Tag: jurassic-park

  • Jurassic World: Rebirth Review

    4/10

    Nothing is ever truly gone, and like a fossil out of amber, the Jurassic franchise is roaring back into cinemas with another entry. 2022’s Jurassic World: Dominion marketed itself as the end of the Jurassic saga, wrapping up the story of the Jurassic World trilogy and bringing back original Park cast Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum and Sam Neill. That conclusion didn’t seem to stick for long, as a new film was reported to be written by David Koepp, who co-wrote the original Jurassic Park and wrote its original sequel, in January 2024. A mere month later, a director was announced, and it was reported that most of the principal visual effects-footage had been shot and was ready to go, prepared well-in advance to avoid another COVID blunder, which affected the predecessor.

    Describing the director’s role as more ‘shooter than auteur’, director Gareth Edwards had essentially been hired to direct a film that was completely out of his hands. This film was Jurassic World: Rebirth, an attempt at a clean slate for the Jurassic franchise. Set years after the events of its predecessor, Rebirth sees the dinosaurs no longer out free in the wild, but instead re-homed around the equator, the only area habitable to them. The lead characters of the film are a group of scientists and former military who have assembled to obtain samples of three different dinosaurs in hopes of using their DNA to help with heart disease treatments. They find themselves in an abandoned research facility which holds rejected samples of mutated dinosaurs, and a lost family that have shipwrecked onto the island.

    Jonathan Bailey and Scarlett Johansson in Jurassic World: Rebirth

    Director Gareth Edwards has made a name for himself directing franchise films, most notably 2014’s Godzilla and 2016’s Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, the former being another film that was controlled by the studio. Edwards knows how to direct a good-looking feature, the biggest positive that can be applied to this film is that the direction and cinematography is stunning, brimming with colours and looking authentically real. The dinosaur sequences are spectacular of course as well, mainly down to the fact that they have been mapped out and ready to go years in advance. The plot boils down to essentially a fetch-quest, a video game-type narrative where the characters must deal with three separate set pieces, with Edwards essentially bridging the gap between these effects-heavy sequences. The sequences are entertaining, focusing the plot around the Mosasaurus, Titanosaurus and the Quetzalcoatlus, with the primary dinosaur having the most thrilling sequence in the film. There is also a thrilling sequence featuring the T-Rex that is ripped straight out of Michael Crichton’s original novel, one of the only scenes not translated into Spielberg’s original feature.

    What lacks in these sequences however is the complete lack of originality. Seven movies into the Jurassic franchise and it really seems like the franchise is running out of ideas, and especially when the freshest sequence is ripped straight out of the source text. The movie’s plot can be described as colliding together the basic plot of Jurassic Park 2 and Jurassic Park 3 together, taking the research expedition and military component of the former, and the lost family aspect of the former. Even the mutant dinosaurs, who seem to be an afterthought in the movie, only making an appearance at the tail end of the film and in the cold open, pale in comparison to the more thought-out inclusion of the concept in Jurassic World and Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom. The attempt to do all three of these plot elements from former Jurassic movies just leaves them all feeling incredibly half-baked, with no side of the film feeling as developed as they should be.

    Mahershala Ali in Jurassic World: Rebirth

    Scarlett Johansson leads a cast of talented actors, with Mahershala Ali, Rupert Friend and Jonathan Bailey joining her on the expedition. All the actors are trying their best with the material they are given, but Koepp’s script pales in comparison to his former work in the Jurassic franchise.  The characters are incredibly surface level, engaging in bravado dialogue straight out of the Marvel wheelhouse, and bringing up interesting character details that are instantly forgotten about once they are brought up. Explorations into PTSD, the loss of a daughter and the destruction of a marriage, and the moral ambiguity of what they are doing, as they are essentially selling these health cures for money, are brought up in one scene and then never mentioned again, leaving each character half-baked.

    The inclusion of the family as well, played by actors Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, Luna Blaise, David Iacono and Audrina Miranda, serves to essentially slowdown the plot, as they enter and exit the movie as a distraction, not serving any narrative purpose. The inclusion of so many named stars also cause the franchise to lose any of the grit or suspense that these movies used to have, deaths are bloodless and mostly off-screen, and the characters exist as superheroes with very little danger facing them. The movie includes various cannon-fodder characters who only exist to die, leaving so many thrilling sequences with very little thrills.

    Never has John Williams’ iconic Jurassic Park theme feel so misused and less powerful than in this film, where it’s thrown into every sequence where the movie cannot convey that emotion by itself. The movie opens with a crawl that reminds the audience what the last few Jurassic World movies kept stating, that people are growing tired of dinosaurs. What it is accidentally proving is how tired and formulaic these Jurassic movies have become, even when a talented franchise director like Gareth Edwards goes behind the camera, it still comes out as the same film you have seen so many times before. The same set pieces, the same character archetypes, even the same dinosaurs, this franchise is going the way of the dinosaur.