Eight years after visiting the unique creation of industrialist John Hammond and his company InGen's disastrous brainchild, Jurassic Park, renowned paleontologist Dr. Alen Grant is desperate to find funding for his new theory on Velociraptor intelligence. Then, a wealthy philanthropist and his wife approach Grant with a proposition to fund his research if he will accompany them on an aerial tour of Isla Sorna, a second quarantined InGen research site, he reluctantly takes the opportunity. But when he finds out they are not who they say, the couple's true motives lead the group on a deadly chase.
It is always fun to see dinosaurs eat people.
I like the chase scenes and the “stay in the car” scenes.
Even using a satellite phone can be enjoyable.
But you can only dumb things down so much before losing any plausibility. In a mediocre movie, you root for the creature to eat the dumb person who walks up to it and says, “Aren’t you just the cutest thing?” In this one, the characters are not worth eating.
The storyline and execution are so incredible that it does not matter that they are transparent to the viewer from the start. They should have gone ahead and made it campy.
The basic story is that paleontologists would not set foot on the island of ancient creatures. A mysterious couple with a lot of cash just wants him to point out the highlights from the air (yeah, sure).
One item in the plus is Sam Neil has more than one expression.
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