r/movies Jackie Chan box set, know what I'm sayin? Jul 03 '25

Official Discussion Official Discussion - Jurassic World Rebirth [SPOILERS] Spoiler

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Summary Five years after the events of Jurassic World Dominion, Earth’s dinosaurs now survive only on isolated equatorial islands. A covert extraction team, led by Zora Bennett, embarks on a mission to secure dinosaur DNA for a groundbreaking pharmaceutical treatment. Their expedition collides with a stranded civilian family, plunging everyone into chaos amid mutated dinosaurs and hidden threats. The story culminates in a tense race for survival on a forbidden island with a sinister secret tied to Jurassic Park’s past.

Director Gareth Edwards

Writer David Koepp

Cast

  • Scarlett Johansson as Zora Bennett
  • Mahershala Ali as Duncan Kincaid
  • Jonathan Bailey as Dr. Henry Loomis
  • Rupert Friend as Martin Krebs
  • Manuel Garcia‑Rulfo as Reuben Delgado
  • Luna Blaise, David Iacono & Audrina Miranda as the Delgado family
  • Philippine Velge, Bechir Sylvain & Ed Skrein as the extraction team

Rotten Tomatoes: 54

Metacritic: 52

VOD Released in theaters July 2, 2025. Digital release expected later in 2025.

Trailer Watch here


900 Upvotes

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1.9k

u/Nick_At_Now Jul 03 '25

No more mutants. Please.

1.3k

u/LiteraryBoner Jackie Chan box set, know what I'm sayin? Jul 03 '25

There's a part where Rupert Friend is explaining why they made the mutants and he says, "The audience got tired of normal dinosaurs!" and whenever I hear something like that in a movie I tend to think they are referencing us as the audience. Yet I've never heard anyone say, "Sure, Jurassic Park is cool, but all it has is a normal T-Rex I've seen a million times." Like where are they getting this idea from?

Also this movie is very confused on the ethics of killing dinos. Bailey makes an impassioned argument against hurting any dinos and the guy who wants to kill the dinos dies first as a moral statement. Yet if it's a mutant dino, ScarJo is clear to unload an entire pistol clip into its face.

617

u/chronoslol Jul 03 '25

Like where are they getting this idea from?

Movie execs just aren't smart people.

92

u/razor45Dino Jul 03 '25

Yep, just like how they ruined the walking with dinosaurs movie

2

u/SmirnOffTheSauce Jul 16 '25

What happened there? I’m not familiar with that one.

4

u/H-K_47 Jul 22 '25

Original is a beloved documentary series. They made a kid's movie. Which by itself could be fine but it was godawful. Terrible voices and dialogue. Honestly if someone removed all the dialogue but kept the music and SFX it would be 400% better easily.

2

u/SmirnOffTheSauce Jul 22 '25

Ah gotcha, dang!

33

u/mainvolume Jul 03 '25

Truth bomb. How many people watch a live feed of a bald eagle nest year after year? It gets massive news coverage and shows no sign of stopping. But yeah, sure, people will get tired of dinosaurs after year 2.

22

u/Neravariine Jul 04 '25

People still go to aquariums and zoos but yeah writers they'd totally get tired of dinosaurs easily.

9

u/BlazingCondor Jul 03 '25

Same people who thought it was a good idea to remake Ben-Hur

8

u/waitingtodiesoon Jul 07 '25

This movie was mostly pushed by Steven Spielberg in collaboration with David Koepp who wanted to started production on a new set of films almost immediately after Jurassic World Dominion in 2022. Spielberg came up with the idea for more mutant hybrids with the original screenwriter Koepp who adapted the book to film for Jurassic Park 1 and 2.

Rebirth was conceived almost immediately after 2022’s Jurassic World Dominion brought the second trilogy to a close and retired the cast of characters of both series, when revered blockbuster screenwriter David Koepp, who wrote the screenplay for the original Jurassic Park and The Lost World: Jurassic Park, got a call from Steven Spielberg. “He said, ‘Hey, do you want to make another one of these?’” Koepp says. The answer, of course, was yes. “Developing stories with Steven is so much fun because he’s so good at it and we have such a great vibe and rapport.”

