3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Boring Roaring., 28 July 2010
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Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This review may contain spoilers ***
Unnecessary.
That's the word that comes to mind during Steven Spielberg's THE LOST
WORLD JURASSIC PARK, the insipid followup to his mighty JURASSIC PARK
(1993).
In a fit of George Lucas storytelling (i.e. Making It Up As He Goes
Along), we are reintroduced to Hammond (Richard Attenborough), the
industrialist behind Jurassic Park (whose character actually dies in
the Michael Crichton book, Jurassic Park, therefore is not featured in
Crichton's literary sequel, The Lost World). And Hammond lets fly with
exposition piled on rationalization piled on piles of dino dropping...
Been a few years since the incidents at Jurassic Park and Hammond is
now a sniveling naturalist trying to preserve his OTHER island of
dinosaurs from industrialists who want to cash in on it (like, uh,
himself from the previous movie). Cos this other island called Site B
is where the dinosaurs were really bred, see, before being transported
to Jurassic Park, see; and for the sake of getting people on the island
for some Running and Screaming, Hammond has sent a research team
comprised of mismatched actors (Julianne Moore, Vince Vaughn and
Richard Schiff). Jeff Goldblum as chaos theorist Ian Malcolm, raises
the pertinent question to Hammond, as to how there are still dinosaurs
running around if he bred them "lysine deficient," to which Hammond
looks up his Hollywood One-Liner Plot Fix Manual and replies, "Yes, but
they're flourishing - that's one of a thousand questions I want
answered by the team."
Let it be known: JURASSIC PARK II was not made for its story (which
departs from the book in the worst ways), nor for art, nor for fans,
nor for enjoyment, purely for dirty profit. At the risk of sounding
like Eric Cartman, dare we rename Spielberg's sequel JEW-RASSIC PARK?
So what are you waiting for, Steven - let's see some dinosaurs!
Still committed to some bare vestige of storytelling (maybe because
David Koepp wrote the screenplay - sorry, 'butchered' is more
appropriate), Spielberg gives us even more crammed exposition. There's
Schiff's "high hide" (a useless piece of elevated cage that serves
ABSOLUTELY NO PURPOSE); there's Vaughn's back-story about being in
Greenpeace for the chicks; there's Malcolm's black daughter, Kelly
(Vanessa Lee Chester), in whom we presume Malcolm's white genes decided
to skip a generation (even in trying to do the right thing - by showing
us an interracial child - the filmmakers cast a kid as dark as the
offspring of a Namibian princess and Barack Obama Sr.).
Even throwing down his best Jeff Goldblum impressions, Jeff Goldblum
still can't stop this dino mound getting higher by the minute. By the
time we actually reach the island, we're trying to tunnel our way out.
This time, the wonder of the dinosaurs lasts even less time than in
JURASSIC PARK, before they are objectified and then turned into
villains. During the first fantastic stegosaur encounter (with a very
fake baby stego), through everyone's gasps Malcolm actually remarks,
"Oh yeah. Oooh, ah, that's how it always starts. Then later there's
running and screaming." He actually uses my clinical definition of this
fall-back position for when ideas run dry: Running and Screaming. I
oughta trademark that. A million trashy "horror" movies will owe me a
big dime.
The Corporate bad guys arrive on the heels of Malcolm's research team,
led by Great White Hunter Roland Tembo (Pete Postlethwaite - eternally
50) and slimy lawyer Arliss Howard. Lots of running dinosaurs.
Capturing, mistreating, head-butting, ropes and jeeps and struggling
corythosaurs. Oh my.
Pete Postlethwaite's energetic missing scene is indicative of this
film's problem: the theatrical release does not show Roland coming to
the aid of a waitress at a tourist bar, knocking out a guy half his age
with one hand tied behind his back. He does this not for honor, but
because he's bored. It is a great insight into his character. And the
scene is cut. In favor of Running and Screaming. Doesn't that tell
anyone with a whit of knowledge on story construction where this film
derailed? After he bags the tyrannosaur, Roland disappears from the
script.
Storyline so contrived, most of it is from JURASSIC PARK. Especially
that "trailer-dangling-over-the-precipice" gag. Yawn. This overwrought
sequence gives us yet another reason to dislike Mr. Spielberg, as
innocuous Mr. Schiff tries valiantly to pull the dangling trailers up
onto solid ground and is rewarded for his troubles by being eaten.
Pulled apart by two tyrannosaurs! After all its cringe-worthy humor and
ratcheting tension, the movie pays off this supposedly thrilling
sequence by killing the only likable minor character. Now that was
unnecessary.
(The opening scene in this movie is actually the opening scene of the
book, Jurassic Park, where a rich family dines on a deserted beach and
the little girl stumbles on a compsognathus herd.) There is much
science in Crichton's didactic book; in the movie, the most science
that occurs is watching Julianne Moore try to act.
THE LOST WORLD JURASSIC PARK is centered around plopping a tyrannosaur
in the middle of San Diego. Spielberg's own confession. Which explains
the half-baked, hurried and insubstantial dinosaur scenes on the
island. More plagiarism, as the tyrannosaur arrives in Los Angeles like
Dracula - aboard a ship with all the crew dead. The beast is still
locked in the hold, which begs begs begs the question on how it ate
everyone and managed to lock itself back in the hold.
After Spielberg sates his jones on stupid t-rex gags around Diego, it
is captured by Goldblum and Moore and put back on the ship. Final scene
is a stinker of the highest proportions, as a conga line of herbivores
walks beside a conga line of carnivores as if neither can see the
other. It is unbelievably incognizant.
The only reason this movie scores at all is the "realism" of its
dinosaurs. They're the best CGI animal whores that money can buy.
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