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Friday, 11 July 2025

Jurassic World: Rebirth

 

This review may contain spoilers!

Jurassic World: Rebirth is the seventh instalment in the Jurassic series, featuring a new group of adventurers trapped on a dinosaur-infested island. Martin Krebs assembles a team of mercenaries led by Zora Bennett in an attempt to collect dinosaur bio-samples that could cure heart disease. After picking up a shipwrecked family, things start to go awry for the group, and they soon find themselves landlocked on an island abandoned to dinosaurs.

I enjoyed this film when it knew what familiar beats would actually resonate with audiences. The moments that worked, or the emotional stakes we could buy into. For example, the ragtag band of main characters soldiering about on Dino Island looking for a cure for heart disease weren't especially interesting. Still, the innocent family that got swept up into this unfamiliar landscape was. To resonate with a young family that could be anyone in the theatre made the stakes feel a little more present. I also greatly enjoyed the action sequences and horror elements present across the film. The Jurassic series is at its best when it's chasing thrills. When it allows itself to be scary? Well, that's when these dinosaur films come alive.

The real strength of Jurassic World: Rebirth lies in its impressive visual presentation. Gareth Edwards is no stranger to shooting for monolithic visual effects while also immersing the audience in stunning environments. The special effects just continue to look better and better. I was in awe of how detailed and expressive the dinosaurs were as beasts in this one. Alexandre Desplat weaves a beautiful musical score for this film, and I really felt the moments of danger just as strongly as the moments of wonder.

Manuel Garcia-Rulfo, who played Reuben Delgado, is quite a comforting role as the signature Dad of the film; this is a character who can be quite high-strung but has so much care for his family at all times. David Iacono, who played Xavier Dobbs, is the strongest point of comedic relief in the feature; I actually enjoyed watching Iacono take his character from slacker to protector. Audrina Miranda, who played Isabella Delgado, is quite a strong performer for someone so young; Miranda does an especially good job at showing a child who is riddled with fear come out of that state.

However, the best performance came from Jonathan Bailey, who played Dr. Henry Loomis. I've really been enjoying Bailey's rise to the big screen; he has a lot of talent to give. This is our scientist hero, often the smartest character in a scene, but also the most naturally at home with the dinosaurs. I found Bailey's ability to grandstand and play to the wonder of the Jurassic series highly infectious. This is the sort of character who feeds your excitement of seeing dinosaurs brought to life. I also loved the chemistry Bailey built with Johansson; there was something very playful in their dialogue with one another. I like characters like Henry in the Jurassic series because it just grounds the viewer in a role who loves the very thing we have all turned up to see.

Jurassic World: Rebirth has possibly one of the worst scripts of the series to be frank. When it actually manages to land something right in the story, it is often because the visual and musical production elements are working overtime to lift that moment up. When this film isn't set against an action sequence, there is a very stark reminder that these storylines and characters don't have much bones to them. The whole film hinges on our characters hunting for a cure for heart disease; they need dinosaurs to do it for some reason, and it has to be the biggest earth, sea and air dinosaurs because they have the biggest hearts (the earth, sea and air aspect is still kinda hazy). This driving thing pushes a very odd band of roles together, who fail to become an intriguing main cast of characters. The main mercenary barely feels like a soldier, the financier is the same evil businessman we've had in many other films, the boat captain is here to weep over every character death we experience, and the rest of the roles could be easily described with the words: 'cannon fodder'. These characters could have been made interesting, perhaps even a little three-dimensional, if they didn't fire backstory/character-defining information at one another like it was a one-liner quip. The film fails to really make you buy into it a lot. For example, the opening scene shows a dinosaur laboratory fall into chaos because a Snickers wrapper (woohoo product placement!) gets sucked into an automated door system. The movie also bares no teeth at the end, by cheating the audience out of a semi-decent main character death. This is a film about dinosaurs that has an opening title sequence that states, "The world has begun to lose interest in dinosaurs". Perhaps after this film, that might be true.

Scarlett Johansson, who played Zora Bennett, is in one of her worst leading roles to date; Johansson puts no work in to making us reasonably think her character is even capable of a mercenary occupation. Mahershala Ali, who played Duncan Kincaid, really struggles to make himself known in this; the fact that Ali is playing to quite a tacked-on backstory point makes him difficult to connect with. Rupert Friend, who played Martin Krebs, struggles to get out from the stereotypical qualities of his role; Friend is comfortable in the sleazy, selfish nature of the role and doesn't add any dimension to that. Luna Blaise, who played Teresa Delgado, is the weak link in the family storyline; the obstinate teenager who lashes out shtick wears pretty thin.

It may be time for the Jurassic series to go extinct. I would give Jurassic World: Rebirth a 6/10.

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