Well, this had
to come. Such a lucrative and exciting franchise could not be put to sleep for
so long. So we have dinosaurs walking the earth again in Jurassic World. The
problem with making a movie like Jurassic World or a Godzilla is that everybody
knows exactly what is going to happen. We know that the dinosaurs are going to
break out of confinement and run amok. It is the ‘how’ of the process that
should hold us in our seats. Has Colin Trevorrow succeeded in giving an
engaging ‘how’ to Jurassic World.
Jurassic World
takes us back to the same island where the entire saga started. What John
Hammond
once dreamt of is now a reality. Jurassic World is open to public and
it has been open for so long that it is now just another ‘amusement’ park that
has dinosaurs as the main attraction. A decade into business and the public is
far too familiar with all the ‘sauruses’, they want more. And, the makers of
Just like in the
original Jurassic
Park , where unwittingly
engineered frog DNA famously allowed ‘life
to find a way’ (nod to Jeff
Goldblum), here a whole lot of inserted sequences make the Indominus Rex almost
indestructible, and more importantly very very intelligent. As Wu puts it, “it
is not possible to engineer a more dangerous predator without the accompanying
behavioral enhancements”. The rest you know, or do I have to say that the
Indominus Rex escapes and all hell breaks loose until Chris Pratt finds a way!
In a way, it is
the predictability that is the most exciting part of Jurassic World. You know
that something is definitely round the corner, you know that the Indominus is
just about to make a thundering appearance, you know there is not going to be a
dull moment. Trevorrow almost manages to do that. He quickly sets the stage
with some very pleasing and aerial shots of Isle Nublar ,
lets us know exactly how huge it is, introduces the Indominus in some detail
and then sets the adventure rolling. Of course, you miss the iconic lunch table
debate from Jurassic
Park where Attenborough
and Goldblum did some excellent verbal jousting. That kind of stimulating
conversation is missing in Jurassic World, though they try to make one between
Dr. Wu and Simon Masrani (new owner of Jurasssic World, played by Irrfan Khan),
which looks more like a pale comparison.
Just when you
think that the movie is dipping into a slowish period in the second hour, in
come a foursome to amp up the action and set up for a very exciting final
confrontation. The foursome (I won’t tell you who they are, that would be a
huge spoiler) are perhaps the most important part of the movie. And then, in
the final minutes, there is a nod to the iconic scene from Jurassic Park
where we learnt that a T Rex can see only moving objects. Yes, Jurassic World
entertains without a doubt.
One only wonders
why there were a few clichés! Why do Owen and Claire have to be shown as a pair
who had just one date and then broke off? Is the casting of Irrfan Khan as
Simon Masrani merely a bait for Indian audiences? After a while, the script
doesn’t seem to know what to do with him, so they dump him into the middle of
the aviary with a helicopter. And why, for heaven’s sake, do the parents of the
two kids have to be going through a divorce? Will the movie have been any less
effective if their parents were still in love?
One has to say
that Bryce Edwards has done hard work for this movie. Running from a T Rex on
high
heels should be one of the toughest tasks in the world! Chris is
comfortable and looks every bit like the tough guy! Irrfan Khan is perhaps not
on the button this time. His dialogue delivery is far too reminiscent of
Piscine Molitor Patel. But, who cares, wee are in it to see the dinosaurs and
they look as real as you want them to. For us, that is the generation tat saw
An exciting ride
back to Jurassic Age!
3/5
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