The impact of Jurrassic Park

ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Jim LaMotta is one of Pittsburgh’s premiere wrestling announcers, as well as a great writer. This article originally appeared on Steel City Underground. You can follow Jim on Twitter.

The highly-anticipated Jurassic World: Dominion hits theaters this weekend, and depending on the schedule to do commentary for a wrestling show on Saturday, I plan to see it either this weekend between calling the chaos on the canvas or next weekend. Either way, since Comcast owns Universal Studios, the production company of the franchise, the original trilogy has been on various channels on the Comcast system to further promote the release of the latest installment. Plus, even if you have another cable provider, the advertisements for this film are everywhere. Fast food commercials have sandwiches based on the dinosaurs, and Dr. Pepper cans are stamped with the Dominion logo.

One thing is for sure, in the pandemic era when some new releases opted to go the stream route, this is a movie that has a major atmosphere around it that not many films have had recently because of the pandemic. Since Sam already did a very good job of the individual film analysis of the series for this site, and recent bouts on insomnia have kept this franchise on my TV on a regular basis, I wanted to take a different approach to the premise of this franchise.

What made this series work and so popular for almost thirty years?

Similar to most successful franchises, some of the sequels have been hit or miss. I found that Jurassic Park is a particularly good example of cinema that had to attempt to thread the needle between art and the cash at the box office. Granted, the discussion can be that the movie business is just that, a business, and the total revenue is the true barometer of success. Before the receipts for Dominion are even tabulated, the franchise has generated nearly five billion dollars over the span of three decades. That doesn’t take into account the numerous spin-offs, the merchandise, and theme park attractions associated with it.

Still, some purists have to wonder if the aura of a certain production would’ve remained untainted without a subpar sequel?

The majority of the Halloween sequels diluted what was accomplished with the John Carpenter original. Speaking of the original, as we know, the legendary Steven Spielberg directed the first two installments of the dinosaur adventure, and opted to serve as an executive producer for the remainder of the franchise. Still, even Spielberg knows the risk of sequels, which is why he stepped away after the iconic Jaws original film. We could’ve done without Meyers running around for a few extra decades, the same way nobody was really clamoring for Jaws to invade Sea World.

Still, cash is king and the almighty dollar is what drove Universal Studios to cash-in on the massive success of the 1993 movie.

Michael Crichton, the author of the 1990 novel that the original film is based on, made big money for his involvement in the movie, and it was only after the enormous success of the movie that Universal wanted a follow-up book from him so that a sequel could be developed to capitalize on the success. The Lost World was published in 1995 and hit screens by 1997, but the biggest takeaway was that the narrative of Jurassic Park was originally intended to be a stand-alone story. The novel wasn’t designed to have a follow-up or leave unanswered questions to be answered with a later edition. By nature, stretching the story to get another film from it lowered the quality of the story. Sure, the logic was there that explorers went to find dinosaurs, and knowing the danger, Ian Malcolm traveled to rescue them, but the fact that a second island wasn’t mentioned at all in the first film tells the audience that this entire concept materialized to justify another movie at the box office. Of course, after two films, it’s only natural to want to complete the trilogy, and it wasn’t surprising that the further the story got away from the original premise, it quite literally yielded diminishing returns, as 2001’s Jurassic Park III, a project that was still very profitable, generated the least amount of revenue of the initial trilogy.

Although, it wasn’t simply the extension of the story that saw a dip in its effectiveness.

