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    Prehistoric Inaction

    With humans this unfocused, cheesy Jurassic World makes you want to root for the dinosaurs

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 12, 2015 | 9:19 am
    With humans this unfocused, cheesy Jurassic World makes you want to root for the dinosaurs
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    It’s hard to underestimate the impact that Jurassic Park had when it came out in 1993. Not only was it part of a stellar one-two punch from director Steven Spielberg, as the Oscar-winning Schindler’s List came out the same year, but it also set a standard for special effects that many movies struggle to achieve even to this day.

    Fourteen years after the lackluster Jurassic Park III, the dinosaurs have been brought back to life once again for Jurassic World. But if you were a big fan of either The Lost World or JPIII, you might want to brace yourself, as the events of those two films appear to have been entirely forgotten.

    Instead, writer/director Colin Trevorrow and a trio of other writers make the film entirely about reliving the glory days of the original.

    The audience is thrust into a new reality without explanation, namely that Jurassic World is an accepted and popular theme park, even though Jurassic Park never came into existence. Two brothers, Zach and Grey (Nick Robinson and Ty Simpkins), are shipped off to the park run by their Aunt Claire (Bryce Dallas Howard) so that their parents don’t have to explain that they’re getting divorced.

    Turns out it’s a particularly bad time to visit, as the park is about to unveil its latest dinosaur creation, the Indominus Rex, a creature bigger and more fierce than the feared T-Rex. When the Indominus Rex escapes from its enclosure, Claire must team up with dinosaur trainer Owen (Chris Pratt) to try to track it down and protect the thousands of tourists on the island.

    What made Jurassic Park work so well was not just the phenomenon of seeing dinosaurs in action; it was also how effectively Spielberg and writer Michael Crichton were able to show how hubris, whether malicious or not, can lead to people’s downfall. With only a couple of exceptions, Trevorrow and his team fail to give proper background on key characters, leaving the audience to just guess what their motivations are.

    In an ironic twist that mirrors the events of the film, Trevorrow is much more focused on the spectacle of the dinosaurs than in telling a compelling story, and the film suffers for it. The dinosaurs are as impressive as you’d expect, but without any real human drama to go along with them, they’re little more than just scenery. Some sequences have the requisite wow factor, but there are also a few where less care was taken with the special effects, making them cheesy instead of powerful.

    The film also relies a bit too much on referencing Jurassic Park. Although some allusions are expected and even welcome, the film returns to them over and over again, making it seem less like its own thing and more like a retread of the original. If you can’t come up with a unique story, why bother even trying?

    Other than being in a less-than-successful movie, Pratt doesn’t really hurt his status as the new go-to action hero. His charming, relatable and smart-alecky personality goes a long way toward making him likable, not to mention set pieces in which he is literally called a “badass.” Howard doesn’t come off quite as well, although she’s done in more by the clunky dialogue than anything else.

    If all you care about is seeing dinosaurs run amok, then Jurassic World is your film. But if you’re looking for a bit more substance with your action, it’s best to search elsewhere.

    The Indominus Rex is at the heart of the action in Jurassic World.

    Scene from Jurassic World
    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment
    The Indominus Rex is at the heart of the action in Jurassic World.
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    Movie Review

    School kids face peril in gripping horror film Weapons

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 7, 2025 | 3:00 pm
    Julia Garner in Weapons
    Warner Bros. Pictures
    Julia Garner in Weapons

    After making his name in the comedy world, writer/director Zach Cregger surprised many by making the highly effective horror comedy Barbarian in 2022. That success made his follow-up film much anticipated, and he’s surprising again with the much darker Weapons, a title that serves to intrigue even as it's only slightly less random than his previous effort.

    The film’s inciting event is the disappearance of almost an entire classroom of third graders taught by Justine Gandy (Julia Garner). For an unknown reason, all of them except for Alex Lilly (Cary Christopher) ran out of their houses at 2:17 am one morning and vanished into thin air. Neither Justine nor Alex claims to know anything about the incident, which is viewed with skepticism by many parents, including Archer Graff (Josh Brolin).

    Told in chapters focusing on different characters, the film methodically approaches the crisis from multiple angles, including deeper dives into side characters like Paul (Alden Ehrenreich), a police officer and Justine’s ex-boyfriend; Anthony (Austin Abrams), a drug addict who tries to find any way to feed his habit; and Andrew (Benedict Wong), the principal at Justine’s school.

    The subject matter of the film inherently makes it deeper than Barbarian, as putting kids in peril is tough to take for many people, especially parents. Cregger shines a light on that stress through the character of Archer, whose obsession with finding out what happened to his son becomes monomaniacal. But by showing the audience stories involving other characters, especially the way Justine gets increasingly isolated, Cregger ensures that the film never becomes bogged down in sadness.

    The diversity of storylines also serves the purpose of keeping the audience guessing as to where the overall story is heading. The strangeness of the kids’ disappearance and a few other odd things early on only hints at the answers that are to come. When Cregger finally decides to put the story into overdrive, it’s a gripping journey involving ultraviolence, bewildered characters, and one supremely creepy woman played by Amy Madigan.

    The film gives cinephiles a lot to dig into with its variety of different shots. Cregger and cinematographer Larkin Seiple don’t do anything overly flashy aside from a couple of sequences without cuts. Instead, they subtly play with angles like approaching a doorknob from underneath or saving a scary reveal until just the right moment that ups the intensity of the film greatly. Jump scares are called upon a bit too often, but the rest of the movie is done so well that the trope can be forgiven.

    Garner, so good in her Emmy-winning role on Ozark, does a fantastic job at carrying the emotional weight of the story. She’s aided by the always-reliable Brolin, whose character mostly acts as a counterweight to hers. Ehrenreich and Abrams are good, if slightly miscast. It’s great to see Wong outside of Marvel movies, and Madigan steals the movie in her late-breaking role. There’s also a fun cameo for fans of Barbarian.

    There are a lot of different filmmakers who can churn out middling horror movies, but Cregger now joins someone like Jordan Peele in making consistently interesting films that also deliver the goods when it comes to scary stuff. Weapons jumps to the top of the list for 2025 horror movies, but it’s also just a great movie, period.

    ---

    Weapons opens in theaters on August 8.

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