Chris At The Pictures: jurassic world
Showing posts with label jurassic world. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jurassic world. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 June 2018

'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' - Review

6/06/2018 10:42:00 pm 0
'Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom' - Review

★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆

The park has gone and so has all direction and imagination in this interminable continuation of the Jurassic Park franchise. With neither the depth of Spielberg’s first adventure, the scare factor of his under-appreciated sequel, nor the nostalgic charm of 2015’s Jurassic World (the less said of Jurassic Park III, the better), this entry settles for retreading old ground. With the facility at Isla Nublar in ruins (again), a shady businessman plans to airlift the dinosaurs back to the mainland (again) in order that they may be exploited for military purposes (again), and also to spite his more aged and more peace-loving mentor (again).

As for our heroes, Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard) is now a stringent dinosaur-rights activist, and she begrudgingly recruits Owen (Chris Pratt) to assist in saving the remaining dinosaurs from Isla Nublar’s suddenly active volcano. That is, before the doomed creatures are plucked from deliverance by Rafe Spall as the aforementioned suit, armed with a smile as untrustworthy as your average social media privacy policy.

Director J.A. Byona and cinematographer Óscar Faura do their best to bring some semblance of awe to proceedings, but returning screenwriters Colin Trevorrow and Derek Connolly’s script suffocates the Spanish duo’s usual flair for likeable characters and haunting imagery. There are some glimpses of the young Richard Dreyfuss in Pratt’s portrayal of Owen, but not enough to prevent him slipping into Star Lord-lite. Howard goes all in on the running (appropriately booted this time around) and screaming, and is easily the most watchable human presence. A new sidekick played by Justice Smith is immediately annoying, and his disappearance from the middle act would be a relief, were it not another indicator of the feckless screenplay losing track of who’s where and why.

“Why?” is a question I found myself asking a lot during this film. Mostly “Why aren’t I just at home watching Jurassic Park?”. The re-heated narrative structure, knock-off set pieces (we’re treated to re-runs of the museum showdown and The Lost World’s downtown dinos), plus a perfunctory appearance from Jeff Goldblum continuously serve to remind us of movies we’d rather be watching. And it’s never scary. Not once. My entire generation can attest to the nightmares of poor Eddie being bisected by the T-Rex pair in The Lost World, and the most this softened rehash can muster is ‘occasional bloody moments’. A largely dialogue-free prologue featuring some truly stunning imagery of monsters in the moonlight is the closest we come to genuine thrills, which is more than can be said for the genetically-enhanced ‘Indoraptor’, introduced by Toby Jones doing his best Donald Trump impression.

This creature is another of the screenplay’s walking clunkers: it’s sold to us as the fusion between Jurassic World’s Indominus Rex and a Velociraptor. A key plot point of the previous film was that the multi-breed Indominus was part-Raptor, and could therefore weaponise Owen’s pack against him. Did they just add more? Extra raptor with your half-raptor, sir? The Indominus - while not particularly chilling - served as a neat analogy for Hollywood’s misunderstanding that bigger equals better. The Indoraptor’s purpose seems to be to remind us that...er...rich people can be greedy and stupid? I don’t need the film to tell me that: that it exists at all is proof enough.

Sunday, 20 December 2015

The Best Films of 2015

12/20/2015 10:09:00 pm
The Best Films of 2015


Note: these are based on UK release dates.

10. Jurassic World – Heaps of fun, properly scary at times; a full-blooded summer blockbuster

Best bit: The Indominus breaks free

Full review here


9. Brooklyn – Can we make sure Saoirse Ronan is cast in everything ever, please…or at the very least, her eyes?

Best bit: “We’ll have no more discussion about nylons at the dinner table!”

Full review here


8. The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 2 – What’s that Lionsgate? A mega-budget blockbuster with intelligent allegory and a subversive ending…wow, you really weren’t kidding. 

Best bit: “Let’s try the sewers”…no, let’s definitely not.

Full review here


7. Mr. Holmes – Without knowing it, Ian McKellen plays Sherlock Holmes by way of my late grandad.

Best bit: See above

Full review here


6. The Martian – It’s okay, everyone, Ridley Scott is back. Best use of ABBA ever.

Best bit: “Anywhere I step, I’m the first”

Full review here


5. Star Wars: The Force Awakens – I love you, J. J. Abrams, and I want to have your babies.

Best bit: [SPOILER REDACTED]

Full review here


4. Mad Max: Fury Road – Crash. Bang. Wallop. Repeat until applause.

Best bit: Am I allowed to say “All of it”?

Full review here


3. Inside Out – It’s Pixar taking on The Numskulls and is every bit as amazing as that sounds.

Best bit: “Oh no, we’re an abstract!”

Full review here


2. Whiplash – Genuinely thought I’d have a heart attack in the middle of the cinema.

Best bit: He’s not really gonna play right after that cra-oh, bloody hell, he is!

Full review here


1. Ex Machina – Whoever could have predicted that removing the influence of Danny Boyle would be a good thing? Sleek, smart sci-fi where every frame shimmers.

Best bit: The gobsmacked silence during the credits.

Full review here