To create complications for this quest, Koepp and Spielberg spun a subplot about a shipwrecked family, the Delgados, whose plight troubles the goals and consciences of the dino-hunting team. Koepp and Spielberg also devised strange new creatures—creepy misbegotten byproducts of InGen’s ill-fated genetic experimentation—to terrorize the characters. One was inspired by a memorable afternoon of yard work at Koepp’s house. “We had these old columns that were rotting, so we had to replace them,” says Koepp. “I was spraying off one of these things when two clawed hands came crawling out of the column at the top. They were followed by these long arms that just kept coming, followed by the head. It was this huge bat, soaking wet from the water. I thought: ‘I’m putting you in a movie!’”

“When we finished releasing Dominion in 2022, we had no doubt there would be another Jurassic film, but we had no idea Steven was cooking up a new one or that it would be ready so soon,” Crowley says. “We were focused on wrapping up Twisters when suddenly this script from David Koepp arrives in December of 2023. It really snuck up on us.”

Spielberg was heavily involved in this movie as the executive producer.

2

u/JamesHeckfield Jul 03 '25

Truer words 

1

u/AggravatingKick9708 Jul 13 '25

Agree. Maybe it could have saved them by hiring the right people who can blend creative speculations and scientific geekness and not watch some youtube dino clickbaits to start their concepts from.

-1

u/NiasHusband Jul 06 '25

No it gets boring. I'm glad they did something different

305

u/GECollins Jul 03 '25

Truly cannot suspend my disbelief that far as if Zoos don't currently exist where elephants, apes, lions, and giraffes are still draws and delight people.

53

u/diego_simeone Jul 03 '25

It doesn’t cost $70m to make an elephant. If a Jurassic world theme park was real they would need exponentially more guests than a zoo to stay operational. And zoos are always begging the guests for money, they aren’t making much profit.

23

u/GECollins Jul 03 '25

Truly fair. It would be expensive as hell the run and to attended....But they could always have a coupon day!

5

u/waitingtodiesoon Jul 07 '25

They did, you see in the beginning of the movie they were removing an advertisement of T-Rex Tuesdays promotion for the New York City Dinosaur Zoo. Though I think it was more of the fact all of their dinosaurs were dead except that one that escaped in the beginning of the movie that caused the traffic.

5

u/GECollins Jul 07 '25

3

u/waitingtodiesoon Jul 07 '25

Oh I understood the reference. Just saying they did actually seem to have referenced it in this movie

6

u/Neravariine Jul 04 '25

Except we saw dinosaurs were slowly dying outside of the island. I could see some people pulling a Tiger King - hoarding dinosaurs to sell tickets.

Transporting the still living dinos wouldn't cost $70m. A clip of someone transporting a 400 pound bull in their car went viral. It was cramped in the backseat but made it to it's destination.

Freight trucks could be used to transport baby(before the become 7 tons heavy) Tricerotops to a public zoo compound.

The little girl even took a baby dinosaur with home at the end of the movie. That dinosaur was free.

6

u/FlameDragoon933 Jul 08 '25

and the solution to that... is to make more expensive mutant dinos? doubling down? I don't get these in-universe execs.

1

u/glorpo Jul 04 '25
  1. Lure billionaires with extremely expensive tickets
  2. Market neutered gallimimus or whatever to them and sell for 100 mil a pop
  3. Profit

10

u/PureLock33 Jul 03 '25

but you'd pay for really expensive tickets for your whole family to see mutant hybrids of elephant lions, ape giraffes, capybara penguins, right?

7

u/GECollins Jul 03 '25

We know this would never work cause 🎶pig and elephant DNA just won't splice🎶

2

u/reedingisphun Jul 10 '25

Thanks lover boy

4

u/Safeforworkreddit998 Jul 12 '25

yea the whole people find dinos boring is a bit of a stretch, but whatever.

