Saskatoon StarPhoenix

TREADING NEW GROUND

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom presents parable on animal rights

- JAKE COYLE

NEW YORK The dinosaurs of Jurassic Park are many things. They are special-effects wonders. They are unruly house guests. And they are some of the biggest, most footstompi­ng metaphors around.

Since Steven Spielberg’s 1993 original, the dinos of Jurassic Park — many of them not light on their feet to be begin with — have been weighed down with meanings that sometimes shift movie to movie. If they look a touch tired in the latest Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, it could be from all the allegorica­l baggage they’ve been carrying.

Twenty-five years ago, the dinosaurs — wondrous and horrifying creations at once — stood for the magical but fearsome power of genetic engineerin­g. In 2015’s Jurassic World, they were focus group-approved theme park attraction­s that doubled for Hollywood blockbuste­rs themselves.

Now, in Fallen Kingdom, the scaly ones — again threatened with extinction — are pursued by poachers and others who wish to capture and capitalize on an endangered if dangerous species. The theme appealed to Colin Trevorrow, the director of 2015’s Jurassic World, now serving as cowriter with Derek Connolly, and as executive producer, alongside Steven Spielberg.

“We have a relationsh­ip with animals on this planet that is tenuous and is strained. They suffer from abuse and traffickin­g and the consequenc­es of our environmen­tal choices,” said Trevorrow. “To find a way to build essentiall­y a children’s franchise about how we have a responsibi­lity to the creatures that we share the planet with felt like a worthwhile thing to do.”

If the previous Jurassic World was fashioned as a meta-blockbuste­r, it made good on its intent. Jurassic World blew away expectatio­ns, setting a new opening-weekend record and stomping its way to nearly $1.7 billion worldwide. Fallen Kingdom, with J.A. Bayona taking over as director, had already taken in $370 million overseas (including $112 million in China) before opening in North America on Thursday night.

That takes some of the pressure off Fallen Kingdom, which was made for about $170 million by Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainm­ent. But expectatio­ns remain high for a 25-year-old franchise that has grossed $4 billion in ticket sales. And the animalrigh­ts gambit of Fallen Kingdom — in which the dinosaurs leave the island in cages — has found a mixed critical reaction. Variety called it “a liberal pulp message movie” and “the first cautionary dinosaur-traffickin­g movie.”

“We looked at real animal traffickin­g in the world and what that process is,” says Trevorrow, who’s writing and directing the third Jurassic World film. “First there’s capture and then there’s going to be an auction of some kind, a sale. We were following something that felt grounded in the reality that we know. It’s a rule that we have that we don’t want the dinosaurs to do anything that real animals wouldn’t or couldn’t do.”

The action takes place three years after the melee of Jurassic World. A soon-to-erupt volcano on Isla Nublar has sparked public debate, complete with congressio­nal hearings: Should the dinosaurs be saved? An aid to John Hammond, the Jurassic Park founder, has convinced Dallas Bryce Howard’s Claire Dearing (now a dino-rights activist) and Chris Pratt’s former raptor wrangler Owen Grady to help get the dinosaurs off the island.

The more cloistered second half of the tale most interested Spanish filmmaker Bayona (The Orphanage and A Monster Calls). “The first time Colin told me about the story, he told me that the second half was going to be a haunted house story,” says Bayona. “I thought that was going to be a lot of fun.”

For anyone who recalls the frightful kitchen scene of Jurassic Park, Fallen Kingdom doubles down on the suspense of dinosaurs in tight, domestic quarters, while channellin­g the franchise’s contemplat­ion of science into animal rights. Bayona traces the dinosaurs of Jurassic World to the kaiju of movies like Godzilla.

The real-world connection­s that most motivated the filmmakers had more to do with stories like that of the northern white rhino. The last male of the species died in March, a victim of poachers seeking its horns. Debate has followed over whether a Jurassic Park-like revival of the rhinos should be carried out.

“It has rendered a species extinct and it’s horrifying. And it’s our fault as mankind. We did that,” says Trevorrow.

“It brings up a similar question that the movie brings up. If we did have this technology, if we could bring back the white rhinoceros, do we have a responsibi­lity to do it? I don’t personally know the answer to that.”

 ?? PHOTOS: UNIVERSAL ?? In the latest Jurassic Park story, starring Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard, the dinosaurs in Fallen Kingdom — again threatened with extinction — are pursued by poachers and others who wish to capture and capitalize on an endangered if dangerous...
PHOTOS: UNIVERSAL In the latest Jurassic Park story, starring Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard, the dinosaurs in Fallen Kingdom — again threatened with extinction — are pursued by poachers and others who wish to capture and capitalize on an endangered if dangerous...
 ??  ?? “We have a relationsh­ip with animals on this planet that is tenuous and is strained,” says director turned producer Colin Trevorrow.
“We have a relationsh­ip with animals on this planet that is tenuous and is strained,” says director turned producer Colin Trevorrow.

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