Colin Trevorrow
The final installment of the World trilogy, Jurassic Park Dominion breaks through with more dinosaurs and a mixed bag for audiences.
This is the third installment of the Jurassic World franchise, with new and returning faces.
The Book of Henry is strange from its outset, and its lack of redeeming characters or strong emotional moments doesn’t much help matters.
Colin Trevorrow scales back for The Book of Henry, taking on the story of a family investigating a suspicious neighbor under the directive of their hyper-intelligent son.
Two decades after the original Jurassic Park became the most successful film of all time at that point and ushered in the era of CGI, the blockbuster cinema landscape is very different. With Marvel Cinematic Universe, franchises six or seven sequels deep, and young-adult dystopias dominating the big releases more and more every year, original screenplays or adaptations of adult-oriented novels are struggling to make an impact – it is inconceivable that Steven Spielberg’s classic could have been released today with anything near the same level of success as in 1993. And so while the original film has a devoted fan base, few would have thought there was that much demand for a new Jurassic Park film, especially after its two increasingly inferior sequels.
In their natural state, no animal should be caged. Their world is of freedom wherein they find their purpose in it. For example, sharks police the seas making sure the weak and feeble are eliminated from the food chain.