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Jurassic World Official Trailer

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That plastic bubble ride next to the brachiosaurus is hilariously unsafe. Just because they're herbivores doesn't mean it's a good idea to be close to them and their feet.
 
That plastic bubble ride next to the brachiosaurus is hilariously unsafe. Just because they're herbivores doesn't mean it's a good idea to be close to them and their feet.
As unsafe as standing right next to it?
jurassic-park-brachiosaurus-reveal.jpg
edges_jurassic_3.jpg
 
Ok. Having got past my knee-jerk reaction, "raptor whisperer" is plausible and acceptable. I get it, we train bears and big cats, we domesticated wolves and Orcas are more likely to perform tricks for fish and a ball than rip us in two.

BUT, that last scene still just looked incredibly contrived and silly.
 
Not just that. Does anyone seriously think that they would run after 10 years out of interesting, real and for humans non-deadly dinosaurs, so that they need freaking hybrids?
Deadly ones, which they couldn't control again and again is already a stretch, but that?
Well, more power to those who can buy it.
The thing is, they're obviously going for the topical GMO-esque theme. We need that bigger, riper, plumper, longer lasting tomato even though we really don't need to but hey, business. If it works in real life, why not in a fictional world where the creation of dinos wasn't already frowned upon by the majority of the general public?
 
That plastic bubble ride next to the brachiosaurus is hilariously unsafe. Just because they're herbivores doesn't mean it's a good idea to be close to them and their feet.

Animals are often very mindful of where they walk and have a good instinct for it, much moreso than people. Wild animals are still wild animals, but I assume the park did its homework and doesn't place aggressive species in that pen.

Could possibly work the other way around; the ball would allow humans to get close to docile dinosaurs and the fact that they are in a bubble means they can't mess with the dinosaurs and provoke them.

It's still an idea that sounds really irresponsible on paper, and I wouldn't want a seemingly thin sphere of glass between me and something that could squish me or be in rare situation where a pissed dinosaur was just having a bad day.
 
Some brighter versions of the raptors:

bTBJbgq.png

ZRWoWMh.png

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They're really sticking to the original JP design, though it looks like the one in the foreground has a long stripe.

I think these shots point out how rough some of the compositing is. Pratt feels out of place in the environment/around the raptors. Easily something they CAN improve before release, so hopefully they will.

What bugs me about this snippet of a scene isn't that he's riding with raptors, it's the fact that the bike he's riding looks like it's running on a flat surface which they've just CG'd jungle grass onto. If there really was that heavy vegetation there then the bike ride would be way more bumpy.
 
What bugs me about this snippet of a scene isn't that he's riding with raptors, it's the fact that the bike he's riding looks like it's running on a flat surface which they've just CG'd jungle grass onto. If there really was that heavy vegetation there then the bike ride would be way more bumpy.

Agreed. That shot needs a lot of work, but I like it, overall.
 
Agreed. That shot needs a lot of work, but I like it, overall.

I like the scene because we get to see Velociraptors actually have a directly comparable sense of speed by having a motorcycle next to it. They've been described as having Cheetah speed in JP1 (capping at 70 mph), and we can finally see a shot that displays it in the clearest way.

That and it's a badass shot of course.
 
I like the scene because we get to see Velociraptors actually have a directly comparable sense of speed by having a motorcycle next to it. They've been described as having Cheetah speed in JP1 (capping at 70 mph), and we can finally see a shot that displays it in the clearest way.

That and it's a badass shot of course.

nah, fighting raptors is badass (like Muldoon in JP1) even if he didn't stand a chance... but riding with raptors? I don't know...looks like a parody imo.
 
Talking about JP1 reminded me of a scene that always bugged me but never got clarification on.

At the end where Grant & friends get power and control to the parks again and the raptors jump through the glass now that the doors are locked, Grant fires a gun off-camera a few times and it cuts to this shot:

lLlD9hg.png


followed by this shot of the gun Grant shot:

AfIOnSi.png


I have no idea about guns, but isn't that a shotgun? And wouldn't it have created giant holes in the glass, if not blown the entire window apart?

I believe that was the same weapon Muldoon had when he was "Raptor hunting". If it is a shotgun, I wonder if it's really a smart weapon to use :U

When I was a kid I was assuming he was using a quiet tranquilizer dart gun like the ones used in The Lost World. Would make more sense when you know there's more than one Raptor out there. Why let loose a huge shot noise that's sure to make every dinosaur scatter further away from you and know where you are?
 
He was probably using slugs, not buckshot.

A modern shotgun slug is a heavy lead or copper-covered lead projectile, with or without a plastic tip, that may have what appears to be rifling, but these are special cuts in the slug to let it deform when passing through a tight choke. Slugs are intended for use in a shotgun and often used for hunting large game. The first effective modern shotgun slug was introduced by Wilhelm Brenneke in 1898, and his design remains in use today. Most shotgun slugs are designed to be fired through a choked smoothbore barrel; they must be self-stabilizing in the absence of rifling.
 