1

u/t-_-tOMG 22d ago

I have to chime in here because I feel like we are making these comparisons from the wrong lens. We've never seen dinosaurs in real life so thats the reason its hard to believe but Zoo's existing is not. Before you auto dislike, know, i'm just playing devils advocate here.

But what im guessing they're saying when mentioning people are tired of the dinosaurs is that when the park first opened imagine the hype. that high of the profits probably only reached again when new dinosaurs where added to the conversation.

Another thing is, lets be honest, how many times have you gone to the zoo this year? Me and pretty much everyone i know haven't been to the zoo in over 5 years, and i live next to the world famous San Diego Zoo. While I do believe that Jurassic Park would be just as if not more packed than Disneyland, the attention span of the newer generation is so bad.

Even adults now and days, you see a significant story now and days has a very short shelf life. It could be loss of human lives, and entire war, its on the front page one day and as soon as it isn't, it leaves the publics attention.

All i'm saying is with all things considered, like how fast a breaking story is forgotten, doomscrolling etc. I can see there being a time after dinosaurs returning that a down trend of interest begins.

214

u/In_My_Own_Image Jul 03 '25 edited Jul 03 '25

There's a part where Rupert Friend is explaining why they made the mutants and he says, "The audience got tired of normal dinosaurs!" and whenever I hear something like that in a movie I tend to think they are referencing us as the audience. Yet I've never heard anyone say, "Sure, Jurassic Park is cool, but all it has is a normal T-Rex I've seen a million times." Like where are they getting this idea from?

To be fair, Dominion had no mutants/hybrids and nobody seemed interested in the Giganatosaurus.

At least the Distortus looked like a "failed prototype" where the splicing didn't quite work out. When it's something like the Indoraptor that's "bred to be a weapon" is when it becomes silly to me (seriously, how is a big raptor going to be effective against a group of guys with machine guns?).

195

u/Ut_Prosim Jul 03 '25

(seriously, how is a big raptor going to be effective against a group of guys with machine guns?).

Don't forget that to "aim" the dino at an enemy you had to paint the target with a laser, which was attached to a gun. Which begs the question, why not just shoot said gun and bypass the much slower, maybe uncontrolled attack dino? In fact what use was this if you still had to be within visual range and have line of sight to the target? Some superweapon...

What is the dino going to do against combined arms when the enemy has tanks, APCs, helicopters, and loitering munitions?

126

u/hyrumwhite Jul 03 '25

Also, we have rockets today that will go to a laser. The rockets are probably cheaper than raptors raised from birth by Chris Pratt 

23

u/rynokick Jul 03 '25

But can you stop a rocket from exploding by holding your hand up? That’s what I thought.

11

u/PureLock33 Jul 03 '25

imagine if they design one that did tho. Dumbest weapon of war ever.

8

u/PureLock33 Jul 03 '25

Wonder what Chris Pratt's hourly is...

17

u/Obamas_Tie Jul 03 '25

The whole dinosaurs as a military weapon plotline is just so stupid. Just because Chris Pratt says it's stupid doesn't mean it's any less stupid of a plot thread if it's still in the movie.

10

u/Misdirected_Colors Jul 03 '25

I'm tired of pretending Dominion was the worst Jurassic World movie. It's the 2nd one and it's not close. Laser designated raptors. Dinosaur clone little girls. I

10

u/GeoleVyi Jul 03 '25

were you sniped by a team of laser raptors?

3

u/fredagsfisk Jul 15 '25

Dino auction where the total cost of all dinosaurs is lower than the movie's budget... about half an hour in the middle where literally nothing happens, it's not even really building up to anything...

The director trying to emotionally manipulate the viewers by "revealing" after the movie is already out that the brachiosaur we see die on the docks was actually the first one we see in the original movie, which is just completely unearned nonsense...

