The plot: Three years after the destruction of the theme park Jurassic World, a now-active volcano on Isla Nublar poses a serious threat to the dinosaurs still on the island. Wanting to save as many of these animals as possible, wealthy benefactor Eli Mills (Rafe Spall) hires former raptor trainer Owen (Chris Pratt) and former JW manager and now dinosaur activist Claire (Byrce Dallas Howard) to take a team to the island. However, once they arrive, it seems that not only is their task going to be a difficult one, but the people who hired them have ulterior motives for what they plan to do with these dinosaurs. The Indominus Rex was just the beginning.
Showing posts with label cromwell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cromwell. Show all posts
Thursday, 28 June 2018
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018) - Movie Review
The plot: Three years after the destruction of the theme park Jurassic World, a now-active volcano on Isla Nublar poses a serious threat to the dinosaurs still on the island. Wanting to save as many of these animals as possible, wealthy benefactor Eli Mills (Rafe Spall) hires former raptor trainer Owen (Chris Pratt) and former JW manager and now dinosaur activist Claire (Byrce Dallas Howard) to take a team to the island. However, once they arrive, it seems that not only is their task going to be a difficult one, but the people who hired them have ulterior motives for what they plan to do with these dinosaurs. The Indominus Rex was just the beginning.
Labels:
2018,
action,
adventure,
animal rights,
bayona,
bryce dallas howard,
chris pratt,
cromwell,
dinosaurs,
horror,
justice smith,
mahan,
movie,
rafe spall,
review,
sci-fi,
ted levine,
trevorrow
Monday, 26 June 2017
The Promise (2017) - Movie Review
Even without getting into the premise of today’s film, this
has the kind of main casting that is designed to make audiences froth in
excitement. You’ve got Oscar Isaac, a true rising star who has been attached to
critical and audience darlings for several years straight at this point and has
even entered meme status thanks to his… interesting dance sequence from Ex Machina. Next to him, there’s Charlotte Le Bon, whom I’ll admit hasn’t exactly
wowed me with her latest features, but quite frankly, she’s more than due for a
proper-good production. And then there’s Christian Bale, the modern king of
method acting who is well-known by this point for how seriously he takes his work. As much as I know better than I’d like how easily a promising
cast can be cut down by a wasteful story, rest assured, this isn’t one of those
occasions.
Labels:
2017,
armenian genocide,
bale,
charlotte le bon,
cromwell,
drama,
jean reno,
mahan,
movie,
oscar isaac,
review,
romance,
war
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)
