The Second Wave Of JURASSIC WORLD: FALLEN KINGDOM Reviews Land And It Seems The Franchise May Be Extinct

The Second Wave Of JURASSIC WORLD: FALLEN KINGDOM Reviews Land And It Seems The Franchise May Be Extinct

A second wave of reviews for Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom have hit this morning and it appears as if critics would very much like to see this franchise go extinct because they're once again mixed...

By JoshWilding - Jun 06, 2018 01:06 AM EST
Filed Under: Jurassic Park
Avengers: Infinity War may be days away from cracking $2 billion but between the underperformance of Solo: A Star Wars Story and the critical reaction to Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, it doesn't appear as if the summer blockbuster season is off to a particularly good start. Today, we have another wave of reviews for you and these are once again mixed but the majority are more negative than positive.

While we heard from the trades last night, these come from entertainment sites and British publications like Empire Magazine and newspapers like The Times, New York Post, and Independent.

That means there's wide array of opinions here and it definitely seems as if critics are ready to see this franchise die. Whether or not moviegoers will agree remains to be seen but Jurassic World 3 may be far from a lock at this stage. So, to check out these new reviews, click on the "View List" button below. 




Life finds a way, and so do franchises that make ungodly amounts of money. “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” gets away with its unoriginality for the most part, but this franchise’s desperation is starting to show. It’s time to evolve or go extinct.

These movies often literally retread the same ground as their predecessors, encountering layers of detritus from those other movies in the process. (The original Jurassic Park cars are briefly rediscovered here, just as they were last time around.) The thematic work of Fallen Kingdom is scribbly and half-finished, a series of dopey riffs on what came before about humans living with the consequences of their scientific meddling. But as a lava-spewing, raptor-training, teeth-gnashing, monster-in-the-basement creature feature, it has a certain freshness. [B-]

SOURCE: AV Club

These movies will go on and on, but some of us are still waiting for them to evolve.

SOURCE: Los Angeles Times
 


The second half opens up the story in more surprising ways, though there’s still the lingering feeling of a ‘Jurassic Park’ greatest hits medley playing out as an array of dinosaurs, new and old, are let loose afresh against a backdrop of corporate villainy. One of them can even open doors, a terrifying new trait that will take some topping in the next movie. A dinosaur that can disconnect your wifi, perhaps? [3/5]

SOURCE: Time Out

Universal Pictures will claw the box office to shreds with Fallen Kingdom. I was not a fan of Jurassic World, and was pleasantly surprised by my reaction here. J.A. Bayona adds a Guillermo Del Toro, horror touch to the film. It's a much needed, fresh perspective to the blockbuster formula. Stick around after the credits; the dinosaurs aren't through with you yet.

SOURCE: Movie Web

Regardless, it’s nice to see the series back on track. For 20 years it reduced itself to lunkheaded horror and Tea Leoni shrieking to the sky at the expense of its most essential element — the wonderment of seeing a living, breathing dinosaur. In making even the most vicious creatures more than just hungry, hungry dinos, the aging franchise has rediscovered its inner child. And ours.

SOURCE: New York Post
 


When the Jurassic Park franchise began, back in 1993, it was seen by its director, Steven Spielberg, as “a good sequel to Jaws. On land.” Since then there have been three sequels, more than $3.6 billion at the global box office and a wearisome sense that the series has been defined by deadening repetition and narrative inertia. Put people on island with dinosaurs. Dinosaurs rampage. People survive. Repeat. Cash cheque. [4/5]

SOURCE: The Times

The series continues to move away from the depth, realism and magic of the original, but as a diehard fan of the franchise, Fallen Kingdom still offers up a satisfying ride set in this franchise. [7/10]

SOURCE: Collider

Exactly why would anyone visit a dinosaur-infested island for a fifth time, when all four previous excursions had ended in limb-gobbling pandemonium? Well, when a hit-and-hope franchise revival like Jurassic World becomes the fifth most lucrative film ever made, with global takings in the region of $1.6 billion, you can be sure that Hollywood, like life, will find a way. [2/5]

SOURCE: Telegraph
 


We’re introduced to the Indoraptor, a smart and lethal hybrid dinosaur. But it’s not the only predator around, with greed bringing out the worst nature of humans. The dinosaurs become a coded warning for man-made climate change, making it a fresh, funny bite of popcorn entertainment. [4/5]

SOURCE: The Mirror

The end results are unsatisfying to say the least, muddled at best and egregious at worst, especially as it tries to circle back around to the ethics and animal rights questions at the end. By the time the credits roll, it feels like Fallen Kingdom has really no idea what it wanted to say or what it wanted to prove — it just wanted to terrorize some action heroes with a monster in a mansion for an hour or so, which winds up being a lot more boring than it sounds.

SOURCE: CBR

It’s a shame this be the case, and given the entire narrative is built around the notion of extinction, and whether or not we should let the dinosaurs live or die – you find this film taps into our more discreditable traits, for we can’t help but opt for the latter, simply because it means this franchise can come to an end once and for all. Oh, and if you’re thinking of seeing this movie for the return of Jeff Goldblum’s Ian Malcolm, then reconsider your plans, for he’s in this film for about as long as he’s in the bloody trailer. [2/5]

SOURCE: HeyUGuys
 


The cruellest, most violent creatures here are the humans. The film ends on a graceful note, teeing affairs up nicely for what promises to be an even more apocalyptic next instalment.

SOURCE: Independent

Maybe what Claire said in the first Jurassic World is right. Maybe we’ve just become so desensitized to seeing dinosaurs running around and eating people that we need something new and bigger to impress us. Unfortunately, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom isn’t that. A few cool moments and good ideas aside, it feels minor in the overall scheme of things. There’s no “Wow” to it—which makes me glad it never truly uses John Williams’ score. If it had, it would have undercut what this franchise can be, and may still be, but isn’t this time around.

