
What's reborn in ‘Jurassic World Rebirth'? Spoiler: It's not the plot
The seventh film in the 'Why are you messing with carnivorous dinosaurs?' series finds apparent mercenary Zora (Scarlett Johansson, also in theaters in ' The Phoenician Scheme ') hired by slick corporate guy Martin (Rupert Friend of ' Companion ') to take idealistic paleontologist Henry (Jonathan Bailey of ' Wicked ') into the restricted zone where dinosaurs thrive. They seek blood samples from three particular live ones for revolutionary medical research.
Zora recruits four helpers, including trusted confederates Duncan (Oakland native and two-time Oscar-winner Mahershala Ali) and Bobby (Ed Skrein of ' Rebel Moon ' and ' Deadpool '). They rescue a family shipwrecked by one of the beasties, but having civilians, including kids, along doesn't dissuade the team from their dangerous mission. They traipse, virtually unarmed, into man-eating monster territory. Who will become dino dinner? Who won't? And there's your movie.
As nothing is reborn in the story, the title really refers to the franchise, which nobody thought was ending after the last trilogy sort of concluded with ' Jurassic World Dominion ' (2022), which raked in a billion bucks despite being coldly received by critics. So even the title announces there's really nothing more to tell about the story, but here comes another movie.
Make no mistake, it delivers what the fans want and expect, no more, no less. There's only one new element in 'Rebirth' — that mutant dinosaurs resulted from experiments conducted for no good reason. Once we know that's a thing, we know what the big bad will be for the final chase. But the mutant dino isn't explored at all, even with an expert present.
We see every turn that's coming; we recognize which folks are 'red shirts' (the 'Star Trek' fan term for characters marked for death). We know, when we meet the little girl who's afraid of dinosaurs, she'll befriend a cute one. One signs a contract to suspend disbelief when watching an adventure movie about dinosaurs and humans, but 'Rebirth' seems determined to test viewers' patience with one incredible stroke of luck after another.
There are Easter eggs for franchise fans — a bus is marked for 'Crichton Middle School,' a nod to 'Jurassic Park' novelist Michael Crichton; a familiar 'When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth' banner is being taken down. Unfortunately, the film also reminds us over and over (and over) again of the previous signature shots of people facing the camera while dinos enter the frame behind them.
Those visiting these Iles de Death by Dino really should be inoculated against plot deafness, which enables these very large animals moving in water or foliage to become undetectable by human ear or nose. The number of times this particular cinematic tic spasms in 'Rebirth' tests the limits of sanity.
Zora is purportedly a highly sought-after mercenary with many years of experience in tough spots. She inspires to-the-death loyalty from Duncan and Bobby. But there is absolutely nothing about Johansson's realization of Zora that says 'warrior,' 'veteran,' 'leader,' or anything along those lines.
The best performance comes from Manuel Garcia-Rulfo (Netflix's ' The Lincoln Lawyer '), who conveys urgency and love as Reuben, the shipwrecked father protecting his family. David Iacono also turns in memorable work as Xavier, the layabout boyfriend of Reuben's daughter. Bailey gets the best dialogue, but the bar isn't high in this functional script.
The dino action is just fine, though as this reviewer's screening companion said, 'There wasn't enough dinosaur-on-dinosaur violence.' Except for a small handful of shots, the visual effects are excellent, per director Gareth Edwards' reputation cultivated with ' Godzilla ' (2014) and ' Rogue One: A Star Wars Story ' (2016).
All that said, this movie is likely review-proof. The franchise is doing just fine without critical approval. This one is less of a slog, but there is precious little interesting or new in 'Jurassic World Rebirth.' It'll likely earn a billion dollars anyway.
