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Jurassic World: Rebirth

Jurassic World: Rebirth

Universal Pictures (2025)
Blu-ray WEBRip Xvid
Action | Adventure | Science Fiction | Thriller
USA | English | Color | 02:13

Five years after the events of Jurassic World Dominion, covert operations expert Zora Bennett is contracted to lead a skilled team on a top-secret mission to secure genetic material from the world's three most massive dinosaurs. When Zora's operation intersects with a civilian family whose boating expedition was capsized, they all find themselves stranded on an island where they come face-to-face with a sinister, shocking discovery that's been hidden from the world for decades.


Cast View all

Scarlett Johansson Zora Bennett
Mahershalalhashbaz Ali Duncan Kincaid
Jonathan Bailey Dr. Henry Loomis
Rupert Friend Martin Krebs
Manuel Garcia-Rulfo Reuben Delgado
Luna Blaise Teresa Delgado
David Iacono Xavier Dobbs
Audrina Miranda Isabella Delgado
Philippine Velge Nina
Bechir Sylvain LeClerc
Ed Skrein Bobby Atwater
Adam Loxley Williams
Niamh Finlay Desanto
Julian Edgar Van Dijk's Barman
Lucy Thackeray Helicopter Pilot
Billy Smith Cop
Jonny Lavelle Helicopter Co-Pilot
Dylan Bickel Brooklyn Pedestrian
Chyril Paulann Driver
Frankie Verroca Shocked Old Man

Trailer

Edition details

Packaging MKV
Nr Discs 1
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital 2.0
English (HE-AAC 5.1)
Subtitles English | French | Spanish
HDR Dolby Vision

Personal

Owner Jackmeats Flix
Location Flix New Releases
Purchased On Aug 06, 2025 at PSA
Watched Jul 06, 2025 (at theater w/Tamara)
Index 11024
Added Date Jul 06, 2025 10:21:30
Modified Date Aug 06, 2025 11:58:28

Notes

My quick rating - 6.1/10. Five years after the somewhat lackluster finale of Jurassic World Dominion, Universal decided the dinos weren’t quite extinct at the box office. So here comes Jurassic World Rebirth, dusting off those prehistoric giants for another run, this time led by covert ops expert Zora Bennett (Scarlett Johansson), who’s been hired to secure genetic material from the three biggest dinosaurs on Earth. Naturally, she brings along a team that feels like it was pulled straight out of the Action Movie Team Starter Pack, including Mahershala Ali as the smooth, capable Duncan Kincaid.

When their mission collides with an unfortunate civilian family whose vacation boat trip gets wrecked (because, of course, it does), everyone winds up stranded on a remote island teeming with dinosaurs. The classic John Williams themes still manage to give you goosebumps, echoing back to that first majestic Brachiosaurus reveal. What follows is your standard-issue survival adventure, sprinkled with a conspiracy twist involving a decades-old secret that’s predictably more sinister than anyone bargained for.

On the bright side, the cinematography by John Mathieson is fantastic. Whenever the action ramps up, dinosaurs sprinting, clawing, or soaring across the screen. It’s genuinely thrilling to look at. Director Gareth Edwards pulls it all together nicely. The creatures themselves are beautifully rendered; the visual effects team made sure the dinosaurs still pack a punch, even if they no longer deliver that jaw-dropping-in-the-theater awe we all felt back in 1993. Similar to that first theater viewing of Avatar, or what I had recently, with a feeling like I was in the room during my VR watch of The Faceless Lady.

But that’s also part of the problem. The sense of wonder feels automated now. The technology has reached a point where seeing a dinosaur on screen is almost mundane, expected, rather than exhilarating. It’s like going to a fireworks show you’ve seen a dozen times: still pretty, but it doesn’t get my heart racing. The mutant hybrid dinosaurs - now culminating in the so-called D-Rex, which looks suspiciously like a T-Rex bred with Jabba’s pet Rancor - didn’t exactly help. Honestly, dinosaurs were plenty fascinating all on their own. Turning them into monster-movie bosses just cheapens it.

The family subplot mostly felt shoehorned in, a group of hapless civilians there to boost the available targets and give Zora’s team something else to fret over. A baby dinosaur pops up to score “aww” points, but its presence is about as essential as an inflatable pool float in a hurricane.

In the end, I walked out of the theater feeling satisfied but not exactly stunned. Jurassic World Rebirth gave me what I expected: solid dino thrills, a few well-shot chase sequences, and enough nostalgia hits to keep me entertained. But that spark of cinematic magic, the kind that made you believe you were seeing real dinosaurs for the first time, is long gone. Maybe some fossils really are best left buried.

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