Is Jurassic World (2015) simply a cash cow
for fan service, with brazen product placement and an unstoppable budget? And
can it compete critically without Spielberg directing?
After twenty-two years since we first came face to snarling-face
with Spielberg's reanimated dinosaurs, we have arrived here: to a monolithic
adventure park that finally sees John Hammond's (Sir Richard Attenborough)
vision a reality. However, this thrill ride sees Spielberg offering his
directorial chair to the indie wonder Colin Trevorrow; renowned for his
wonderfully wholesome and fantastical Safety Not Guaranteed (2012).
Instead he has opted, as he has done in recent years, to act as Executive
Producer overseeing the production with creative integrity and dinosaur mayhem
in check. The question we should then be asking is can Tevorrow deliver to the
franchise? Can the spectacle revived from the original astonish us, and
hopefully bury the atrocious Jurassic Park 3 which mortified our eyes with mere
fan service and stretched narrative device. It has only taken a few glimpses of
teeth, a handful of notes from John Williams' nostalgic score, and a sprinkling
of references to Jurassic Park (1993), to reunite the fans for
the biggest battle of prehistoric creatures in what seems like too long.
Since it was last in operation in 1993, the park has seen a
massive overhaul in innovations, dinosaur genetics and viewing experience. Now
under management, with Simon Masrani (Iffan Khan) acting as the main investor
and 8th richest man in the world he has now continued to pursue Hammond's
dream, by creating not just a park, but an infrastructure. A multitude of
enclosures, paddocks and quasi-sea-world shows and you have Jurassic World.
Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), the park operations manager and Auntie to
Zach and Gray Mitchell (Nick Robinson & Ty Simpkins), has the misfortune of
playing host to the boys while attempting to run a park and contending with a
new park attraction - the aptly named Indominus Rex - a name met with immediate
mockery by the characters. As can be expected operations don't run smoothly in
Jurassic World, so Claire calls in dinosaur expertise, and resident eye-candy.
Chris Pratt plays Owen Grady, an ex-Navy Seal turned park trainer, who sees
past the scaly exterior of theses scientific experiments, and actually bonds
with and raises several Velociraptors to take commands. Compared to everyone
else, customers included, he appears to be the only one who realises these are
still ruthless predators, regardless of genetic domestication. Therefore he
treats them with a balance of fear and respect.
It all sounds like a dream come true. The dinosaurs have become
genetically modified so they are born ostensibly domesticated; making them much
easier to control. These once wild beasts that were highest on the food chain
are now pets to be paraded around for human amusement, in a park that seems
suggestive of the universal theme park in Orlando, Florida - a smart marketing
move by Universal Pictures. Yet with all these improvements and advancements,
we are reminded of Jeff Goldblum's words 'nature always finds a way', as Owen
foreshadows to us the growing hostility that is apparent in animals who remain
in captivity. Before long the intimidating Indominus learns of her own
confinement, grows smarter, more volatile and devises an escape and tricks the
park attendants into becoming dino-chow.
Woven expertly into this overriding story about the dinosaur
attraction, are two other carefully constructed stories in their own right. One
perspective is seen through the children attending the park; one gawking at the
magnificence, and the other at the girls, while the third narrative perspective
takes us behind the scenes. Not so much as a derivation of the first film,
which had deception, exploration, car chasing action sequences and humans
falling prey to hungry dinosaurs, the latest installment offers practically the
same; only this time the action is turned up to eleven. The cliché 'if it ain't
broke, don't fix it' should be applied fairly here. After all, the writers and
produces tried all other variants of plot device in the sequels, and did that
work? Well, you can find the answer in Sam Neil's soggy demeanour in Jurassic
Park 3 (2001).
Nevertheless, some comfort can be taken in the fresh faced actors
who are happy to take on these archetypes with a gleeful enthusiasm and
originality. Pratt and Howard are delightfully well fitted as an on screen
couple, following the trail of her character's nephews with quips, in jokes and
connectivity that fully rounds out their characters. This immediate backstory
develops a romance plot early on that is somewhat unnecessary, but does however
invest us in this group of characters. So much so, that we find ourselves
transfixed on the acting, and multiply that by ten for the 100 foot talking
points surrounding them.
While most viewers will have focused on the characters, and the
awe-inspiring dinosaurs, the more astute will have been noticing, the
overabundance of product placement for Coke, Mercedes and Samsung. Call it
shameless marketing if you will, but Trevorrow has his own answer to this,
which he explained to News.com that 'there's something in the film about our
greed and desire for profit [...] the Indominus Rex, to me, is that desire.' Therefore
it is contestable that Trevorrow's awareness of advertising, commercialism and
capitalism is in itself flipped on its head. In one scene, the tech-savvy
operator Lowery Cruthers (Jake Johnson) sports a Jurassic Park t-shirt, much to
the dismay of Claire. He tells of his attire as a worthwhile purchase from Ebay
for $150, before later praising Hammond's initial park concept, and ripping
into the commercialisation of the park attraction now. In itself a commentary
on Spielberg's simpler narrative of dinosaurs reborn in the age of
mankind's dominion, compared to the Frankensteinian hybrid in
Trevorrow's movie that is synonymous with the dangers of capitalism. Clearly
Trevorrow knows his source material, he deeply adores the franchise and has had
the guts to reinvigorate the franchise into something more than just the year's
highest grossing film. If it takes selling the souls of the dinosaurs for brand
marketing, just to expand the budget, then it may be a practical sacrifice.
Especially when you're mocking the whole capitalist ideology in the first
place.
Spielberg has pushed the scope for the franchise. When the first
film was released, it was the dinosaurs that became the stars. Now, it is the
island that is the most diverse character. Boasting viewing decks and rolling
bubbles that allow one to immerse themselves in the whole Jurassic experience,
then throw into the experience, lectures, archaeology digging and the return of
Mr DNA. What we then have is a four dimensional world that is as real to the
extras in the film, as the people behind the veil, sitting in their seats,
eagerly stuffing popcorn into their mouths.
It may not have the propulsion to get it any more critical acclaim than art direction and visual effects, but it is certainly a movie that innovates and captivates. Jurassic World will easily follow with sequel after sequel. Quite simply, Trevorrow has injected this franchise with the literal performance enhancer it needed, whilst focusing on the main points: characters, setting, homage and teeth. A roar-some spectacle that every member of the family will enjoy.
It may not have the propulsion to get it any more critical acclaim than art direction and visual effects, but it is certainly a movie that innovates and captivates. Jurassic World will easily follow with sequel after sequel. Quite simply, Trevorrow has injected this franchise with the literal performance enhancer it needed, whilst focusing on the main points: characters, setting, homage and teeth. A roar-some spectacle that every member of the family will enjoy.
No comments:
Post a Comment