Talking about JP1 reminded me of a scene that always bugged me but never got clarification on.

At the end where Grant & friends get power and control to the parks again and the raptors jump through the glass now that the doors are locked, Grant fires a gun off-camera a few times and it cuts to this shot:

lLlD9hg.png


followed by this shot of the gun Grant shot:

AfIOnSi.png


I have no idea about guns, but isn't that a shotgun? And wouldn't it have created giant holes in the glass, if not blown the entire window apart?

I believe that was the same weapon Muldoon had when he was "Raptor hunting". If it is a shotgun, I wonder if it's really a smart weapon to use :U

When I was a kid I was assuming he was using a quiet tranquilizer dart gun like the ones used in The Lost World. Would make more sense when you know there's more than one Raptor out there. Why let loose a huge shot noise that's sure to make every dinosaur scatter further away from you and know where you are?

Hmm I always thought it was safety glass. He fires one shot (shotgun), right? So three holes could be possible.
 
Talking about JP1 reminded me of a scene that always bugged me but never got clarification on.

At the end where Grant & friends get power and control to the parks again and the raptors jump through the glass now that the doors are locked, Grant fires a gun off-camera a few times and it cuts to this shot:

lLlD9hg.png


followed by this shot of the gun Grant shot:

AfIOnSi.png


I have no idea about guns, but isn't that a shotgun? And wouldn't it have created giant holes in the glass, if not blown the entire window apart?

I believe that was the same weapon Muldoon had when he was "Raptor hunting". If it is a shotgun, I wonder if it's really a smart weapon to use :U

When I was a kid I was assuming he was using a quiet tranquilizer dart gun like the ones used in The Lost World. Would make more sense when you know there's more than one Raptor out there. Why let loose a huge shot noise that's sure to make every dinosaur scatter further away from you and know where you are?
Pretty sure that was reinforced glass. In any case, there's more than one type of shot from a shotgun. You can have buckshots (big spread) or slugs (single shot). He likely was shooting slugs.
 
Yeah, he uses a LAW. Which doesn't seem like the best way to deal with fast-moving targets, but ok.



Nah, he fires three. You can hear it.

Oops, I've watched this movie 20 times lol...I think it's time to watch it again.

BTW: Jurassic Park has hundreds of mistakes/errors. It's actually very entertaining to watch/read them on youtube or moviemistakes.com.
 
He was probably using slugs, not buckshot.

Pretty sure that was reinforced glass. In any case, there's more than one type of shot from a shotgun. You can have buckshots (big spread) or slugs (single shot). He likely was shooting slugs.

That makes sense. I remember hearing that shotguns could shoot slugs before but most movies and video games have quickly conditioned me to expect a huge buckshot spread of damage whenever a shotgun is used.
 
That plastic bubble ride next to the brachiosaurus is hilariously unsafe. Just because they're herbivores doesn't mean it's a good idea to be close to them and their feet.

"Our pods are designed to withstand the force of a dino foot"

Problem solved

Then you can have one of them get crushed anyway when things go south. It fits with the "humans playing god" theme
 
Random question since I just finished The Lost World. I think I saw it a thousand times but I never understood how the ship crew got killed. The one that carries the Rex.

I think I read something about Raptors entering the ship. But could be bullshit.
 
True 3D or converted 3D?

Either way I'm probably seeing this in IMAX 3D :U

I really like this shot:

8Efq1xE.jpg

On another note, not sure how I feel about the wardrobe of either of the characters. It's like they're coming from two different eras, esp when directly clashing with the ultra high tech broken hamster wheel.

Random question since I just finished The Lost World. I think I saw it a thousand times but I never understood how the ship crew got killed. The one that carries the Rex.

I think I read something about Raptors entering the ship. But could be bullshit.

Yeah, I always chalked it up to really really bad writing. I think one can infer that the T-Rex broke out of its restraints and somehow the events on the boat led to opening the top hatch, letting the dinosaur free to wreak havoc. THEN, they somehow trapped the T-Rex back into the holding area and closed the automated doors on it before dying. Or something. That's all my mind could do to have it make any sense at all.

edit: from The Lost World's IMDB page:

The script called for a scene where the Velociraptors got on board the Venture as it was about to set sail. As chaos ensued, the T-Rex also got loose, and killed everything else aboard. This explains why many of the crew members are dead in places the Rex cannot reach. The scene was never filmed.

What a fuck up lol
 
Random question since I just finished The Lost World. I think I saw it a thousand times but I never understood how the ship crew got killed. The one that carries the Rex.

I think I read something about Raptors entering the ship. But could be bullshit.

yeah, raptors got on board the ship. i think the scenes were filmed, but didn't make it into the final movie. made for a plothole big enough for a T Rex... unlike the ship's cabin. =P
 
Random question since I just finished The Lost World. I think I saw it a thousand times but I never understood how the ship crew got killed. The one that carries the Rex.