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Buzz Feed
2 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
TV And Movie Recs: 28 Years Later, Jurassic World Rebirth
Do you love all things TV and movies? Subscribe to the Screen Time newsletter to get your weekly dose of what to watch next and what everyone is flailing over from someone who watches everything! Welcome to Screen Time! I'm Nora, and if there's one thing you need to know about me, it's that I love watching TV and movies. I also absolutely love being absorbed in fandoms. This week, it's a little more movie-focused, as I dive into what movies you should watch this weekend, including a documentary from Mariska Hargitay that made me weep. I also share what's all over my FYP — like the Superman cast being my favorite new cast — and what we've got going on over on BuzzFeed Celeb's YouTube channel, plus more. Thanks for joining me! It's a long weekend here in the US, so here's a super-sized weekend rec list: 28 Years Later — watch for: Jodie Comer being, well, Jodie freakin' Comer In theaters now It only took me one (1) of these before I mentioned Jodie Comer. My friends will honestly be shocked that it took me this long. The third installment in this series, Danny Boyle's 28 Years Later follows Spike (Alfie Williams), who has grown up on an island off the coast of northern England, away from the mainland that has been ravaged by the Rage Virus. With his mom, Isla (Jodie Comer), getting sicker, Spike decides to leave his dad (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) behind and take Isla to the mainland in hopes of finding a mysterious doctor (Ralph Fiennes). If you couldn't tell, you need to see this movie for Jodie. She never misses, in my opinion. Her performance as Isla made me uncontrollably sob more than I'd like to admit, and I just think she brings such raw, human emotion to a character in an extraordinary setting. Also, this is Alfie's very first movie, and he's outstanding. If you're a zombie movie fan, I think this is worth watching, and if you're a Jodie fan, it's a must-watch. Also, it's currently my second favorite 2025 movie behind Sinners. Jurassic World Rebirth — watch for: Jonathan Bailey in his slutty little glasses In theaters now Directed by Gareth Edwards, Jurassic World Rebirth reboots the Jurassic Park series once again, this time with Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, Jonathan Bailey, and more. The film follows Zora Bennett (Johansson), who is recruited to collaborate with paleontologist Dr. Henry Loomis (Bailey) and Duncan Kincaid (Ali) to infiltrate a forbidden island that was once used as a dinosaur research facility. It's a Jurassic Park movie after all, so expect a lot of tense dinosaur moments. However, this movie was kind of lacking for me, and I think Kong: Skull Island did the same plot much better. So, I'm curious what you all think! But, if there's one thing I'm always going to love, it's Jonathan Bailey, so I did enjoy him and his 'slutty little glasses.' And, I just love how much Scarlett loves Jurassic Park, like she used to sleep in a Jurassic Park tent in her bedroom growing up. LIKE, IT'S SO CUTE! So, I want her to be able to make another one of these movies because her love for it is so wholesome. Ironheart — watch for: Dominique Thorne and a WandaVision theory finally coming true Streaming on Disney+ It's no secret that a lot of people are feeling some Marvel fatigue, but I am here to tell you that Ironheart is worth binge-watching. Executive produced by Ryan Coogler, the show follows Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), who has returned to Chicago with her iron suit and ends up getting involved with Parker Robbins/Hood (Anthony Ramos) and his crew. Dominique is such a breath of fresh air as Riri, and I love seeing her really own this space in the MCU and create such a flawed hero you want to root for. The show really dives into grief and the lengths we go to after losing someone close, and I think it's just a great message on top of some amazing superhero moments. Also, the show FINALLY makes a longstanding WandaVision theory a reality, and as someone who has been screaming about [spoiler] since 2021 with my WandaVision Easter eggs posts, I feel vindicated. I feel alive. I WILL need an Ironheart Season 2. My Mom Jayne — watch for: Mariska Hargitay continuing to be the best of us Streaming on HBO Max I wouldn't consider myself a huge documentary person, but I love old Hollywood, so My Mom Jayne was an immediate watch for me. Directed by Mariska Hargitay, the film explores Jayne Mansfield's rapid rise to fame in the 1950s, her relationships, and her sudden death at just 34 years old. A lot of people might not realize that Mariska is Jayne's daughter, so it's a documentary that allows Mariska to really come to terms with who her mom was outside of Hollywood's 'smartest dumb blonde.' 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The story unfolds with us seeing how Ryland ended up in space, as he wakes up with amnesia, unsure of what happened to him and how he got to space. You can watch the trailer below: This week, over on BuzzFeed Celeb, we had the adorable cast of Squid Game Season 3 — Lee Jung-jae, Lee Byung-hun, Park Sung-hoon, Kang Ae-sim, Jo Yu-ri, and Yim Si-wan — play with puppies while answering all of our questions about themselves and the final season of the hit Netflix series. They were so wholesome, the puppies were absolutely chaotic, and it made me love this cast even more. We talked about which scenes they couldn't get through without laughing, what it was like working with T.O.P., the celebs they've been surprised to find out are fans of Squid Game, and so much more. Also, here's a behind-the-scenes photo of my view from filming that day: A place where I answer YOUR questions about TV, movies, fandom, and more: Question: What's your Letterboxd Top Four? I'd be lying if I said I haven't fantasized about Letterboxd asking me my four favorite films on a red carpet and me pretending like I haven't practiced my answer a million times. So, in the interest of getting to know me a little better, here is my Letterboxd Top Four: Well, that's all I've got for this week's edition of Screen Time. Come back every week to get more TV and movie recommendations, find out which celebs we're working with, and so much more! Have a question for me, or want to tell me what you're watching right now, or have a suggestion of what I should watch next? Send it to me now at screentime@ or at this Google form. Do you love all things TV and movies? Subscribe to the Screen Time newsletter to get your weekly dose of what to watch next and what everyone is flailing over from someone who watches everything!


