- A silly and contrived
plot (featuring: “talking” Velociraptor dinosaurs who possess “social
intelligence,” and even the ability to set traps for unsuspecting humans;
people yelling for each other in the jungle as they try to avoid detection
by the raptors—in this movie, the dinosaurs are smarter than the people).
- Poor cinematography (a
rather dark and poorly lit film—even in its daylight scenes); the dinosaur
special effects, however, are quite good.
- Very scary and violent—dinosaurs
graphically munch on people as if they were pretzels. Several scenes which
would give young children nightmares.
- Evolutionary content
(e.g. dinosaurs died out 65 million years ago in evolutionary history; the
movie’s raptors are said to have an “evolutionary advantage”
because they could speak to each other; there is a reference to Darwinism,
etc.)
- The movie is produced
by Universal Studios, the same film company that gave the world the blasphemous
movie “The Last Temptation of Christ”—many Christians, in fact,
have been refusing to watch Universal movies since.
- $8.25 (US) a ticket!
(and the movie is only about 85–90 minutes long, not the typical 100-plus
minutes)
- Bad science—putting
aside the bankrupt view of evolution presented in the film, it’s impossible to clone dinosaurs back to life anyway!
Three Jurassic Park
films with the same “menacing-raptors-chasing-scared-people” theme
have definitely run their course. It’s gotten to be quite boring—you
won’t be held in rapt attention if you saw either of the previous films.1
Two claws down on this one.
For the answers to the mysteries
surrounding dinosaurs from both the Bible and real science, go to our Get Answers
section on dinosaurs.