I think I read something about Raptors entering the ship. But could be bullshit.

There's a missing scene. They cut it out (I don't know why).

The crew wasn't killed by the Rex, they were killed by
Raptors

edit: Damn, Neverwas finds a way...
 
Eh I don't care for Pratt's reaction there.

Would prefer this

I swear Pratts downfall is going to be that people will always see him as "that silly guy from Parks and Recs".

That being said, him trying to act serious is extremely jarring and borderline uh awkward? He will need a big SHIIIIIT THAT WAS INTENSE role for the audience to stop seeing him as Andy.

He was a solid Starlord because Starlord is a goof that gets stuff done, but at the end of the day he's still just a goof.
 
I swear Pratts downfall is going to be that people will always see him as "that silly guy from Parks and Recs".

That being said, him trying to act serious is extremely jarring and borderline uh awkward? He will need a big SHIIIIIT THAT WAS INTENSE role for the audience to stop seeing him as Andy.

He was a solid Starlord because Starlord is a goof that gets stuff done, but at the end of the day he's still just a goof.

I think it'll be different when you get to see 2 hours of him on screen rather than some tiny snippets. Gives everyone time to get accustomed to his character
 
Those pods MIGHT be designed as an egg. I mean, can you crush an egg? By grabbing the top and bottom? Naaaah...

Ill see this movie. Just cause its JP. The cgi will look good once the movie is out. Its ILM for fucks sake.
 
I swear Pratts downfall is going to be that people will always see him as "that silly guy from Parks and Recs".

That being said, him trying to act serious is extremely jarring and borderline uh awkward? He will need a big SHIIIIIT THAT WAS INTENSE role for the audience to stop seeing him as Andy.

He was a solid Starlord because Starlord is a goof that gets stuff done, but at the end of the day he's still just a goof.

People gave him a pass in Zero Dark Thirty.
 
I miss Stan Winston.......btw.

So do I, but let's not forget he also worked on TLW and JP3. Just because he was involved didn't mean the movie was magic or good.

I think the transitions between CG and animatronics in TLW and JP3 are markedly worse than JP, despite the quality of the models. The director has to know what he's doing AND/OR care about what he's doing.
 
He was probably using slugs, not buckshot.

Even if he was using slugs, the holes wouldn't look like that. It's just a movie mistake which is common with firearms and how they are portrayed. Also real dumb to be using slugs with a SPAS-12, high powered rifles would be far more useful than slug rounds especially against a powerful animal like a dino. If they are gonna use shotguns like that, they would be using buckshot especially as it's a semi auto shotty.
 
So do I, but let's not forget he also worked on TLW and JP3. Just because he was involved didn't mean the movie was magic or good.

I think the transitions between CG and animatronics in TLW and JP3 are markedly worse than JP, despite the quality of the models. The director has to know what he's doing AND/OR care about what he's doing.

The animatronic Spino in JP3 looked so bad. So stiff.
 
Talking about JP1 reminded me of a scene that always bugged me but never got clarification on.

At the end where Grant & friends get power and control to the parks again and the raptors jump through the glass now that the doors are locked, Grant fires a gun off-camera a few times and it cuts to this shot:

followed by this shot of the gun Grant shot:

I have no idea about guns, but isn't that a shotgun? And wouldn't it have created giant holes in the glass, if not blown the entire window apart?

I believe that was the same weapon Muldoon had when he was "Raptor hunting". If it is a shotgun, I wonder if it's really a smart weapon to use :U

When I was a kid I was assuming he was using a quiet tranquilizer dart gun like the ones used in The Lost World. Would make more sense when you know there's more than one Raptor out there. Why let loose a huge shot noise that's sure to make every dinosaur scatter further away from you and know where you are?
The thing I hated about that scene is when Grant and Sattler are holding off the raptor and they're reaching for the gun... then the kid there is doing nothing the entire time. WHY DIDN'T HE GO OVER AND GET THE GUN?!
 
So do I, but let's not forget he also worked on TLW and JP3. Just because he was involved didn't mean the movie was magic or good.

I think the transitions between CG and animatronics in TLW and JP3 are markedly worse than JP, despite the quality of the models. The director has to know what he's doing AND/OR care about what he's doing.

That's true. I love the animatronics in TLW though. JP3 was a colossal ...well..no, JP 3 doesn't exist.
 
The thing is, they're obviously going for the topical GMO-esque theme. We need that bigger, riper, plumper, longer lasting tomato even though we really don't need to but hey, business. If it works in real life, why not in a fictional world where the creation of dinos wasn't already frowned upon by the majority of the general public?

I'm aware what they are probably going for and I said, it is too farfetched for me. We live indeed in a world were is a huge fight/discussion over gmo-tomatoes, so barely any fight against dinos seems a stretch. A deadly hybrid falls under "just fucking why?" If you could see freaking actual dinosaurs, why hybrids? Why?
 
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