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
Spoilers! 'Jurassic World Rebirth' originally killed off this character
Spoiler alert! We're discussing the ending of "Jurassic World Rebirth" (in theaters now). If you haven't seen the film yet and don't want to be spoiled, stop reading now. In "Jurassic World Rebirth," survival is a long shot, but Duncan Kincaid (Mahershala Ali) still manages to pull it off. The latest "Jurassic" film culminates in what appears to be a heroic sacrifice by Ali's character. Duncan draws the horrifying mutant Distortus rex away from Zora Bennett (Scarlett Johansson), Henry Loomis (Jonathan Bailey) and the shipwrecked Delgado family so they can all escape on a boat. It seems like Duncan is about to be eaten off screen, only for the final moments to reveal he made it out. He sends up a flare to signal for the group to wait up for him, then joins Zora and Henry as they leave the island together. But the movie didn't always have such a happy outcome, as director Gareth Edwards tells USA TODAY that Duncan was originally meant to die at the end. "My first gut feeling was to kill him, and that's what I tried to do," Edwards says, noting that Ali felt the same way. According to screenwriter David Koepp, there were also versions of the script where Duncan died earlier. Join our Watch Party! Sign up to receive USA TODAY's movie and TV recommendations right in your inbox During production, though, Edwards says the studio talked him into sparing Duncan. "The director's cut had him dying, and I played it to the studio, and they said, 'Is there any version where we could just see him living?' " While initially reluctant, Edwards cut together a new version and ended up warming to it. "Because it's written and filmed for him to die, all the little tropes and subconscious things you would do to (set that up) are happening in the movie," he says. "So then, weirdly, I think it's a surprise when he lives, because we've played all the cards you play when someone's about to have their last moment." He says he was moved to watch the film with a crowd and hear the audience cheer when Duncan's flare goes up, revealing that he's alive. First look at 'Jurassic World Rebirth': See new cast Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey "It was one of those occasions where sometimes the studio knows what they're on about," Edwards says. Koepp was also on board with the change, noting that as the movie evolved, "Duncan became a bigger part and a more interesting character, and we have a fantastic actor (playing him), so killing him 90 seconds before the end of the movie would not have made a lot of sense." How does 'Jurassic World Rebirth' end? After Duncan joins up with Zora and Henry, the film closes with a scene of the trio leaving the island. Now that they have the dinosaur DNA necessary to create a drug that could cure heart disease, Zora decides they will give the entire world access to the new medicine, rather than handing it over to a pharmaceutical company to profit from. But there's a lingering threat still out there. While the three previous "Jurassic" movies introduced a new dinosaur villain that is then killed at the end, in "Rebirth," the Distortus rex remains alive and kicking when the credits roll. Edwards says he second-guessed this while editing the film and started wondering if it would be better for the Tyrannosaurus rex to reappear and fight the D. rex. "I thought, 'Oh, my God, is this something we should be doing?' " he recalls. "It hadn't occurred to me before." While he was contemplating creating a new ending where the T. rex returned, Edwards polled everyone working on the film to see what they thought. It was the movie's visual effects supervisor who talked him out of it by telling Edwards, "That's what happens in all the movies, Gareth! The T. rex turns up and saves the day, and everyone's expecting that. I was so pleased when you didn't do that." Edwards notes that leaving the Distortus rex alive isn't meant to set up its return in a possible sequel. But "it's hard to kill that thing unless it was another animal that did it," which would lead to a similar ending as other "Jurassic" movies. "There's that phrase 'ex machina,' where God comes and saves everyone," he says. "In 'Jurassic,' there's something I call 'rex machina,' where a T. rex comes and saves everyone. I felt like, maybe we don't do that. Maybe that's one of our differences." What's the future of 'Jurassic World' after 'Rebirth'? Given that Zora, Henry and Duncan all live to fight another day at the end of "Rebirth," should fans expect them to reunite in future "Jurassic" movies? Nothing is set in stone, but "it's hard to imagine them not being in the next film," Edwards says. While no discussions about a sequel have taken place, the director also teases that he has a specific concept in mind for where the franchise could go after "Rebirth," which he doesn't want to reveal in case he has an opportunity to make it happen. "As a fan, there's a type of movie I've just been wishing for with each incarnation," he says. "I have a feeling what I would love to see next."


