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Amanda Silver
Derek Connolly
Colin Trevorrow
Amanda Silver
Amanda Silver
Derek Connolly
Colin Trevorrow
Amanda Silver
I have loved every movie since I was born (in 1993). I can recite every line from the first three. Yes as a kid the movies scared me even on rewatches, but as an adult they were just good movies I enjoyed.
However, I have always had a little bit of difficulty rewatching Jurassic World. It’s not a bad movie, I think it’s quite good, but the Indominus Rex just really actually scares me. I think it’s because it’s so invincible? With a T Rex you can freeze, with the Velociraptors they are smart and pack hunters but can be trained/are rational, Spino you can stay away from water and get away from, everything seems like a monster with a flaw.
But the I Rex can smell you, kill/destroy everything between you and it, is too smart to hide from, nearly invincible, can turn basically invisible, and fucking ruthless. It’s the only scary movie/monster that actually sticks with me after I watch the film.
Is it just me? It is it on a different level than other carnos in the films?
I was watching the jurassic world trailer on the universal YT channel and it came to me, what did the fans at the time think of this hybrid dinosaur being teased, how hyped and interested were y'all into what at the time was a brand new concept to a Jurassic world movie lemme know your thoughts
I just finished rewatching Jurassic World (still a really fun movie, btw), and honestly, I think it's insane that they greenlit the introduction of Indominus to the park. This thing is a lawsuit waiting to bite their ass.
During the events of the movie, Indominus was going to be introduced to the public in around 3 weeks, yet everything about it is highly unstable/aggressive. It ate its sibling, almost caused accidents/casualties EVEN before its escape, and was already shown trying to escape. Mind you, it wasn't even fully grown at this moment, meaning its aggressiveness could further increase. It baffles me that Masrani/Ingen was 100% ready to introduce it despite not having to let it grow to adulthood first and fully learn its behavior/characteristics. I understand that having a dangerous creature in your theme park is cool on paper, but it's really stupid to let that happen. Imagine Disneyland opening a roller coaster that has never been tested for safety; that is literally the Indominus situation.