Saturday, June 13, 2015
Jurassic World
**Spoiler Alert**
Director: Colin Trevorrow/Starring: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Vincent D'Onofrio, Irrfan Khan, Ty Simpkins, Jake Johnson, Nick Robinson, Judy Greer, BD Wong, Omar Sy
Colin Trevorrow, director of the amusing, off-the-wall Safety Not Guaranteed, takes on the dinosaur-sized production Jurassic World. Watching the film, I couldn't remember if Spielberg was in the director's chair because much of it bears his stamp. I suppose that's inevitable when he himself co-produced the film.
Though Trevorrow makes the film reasonably entertaining, his can't hope to match Jurassic Park for its originality or Spielberg's thrill-making ability. Jurassic World borrows so from the original the film seems almost like a reboot.
Isla Nublar is now home to Jurassic World; a mega-theme park sprawled across the Costa Rican island. Rather than the park-in-progress seen in the first film, Jurassic World is a fully-functional tourist destination.
When the film begins, we see the brothers Zach and Gray preparing to leave their parents outside their snow-covered home. Zach, a broody, discontented teen, is given a romantic send-off by his girlfriend, while his precocious, younger, Asperger-ish brother concerns himself with other distractions. The dark cloud hanging over the household is the divorce their mother Karen (Judy Greer) and father are headed precipitously toward. While the parents say their goodbyes to Zach and Gray at the airport, the older brother acts peevish, put-upon and unhappy about leaving his girlfriend.
The story cuts to a sleek transport boat as it approaches the impressive Jurassic World. An aerial long shot captures the crowded, vast complex; situated on the lush shoreline of Isla Nublar. Negotiating the crush of people who wander about the shops and tourist attractions inside the park, the brothers find their Aunt Claire; a park executive, who receives her nephews rather coolly. From the first exchange, the boys see their aunt is emotionally detached and totally absorbed in the business of running Jurassic World. After Claire makes a tepid promise to spend time with them the next day, the boys run off while an appointed guardian struggles to keep up.
Meanwhile, we see Claire at work, leading a group of potential investors on a tour of the park and the private labs. We learn something about the park's growth initiatives, which includes scarier, genetically designed dinosaurs with bigger teeth to wow and dazzle the patrons who grow increasingly bored with tyrannosaurs, triceratops and apatosauruses.
As in the first film, the unholy marriage of science and commerce alerts us to the folly of hubris and tampering with nature.
While the boys wander through the park, Claire's administrative concerns lead her to the park's newest exhibit; a genetically engineered creation called Indominus Rex; which is essentially a larger, smarter and nastier T-Rex. Safety concerns about the Indominus' paddock have arisen, which necessitates a meeting between Claire and a former naval engineer named Owen (Chris Pratt), whose expertise on structural integrity makes him an ideal consultant. When we first see Owen, he is standing on a walkway above a pen of velociraptors. As the raptors hiss and screech below, Owen busies himself training the raptors to follow orders. He even assigns them names.
When an unscrupulous military contractor named Hoskins (Vincent D'Onofrio) shows up to observe Owen's raptor-training, we learn the raptors are to be trained for deployment in combat.
I'm glad the screenwriters kept one foot in the real world; showing us how different parties with different agendas might actually exploit dinosaurs for profit and militaristic purposes. Of course the audience knows both means of exploitation will prove to be short-sighted and foolish.
In a scene where Claire approaches Owen about inspecting the Indominus' paddock, we see his shabby-looking, riverside home. We soon discover they once shared an extremely brief romance, which shows signs of rekindling.
Later, at the park complex, Claire and Owen find claw marks on the walls of the paddock, which suggest the dinosaur has taken flight. Thinking the Indominus Rex gone, they discover the dinosaur has tricked them into believing it escaped. As they find the towering hulk bearing down on them, Owen manages to elude the beast but an unfortunate staff person is gobbled whole. In spite of Owen's efforts to contain it, the Indominus effects an escape, and when he does, he goes on a park-wide, lethal rampage; feeding on other dinosaurs and hapless park employees. Later, the Indominus' love for bloodsport comes to light when Claire and Owen happen upon a herd of dead apatosaurs; their claw-streaked bodies providing grisly evidence.
And like the first film, we know the two youngsters will eventually find themselves stranded and trapped somewhere in the park. While taking a tour of the park in glassy, gyroscopic pods (really cool) Zach decides to drive off road into prohibited areas. Gee, what do you think will happen next?
And you might guess too that the thought of her endangered nephews will cure Claire of her seeming indifference and awaken a warm, familial compassion.
As the Indominus Rex stalks and skulks about, the park closes while the tourists are herded into a makeshift shelter in a warehouse.
Hoskins sees the Indominus' escape as an opportunity to test the velociraptors hunting and seeking skills. Though contemptuous of Hoskins, Owen decides to lead his trained pack on the hunt. Meanwhile, Hoskins' heavily armed, para-military personnel join the pursuit.
One of the parks biggest investors, Simon Masrani (Irrfan Khan), takes to the air in his helicopter in hopes of locating the Indominus, only to find the beast has smashed into the park aviary, where pterodactyls are kept. The flying dinos escape, unleashing their own mayhem on the tourists and park personnel.
It's pretty clear where the story will go. As previously mentioned, if you know the first film, this one won't offer many narrative surprises.
I don't know what is more frightening; predatory dinosaurs loose in a theme park or the very realistic throngs of tourists milling about. Though the idea of the park seemed like a fun idea in the first film, Trevarrow is quick to reinforce the impression that such a place would actually be inhumane and maybe immoral. One might have thought that after all the mayhem and destruction visited upon the world in the first few films, the authorities might keep a place like Jurassic World from ever getting off the ground. Implausible as the park might be, the human capacity for stupidity can never be too implausibly rendered onscreen.
Trevarrow does a respectable job keeping the story and action moving, but the film lacks the original's sense of wonder. Or maybe we've become the jaded park patrons Claire derides. Are T-rexs' and velociraptors no longer enough?
The Claire/Owen romance seems like a throwback to a 1940s' B-film; the damsel in high-heels being led about by the rugged, shotgun-toting tough. Bryce Dallas Howard's and Chris Pratt's chemistry manages to distract us from this crumbly, boy-leads-girl movie convention of old.
I liked the shot of the park's tourist area reduced to rubble and ruin to reinforce the film's message that nature isn't something to be commodified. Man proposes, nature disposes; to rework a famous quote.
Like the investors in the film who never seem to learn, the filmmakers may be on a course to create more of these films. Certain developments in the story suggest as much. Jurassic World is mostly fun and mostly painless. One could see a helluva lot worse at the local multiplex these days. Speaking of, is that Woman in Gold I still see on the marquee?
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