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MOVIE REVIEW
Jurassic Park III
(2001) Starring:
Sam Neill, William H. Macy, Téa Leoni, Alessandro Nivola and
Michael Jeter
Director: Joe Johnston
Rating: PG-13
Studio:
Universal
Review
Posted: 7.17.01
Rating:
3.5/5
By
Gareth Von Kallenbach.
When
the first two films in a series generate over $500 million in
box office receipts and countless dollars in toy and merchandise
sales, it is a safe bet that the studio will do whatever it can
to keep the almighty dollars keep coming in.
Sequels
are often a safe bet in Hollywood as they have a built in
audience and name recognition, combined with the general fact
that even if a sequel does1/3 the business of the previous film,
it is likely to make good money at the box office.
Despite
lackluster reviews from critics and many filmgoers, 1997s
“Jurassic Park The Lost World” was one of the year’s
biggest winners at the box office. Boosted by a
$92.7 Million opening weekend in the bank, the powers
that be at Universal started to make plans for the next chapter
in the series.
Steven
Spielberg decided to pass on directing duties and focus on
producing the new Jurassic Park film leaving Joe Johnston to
take over the reins of the lucrative franchise. The biggest
issue facing the new film was creating a script, as the first
two films had the advantage of having best sellers from Michael
Crichton to base their screenplays upon. However, with no new
novel in the series available, it fell to screenwriters Peter
Buchman, Alexander Payne, and Jim Taylor to create an original
script that would continue the success of the film series and
ensure the lucrative continuation of the series.
The
story takes place a few years after the event of the first two
films where the world’s population has come to accept that
Dinosaurs do indeed exist on the Isla Nublar. This has lead to a
belief amongst many that and that further study of fossils of
the creatures is no longer necessary to the point it has been in
the past.
This
viewpoint is very difficult for Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neil) to
accept as he has spent his time following his visit to the
original "Jurassic Park" speaking out against the
company who recreated the animals as theme park attractions.
Grant is also working on a theory that Velociraptors were able
to communicate with one another and had the Dinosaurs not been
eliminated, they instead of primates might have evolved as the
higher life form on Earth. Grant is however unable to get the
needed funding he needs to continue his research and is faced
with shutting down his research in only a few short weeks.
Just
when all seems lost for Grant, a wealthy couple arrives with an
interesting proposition. It
seems that Paul and Amanda Kirby, (William Macy, Tea Leoni) have
chartered a plane to fly over the forbidden Isla Nublar and they
want to fund Dr. Grants research if he is willing to be their
guide. Despite some
misgivings, Grant realizes this is the only way to continue his
work and before long he is on the way to the island.
It
does not take long for Grant to realize that this is not a site
seeing trip for a wealthy couple but rather a rescue attempt. It
seems that the Kirbys are a divorced couple who is looking for
their son who vanished on the island 8 weeks earlier.
On top of this, Kirby is not the wealthy person he
claimed to be, and before long, Grant and the crew find
themselves in a spectacular plane crash, stranded on the island
running for their lives, from all manner of deadly creatures.
While
the film does not have the tightest of scripts, the FX is truly
amazing. While the sight of the Dinosaurs does not hold the awe
it once did in the original, it is amazing to see how the
technology has improved as the creatures are even more detailed
then they were before. The animals show a spark of intelligence
and at times malevolence in their eyes much to dismay of many a
character who ends up on the lower end of the food chain to one
of the creatures.
“Jurassic
Park III” also introduces some new animals such as the deadly
Spinosaurus and a nest of Pterodactyls who menace the cast in a
visual spectacle. The
film also had a sense of humor about it, and an ongoing series
of jokes regarding a unique cell phone ring is very funny.
In once scene the audience went from laughing to jumping
from their seats in less than 30 seconds, truly an effective use
of audience manipulation.
While
it would be easy to pick the film apart for plot holes, pacing
in parts, and a lack of originality with some of the scenarios,
it is important to remember that the film is intended to be
nothing more than a Summer thrill ride.
It is under this scenario that “Jurassic Park 3”
succeeds. It is not as good as the first film but better than
the second.
The
return of Sam Neil as Dr. Grant was a good idea as his calm
demeanor in the face of crisis and his humanity made him stand
out from the rest of the cast who were little more then stock
characters in the film. Leoni and Macy did have some nice scenes
but they were little more than the romantic element to the film.
As the strained couple who learn to love one another again in
the middle of all the chaos, but their lines and situation were
so stock, it was obvious where their relationship was going.
Word
has it that plans are already underway for a fourth installment
of the series and here is hoping that the creative element do
not rest on their past formula and decide to push the envelope a
little bit. "JP3" was more of a scenario that unfolded
for the viewers over 90 minutes much like a theme park ride. It
had its thrills and chills, but there were moments were things
just went along.
In
a leisurely manner waiting for something to happen. Johnston
allows this to happen as he knows that the real stars of the
film are the creatures and since the audience is coming to see
them, not griping human drama and well written character
interactions, he puts his focus on the creatures and the humans
as the struggle to survive and outwit one another.
Bottom
line, if you go in not expecting much in the way of a story and
want to have some thrills and laughs while you marvel at the top
notch FX by ILM, then "JP3" is a relaxing afternoon in
the park.
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