This article contains spoilers for "Renaissance of the World of Jurassic".
The Jurassic franchise is in a serious place - creative, of course, Because financially, the franchise continues to print money. Of course, Gareth Edwards "Jurassic World: Rebirth" is better than the traverse that was "Dominion", because it is at least often a fun adventure with dinosaurs. But it's also like /Movie, EreereMi Smith, skillfully noted, "a cry for help from a series that is without ideas."
The film is the story of a base base in which a group of mercenaries are engaged to head to another secret island full of dinosaurs (this time an island with some ugly mutant dinosaurs) in order to extract samples for Big Sharma.
Part of the problem with the film is that it continues a pretty funny idea from the "Jurassic World" trilogy - that people would somehow grow bored of dinosaurs. This began with the first "Jurassic World" as an excuse to bring more extreme dinosaurs, asking the audience somehow to believe that baby trikeratops's videos will not become the next social media phenomenon, similar to cat videos. Then, the "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom" worsened by bringing back dinosaurs to the mainland, an idea that the franchise was not interested in proper research.
Indeed, the fall of the "Jurassic World" franchise (as in, everything that happened after the first three films) can be followed at one point: when the little girl with a clone allows dinosaurs to get lost rather than let them die.
They never had to allow dinosaurs to turn off the island
The scene takes place at the end of the "Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom". At this point, Isla Nullar was destroyed thanks to a volcanic eruption, and the other dinosaurs were smuggled into a great Gothic Manor, where they were to be killed by poison gas. In the last second, Charlotte Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) decided to let all the dinosaurs go out instead of watching them die. Its judgment? She sees herself in the creatures, because she is actually a human clone - an idea for the nuclear that the franchise has never been touched in a significant way.
More than anything else, and almost as bad as everything that includes Chris Pratt in that trilogy, allowing the dinosaurs to get lost on the mainland is the moment the "Jurassic World" films painted in an angle and died creatively. Simply put, the franchise had a few places to go after that decision was made. You either double down and have dinosaurs radically change society in the type of "Monkeys Planet" scenario, or simply ignore it all.
Unfortunately, "Jurassic World: Dominion", amid her many, many, many disadvantages, decided to do both, and neither. Of course, he had that scene in Malta where Raptors chased him after Chris Pratt in the streets, but The franchise never appeared a complete city chaos of the dinosaur. Instead, "Dominion" imposes another story of a secret dinosaur compound in a hidden location, and "Jurassic World Birth" has doubled by shifting the action to another island.
"The renowned world Jura" makes things worse worse Killing virtually every dinosaur that does not live near the equator. The film took the bravest and biggest idea introduced into the Jurassic World trilogy and threw it out of the window, apparently deciding that there was not much that could be done with it without taking the franchise in the direction that were not enjoyable.
That's the output of the coward. Instead of returning everyone, the films "Jura World" were to be doubled. Why not go down the road "Planet of the Monkeys" and do the dinosaurs take over the planet again? Or, because those films focused so much on people who want to arm dinosaurs, just go full "Dino Ridar" and make dinosaurs with machine guns and laser beams on them. There is still time to preserve this franchise, universal and without a clear idea of a sequel to the end of Rebirthite, has the opportunity to correct this error.
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