The
Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997)
Rated PG13
Starring: Jeff Goldblum, Julianne Moore,
and Pete Postelthwaite
Rating:

out
of

|
The summer movie season has kicked off and the movie that ended up being
the first out of the chute is most typical of summer film fare. It's big,
loud and chock-full of special effects and stupid characters. Granted,
no one goes to the summer action films to be educated. The point is to
shock, thrill and overwhelm the senses with a wall of digitally created
sights and sounds. On that level, The Lost World succeeds magnificently.
As a movie, stripped of the volume and looked at with the slightest skepticism,
it doesn't fare so well. In 1993's Jurassic
Park, genetically created dinosaurs wreaked havoc
on the island amusement park complex they were created for. This time,
the existance of a second island, used as a factory to create the dinosaurs
for the amusement park, has been uncovered. It seems the dinosaurs have
created a nice little environment for themselves and Dr. John Hammond
(Sir Richard Attenborough), the creator of the dinosaurs, has decided
that it would be nice to study these creatures in their habitat.
So he hires Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), who survived the first dinosaur
encounter; his girlfriend and predator expert, Dr. Sarah Harding (Julianne
Moore); photographer Nick Van Owen (Vince Vaughn) and equipment expert,
Eddie Carr (Richard Schiff) to record what they find on the island. For
the kiddies, Malcolm's daughter, Kelly (Vanessa Lee Chester), stows away
and finds herself not enjoying the trip.
It seems that a second expedition
has also decided to travel to Site B, but with a much different motive.
They want to capture dinosaurs and
take them back to a new Jurassic Park site in San Diego. Led by a hunter
(Pete Postelthwaite) who wants to bag himself a male Tyrannosaurus Rex
as a prize, the group begins assaulting virtually every species of dinosaur
on the island in their first five minutes onscreen. I guess that's to
set them up as the "bad guys."
The movie begins with the two groups as adversaries. But as the dinosaurs
prove to be a little more than the two groups can handle separately, smashing
their communication gear in the process, they join forces and attempt
to merely survive a jaunt to the old communications center on the island.
The trick is that the center is located on the interior of the island
where the predators, including the highly intelligent velociraptors, have
claimed their territorial boundaries.
The special effects, which were the highlight of the first movie, are
improved and spend a lot more time onscreen. Dinosaurs of various shapes
and sizes run, jump, scamper and plod all over the place, tearing a few
humans apart in the process. The script, however, is not so special. The
story is better than the first movie, but that's not saying a lot.
As the movie begins, it plods along like a brontosaurus on prozac. When
it finally gets moving, it doesn't really know where to finish up. A final
showdown in San Diego with a Tyrannosaurus Rex seems tacked on and that's
a shame because it had the potential of making up a much more interesting
movie than the two hours that proceed it here.
The
Lost World is another example of special effects overwhelming a script
in terms of priority. It's a shame, because this material screams for
a story to go along with the beautiful scenery.
Trivia: Peter
Stormare, who plays Dieter Stark, a member of the "bad" group,
played Gaear Grimsrud in 1996's Fargo. (Source: The
Internet Movie Database) |