There are many key aspects of the 1993 version that the two follow-up films just didn’t have. First and most importantly, the concept of dinosaurs wandering around the modern day world is such a neat concept. We’ve seen the fossils and the illustrations of what these massive creatures would’ve looked like so there’s always the question about what it would be like to see the animals in-person. Next, the casting and character dynamics, while garnering mixed reviews at the time from critics, was very well-done. This movie is about dinosaurs chasing humans, it’s not supposed to be on par with the character depth of Citizen Kane. Sam Neil’s Dr. Grant was an all-business paleontologist that detailed how the velociraptors would’ve devoured a youngster who disrespectfully called the fearsome creatures “a giant turkey” in an early scene before he protects the kids of the film, Lex and Timmy, the grandchildren of InGen founder, John Hammond, during their adventure through the park. Pittsburgh’s own Jeff Goldblum played the role of Dr. Ian Malcolm, the bombastic professor that was so cool that he became a favorite of the film for audiences. Hence the reason why Malcolm is the lead protagonist in the second film, taking the role previously held by Alan Grant. At the same time, it wasn’t Lex and Timmy in danger, but Ian’s daughter, who invited herself along for the trip not knowing what would be on the island. At the very least, it was the same basic story with the same basic premise. Still, I think The Lost World gets a little too much flak and in my opinion, the dinosaur rampaging through the streets was a little too much of a stretch (even for a dinosaur film) after the initial story on the second island was solid. As we know Jurassic Park III brings Dr. Grant back onto the scene, but the narrative is very flat, and I’d consider the film nothing more than an excuse to complete a trilogy.

Ironically, the stray away from the original concept is more or less what allowed Jurassic World to jump-start the franchise again. It was almost 15 years since the audience saw the dinosaurs on the big screen, and with a combination of Chris Pratt as the new protagonist, and kids cast to rejuvenate the original Timmy and Lex roles, the movie worked.

Aside from the humans, the hero and villain dynamic was used for the prehistoric creatures throughout the franchise. The 1993 movie had the raptors to chase the humans before the T-Rex makes the save in one of the final scenes. When the new trilogy hit screens, Blue was a raptor that became a favorite of the audience to combat the more “villainous” dinosaurs.

Some of the key aspects that made such an impression on audiences during the release of Jurassic Park were both the animations, which were made by the Sam Winston production company and the visual effects. There are a few different documentary clips on Youtube that show some amazing footage of how the prop dinosaurs were used in some of the more iconic scenes, as well as filming techniques that were used to camouflage the computer-generated portions as well. I always thought film sequences were much more impactful when the audience actually saw the object on screen as opposed to something computer-generated. Maybe I’m wrong, but there just seems to be a disconnect when you can tell that the “danger” on-screen is just a digital addition in post-production. Perhaps, that’s another reason the sequels didn’t quite reach the level of the original since CGI creatures are much cheaper to add in later, thus adding to the eventual profit margin at the box office.

The Jurassic World sequel, Fallen Kingdom was a subpar film that lacked story and the visual presentation previously seen in the franchise. I’m generally a very pessimistic person, but I’ve honestly wondered if Fallen Kingdom got the green light simply because Universal wanted to get a second trilogy from the franchise.

That leaves us with Dominion, a film that will bring together our original favorites with the modern day cast. I don’t have major expectations for this film, but I hope I’m wrong about doubts of the quality of the narrative. I’m hoping that Dr. Grant, Malcolm, and Ellie Sattler weren’t just brought back for the sole purpose to use the nostalgia to sell the final piece of a second trilogy because there wasn’t a quality story for Dominion.

Ultimately, Jurassic Park remains such a treasured part of American cinema because it had adventure, action, and wholesome characters. The score by legendary composer John Williams, who worked on a number of Spielberg projects, enhances all of those pieces of the puzzle to create a franchise that remains an endearing movie nearly thirty years after its debut in theaters.

WRITERS WANTED!

