Jurassic Park is a film that has always been near and dear to my heart. Ever since I first saw it when I was young, I've had a certain fixation about the film.The idea of a Jurassic Park helped to spark my imagination, and the park itself is so full of potential that when it all ultimately falls to shit I can't help but share in Hammond's pain. I would re-watch the film constantly when I was just a boy, and when I grew older and learned it was a novel I just had to read it, and that only served to further strengthen my love for this property (the film and the book are two entirely different beasts. They are both great, but in entirely different ways). I've seen the film and read the book countless times, and love each just about equally. When I learned that Jurassic Park was getting the 3-D treatment....and was going to be shown in the IMAX format no less, I decided that I couldn't let this golden opportunity pass through my fingers. This would be my first time ever seeing this classic in theaters, and it's forever changed the way I will look at this film. Jurassic Park is a film that was made to be seen on the biggest screen possible, it's the very definition of what a theatrical film should be. It's large, loud, bombastic, thrilling, all-encompassing, and audience engulfing.
For those not in the know (of which I hope there are very few), Jurassic Park follows Dr. John Hammond (played by an eccentric, starry-eyed, joyful, and foolishly idealistic Richard Attenborough), a wealthy creator of a very special biological preserve named Jurassic Park, which needs a few outside opinions before it can be officially opened to the public. Hammond calls upon "Rock Star" chaotician Dr. Ian Malcom (played to absolute perfection by Jeff Goldblum, who is clearly enjoying the hell out of playing this character), greedy lawyer Donald Gennaro (Martin Ferrero), Paleontologists Dr. Ellie Satler (Laura Dern) and her partner Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neil, also perfect here), and Hammond's own grandchildren Tim (Joseph Mazzello) and Lex (Ariana Richards) for said outside opinions. Unfortunately, a disgruntled employee of the park (Dennis Nedry, played by none other than Newman himself, Wayne Knight) decides he has had enough and sabotages the park in an attempt to escape with some valuable information which a competing company wants, in the process freeing all the dino's. Now, with Jurassic Park thrown into a state of total chaos it's a race against time to restore power and order to the place (with the help of computer specialist Ray Arnold, portrayed here by an epic cigarette smoking Samuel L. Jackson, another actor who seems to having a great deal of fun here.....love that cigarette) , a task which proves to be herculean and maybe even pointless.....is it too late for Jurassic Park? Will anyone survive?
Jurassic Park is a landmark film that helped to change the way movies were made, it was one of the first films to show how useful CGI could be. While it is fun to look back at Jurassic Park as an almost metaphor for those times.....where outdated practical effects artists (paleontologists) were slowly being replaced by computer artists (Hammond and crew) and the film looks at this through the eyes of the people on the way out. The cool thing most probably don't remember though, is that most of the effects done in the film are practical and not CGI. For example, a large portion of the T-Rex attack is done with a practical T-Rex animatronic.....the CGI is only used when practical effects would have been impractical or downright impossible to do the material justice. This is a large reason why the effects work so well, the CGI and practical effects work together to help build the illusion that these dinosaurs are actual, living breathing creatures.
Jurassic Park was a film whose intent was to make the audience feel like they are in the world of Jurassic Park, on the big screen this is all the more obvious. The way shots are framed, with elements in the foreground, midground and background help to establish a scene and place you inside it. Even small things like where the camera is set and angled help to place you into the world. There was only so far this attempted effect could go back in the day, Jurassic Park was a film that was just waiting to be converted into 3D and by god, those crazy bastards at Universal did it....they really did it and they did it beautifully. Somehow, the 3D team here worked with the original film and it's cinematography to craft a 3D experience which I would compare to Avatar, except done and executed a million times better. They didn't force the 3-D, but did it in a way so that it came off naturally. The 3-D is just about a perfect fit for the film as can be evidenced by the above stated fore, mid and background elements which combine to create not just a fantastic illusion of depth, but another illusion that most 3D films strive to achieve but rarely do.....that there is no screen or window in front of you. There is no separation between film and theater, they become one and we, the audience, find ourselves fully engulfed in the world of Jurassic Park. It took my breath away.
