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Jurassic World: Dominion

  • 2022
  • PG-13
  • 2h 27m
IMDb RATING
5.6/10
224K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
510
27
Jeff Goldblum, Laura Dern, Sam Neill, Bryce Dallas Howard, Chris Pratt, DeWanda Wise, and Isabella Sermon in Jurassic World: Dominion (2022)
Four years after the destruction of Isla Nublar, dinosaurs now live--and hunt--alongside humans all over the world. This fragile balance will reshape the future and determine, once and for all, whether human beings are to remain the apex predators on a planet they now share with history's most fearsome creatures in a new Era
Play trailer2:08
69 Videos
99+ Photos
Dinosaur AdventureGlobetrotting AdventureActionAdventureSci-FiThriller

Four years after the destruction of Isla Nublar, Biosyn operatives attempt to track down Maisie Lockwood, while Dr Ellie Sattler investigates a genetically engineered swarm of giant insects.Four years after the destruction of Isla Nublar, Biosyn operatives attempt to track down Maisie Lockwood, while Dr Ellie Sattler investigates a genetically engineered swarm of giant insects.Four years after the destruction of Isla Nublar, Biosyn operatives attempt to track down Maisie Lockwood, while Dr Ellie Sattler investigates a genetically engineered swarm of giant insects.

  • Director
    • Colin Trevorrow
  • Writers
    • Emily Carmichael
    • Colin Trevorrow
    • Derek Connolly
  • Stars
    • Chris Pratt
    • Bryce Dallas Howard
    • Laura Dern
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.6/10
    224K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    510
    27
    • Director
      • Colin Trevorrow
    • Writers
      • Emily Carmichael
      • Colin Trevorrow
      • Derek Connolly
    • Stars
      • Chris Pratt
      • Bryce Dallas Howard
      • Laura Dern
    • 2.8KUser reviews
    • 360Critic reviews
    • 38Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 25 nominations total

    Videos69

    Official Trailer 2
    Trailer 2:08
    Official Trailer 2
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:52
    Official Trailer
    Official Trailer
    Trailer 2:52
    Official Trailer
    The Prologue Trailer
    Trailer 5:30
    The Prologue Trailer
    Jurassic World: Dominion
    Trailer 2:16
    Jurassic World: Dominion
    Jurassic World: Dominion
    Trailer 2:59
    Jurassic World: Dominion
    Jurassic World: Dominion
    Trailer 5:42
    Jurassic World: Dominion

    Photos444

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    Top cast80

    Edit
    Chris Pratt
    Chris Pratt
    • Owen Grady
    Bryce Dallas Howard
    Bryce Dallas Howard
    • Claire Dearing
    Laura Dern
    Laura Dern
    • Ellie Sattler
    Sam Neill
    Sam Neill
    • Alan Grant
    Jeff Goldblum
    Jeff Goldblum
    • Ian Malcolm
    DeWanda Wise
    DeWanda Wise
    • Kayla Watts
    Mamoudou Athie
    Mamoudou Athie
    • Ramsay Cole
    Isabella Sermon
    Isabella Sermon
    • Maisie Lockwood…
    Campbell Scott
    Campbell Scott
    • Lewis Dodgson
    BD Wong
    BD Wong
    • Henry Wu
    Omar Sy
    Omar Sy
    • Barry Sembène
    Justice Smith
    Justice Smith
    • Franklin Webb
    Daniella Pineda
    Daniella Pineda
    • Zia Rodriguez
    Scott Haze
    Scott Haze
    • Rainn Delacourt
    Dichen Lachman
    Dichen Lachman
    • Soyona Santos
    Kristoffer Polaha
    Kristoffer Polaha
    • Wyatt
    Caleb Hearon
    Caleb Hearon
    • Jeremy Bernier
    Freya Parker
    Freya Parker
    • Denise Roberts
    • Director
      • Colin Trevorrow
    • Writers
      • Emily Carmichael
      • Colin Trevorrow
      • Derek Connolly
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews2.8K