I’m always looking for more writers to be part of the site. Sure, it doesn’t pay, but I’m willing to let you write about just about any movie that you want to, at any length and in any style or format. The site gets around 1,200 visitors a day and I share the reviews on Letterboxd, IMDB, Amazon, Rotten Tomatoes, Facebook and Twitter, so your work will get an audience. writerswanted2

For the rest of June, the following theme weeks will appear:

  • June 26-July 2: Animals attack

July 2022

  • July 3-9: Superheroes (and please go for the weirdest ones you can!)
  • July 10-16: Movies with tough and empowered heroines
  • July 17-23: The movies of Jose Larraz
  • July 24-30: Arnold Schwarzenegger birthday week

August 2022 and up to September 10 (and maybe longer) 

All Cannon, all month long, concentrating on the Assonitis-Globus-Pearce, pre-Golan and Globus, Dewey-Friedland and 21st Century eras. Need some help? Check out this list.

You can always send your pitch my way and I’ll see if it fits the site.

If you want to be part of the site, just email me at bandsaboutmovies@gmail.com. I look forward to having you write for us and am easy on deadlines, have no limit on word count and am really excited to help you either get a new audience for your site or write about movies for the first time.

ARROW BLU RAY RELEASE: Edge of Sanity (1989)

When Henry Jekyl was young, he caught his father cheating on his mother in the barn. Caught, he was beaten by his dad as the half nude woman laughed at him, forever intertwining sex with violence and repressed sadomasochistic longings.

Welcome to a totally different take on the Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

Many years later, Dr. Jekyll is experimenting with the human mind, but really he’s just mixing ether with cocaine, which drives him insane and transforms him into Mr. Edward Hyde. Actually, it goes even further than that because it turns him into Jack the Ripper, a killer of women of the night who look just like the woman his father slept with all those decades ago.

That mix of ether and cocaine also allows him to play master to prostitutes and their clients where they lose their inhibitions and end up murdering one another. Meanwhile, his wife Elisabeth (Glynis Barber) begins to suspect that perhaps her husband has something to do with all the Whitechapel murders.

Director Gérard Kikoïne also made the 1989 version of Buried Alive (with Ginger Lynn, Robert Vaughn, Donald Pleasence and John Carradine), Lady Libertine, the Cannon film Master of Dragonard Hill and Love Circles. It’s a strange movie, as the costumes and money seem to be modern, yet it’s set in the Victorian era. Perkins doesn’t make the full makeup transformation as most actors do, but goes wild in the way he carries himself, adding another different killer to his career of odd characters. It’s definitely not for everyone — it mixes huge doses of sex with violence, which always seems to upset people — but for those ready for its surreal take on Jack the Ripper and a classic horror novel, there are plenty of rewards to be had.

Leonard Maltin said that it was, “Tasteless, pointless, and unpleasant.” That’s a standing ovation where I come from.

The Arrow blu ray of Edge of Sanity has a new 2K restoration from the original 35mm camera negative by Arrow Films, as well as brand new audio commentary by writer David Flint and author and filmmaker Sean Hogan, interviews about the movie with Stephen Thrower and Dr. Clare Smith, author of Jack the Ripper in Film and Culture, features on director Gérard Kikoïne’s career and him discussing the film, a reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Graham Humphreys and a collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Jon Towlson. You can order it from MVD.

Bosque de muerte (1993)

Three couples — Silvia (Alejandra Espejo, who was 43 when she made this and supposedly playing a teenager) and Cesar (Andrés Bonfigliom, Grave Robbers), Tamara and Raul, and Laura and Adolfo (Andrés García Jr., Cemetery of Terror) — head to a secluded cabin in the woods — this movie’s title translates to Forest of Death — a place where one of them, Sylvia, grew up. It’s also where her mother drowned and her father siappeared. So if her friends start getting killed by someone in a raincoat, are we to even be surprised?

She also met Forest Ranger Jaguar (Jorge Reyonoso) back then and he’s been in love with her ever since, even if she was ten and he was probably in his teens back before but let’s just move on. He wants to protect his woods — he shoots a poacher with ammunition so powerful it blows his leg completely off — and her with equal fervor.

It takes an hour and with the last twenty minutes of the movie, this finally becomes a slasher. That said, it has an amazing moment where the killer throws a severed head through a window at two of the girls.

