The review of 'Jurassic World: Rebirth' highlights its role as a tribute to the original film while simultaneously critiquing its lack of originality and depth. Set 32 years post-revival of dinosaurs, the film attempts a back-to-basics approach, yet the spectacle feels hollow and the narrative is deemed pointless. The review expresses that despite its flaws, the film aligns with the original theme of humanity's struggle to control its creations, and ultimately, it reinforces the idea that survival itself is a reward in this cinematic landscape devoid of evolution.
The mere existence of Gareth Edwards' 'Jurassic World: Rebirth' would have been enough to clarify that condition, and yet this back-to-basics standalone... takes pains to remind us that the 'Jurassic' period won't stop printing money.
...the sheer nothingness of its spectacle - combined with a complete non-story that feels like it was 65 million studio notes in the making - allows it to become a singularly perfect legacy for Steven Spielberg's classic.
In that sense, and in that sense only, I have no choice but to admit that Edwards' installment lives up to its much-advertised promise as a tribute to the 1993 masterpiece that started it all.
Life finds a way, and no 'Jurassic' movie since the first one has more convincingly illustrated how, in the absence of evolution, survival is forced to become its own reward.
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