musical score of JW is very average and frequently lays on the syrup. I think it's partially a consequence of the very poor direction. The job of music is to score the actual emotion in the scene, due to the sub-par direction there is very little emotion in scenes, hence why the music is so jarring.<br/><br/>And even the production design itself was a underwhelming. It did not feel like a significant place to visit.<br/><br/>It seems to me that the most talented people these days are working in American TV, while cinema has the dregs and the "former greats" going through the motions for a big payday.
- Spoilers - To be honest, I had low expectations going into this film. The lack of returning "Stars" from the other three films was sort of a let down but I have to say, Jurassic World blew me away. Even though I was hoping for some familiar faces, I was really going to see this film for one reason. Dinosaurs. And this film delivered all kinds of dinosaurs, both old and new. Sure, there's some plot holes and you really need to have a suspension of disbelief at some moments but that was the case with the original and it's sequels. I don't go to see Star Wars, Godzilla or Indiana Jones and pick it apart for it's realism or lack of, either. It's a fantasy ride and that's how one should approach it. I am also a huge fan of the other 3 JP films including JP3 which I see some folks bashing in their reviews here. I've also noticed a lot of people bashing Peter Jackson's Kong on that particular page. I'm not sure what their tastes are but I'm a huge fan of old monster films like Universal Monsters, King Kong, Godzilla, Jaws and Dino films like The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Valley of Gwangi and One Million Years BC. I thought Jackson nailed it with his version of KK as he's a huge fan and made a film he wanted to see and I feel the filmmakers behind Jurassic World nailed it as they realized what was most important...tons of DINO ACTION. Unlike last year's Godzilla, JW gives a majority of screen time to dino carnage. This is probably the scariest of the 4 Jurassic films and the ending was the grandest of all the films. Great ending. The T-Rex is supposedly the same T-Rex from the original. I loved the little cameos by Jeff Goldblum in the background on the cover of books, etc. I loved the homages to the original film by revisiting the original complex and using the original jeeps. The homage to Jaws. I thought Chris Pratt did a great job. All in all, it was a huge success in my eyes. I can't wait for the Blu-ray and I hope they continue with more sequels.
- Trevorrow, like so many directors given the responsibility of delivering a straightforward blockbuster designed to satisfy bottom-line expectations, struggles to find the balance between silly and serious.
- Isla Nublar now features a fully-functioning dinosaur theme resort called Jurassic World, as originally envisioned by John Hammond. This new park was built and is now owned by the Masrani Corporation. Owen (<a href="/name/nm0695435/">Chris Pratt</a>), a member of Jurassic World's onsite staff, conducts behavioral research on the Velociraptors. In recent years, Jurassic World's attendance rates have begun to decline and a new attraction created to re-spark visitor interest gravely backfires, sparking a fight for survival for Jurassic World's employees and visitors. Jurassic World is the fourth movie in the Jurassic Park franchise, preceded by <a href="/title/tt0107290/">Jurassic Park (1993)</a> (1993), <a href="/title/tt0119567/">The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)</a> (1997), and <a href="/title/tt0163025/">Jurassic Park III (2001)</a> (2001). The Jurassic Park premise and first two films were based on novels by Michael Crichton. Jurassic World's story is based on a screenplay by Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Colin Trevorrow and Derek Connolly. Jurassic World is a direct sequel to Jurassic Park and it takes place 22 years later on Isla Nublar. No. The events of The Lost World and Jurassic Park III are still present but because they happened on a different island, Isla Sorna (aka Site B), they've been "put aside". While neither sequel is referenced in the film, their events have been referenced in the film's promotional materials and viral marketing. For example, in a feature introducing the character Vic Hoskins, it's revealed his team did work involving flying dinosaurs, referring the Pteranadons that escaped at the end of Jurassic Park III. The bones of a Spinosaurus can be seen in the main plaza of the park. T. rex is even shown to smash through them during the final fight as a way to show that the T. rex is still the king of the dinosaurs. The juvenile male T. rex killed in Jurassic Park III was on Isla Sorna (aka Site B). This film takes place back on Isla Nublar from the first film and is in fact the same female T. rex of that film. The male T. rex in Jurassic Park III is also a young, not fully-grown adult. In an inside joke for the fans, the bones that the T. rex smashes through to get to Indominus Rex during the fight are those of the Spinosaur. Henry Wu (<a href="/name/nm0000703/">BD Wong</a>) is the only returning character. The main character of Owen is described in the script as having the characteristics of both Ian Malcolm and Alan Grant, the main protagonists of the previous films. The T. rex from Jurassic Park also returns, complete with scars from her fight with the raptors during the movie's ending. While scientific discoveries in the last two decades have revealed that some or many dinosaurs may have, in fact, had feathers, these discoveries were not made at the time of the first two films and therefore all the creatures in the films were portrayed with the commonly perceived design of being scaly and reptilian in appearance. This was however was touched on in Jurassic Park III, which gave some of the raptors crest feathers. In the movie, the appearance of the dinosaurs is commented upon by the genetic engineer Henry Wu, who points out that none of their dinosaurs are truly "real" dinosaurs due to the genetic meddling needed to correct their DNA, that the real creatures looked quite different and that the creatures that are in the park are what people "expect to see" when they think of dinosaurs. No, there is not. According to records and past information, there have been at least 4 scripts. The first script was written by William Monahan (it was later reworked into an almost entirely different script by John Sayles,) an untitled script that was to be used for the film in 2008, and the Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver script (which was being reworked by Colin Trevorrow and Derek Connolly this past summer). Mark Protosevich was said to have worked on the film after 2008 and before Jaffa and Silver's involvement, but in an interview with Ain't It Cool News in 2013 Protosevich stated he never got past the discussion stage with Spielberg. The second half of the first teaser trailer features a piano cover of the original Jurassic Park theme composed by John Williams a5c7b9f00b
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