    5.6223.5K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Jurassic World: Dominion' offers a nostalgic reunion and impressive CGI, but suffers from a weak storyline and over-reliance on nostalgia. The convoluted plot, inconsistent pacing, and underdeveloped characters are criticized. Despite enjoyable action sequences, many find it fails to match the original 'Jurassic Park'. The blend of old and new elements is both praised and faulted, making it a decent yet flawed franchise conclusion.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    sumtim3s00n

    80% revisiting old characters and scenes, no real story, predictable action...it feels spiritless

    This movie consists mostly of us watching previously known characters doing whatever theyre doing now, meandering nowhere plot wise, while getting in random tight spots . For some reason they believed fans want to see a repeat of 1st movie and its characters instead of a new quality story and interesting content. Also EVERY SINGLE tight spot they find themselves in with dinosaurs is same formula.

    Its always exactly as it has been in every Jurassic film. Big problem all of a sudden, slow moving dino watching someone or breathing around them, then dino gives chase, uff! They barely escaped but escape they did!

    It is so dull and predicatable.

    Meanwhile we meet two new types of characters, a) those who are just inherently evil b) those who do evil stuff but are really good and moral. You can tell them apart easily by looking at what theyre wearing and whether its a rich straight white guy.

    The story is dumb and their evil plan so on the nose it is humorous. Zero imagination when writing the script. The length of it fits on half a napkin.

    After 80% of the movie is finished and we have gone over the revisiting our "favourite" Jurassic characters and our classic Jurassic scenes phase, the predictable ending occurs.

    And you realize the movie was as a wonderful and full of quality content as a dino fart.
    5josiahliljequist

    They forgot why we loved Jurassic Park

    When I go to a Jurassic Park movie, I want something above all else-hyper realistic dinosaurs in cool environments, seeing them frolic in natural habitat, defend territory, battle other dinos for dominance, hunt humans, and the like. From the opening island scene with the brachiosaurus to the T-Rex reveal in the rainstorm, dinosaurs were front and center in the original Jurassic Park, inspiring a sense of grandeur and awe. The dinosaurs were what mattered, and everything else was peripheral-even the plot to get off the island. We all wanted another glimpse of the T-Rex, or were anxious to discover where the raptors were lurking.

    So that was the first one. Now in this sixth installment, not only are dinosaurs relegated to a commercialized product that's seen on every tv screen in the movie, but they're demoted below the humans, genetics, and even mutated locusts in terms of importance. In a two and a half hour movie, one would expect dinosaurs to fill almost half that time, and yet they pale in screen time comparison to all the human characters. Instead, the director tried to insert cameos of the legacy characters in forced interactions and honestly cringey dialogue, shifting the focus away from the real meaning in the Jurassic Park franchise-awe for dinosaurs. The wonder is now gone.

    I have given it six stars in respect for the franchise and the limited appearances of some of my favorite dinosaurs, but I'm sad to see that the director forgot what made Jurassic Park so special in the first place.
    5Hitchcoc

    Sorry It Was So Bad

    Before I went to this film (because my Grandson is nuts about this series of films) I read one newspaper review. It wasn't glowing, but it was positive. Unfortunately, this is a mess. Others have already talked about the issues I have. Granted, this is an empty headed summer movie, it could still have been done with some serious thought. I was hanging in there throughout with a new dinosaur attack every three minutes, and velociraptors going at fifty miles per hour and not getting tired. Humans being assaulted time after time and yet showing no fatigue. I also didn't see a scratch on any of them. But the best of all was the promise made to a baby dinosaur and his mother that precluded saving the world from famine. Not to mentioned the coincidences of everyone showing up in just the right places. I still don't understand how they got into that facility so easily. The return of the original cast was not helpful other than Jeff Goldblum's sarcasm. Anyway, it's all been said. This is a poor movie.
    6petra_ste

    Too long, some neat set-pieces

    I will say this for Colin Trevorrow: unlike other Hollywood writers/directors, who seem to be actively spiteful towards the classic sagas they are writing sequels to, when Trevorrow says he is a fan of Jurassic Park, I believe him.