SOURCE: io9

There are some reasonably entertaining scenes and set pieces, but the whole concept feels tired and contrived, and crucially the dinosaurs themselves are starting to look samey, without inspiring much of the awe or terror they used to. It could be that a meteor of tedium is heading towards these CGI creatures, despatching them to extinction.

SOURCE: Guardian



The fear factor is back. This is a Jurassic sequel that plays it both adrenaline-pumpingly huge and thrillingly small. A summer ride that will drive kids out of their minds, and maybe even give the parents nightmares. [4/5]

SOURCE: Empire Online

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom is the Jurassic Park sequel that I have been waiting 25 years to see. This is a refreshing sequel that isn’t afraid to break formula and try new things.  Director J.A. Bayona has done remarkable work with this film and making this world his own.  I cannot wait to see where the story goes from here and can only hope that Bayona will direct the next installment. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom is hands down, the best entry in the Jurassic Park franchise since the 1993 original. [9/10]

SOURCE: We Live Entertainment

If anything the whole uninteresting affair seems to be setting up Jurassic World 3, a film with Colin Trevorrow back in the director’s chair, announced for 2021. Let’s just hope he can bring back the spark of his original, perhaps getting Goldblum, Sam Neill and Laura Dern back for a reunion. Something certainly has to be done to stop this franchise from going extinct. [2/5]

SOURCE: Express

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Chameleon
Chameleon - 6/6/2018, 1:45 AM
Saw this yesterday and really liked it, although i agree that is was trying to send some kind of message and it didn’t come across very clearly
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 6/6/2018, 4:48 AM
@Chameleon - what was the message?
Oskir
Oskir - 6/6/2018, 4:49 AM
@Chameleon - Saw it too and I really enjoyed this one. There are some amazing shots and even if it is still a little dumb sometimes, it is really fun to watch.
Chameleon
Chameleon - 6/6/2018, 5:53 AM
@MyCoolYoung - About lab experiments still being living creatures and should be treated the same way as real animals etc
Nebula
Nebula - 6/6/2018, 6:49 AM
@Chameleon - Well that was kind of the message of the last one too..
FASELI
FASELI - 6/6/2018, 2:00 AM
Haven't seen it yet, probably Saturday when we can get a babysitter.
For me playing all their cards on the advertising campaign hasn't helped. I was sold when it was initially dinosaur evacuation emergency in the teaser trailer but then they gave us biological weapons, evil corporations and then ultimatl a Raptor hybrid. I don't want to see everything in a succession of trailers.
L0RDbuckethead
L0RDbuckethead - 6/6/2018, 2:07 AM
Fingers crossed this is better than Jurassic World, at least. If not, oh well, it'll still make money overseas. Maybe not $1 Billion though.

baszs
baszs - 6/6/2018, 2:38 AM
@L0RDbuckethead - Maybe they shouldn't earn that much money. I tend to believe that franchises that earn too much become stale and boring. I mean good for them that they have a big budget to continue their thing, but if we would compare it to movies that need to turn every penny than those movies do better in script and creativity.

The first Deadpool film is a good example.
baszs
baszs - 6/6/2018, 2:32 AM
I feel like the press is on a hunt trying to kill Colin Trevorrow like a pack of raptors. The movie will probably do okay.
But I hope they incorporate some gore in there with some scares. For me Jurassic park was awesome because the first one was pretty scary and intense. But the fantasy faded away when the second instalment of Steven Spielberg came into theaters. That was the point that the dino's became dull zoo animals. but it could also be part of the kid growing up.

I hope the let the franchise become a show like game of thrones and westworld.


connorblaze
connorblaze - 6/6/2018, 2:47 AM
I love the irony that most of these reviewers are accusing the film of being unoriginal, yet they’re all making the same joke about the franchise going extinct.

A headline predicting a franchise going extinct when the last film was one of the ten highest grossing movies of all time seems like a bit of hyperbole over ‘mixed reviews’.
bkmeijer2
bkmeijer2 - 6/6/2018, 2:50 AM
This franchise needs some of that Dwayne Johnson. But whatever, I’m still gonna see it
DoubleD
DoubleD - 6/6/2018, 3:15 AM
Rotten Tomatoes

65%
Average Rating: 6.3/10
Reviews Counted: 43
Fresh: 28
Rotten: 15

Critics Consensus: Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom adds another set piece-packed entry to the blockbuster franchise, although genuinely thrilling moments are in increasingly short supply.
right
right - 6/6/2018, 3:17 AM
Talk about unoriginal, these critics puns. Extinct, evolve etc
Forthas
Forthas - 6/6/2018, 3:26 AM
I mean where else can you go with this franchise creatively? This is what will happen to Avatar also!
GhostDog
GhostDog - 6/6/2018, 3:34 AM
As someone who could never get into these films, how does this series evolve? Understanding the general premise of the films, some of these critics asking for the movies to evolve seems EASIER said than done imo.

What more can these films be other than what they have been? The "man meddling with things beyond his control" and "dinos run amok" appears to be all that the films are.
MUTO123
MUTO123 - 6/6/2018, 3:58 AM
@BlackBeltJones - If the movie ends the way it seems like it will from the trailers, the dinos getting out and mingling with civilization on a global scale coud be interesting and dealing with the fallout would make for a great setup for the next one. Other than that, yeah it’s basically the same thing over and over again, and even that potentially cool setup I just mentioned would just be a larger-scale version of the third act of The Lost World.
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