One wise move by the director and writers of Jurassic Park III (2001; dir. Joe
Johnston) is abandoning the pretense of arguing against the dangers of science
and commercialism. The abandonment
allows more focus. It does nothing to
improve the film. The story is straightforward.
A young boy with his new stepfather parasails near Isla Sorna, where the
InGen corporation in the first Jurassic
Park bred the dinosaurs. But the
parasailing goes wrong and the boy ends up lost in the middle of an island full
of dinosaurs. To make a longish story
shorter, the boy’s mother and real father launch an expedition to the island to
find their son. They convince the head paleontologist
from the first film, Alan Grant (Sam Neill), to come along by offering to fund
his research. What follows is episodic
adventure—one encounter with dinosaurs after another. The really nasty dinosaur of this film is a Spinosaurus. As usual, the humans make bad decisions that
get them into trouble—stealing Velociraptor eggs, for example. Since the main attractions of these Jurassic films
is dinosaurs, this one satisfies the need.
Pteranodons menace various characters.
Velociraptors run amok. Dinosaurs stampede. There’s a huge pile of dinosaur
excrement (as in the first film). I can think of nothing further, except that
this film had more energy than the second one.
Well, I can say that all the Jurassic films have the same
basic plots, and they tend to blur together.
Writing the first draft of this comment, I mistakenly combined elements
of the second and third Jurassic films.
And I can say that Bill Macy plays a wealthy man who pays
his ex-wife’s way to the island so they can both look for their son. Macy, usually a good actor, is serviceable in
his role, not bad but not great. It’s
difficult to think of him as a masculine go-getter. Tea Leonie as his wife is shrill
and hysterical. She usually plays
stronger characters, and she’s irritating here.
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