This take a bit long to get going and maybe stays too close to the American slasher formula but it is pretty competent. I just demand that Mexican films get completely out of control and blow my mind, like how Trampa Infernal has a killer who combines Rambo, Michael Myers and Freddy’s glove into one ruthless murder machine.

VISUAL VENGEANCE announce BLOOD OF THE CHUPACABRAS – Double Feature Blu-ray for September!

Releasing September 27 from Visual Vengeance, a double feature release of director Jonathan Mumm’s shot on video Crypto Creature Features Blood of the Chupacabras and its sequel Revenge of the Chupacabras. Both SOV features include a healthy amount of new and archival bonus material.

Blood of the Chupacabras (2003):  A group of local townsfolk are led by a treasure hunter into a nearby mine in search of gold but encounter a vampiric Chupacabras monster and the townsfolk that the beast has turned into murderous slaves.

Revenge of the Chupacabras (2005): A detective in search of a missing college student is lured by a madman into the lair of the fabled Chupacabras monster and he and several locals must face off against this early CGI monstrosity.

Bonus features include:

  • Both available for the first time ever available on blu ray, scanned from the archival SD masters from original Betacam tapes
  • New audio commentaries on both films with director Jonathan Mumm
  • Archival behind the scenes features
  • Blooper reels
  • Archive video from premiere and festival appearances
  • Limited Edition Slipcase by Earl Kessler — FIRST PRESSING ONLY
  • Collectible Mini-poster
  • Stick your own VHS sticker set and more

For more details on the label and updates on new releases – as well as news on upcoming releases – follow Visual Vengeance on social media – IG, Facebook or twitter

TWITTER @VisualVenVideo

INSTAGRAM visualvenvideo

FACEBOOK https://www.facebook.com/visualvenvideo

Siete en la mira 3: Calles sangrientas (1990)

Bikers battle punks with Fernando Almada as the authority figure caught in the middle. Yes, his character was dead in the second movie in this series, but I get the feeing that this is a sequel in name only.

One of the gangs even goes to a high school where they make their money selling drugs to students. Two brothers, Raúl and Humberto, get involved, with Humberto dedicated to staying in school and Raúl joining the gang in their battles against other toughs as well as robbing trucks. Then, Humberto is killed, and his brother must reevalute his ways.

At the end of this movie, a bad guy keeps shooting Almada who keeps getting up and gritting his teeth like he doesn’t have time to bleed. Once, I saw my grandfather get stabbed — and another time he was in an accident in which most of his back was burned to a crisp — and the guy didn’t register the day or cry or even make much of a noise.

He would have loved Fernando Almada.

You can watch this on YouTube.

El Superloco (1937)

Margarita (Consuelo Frank) and Dr. Alberto (Ramón Armengod) are set to be married, but he keeps spending more time with Dr. Dienys (Carlos Villarías), his mentor, than with her. I mean, if you knew that someone was about to invent an eternal youth serum, you’d be spending lots of time with them as well. Meanwhile, Alberto’s aunt Susanita (Aurora Campuzano) thinks that Dienys is a wizard and teams with town drunk Sóstenes (Leopoldo ‘Chato’ Ortín) to bring him to justice.

And then — this movie as a lot going on — Margarita decides that the only way to get Alberto to give her more attention is to flirt with his mentor, which goes wrong when he tries to make love to her. She rejects him, he ages in front of her eyes and his monster — not a euphemism — gets loose.

The Super Madman feels like a poverty row ripoff of a Universal movie and that’s exactly what it is, except that it was made in Mexico.

JUNESPOLITATION 2022: Lung Hing Foo Dai (1986)

June 21: Junesploitation’s topic of the day — as suggested by F This Movie— is Jackie Chan! We’re excited to tackle a different genre every day, so check back and see what’s next.