USA Today
5 hours ago
- USA Today
Dino-mite! 🦖
Some people dig fireworks on Fourth of July. I'll take a T. rex over those every day of the week. There's another "Jurassic" movie upon us, and while "Jurassic World Rebirth" continues the streak of franchise films chasing the wonder of Steven Spielberg's OG "Jurassic Park," it's fun watching dinosaurs romping and stomping on a big screen again. That's something to watch this July 4 weekend, as is the new Charlize Theron Netflix sequel "The Old Guard 2." And if you're feeling a biblical binge this holiday, the final episodes of Season 5 of "The Chosen" are finally on Amazon Prime Video. Now on to the good stuff: Thrill to big-screen dinosaurs again in 'Jurassic World Rebirth' Scarlett Johansson threw down with Thanos. Jonathan Bailey is at odds with Elphaba. But how will those two do against the mighty Distortus rex? Johansson, Bailey and Mahershala Ali are the newest recruits to the dino-mite franchise in "Jurassic World Rebirth." The movie centers on a team of specialists sent to an abandoned research facility to find dino DNA for a potential miracle drug. There's "Jurassic" homages a plenty, plus all sorts of generic characters, but the cloned critters are as fun to watch as always. (Peep my ★★½ review.) And if it's a "Jurassic" film, there's of course a T. rex running around. One sequence in the new movie finds the dino attacking a family trying to escape in a raft, and my colleague Brendan Morrow wrote about how it echoes a scrapped scene from Spielberg's original movie. "In the early '90s, water was still a big challenge for CG, and so the idea of making a T. rex and then having it swim was a bridge too far," recalls David Koepp, screenwriter of the first "Jurassic Park" as well as "Rebirth." See Charlize Theron do battle in Netflix sequel 'The Old Guard 2' Charlize Theron turns 50 next month. (I'll be there too soon enough, Charlize!) But age is just a number for the Oscar winner, who's rocking fishnets at movie premieres and throwing down in a sword fight vs. Uma Thurman in the Netflix action sequel "The Old Guard 2." "I have limited time left, and I'm going to do it up the way I want to do it up," she tells my pal Marco della Cava in a new interview. If you dug the first "Old Guard," more immortal warriors join the battle in modern times in the sequel (which has quite the cliffhanger). It's one of several new movies streaming this week – "Sinners" also makes that roundup, and ranks high on my list of the best movies so far in 2025. Stream the final episodes of 'The Chosen' Season 5 The biblical series "The Chosen" has proven popular among religious folks and others, and the show's fifth season (now streaming on Prime Video) centers on the days leading up to Jesus' crucifixion. One of the key moments is actually the last scene of the season, as Judas (Luke Dimyan) kisses the cheek of Jesus (Jonathan Roumie) in the Garden of Gethsemane, the infamous act of betrayal that identifies Jesus to the authorities. Dimyan talked about the very particular instructions he had to follow filming that sequence with my colleague Erin Jensen: "I was able to kiss him pretty normally, but they were like: 'Nope. We want it higher on the cheek.' And I'm like, 'Why do we want it higher on the cheek? Is that just to make me feel bad?' " Erin also got some scoop on Season 6, which is now filming in Italy and depicts the crucifixion. (A planned seventh season will focus on Jesus' resurrection.) Roumie says it was "brutal" filming the upcoming episodes, where he replicates Jesus' injuries on the cross: "It's not something I would ever want to shoot again.' Even more goodness to check out! Got thoughts, questions, ideas, concerns, compliments or maybe even some recs for me? Email btruitt@ and follow me on the socials: I'm @briantruitt on Bluesky, Instagram and Threads.