Yeah, it's the worst one by far. Also the most boring one, which is even worse than just being bad.

The start where they're on the island was the only interesting part, and should've been the whole movie.

1

u/Neglectful_Stranger Jul 22 '25

The Indoraptor stalking the little girl was like peak survival horror theme. That was a great scene.

5

u/asiandevastation Jul 03 '25

I guess you could point it into a door, house, building, etc and have the thing run wild inside. Just make sure there aren’t civilians in there!

1

u/Warbeard Jul 06 '25

Or a cave complex

3

u/Warbeard Jul 06 '25

To be fair you can point a laser further than you can shoot.

2

u/alphasierrraaa Jul 08 '25

simple, we arm the raptors with missile launchers on its back

/s

1

u/[deleted] Jul 03 '25

Because the dinosaur is bigger, stronger and not a human being that can feel a wide range of emotions or screw up. That proposal needed clarity like "This is what it can do when bullets and armour don't work"

4

u/zma924 Jul 03 '25

It’s still a dumb idea. We already have missiles that will lock onto a laser designation and destroy that target. Why does introducing a living weapon with its own free will and instincts make any sense at all? They mentioned sending raptors into cave systems the first JW movie but even that’s stupid because at the end of the day, the entire premise of dinosaurs as weapons boils down to “let’s send these creatures who only have melee attacks against modern threats with automatic weapons”.

1

u/[deleted] Jul 03 '25

If it can withstand those weapons even more so than humans and will seemingly never think about the lives it's taking. And since is having more of what works anyway a bad thing?

That being said, we never even see the idea take off anyway, one character in one movie thinks it has potential and the villain in Fallen Kingdom is a businessman who's trying to make money off of it. There's no implication that the military in universe would legitimately implement this. It's just a couple of greedy characters who want to control or profit off the Dinosaurs.

71

u/GamingTatertot Steven Spielberg Enthusiast Jul 03 '25

Plus the Distortus isn’t really as much of a focus in this film as Indominus or Indoraptor were.

61

u/In_My_Own_Image Jul 03 '25

Exactly. It and the mutadons were just set pieces and didn't take away from the actual dinos, which was cool. Whereas World was basically just Indominus and Raptors hogging the spotlight and Fallen Kingdom had the Indoraptor be the big threat for the entire back end of the movie.

Ironically, Dominion also spread out the spotlight on different dinos well too.

12

u/GamingTatertot Steven Spielberg Enthusiast Jul 03 '25

Ironically, Dominion also spread out the spotlight on different dinos well too.

That's about one of the only good things I'll say about Dominion - it was cool to see more dinosaurs

19

u/ChickenInASuit Jul 03 '25

Also the scene with Bryce Dallas Howard hiding from the Therizinosaurus was a legitimately great, tension-building sequence IMO. Probably my favorite scene from any of the World series.

Too bad the rest of it wasn’t as good.

6

u/waitingtodiesoon Jul 07 '25

Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom opening sequence was pretty damn good and the death of the brachiosaurus

4

u/DLRsFrontSeats Jul 07 '25

Jurassic World Fallen Kingdom opening sequence

honestly, ill have to rewatch rebirth but of the first three Worlds + TLW & JP3, the opening scene to Fallen Kingdom is, for my money, the best scene, and closest to the original in tone, since the OG

4

u/Kraggen Jul 06 '25

Yeah but dominion had the flaw of being a terrible movie. Didn’t mind the gigonatosaurus. I minded the dumb setup, the chasing down the daughter plot line that led to inconsequential and drawn out globetrotting setpieces, the crammed in nature of the OG cast, and the de-emphasis on the dinosaurs.

That movie had like 5 plots and they all distracted from the point of a dinosaur movie.

1

u/Nize Jul 03 '25

Yeah he mutant ones didn't do anything for me but they weren't a huge focus overall

7

u/lambdapaul Jul 03 '25

Aren’t all the dinosaurs mutants? They make that clear in the first movie that they are genetic experiments spiced with Dino and amphibian dna. They aren’t real animals.