Every scene you expect to take your breath away does. The big reveal of Isla Nublar is breath-takingly beautiful and filled to the brim with depth (and that score, oh god that sweeping score), our introduction to the T-Rex paddock gave me chills thinking about what would occur there later and the mere look of the thing helped in the giving-me-serious-chills department too (those large electrical fences in that area....oh man, how different, unreal and scary they are in IMAX 3D), the T-Rex attack had me in jaw-dropped, knee shaking awe and terror (the T-Rex animatronic is a thing of pure beauty, and by god is that thing large!!!! Look at how big it's head is, it's mouth, it's teeth.....I'm still in shock. And I'm not kidding about my knees shaking, first film to ever make me do that. Not sure if it was out of pure terror or pure heart stopped awe or a mixture of these 2. Either way, the T-Rex attack works amazingly well in IMAX 3-D, really making the height difference between the kids and the T-Rex stand out in such a way that it increases our worry for them and their predicament), Dr. Grant's tree climb and narrow escape with Tim from a falling car was beautifully IN-YOUR-FACE/YOU-ARE-THERE, the first raptor attack inside the power generator with Ellie is perfect in it's dark, eerie intensity and that fist-pump inducing ending where the T-Rex gets to tear into those nasty raptors and then strikes that I AM THE KING pose and roars at the audience (You can't help but bow down after that). You know what, every single damned scene ROCKS in IMAX 3D, as I said earlier the whole film has a YOU ARE THERE, YOU ARE IN THIS WORLD feeling to it that really knocked my socks off.
Jurassic Park has a somewhat surreal quality to it when viewed in IMAX 3D, with it's extreme close-ups of character's faces and computer screens made all the larger and bizarre when displayed on the downright gigantic IMAX screen. Extreme close-ups of people's heads make them seem to float or protrude just barely out of the screen, then there is the extreme close-ups of computer screens which seem downright imposing and even a bit frightening in IMAX. The extreme close-up shots of the dino's feet as they are chaisng after their prey is also super-impressive in IMAX 3D. It also helps that the way scenes are filmed, and the lighting and set design help create this different world of bizarre but fascinating science that can be mysterious, intriguing and deadly (perfect example: the way the scene where Dennis steals the embryos looks on IMAX really does make it seem like we are in a bizarre new world). There is also a cool effect where Tim puts on those nifty night-vision goggles and due to the extreme close-up the camera uses it seems like he is peering into the theater for a few seconds. I guess my point here is that extreme close-ups in IMAX 3D are awesome.
Jurassic Park was a film that wasn't made to be seen on your blu-ray player. This monster was made to be seen on the biggest damn screen possible (Go big or go home guys). Jurassic Park is a celebration of cinema and everything that's good about this art form. On display here is a fairly strong script, fantastic acting all around, gorgeous cinematography, memorable monsters, and some kick-ass visual effects (both practical and CGI), not to mention it's also got some moments of quiet brilliance hidden inside. This is a film whose aim is to show audiences an explosive good time, but it can also be surprisingly smart and clever when it wants to be (it's not just a mindless blockbuster guys). While it wasn't made with 3-D in mind, it was THE perfect choice to convert into the format due to the way it was shot and the angles and swooping movements of the camera (oh, and because DINOSAURS!!!!). The IMAX 3D experience here is top-notch as it allows audiences to fully engulf themselves into the rich and fascinating world created here. I don't cry easily, but when it came time to leave the theater I had to fight back some tears....I did not want to exit this world, I was not ready for this experience to end. Jurassic Park has always been and always will be one of the best, while seeing it in 3D is not mandatory for you to enjoy it (I'm sure that seeing it in 2D on the big screen is still enjoyable) I do recommend that you fork over the extra bucks for IMAX 3D, because as good as Jurassic Park is....it's even better in IMAX 3D, and the world you step into seems all the more real on that large IMAX screen. It's a one-of-a-kind experience that you shouldn't cheat yourself out of.
5 STARS- BETTER THAN SEX
BONUS NOTE: I did some digging, and apparently Sir Steven himself oversaw the 3D conversion here. No wonder it was so impressive!