- Amblin
- Bryce Dallas Howard
- Chris Pratt
- Colin Trevorrow
- Steven Spielberg
Michael Crichton and Steven Spielberg's test-tube dinosaurs get a critic-proof reboot that's fun for a while, but not a patch on the original.
“No one’s impressed by a dinosaur anymore,” notes one character early on in “Jurassic World,” and it’s easy to imagine the same words having passed through the lips of more than one Universal Studios executive in the years since Michael Crichton and Steven Spielberg’s 1993 “Jurassic Park” shattered box office records, along with the glass ceiling for computer-generated visual effects. Two decades and two lackluster sequels later, producer and studio have spared few expenses in crafting a bigger, faster, noisier dinosaur opus, designed to reclaim their place at the top of the blockbuster food chain. What they’ve engineered is an undeniably vigorous assault of jaw-chomping jolts and Spielbergian family bonding that nevertheless captures only a fraction of the original film’s overflowing awe and wonderment. Which should still be more than enough to cause a T-rex-sized ripple effect at the summer multiplex turnstile.Located off the coast of Costa Rica, the Jurassic World luxury resort provides a habitat for an array of genetically engineered dinosaurs, including the vicious and intelligent Indominus rex. When the massive creature escapes, it sets off a chain reaction that causes the other dinos to run amok. Now… More
Release date: June 12, 2015 (USA)
Running time: 2h 4m
MPAA rating: PG-13
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ilm Review: 'Jurassic World'
Reviewed at AMC Century City, Los Angeles, June 8, 2015. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 124 MIN.
Production
A Universal release presented with Amblin Entertainment in association with Legendary Pictures. Produced by Frank Marshall, Patrick Crowley. Executive producers, Steven Spielberg, Thomas Tull. Co-producer, Trevor Waterson.
Crew
Directed by Colin Trevorrow. Screenplay, Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Derek Connolly, Trevorrow; story, Jaffa, Silver, based on characters created by Michael Crichton. Camera (color, 35mm), John Schwartzman; editor, Kevin Stitt; music, Michael Giacchino; production designer, Edward Verreaux; supervising art director, Doug Meerdink; art director, Christa Munro; set decorator, Ron Reiss; set designers, Ernie Avila, George Lee-McDonnell, Kevin Loo, Todd Cherniawsky, Lorrie Campbell; digital set designers, Masako Masuda, Randy Wilkins, Forest Fischer; costume designer, Daniel Orlandi; sound (Datasat/Dolby Digital), Kirk Francis; sound designers, Al Nelson, Pete Horner; consulting sound designer, Gary Rydstrom; supervising sound editors, Al Nelson, Gwendolyn Yates Whittle; re-recording mixers, Christopher Boyes, Pete Horner; visual effects supervisor, Tim Alexander; visual effects animation supervisor, Glen McIntosh; visual effects producer, Erin Dusseault; visual effects and animation, Industrial Light & Magic, Image Engine Design, Hybride, Vuirtuos, Ghost VFX, Base FX, Level 256 VFX, Avery FX; special effects supervisor, Michael Meinardus; dinosaur consultant, Phil Tippett; associate producer, Christopher Raimo; assistant director, Chris Castaldi; second unit directors, David Leitch, Chris O’Hara; second unit camera, Patrick Loungeway; casting, John Papsidera.
With
Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Vincent D’Onofrio, Ty Simpkins, Nick Robinson, Jake Johnson, Omar Sy, BD Wong, Judy Greer, Irrfan Khan.
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