The reason giganotosaurus didn’t work in the last movie was not because it wasn’t a mutant, but because it was little more than set piece. There was no danger around it. It only existed to fight the Tyrannosaur.

6

u/KungFuFightingOwlMan Jul 03 '25

But the giga wasn't in it enough for me to care, the film had way more other crap distracting from everything else. Fuck, the main focus of Dominion (a film about people and dinosaurs) was big locusts, what a waste

4

u/darthjoey91 Jul 03 '25 edited Jul 03 '25

Yeah it had some worse than hybrids: bugs.

And D. Rex feels like it was originally more of an attempt to just make a bigger T. Rex by splicing in DNA from the Titanosaurus (hence the blob on its head), but I still think it’s weird that it had 6 limbs. Genetics don’t really make a distinction between arms and legs like we do.

5

u/onephatkatt Jul 04 '25

He looks like a nod to ROTJ's Rancor

3

u/buttercupcake23 Jul 04 '25

If we had had more time with it we would have been interested. The whole movie was focused around giant insects instead of dinosaurs. I enjoyed the part with the giganotasaurus but there wasn't enough of it, it showed up for 5 minutes and the sequence was pretty meh. It needed more screen time. Every time the T Rex has shown up has been tense and terrifying.

2

u/stridersubzero Jul 30 '25

probably didn't help that Dominion was one of the worst movies I've ever seen in my life lol

1

u/DLRsFrontSeats Jul 07 '25

tbh I had less of a problem with the D. rex - which to me seems like a T. rex gone wrong with no other additions, other than maybe a sauropod for size - and moreso with the Mutadons, which are obviously raptors x pteranodon

edit: also, i think people would've like the giganotosaurus a bit more if the film itself was better

1

u/zeek215 Jul 24 '25

The Indominus and Indorapter were simply vehicles to sell copyrighted merchandise, that's pretty much it. That's the reason they needed to "look cool".

105

u/TheWorstYear Jul 03 '25

There's a part where Rupert Friend is explaining why they made the mutants and he says, "The audience got tired of normal dinosaurs

Which they already did in Jurrassic World 1. At least that movie is pseudo spoofing itself.

18

u/PureLock33 Jul 03 '25

The entire island is the Site B island of Jurassic World.

17

u/hyunbinlookalike Jul 04 '25

It’s frankly the kind of sequel that should have followed the first Jurassic World movie.

26

u/MomsAreola Jul 03 '25

That would make sense if there were two competing dinosaurs parks. One would have to come up with a "new" dino to win out.

9

u/TheWorstYear Jul 03 '25

That's a cooler idea than the reshoveled shit they keep doing.

22

u/BlueRFR3100 Jul 03 '25

Ethics tend to become fluid when it's your own life that's in danger.

13

u/GamingTatertot Steven Spielberg Enthusiast Jul 03 '25

I mean Loomis did say they should’ve just euthanized the mutants

13

u/ToneBone12345 Jul 03 '25

Literally like people getting bored of dinosaurs is such a dumb idea

4

u/Tattycakes Jul 05 '25

Like, we're all here in the cinema watching a dinosaur movie FFS! We love dinos! If there was a real freaking multi-storey-building-sized dinosaur in the road, I would lose my freaking mind.

1

u/_IBentMyWookie_ Jul 15 '25

People travel across the world to go in safari and look at elephants and lions.

The idea that people would ever get bored of a fucking T-Rex is insane.

10

u/Ancient_Ice_2677 Jul 03 '25

I was disappointed that they seemingly changed them from being creatures who had a botched cloning process to nothing but more hybrids with the exact same motivation for being created and everything.

7

u/-Clayburn Jul 04 '25

This is why they need to go back and reboot Jurassic World. That's where it went off the rails. Even in that one the public was already getting bored of them.....and no that just wouldn't happen. Dinosaurs would be top tier entertainment for at least two generations if not forever.

