Cinematic Releases: Jurassic World Dominion (2022) - Reviewed

Courtesy of Universal Pictures

I’ll never forget the first time I saw Jurassic Park as a ten-year-old in 1993 with its thundering DTS sound system logo and T-Rex stomping you could hear from the theater lobby while trying to buy a ticket.  The senses of fear, awe and wonderment in Steven Spielberg’s loose adaptation of Michael Crichton’s science fiction novel of the same name are still as palpable now as they were almost thirty years ago.  Science-fiction/horror as an exercise in pioneering technically proficient special effects driven filmmaking whose practically and CG rendered vistas hold up remarkably well to this day, it remains a game changer for the cinema world entire which redefined the scope and possibilities of the summer Hollywood blockbuster.  As a child being let loose in this violent scary funny exciting roller coaster ride, it was a bit like being in an arcade wanting to try every game in the place.
 
But as with every strike of lightning in a bottle printing an endless stream of money, studios get greedy and proceed to milk the cow dry of whatever life it has left to give.  After Spielberg’s own direct sequel The Lost World also based on Crichton’s novel followed by a third entry by Honey I Shrunk the Kids director Joe Johnston, the franchise fizzled out in 2001 while raking in well over $300 million at the box office.  Despite efforts to keep selling the brand, like Jeff Goldblum’s Dr. Ian Malcolm wryly pointed out in the first film ‘dinosaurs had their shot and nature selected them for extinction’.  This is a series whose brand and inspiration more or less ran its course.  

 
Circa 2015, a new trilogy “inspired” by the first set of films and a canonical chronological of the original series featuring a new cast of characters now known as Jurassic World, was introduced to moviegoers.  Helmed by newcomer Colin Trevorrow, the film outgrossed the original film even after adjustment for inflation and went on to become the third most successful film of all time.  Immediately the film catapulted Trevorrow from fledgling indie director to top Hollywood player.  Critics (myself included) were hard on the film’s merits (or lack thereof) in its efforts to repeat the beats of the 1993 Spielberg film scene by scene only louder and sometimes more violent.  Nevertheless, it spawned a sequel which saw Trevorrow take a step back from directing to focus on what would’ve been his first Star Wars film.
 
After being let go from Star Wars over creative differences and the failure of his film The Book of Henry, it came as a surprise to hear Trevorrow was back in the director’s chair for what is ostensibly the closing chapter of this new Jurassic World series.  Even more surprising was that after two sequels, Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment somehow or another cajoled three of its primary surviving cast members from the 1993 film, Sam Neill, Laura Dern and Jeff Goldblum, back into it, making this the series’ The Force Awakens kind of endeavor.  Prompted by a 2021 IMAX-exclusive prologue (actually deleted footage from the final cut) and numerous movie tie-ins such as Progressive Insurance commercials, Jurassic World Dominion in a way becomes the very thing Dr. Ian Malcolm warned against: selling of a brand at all costs. 



 
While the film takes place years after the island of Ilsa Nublar has been destroyed and humans coexist with dinosaurs and other forms of life on Earth and a subplot involving an evil corporation intending to unleash genetically engineered locusts to create a global food crisis and control trade, as with the first Jurassic World (when you get down to it) is once again retreading tried old ground.  The once majestic T-Rex footprint at this point has been overrun repeatedly by tires and shoes.  What I’m saying is whatever life and inspiration this series once had (and still has in the 1993 film) has been trampled upon and crushed out of it.  Whereas Spielberg’s film still can have you on the edge of your seat, Trevorrow’s mercenary, perfunctory nostalgia-pornographic dirge closing this franchise for good is a tiresome if not draining slog.
 
While Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard still seem to care, Laura Dern and Sam Neill look trapped in this movie looking desperately for a way out while Jeff Goldblum does his thing on autopilot echoing the humiliations of Independence Day: Resurgence.  Campbell Scott as the villainous Dr. Lewis Dodgson (“we’ve got Dodgson here!”) does his best playing a riff on Arliss Howard’s InGen CEO from The Lost World but ultimately strong cast or weak cast, everyone’s efforts get lost in the mire of its staggering 146 minute running time.  As the film piles on dino chase after dino chase, quick saves and last-minute escapes, the thing becomes a monotonous bore made for moviegoers more keen on having popcorn fights than paying attention to whatever is happening onscreen.
 

Technically speaking the film’s set pieces and production design are great, with every dollar on the screen shot beautifully by The Rock cinematographer John Schwartzman and Michael Giacchino dials up the “excitement” notes while also finding room to rechannel just a few reminders of John Williams’ iconic score.  As a home theater or Dolby Cinema demo, its prime material for selling 4K televisions and Dolby Atmos sound systems.  And that’s it, just stop right there.  If there’s a reason for you to freely watch this let alone spend money on it, it is a textbook example of how you can take a beautiful baby like Jurassic Park which can still fill a theater and enthrall an audience and then turn around to embalm it alive.  Not even familiar faces can bail out this sinking ship, just let it drown already.

--Andrew Kotwicki