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- <text id=93TT1865>
- <title>
- June 14, 1993: Jaws II
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jun. 14, 1993 The Pill That Changes Everything
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 69
- JAWS II
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>In Jurassic Park, Steven Spielberg has a monster movie with
- a lot of bite
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD CORLISS--With reporting by David S. Jackson/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> John Hammond is a man in love with an idea. Inspired by motives
- of applied science and pure profit, he has pursued a scheme
- to clone dinosaurs from their preserved dna and show off the
- brand-new behemoths on an island preserve. He has imperiled
- some noted scientists, and even his two young grandchildren,
- by inviting them to inspect the park before it is ready. Dino
- disaster awaits.
- </p>
- <p> Hammond might be an ogre, twisting genetic research into capitalist
- exploitation, creating the ultimate carnival sideshow, where
- the freaks eat the gawkers. That is pretty much how Michael
- Crichton sketched the old man in the novel Jurassic Park. But
- the Hammond played by Richard Attenborough in Steven Spielberg's
- movie version is another fellow altogether; the director calls
- him "a cross between Walt Disney and Ross Perot." Hammond is
- certainly a visionary, a fabulous showman, an enthusiast, an
- emperor of ice cream, a kid with a great new toy. "Top of the
- line!" he chirps. "Spared no expense!" Why, he might be Spielberg
- as a foxy grandpa.
- </p>
- <p> Top of the line? Jurassic Park, like every other Spielberg movie,
- is couture for the masses: a cunning design, elegantly tailored.
- Spared no expense? Just ask the picture's sponsor, Universal,
- which has not had a $100 million winner at the domestic box
- office since 1989 (with the Spielberg-produced Back to the Future
- Part II) and urgently needs a megahit. Hence the marketing tie-in
- with McDonald's, the imminent Jurassic Park ride at Universal's
- theme parks, and the saturation of action figures, jammies and
- cologne. The director did cut costs with a decent, modest cast
- of nonstars, and he tried shooting every dialogue scene in no
- more than five takes. But the expert exertions of the 483 other
- artists and technicians listed in the credits ensured that Jurassic
- Park would cost about $65 million, or $1 for every year since
- dinosaurs became extinct.
- </p>
- <p> But enough money talk. This is a monster movie. So how are they?
- </p>
- <p> Amazing. Dinosaurs live. You are there, once upon a time, before
- mammal walked or man dreamed. You can pet a triceratops and,
- if you wish, examine its droppings. You can feed a vegetarian
- brachiosaur, whose movements are graceful, endearing. At times
- the beasts (animated, mostly, by the computer sorcerers from
- Industrial Light & Magic) move in a hazier space than the humans
- in the foreground, but in the intimate scenes the dinos are
- utterly convincing. Spielberg loves to mix wonder with horror,
- and he has fun creating a living Museum of Natural Fantasy.
- </p>
- <p> Then he scares you witless. Here come a nosy tyrannosaur and
- a fan-faced, bilious dilophosaur. Nastiest of all are the velociraptors,
- smart, relentless punks in packs--Saurz N the Hood. They have
- a special appetite for kids, just like the great white shark
- in the movie that made Spielberg's rep. Now it has some worthy
- successors: primeval creatures with personality and a lot of
- bite. Jurassic Park is the true Jaws II.
- </p>
- <p> Like the films to which it pays elaborate homage--Gertie the
- Dinosaur, King Kong (and its Universal theme-park spin-off,
- Kongfrontation), The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Godzilla, Bringing
- Up Baby--this one sometimes creaks when it's not playing with
- the beasties. For the first half-hour--the pre show before
- the thrill ride--you are advised to bide your time. Screenwriter
- David Koepp's subplot, in which a paleontologist (Sam Neill)
- is force-fed lessons in fatherhood by his paleobotanist girlfriend
- (Laura Dern), is laid on with a trowel. And the plot occasionally
- beggars belief. If you were up a huge tree and a van were teetering
- on the branch above you, would you race down the side of the
- tree just ahead of the plummeting vehicle, or would you move
- sensibly to the other side of the tree? But that is just another
- horror-movie tradition Spielberg observes: smart people doing
- really dumb things.
- </p>
- <p> So what? This is at heart a picture about animals doing really
- smart things. The dilophosaur can inspire dread just by staring
- at its prey; the raptors by breathing on a window or opening
- a door. The T. rex goes for broader gestures: tipping over that
- rickety van, gobbling half of a lawyer, and shaking the other
- half like a cat with a mouse between its teeth. (And if you
- miss the book's creepiest scene, where the T. rex curls its
- tongue around a child hiding inside a waterfall, it's not here
- because, Spielberg says, "the tongue we made just wasn't convincing.
- It looked like Dino from The Flintstones.")
- </p>
- <p> Most of the movie eschews overt violence for its much more satisfying
- alternative--the threat of violence. The guts and gore are
- seen mostly in the viewer's lurid imagination. That is why Jurassic
- Park slips so neatly into its PG-13 rating. "I do think this
- movie is inappropriate for children under 13," Spielberg says.
- "In general, though, I think children are more traumatized by
- violence that can be re-created in a natural setting: a movie
- about child abuse or a movie about murder. This is a movie that
- not only can't happen, but can't even be emulated. Even if audiences
- buy into the notion that dinosaurs are back, they still have
- the reassurance that they won't be attacked by a tyrannosaur
- on the way home. I guarantee that won't happen."
- </p>
- <p> Ever since the director hit it big with Jaws, people have been
- telling him to grow up. They want him to tackle more personal
- themes, to address adult subject matter, to please stop making
- Steven Spielberg movies. Perhaps Schindler's List, the Nazi-era
- drama he has already completed shooting for Christmas release,
- will satisfy those who want Spielberg to enter an auteur rehab
- clinic.
- </p>
- <p> But no film could be more personal to him than this one. With
- its next-generation effects and its age-old story line, this
- is a movie whose subject is its process, a movie about all the
- complexities of fabricating entertainment in the microchip age.
- It's a movie in love with technology (as Spielberg is), yet
- afraid of being carried away by it (as he is). The film even
- has a resident conscience, chaos theoretician Ian Malcolm (Jeff
- Goldblum), who insists that what God has put asunder, no man
- should join together.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, if Hammond listens to him and shuts down the park,
- there's no film. The director of such beautiful dramas as Empire
- of the Sun and Always knows Malcolm is right; the director of
- E.T. and the Indiana Jones movies knows he must be ignored.
- Spielberg needs the dinosaurs to run amuck, as they so handsomely,
- plausibly do.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Malcolm's words are a warning to all directors dazzled by
- the great new toys of filmmaking. "Dennis Muren and the ILM
- team," Spielberg says, "have perfected the dinosaur. Now what
- we need are stories. Without them, technology is an orphan.
- Without a good yarn, it's just a bunch of convincing pictures."
- </p>
- <p> Thanks to Crichton, Spielberg had a good yarn to work with.
- Thanks to his effects wizards, the pictures were convincing.
- But it was the director who put the drama in every snazzy frame.
- For dinosaurs to rule the earth again, the monsters needed majesty
- as well as menace. And Spielberg got it all right.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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