- Director : Colin Trevorrow
- Actors : Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill
- Writers : Emily Carmichael, Colin Trevorrow
- Producers : Frank Marshall, Patrick Crowley, Steven Spielberg
- Studio : Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- Media Format : 4K, NTSC
- Run time : 2 hours and 27 minutes
- MPAA rating : PG-13 (Parents Strongly Cautioned)
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 2
- Release date : August 16, 2022
In a recent interview actress DeWanda Wise responded the Jurassic World Dominion receiving some of the poorest reviews of the franchise by saying “You can’t tell me shit,” which may not be the best approach to promoting the film’s release on Blu-ray and 4K. Director Colin Trevorrow made the wiser decision to herald the
extended edition as the superior cut of the film, suggesting those
unimpressed with the theatrical cut would better enjoy a longer
version. While the extended edition doesn’t do much to improve the
faults of the film, it does have a few impressive sequences likely to
be enjoyed by those who were fans of final installment of the
Jurassic World franchise.
As has become
the trend recently, Jurassic World Dominion brings back the cast from the
original Jurassic Park, along with continuing the narrative from the first two
Jurassic World movies. With the world overrun by wild dinosaurs, many have
begun to profit off of them with poaching, which Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas
Howard) fights against with her own form of activism while Owen Grady (Chris Pratt)
works to collect them from the wild. Both live in isolation to keep the cloned
child Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) safe, until she is kidnapped by an untrustworthy
company fittingly named Biosyn.
While Grady and Dearing
work to track down Maisie, paleobotanist Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) is
investigating swarms of giant locusts destroying crops all over the world,
suspecting that Biosyn may be responsible. Sattler tracks down paleontologist Dr.
Alan Grant (Sam Neill) to join her on a tour of the Biosyn facilities, which
their mutual friend Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum) works at. Eventually
Dearing and Grady track Maisie to the location, and the members of each franchise
share unnecessary praise of each other, with the exception of Malcolm who humorously
makes a meta comment about not being “a fan” of Jurassic World. I know how he
feels.
While Jurassic
World Dominion doesn’t have as many annoying characters as the first
installment of the second trilogy, it does feel unnecessarily bloated in places
and entirely to predictable in others. If all you want is scenes of dinosaur
carnage, it should satisfy that need. Critics tend to look for more than just
base entertainment, which may explain why they were so harsh despite the film
doing well at the box office. The extended cut opens with more unnecessary
scenes, including a wordless and human-less opening set in the prehistoric era.
Any additional scenes added to the extended cut don’t make the film any more
entertaining or improve upon the bad jokes.
Along with the
longer version of the film, the 4K UHD also contains the theatrical cut, as
does the Blu-ray disc included as a special feature. Also included in the
package is a digital copy of the film. Extras on the disc itself include an
additional short film which easily could have been a deleted scene removed from
the theatrical cut. While it doesn’t add to the story, it does provide the audience
with even more dinosaurs fighting and humans in peril. The extras also include a
featurette about the visual effects and a 45-minute making-of featurette
covering broader elements of the film’s production, which was one of the first
to take place following the Covid pandemic.
Entertainment Value:
7.5/10
Quality of
Filmmaking: 6/10
Historical
Significance: 6/10
Special Features: 7.5/10
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