    That's why Jurassic World Dominion feels, for good and for ill, like the world's most expensive fan film, cramming in nearly every dinosaur known to man and every character, meme and in-joke from the previous five movies (button up your shirt, Malcom! Get your hat, Grant! Oh look, Nedry's old Barbasol can!).

    I'm betting that if the great Pete Postlethwaite had not passed away we would have gotten Roland Tembo rappelling from a helicopter to shoot an Oviraptor in the face.

    The movie is at least twenty minutes too long - Hollywood seems incapable to make a non-bloated blockbuster today, even Bond movies have the running time of The Thin Red Line - and it doesn't have a shred of the wit and intelligence of my beloved first Jurassic Park, but I did like a few set-pieces (the Therizinosaurus, the frozen lake...) and it's always nice to see the awesome Sam Neill back, so I guess the fan bait worked to an extent.

    6/10.
    4Brandon_Walker_Robinson

    Wayne Knight said it best three decades ago: We got Dodgson here, and nobody cares.

    I don't know whether this is a fabled memory, but a few years ago I think I read an interview where director Colin Trevorrow said that the story of Dominion was always his ultimate go-to, that Jurassic World and Fallen Kingdom were the stepping stones to there (almost as if it was gathering the right build-up with characters, fan anticipation, budget, and technological advances). For every reason imaginable, I believed him. Where Fallen Kingdom ended, you had endless opportunity to explore the world with dinosaurs running amok and causing mayhem. Final shots of Fallen Kingdom included the T-Rex at a zoo, the Mosasaurus attacking surfers, a velociraptor overlooking a suburban California, and pterodactyls towering above a tourist-populated Las Vegas. It was all there; think The Lost World's San Diego epilogue but on a grander scale with more dinosaurs. Throw in the military, philosophical conversations regarding their eradication versus their survival, advance some more characters, and you have a bona fide fun summer blockbuster.

    This didn't happen.

    No matter what my actual opinion is of the film hereon out, I can't help but be letdown with disappointment that Trevorrow either deluded himself into believing this was the kind of conclusion that fans yearned for ala War for the Planet of the Apes (which has a much more compelling protagonist that makes it work despite its story misdirection) or J. A. Bayona pulled a Rian Johnson and put him in a corner with the concluding chapter that he had to rectify and had no actual written plan of his own. And it's not that there isn't a medium where this story doesn't work just fine. I can imagine the main plot elements being adapted from, say, a novelization or a comic series. Hell, there was even that Battle at Big Rock short that was done which could have told these elements on their own, or at the very least introduced them. Instead, they threw in extremely disjointed story bits for this final chapter that seemed to have no source of origin. They felt like they were the contrivance meant to unite our two character groups, and nothing more.

    Dominion starts off very okay. It shows that it can slow down, have a genuine heartbeat, provide pathos for the existence of our reptilian brethren, trot the globe to see how they have integrated (or not) with our species, and reintroduce characters new and old (with possible internal conflicts) to show how they would pave their globetrotting paths. They even fix some of the poorly written aspects of Fallen Kingdom such as maturing Franklin's character, giving better use to the laser-targeting attack system, and giving Maisie a more believable backstory. All of this is supported with fantastic animatronic work and much improved CGI blending with it. I thought the visuals were mostly a knockout and supported the onscreen setups.

    Not only that, but Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum kindled a similar flame to their interactions in JP1 and you sat forward to watch those moments. I caught myself smiling quite a few times during those exchanges. Jeff Goldblum was especially used well as he was able to inject entertainment and comedy through his dialogue where the film otherwise was flat with on its attempts. They were not small cameo appearances and served crucial roles to the film. You buy where they are in their lives, and even though TLW and JP3 are retconned the actors clearly tapped into those experiences for their performances to accentuate their statuses.