Jackie Chan nearly died to make this movie for you. It wasn’t even something wild. He jumped from a tree to a ledge, the branch snapped and he cracked his skull. Most people would hide that this happened. Jackie put it in the bloopers at the end, a trick her learned from Burt Reynolds, except that instead of Burt laughing it up with his co-stars, we see people freaking out that the star of the movie just smacked his head off a rock and part of his skull went into his brain, leaving a permanent hole in his head that he now fills with a plastic plug.

Jackie plays Jackie, known as the Asian Hawk, but really just Jackie playing Indiana Jones if Indiana Jones did some of the most ill-advised stunts you’ve ever seen. He was once a singer in a band called The Losers with Alan (Alan Tam) and Lorelei (Rosamund Kwan). The band was also a love triangle and like a three-member Fleetwood Mac in Hong Kong without lyrics like “I’ll follow you down till the sound of my voice will haunt you.”

Jackie has reinvented himself as a treasure hunter, Alan is a rock star and Lorelei is a fashion designer. He’s forgotten them both — as much as he can — as he steals the sword of the Armor of God from an African tribe and sells it to May Bannon (Lola Forner, Miss Spain 1979 who is also in Project A and Meals on Wheels as well as White Apache and Scalps, two Bruno Mattei and Claudio Fragasso movies that were made back to back), the daughter of the super-rich collector Count Bannon, a man who has most of the Armor.

Alan comes into the picture again as a cult of devil worshippers wants the Armor so that they can take over the world. He knows that Jackie is the one person who can help him and together, they visit the Count and try to steal the pieces that he has. The story of losing his girlfriend gets to the Count, who allows him to take his pieces to the cult, as long as his daughter is in charge of the mission.

The cult knows they are coming, so they brainwash Lorelei, who does the same to Alan, assembling the full Armor of God. Jackie saves them by batting four Amazons in high heels — Cynthia Rothrock was going to play one of them but the schedule changed due to Jackie’s injury —  and the entire cult — who have already machine gunned an entire room of people in the movie just to show how serious they are — while wearing a vest covered with dynamite, then base jumping — Jackie actually dove from an airplane for this which is even crazier — onto a hot air balloon as the Armor is forever trapped in a cave-in.

This is actually the first Armour of God movie but was released as the second in the U.S. because, well, Miramax just did whatever they wanted. The Golden Harvest Hong Kong release is nine minutes longer than the version they released.

To explain it, I’ll just share this comment from Terry Thorne: “This is the first Armour Of God, which was released straight to video as Operation Condor 2: The Armour Of God in the US. The second one was Operation Condor: Armour of God 2, but had a theatrical release in the US as Operation Condor, so the sequel became the first one and the original became the prequel and the titles were flipped.”

Jackie Chan. Treasure. Amazon devil worshippers. Crazy flashbacks to the darkest of ages. A car that turns into a mini car designed just for Jackie. Yeah, this really has so much to love and was followed by 1991’s Operation Condor which has Jackie looking for Nazi gold and 2012’s Chinese Zodiac which sends him on the hunt for twelve treasures.

ARROW BLU RAY RELEASE: The Initiation of Sarah (1978)

EDITOR’S NOTE: This movie originally was on the site on April 1, 2018. Now, Arrow Video has a new release that we’re so in love with. Extras include brand new audio commentary by TV movie queen Amanda Reyes; Welcome to Hell Week: A Pledge’s Guide to the Initiation of Sarah, a brand new appreciation by film critic Stacie Ponder and queer horror programmer Anthony Hudson, co-hosts of the Gaylords of Darkness podcast; Cracks in the Sisterhood: Second Wave Feminism and The Initiation of Sarah, a brand new visual essay by film critic and historian Alexandra Heller-Nicholas; The Intimations of Sarah, a brand new interview with film critic Samantha McLaren looking at witchcraft, empowerment, TV movies and telekinetic shy girls post-Carrie; The Initiation of Tom, a brand new interview with Tom Holland on this his first film writing credit as well as an image gallery, a reversible sleeve featuring newly commissioned artwork by Luke Insect and a fully-illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing by Lindsay Hallam and Alexandra West. You can order this from MVD

Originally airing on February 6, 1978, this movie reminds me of a very important lesson: the occult was everywhere in the 1970s and it was ready to mess your life up.