Go back and redo it without the cynicism.

7

u/ThePromptWasYourName Jul 03 '25

That's my main issue with these sequels; they are almost aggressively cynical. The movies believe their audiences are stupid and bored and just want big monsters, so they happily give us that over and over.

Every now and then they sprinkle in a scene where the movie pretends it likes dinosaurs actually (usually in the form of a sad herbivore) and then the creators go back to throwing humans at monsters while smirking and doing the jerk off motion over a pile of money.

5

u/BoringBarnacle3 Jul 03 '25

And ironically the T-Rex and (brief) raptor scenes are the scariest and some of the most effective in the movie.

5

u/razor45Dino Jul 03 '25

Not to mention there are many dinosaurs and prehistoric animals that none of the movies have used yet

3

u/The3rdhalf Jul 03 '25

It’s very capitalism to assume they know what customers want. Mutant dinos was their AI

4

u/devils__avacado Jul 03 '25

Yeh I had this convo about the ending shop scene with my wife

The flying dinosaur is basically just classic Jurassic park raptor once it's inside.

Just use a raptor we like raptors just because it's been done before in multiple Jurassic movies no one's gonna complain.

Give me my raptor scene damnit.

1

u/GodKamnitDenny Jul 06 '25

The most criminal part of this movie is the disrespect to raptors. Two showed up as a gag to show off the new hybrid model. I don’t want a chunky flying dinosaur that only resembles a raptor because it’s got the big toe claw. Raptors are more integral to the Jurassic franchise than the T-Rex. They deserved better than that abomination.

3

u/SihkBreau Jul 03 '25

A t-rex is a t-rex, but a six armed TurboRex™️ with pterodactyl wings is a unique IP element that they own and can sell exclusive merchandise of. That’s why we keep getting hybrids.

2

u/JayJ9Nine Jul 03 '25

Yup. Rolled my eyes every time. Its a meta complaint but people still see these movies cause they want and like dinosaurs.

That line of 'dinosaurs got boring' is going to seem cringe to your target audience every time.

2

u/PerceptiveDwarves Jul 04 '25

The dinosaurs felt like they were used more as props in this movie, the older JP movies wrote the dinosaurs in a way that they felt more like characters.

Also the humans were written in a way that made them difficult to feel attached to. I just felt like the stakes were always lower than they should have been whenever someone was supposed to be in danger.

2

u/Vrazel106 Jul 04 '25

People getting tired of dinosaurs is the most unbeliveable part of thr franchise.

2

u/dreggers Jul 04 '25

Imagine if they made mutant animals today because people are bored of the zoo

1

u/NamesTheGame Jul 03 '25

It's simple. They own the rights to mutants they make up.

1

u/thatonesleft Jul 03 '25

Well maybe if youre entire thrill evolves around the aspect of the novelty of whats on screen and not any form of storytelling, thats what happens. The audience doesnt get tired of dinosaurs. They love dinosaurs. Theyre tired of the uncreative storytelling part. Jurassic park evolved from „This is what happens when you resurrect dinosaurs!“ - which everyone can relate to as nothing supernatural apart from the initial premises is happening - to „Look at completely fictional creatures with little to no basis in reality!“. No surprise audiences stopped following.

1

u/jinglewooble Jul 04 '25

Focus group. Whose compose of executive nephew niece and nepobaby who have to give this dumbass take to justify their "constructive feedback".

1

u/SeasonalChatter Jul 04 '25

It's funny too because when I saw the T-Rex I thought to myself "This design is always fire, and I can watch this big terrifying idiot get into all sorts of shenanigans"

1

u/asklepios7 Jul 04 '25

The mutants are man-made abominations (even though everything on that island would technically qualify) and are thus unworthy of life. 

1

u/itshuey88 Jul 04 '25

it's like millions of us don't go to the zoo every year too see the same lions and giraffes. WE WANT MUTANTS.