    Speaking of buy-in, I would have given this film a long leash on a lot of things they could have done or did with this movie. We hit the point where we can embrace the ridiculous in several places. Want to make Blue become Owen's pet and attack guard? Go right on ahead. Want to modernize the action and give our protagonists more ability and skill that you might see in the Fast & Furious franchise or with our human Marvel heroes? If the dinosaurs get their large share of the action as well, I'm on board (the Malta scene is a perfect example of this). Want to pay homage to the previous films as you conclude your franchise? That is what I expect. I also expect them to diversify this on a tonal level where need be as to not become too stale, and I think I was feeling that here. Hell, there is nearly a half-hour duration where not a single dinosaur is shown or brought up, and if it's in anticipation for what is to come while building character or story then I will let it play out.

    The problem really arose both when the movie decided to abandon the broad, peregrinating experience and confine its setting. Dominion is the saga's epic conclusion and did not need to put on this hat. This was a major rug pull from what was anticipated, and soured itself spending an excruciatingly long time on something that left little entertainment, tension, or dinosaurs. When they do show up, the moments become a little one-note. Our good guys have plot armor such as raptors that can run at vehicle speeds but can't catch up to running characters, or when they are cornered they just get roared at or ran/flown/swam past until they find their way out of the situation, or when they know they can stand around and trust that a carnivore won't eat them because reasons. Bryce Dallas Howard got the best/most suspenseful dino encounters at this stage of the film and they actually work extremely well, but for a near 150-minute movie these are few and far between, and for this franchise you really have to sit and ask yourself if there is a chance that she won't survive any of these instances.

    A lot of this could have been made better if our Rexy got some great moments, but even she was backdropped and upstaged too often to matter, or when she does come on screen it seems to be a rehashed occurrence from something of old. She looked and sounded good, though. I want to restate how good the dinosaurs actually looked here, and I want to commend the visual effects departments for what they were able to do in that department. If there was a niggle I'd have here, it would probably be in the weight of the raptor movement which felt too light and jittery. That probably only makes sense in my head, but the rest looked really good. If knowing that I would have to wait 21 years after 2001's Jurassic Park III to finally get the sequel with visuals that really soar, I would gladly take it. I just wish it was with a better film, or at least with a film that I would want to rewatch over and again. Instead, this left an aftertaste that makes me want to instead go and watch Top Gun: Maverick for a fourth time. Outside of demo material, I don't even know if I will be a completionist and get this on UHD a few months down the line. Normally one shouldn't fault a film for letting their own speculation become expectation, but in this particular instance I very much believe that you can. All signs and promotions hinted toward a different kind of movie and story, but despite the good parts it did have, this was too much of a misguided, ineffectual whimper.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Laura Dern told TIME that reuniting with the adorable animatronic Nausutoceratops "was equally as jaw dropping, but nothing will be like that first moment I walked through a field on Kauai [in Hawaii] with Sam Neill and I looked ahead and I saw a triceratops. That was my first dinosaur and I will love that dinosaur the most forever."
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h 26 mins) After falling in ice cold water, Owen is barely wet in the lift, nor is he shivering, which he would be, purely from the shock.
    • Quotes

      Ian Malcolm: Jurassic World? Not a fan.

    • Crazy credits
      The film's title does not appear until the main end credits.
    • Alternate versions
      The Extended Cut released in Home Video and VOD runs about 12 minutes longer than the theatrical version including 11 extended scenes and 7 additional scenes. (Total run-time 2h 40m). The Extended Cut shows much more connecting material that is important to the overall narrative.
    • Connections
      Featured in Louder with Crowder: Episode dated 10 February 2022 (2022)

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    FAQ19

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • June 10, 2022 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • United States
      • China
      • Malta
    • Official sites
      • Amazon Link
      • Official Facebook
    • Languages
      • English
      • Maltese
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Jurassic World Dominio
    • Filming locations
      • Valletta, Malta(St George's Square)
    • Production companies
      • Universal Pictures
      • Amblin Entertainment
      • Perfect World Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $185,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $376,851,080
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $145,075,625
      • Jun 12, 2022
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,001,978,080
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      2 hours 27 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • IMAX 6-Track
      • Auro 11.1
      • Dolby Atmos
      • Dolby Surround 7.1
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.00 : 1

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