I’m pretty sure the only way you hadn’t heard about “Jurassic Park” or “Jurassic World” is by living under a rock.
I mean, the movie series has won awards since its first novel-to-film run in 1993.
The Jurassic Park movie series is based on Michael Crichton’s novels.
Now, I have to admit that I haven’t read any of the books but do love seeing huge dinosaurs on the big screen and people finding out that karma does happen if you’re the villain of the story.
Plus, the action actually moves the story along – even though it’s a little weak in premise.
I’m just an avid fan regardless and love the added nostalgia of characters from the original trilogy.
Jurassic World Dominion is a science fiction action film directed by Colin Trevorrow, written by Trevorrow and Emily Carmichael, and based on a story by Trevorrow and Derek Connolly.
It is the sequel to Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018), the sixth installment in the Jurassic Park franchise, the final film in the Jurassic World trilogy, and the conclusion to the storyline started in the original Jurassic Park trilogy.
As with its predecessors, Frank Marshall and Patrick Crowley produced the film with Trevorrow and Jurassic Park (1993) director Steven Spielberg acting as executive producers.
The film stars an ensemble cast including Campbell Scott, Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Sam Neill, BD Wong, Omar Sy, Isabella Sermon, Justice Smith, DeWanda Wise, Mamoudou Athie, and Daniella Pineda reprising their roles from previous films in the franchise, and are joined by DeWanda Wise, Mamoudou Athie, Campbell Scott, Scott Haze, and Dichen Lachman.
Dern, Goldblum and Neill reprise their roles from the Jurassic Park trilogy, appearing together for the first time since the 1993 film.
The film is set four years after the events of Fallen Kingdom, with dinosaurs now living alongside humans around the world.
It’s rated PG-13 for intense sequences of action, some violence and language and comes in at 146 minutes long.
Four years after the cataclysmic volcanic eruption on Isla Nublar and the Lockwood Estate incident, dinosaurs freely roam among humans.
Claire Dearing (Howard), former operations manager of Jurassic World, works to protect dinosaurs from illegal breeding organizations.
She and Owen Grady (Pratt) have been living in a remote cabin in the Sierra Nevada Mountains where they secretly care for Maisie Lockwood (Sermon), Sir Benjamin Lockwood’s cloned granddaughter.
They are astonished when Owen’s trained Velociraptor, Blue, unexpectedly arrives at the cabin with an offspring that was reproduced asexually.
Maisie dubs the baby raptor “Beta,” and gradually establishes a bond with it similar to Owen and Blue’s.
Unknown to Owen and Claire, BioSyn Genetics, a corrupt biogenetics corporation led by CEO Lewis Dodgson (Scott) has targeted Maisie.
Frustrated with living in seclusion, Maisie sneaks away to a nearby town where Dodgson’s operatives kidnap her and Beta.
Owen and Claire immediately set off to rescue them.
Elsewhere, swarms of an extinct species of giant locust have inexplicably reappeared, destroying crops and threatening the world’s food supply.
Paleobotanist Ellie Sattler (Dern) has noticed how the locusts avoid crops grown with BioSyn seed, leading Ellie to suspect that BioSyn is breeding them.
Ellie approaches paleontologist and former romantic partner Dr. Alan Grant (Neill) to help investigate BioSyn’s operations.
Using info provided by her government contacts, Claire and Owen track Maisie and Beta to Malta where they infiltrate a dinosaur black market.
When military authorities raid the market, dinosaurs are unintentionally released, causing havoc.
It’s pretty much nonstop action film energy from there and the cinematography is gorgeous.
The film is worth seeing on the big screen to get fully immersed in the beauty of Jurassic Park dinosaurs.