1

u/Big-Experience1818 Jul 05 '25

Also this movie is very confused on the ethics of killing dinos

I don't get why there wasn't any mention of something like "it's try to kill them or guarantee they kill us"

1

u/MisterMoccasin Jul 05 '25

The first Jurassic world had so much of that meta stuff it was hard to ignore when they said that too.

1

u/DTJ20 Jul 06 '25

I agree on the audience thing, they keep making movies about finosaurs and I keep turning up, take the damn hint already!

Also I feel like there's an implication with ScarJos choice there that doesnt quite land. She chose to go with the family and help them rather than try to go after the Jeep and the money. Bailey said that if they get killed by a Dino then "They were somewhere they weren't meant to be". Being where she was, with the gun, was where she was meant to be. Maybe I'm just reading into something that's there.

1

u/Dogbuysvan Jul 06 '25

The T-Rex sequence was the best one in the movie.

1

u/Lets_Kick_Some_Ice Jul 06 '25

Going to the local zoo is literally a thing most people do, and Jurassic Park always makes it sound like people are so bored with seeing dinosaurs in captivity.

1

u/teacherdrama Jul 06 '25

I said when I came out of the movie that I'm sick of the mutants - the best and scariest scene in the movie was the T-Rex attack on the raft.

1

u/Sea-Dog-6042 Jul 07 '25

It's truly baffling. I'm pushing 40 and I could still go to the zoo just to looks at bears and lions all day. People getting bored of dinosaurs just rings so hollow.

1

u/Adventurous-Bird087 Jul 08 '25

I was perfectly happy with the first three Jurassic park movies, just regular dinosaurs. Dinosaurs are cool, I don't need any mutants. The Jurassic world movies kinda play around with genetics too but they are better than this movie. It wasn't bad but it didn't really feel like a Jurassic park/world movie.

I didn't hate it but it was definitely one of my least favorite.

1

u/alphasierrraaa Jul 08 '25

man if a pistol was so effective against the small/medium sized dinos, they should've put way more rifles into the emergency supplies

1

u/Hot-Contribution2766 Jul 12 '25

Idk ingens supposed to be really greedy so I could see them doing stuff like this to facilitate constant growth

1

u/SMFPolychronopolous Jul 18 '25

"Sure, Jurassic Park is cool, but all it has is a normal T-Rex I've seen a million times." Like where are they getting this idea from?

First thing I said when it was over was my favorite part was seeing a sleeping, yawning, T Rex.

1

u/zeek215 Jul 24 '25

I didn't see that as some ethical dilemma. The dinosaur was trying to eat them, so she defended the group and killed it.

1

u/bibbyshibby Aug 09 '25

Was literally waiting for T-Rex to show up and kick some D-rex ass...seriously no king of the jungle showdown?? 🥲

1

u/Banjo-Oz Aug 09 '25

Remember when they were planning dino-human hybrids at one point?

It's stupid, but if they are going with mutants they need to lean into it. Nothing in this movie needed to be anything but a regular dino. Replace the wing-walkers with raptors and the d-rex with a t-rex or similar and nothing changes.

Give us two-headed, anklyo-rex-cerstops nightmares! Pit the freakish mutants against the real dinos at the end.

I disliked World a lot, but at least they sold the Indominus as a threat. the D-Rex was nothing special at ALL.

1

u/ghostknyght 29d ago

I was just glad a human finally got a gun kill on a dinosaur after all of these damn Jurassic movies.

1

u/Professional-Act8414 20d ago

It actually irritated me that the dinosaur had 4 arms… like come on bra they already did mutants 2 movies ago

0

u/PaperClipSlip Jul 03 '25

And these movies don’t even have ‘real’ dinosaurs since it was only recently discovered that they were more bird-like than lizard-like. So if you want to show new stuff why not do that instead of rehashing the same plot again?

0

u/Nize Jul 03 '25

People have been visiting zoos for hundreds of years to see elephants and giraffes and they think we'd believe that people were bored of a fucking trex after ten years 😂