The film opens with Sarah (Kay Lenz, House) who joins her stepsister Patty (Morgan Brittany, who was in Death Car on the Freeway and was Katherine Wentworth on Dallas, who was Bobby’s killer before the shower scene retcon) going to the beach. A young man forces himself on Patty and Sarah saves her with telekinesis.

The movie tries to set things up with Sarah as some ugly duckling, but in every other movie I’ve seen Kay Lenz in, she is portrayed as being attractive. That’s the only hollow note in this movie.

The girls go off to college, where they both plan on joining Alpha Nu Sigma. Their mother is even the head of the alumni committee, so it’s a big deal for her to get her biological daughter, Patty, in. For some reason, Patty is welcomed with open arms while Sarah is directed to join Phi Epsilon Delta.

All of the PED girls are rude and ill-tempered other than Mouse (Tisa Farrow, Zombi 2, Anthropophagus), a shy girl who everyone else is mean to. Mouse just wants to play her violin because otherwise, she gets nuts!

Jennifer (80’s sex symbol Morgan Fairchild), the head of ANS, forbids her sisterhood from fraternizing with the PED girls, which tears the sisters apart. Meanwhile, Sarah starts to fall for Paul (Tony Bill, Are You in the House Alone?) while staying wary of den mother Mrs. Hunter (Shelley Winters in an unhinged performance).

Even after she uses her powers to shove Jennifer into a fountain, Sarah doesn’t want to give in to her powers. But once the ANS girls retaliate and throw food and mud at her, she gives in to Mrs. Hunter’s call to hatred and gives in to an initiation ceremony.

That ceremony? It involves blowing off the evil girl’s dresses, permanently ruining Jennifer’s face and killing Mouse, but Sarah decides at the last second to kill both herself and Mrs. Hunter to stop the sacrifice. As the film ends, Patty joins PED and becomes friends with Mouse. They both mourn the loss of Sarah.

These are the kind of movies that made me glad that I went to art school and a downtown college instead of a real university. That said, I would not be eligible for a sorority, so I guess the point is moot.

This movie also has appearances by Michael Talbott (Freddy from Carrie), Robert Hayes (Airplane!), Deborah Ryan (Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park), Talia Balsam (The Supernaturals) and Kathryn Grant (The Night the World Exploded).

SHUDDER EXCLUSIVE: Revealer (2022)

By all rights, Angie (Caito Aase) and Sally (Shaina Schrooten) should never be friends. Angie dances as Precious at the peep show booth of The Revealers Bookstore, Sally is a religious zealot that yell at her nearly every day and their lives couldn’t be more different. But maybe they aren’t. Maybe they have more in common than they think. It only takes the end of all there is for them to realize that.

Using one location — which was demanded by the COVID-19 outbreak — to its best advantage, the film separates the two leads via the peep show booth as they work together to try and escape the store, then attempt to see what’s left of the world. I mean, the horns of the angels have been blasting non-stop, so one imagines that Chicago is an inferno by this point.

Directed by Luke Boyce (The Pooka and the upcoming adaption of the comic book Revival) and written by Michael Moreci and Tim Seeley (who created the aforementioned Revival with artist Mike Norton, colorist Mark Englert and cover artist Jenny Frison as well as Hack/Slash, which is about horror movie survivor Cassie Hack and her mission to destroy slashers; it’s even better than it sounds and is required reading), Revealer is a dark movie with a light heart, awash in neon color, dirt and blood. It’s not a big movie but that’s because it stays small in the face of the biggest thing that ever will be. And it’s a blast.

Revealer is streaming exclusively on Shudder.