Welcome back to Nation.
The Jurassic World: Dominion trailer revealed a new dinosaur, Archeopteryx, and hinted that dinosaurs could become part of a brave new world.
Jurassic World: Dominion could end the evolution of dinosaurs to coexist with humans. The ending of Jurassic World: the Fallen Kingdom marked the outcome of the franchise, and one director Colin Trevorrow has had on his mind from the start. As Trevorrow explained when discussing where Jurassic World films should go, he stated in an interview, I remember saying to Steven (Spielberg) even while we were doing the first movie, This is the beginning. Here's the middle. Here is the end of the end. This is where we want to go.” This means that he always had a sense of where the conflict between humans and dinosaurs would be resolved.
Jurassic World: the Fallen Kingdom ends with the Lockwood Estate's dinosaur auction going wrong when Doctor Lockwood's granddaughter Maisie chooses not to allow these surviving dinosaurs to die of poisonous gases. Instead, the cells opened and released these dinosaurs across North America. She was creating a kind of "Dinogydon, in which dinosaurs reclaim the world that once belonged to them. While only a small number of dinosaurs have been released, as previously identified in Jurassic World, frog DNA integrated into the dinosaurs means they are capable of asexual reproduction. The ending of Jurassic World: the Fallen Kingdom was an effective preparation for the latest installment.
However, for all these elements, it is still not clear how the story will end. The status quo must be reached, which includes either putting the genie back in the bottle or somehow dinosaurs and humans coexisting. While any definitive answer is still a guess at this point, the recent Jurassic World: Dominion screening seems to subtly point to a second possibility. That's why the future of the franchise may revolve around both dinosaurs and humans living together.
Jurassic World: Dominion simply cannot create a new park
The natural human instinct will try to restore balance. to create a completely new Jurassic park - around dinosaurs and put them all there. It's human nature to want to return to the dominant status quo, after all, and that would fit right in with the theme of evolutionary competition in Jurassic World: the Dominion trailer. Chris Pratt's Owen Grady tries to keep his pet blue dinosaur a secret, afraid Blue and her baby will be taken from him if they are discovered. And another shot in Jurassic World: Dominion's trailer shows up what appears to be a new Jurassic Park getaway, apparently built in the mountains on a flowing river. It is exactly what can be expected of humans.
However, this would be a completely unsatisfactory outcome for the Jurassic World saga. The best comparison of this trilogy is with the Greek myth of Pandora, who was given a jar containing countless horrors - disease, death, and many other evils. When the jar was opened, all these things were released into the world, and could not be returned. In the same way, the release of the dinosaurs in North America should be a change of the world that can never be undone. The movies might have started in a world similar to ours, albeit with genetically modified dinosaurs on one island, but they couldn't end with existing dinosaurs the same way.
Pyroraptor reminds viewers of what could happen
The Jurassic World: Dominion trailer introduced a new dinosaur never seen in the movies; Microraptor. Pyroraptor lived in the late Cretaceous period about 70 million years ago, and as a feathered dinosaur, it has long been considered the beginning of the evolutionary transition from a dinosaur to a bird. Besides the more famous feathered dinosaurs, such as Archeopteryx, Pyroraptor helped confirm the theory that birds were living descendants of ancient reptiles that once dominated Earth.
Although creatures like the Pyroraptor may be well established in the popular consciousness, they are the subject of intense debate. Archeopteryx itself, for example, was named after a single controversial feathered fossil in 1861, and there is still intense debate about whether or not the 10 extant fossils are members of the same species, and recent discoveries have led to a renewed scientific debate about the evolutionary tree. The final dinosaur. However, the fact remains for most viewers that Archeopteryx - and thus Pyoraptor - is a symbol of the transformation of dinosaurs into something that exists in the modern world. The appearance of Pyroraptor in Dominion is a reminder that not only did dinosaurs remain stationary; You have evolved. The world around them has changed, and they have changed to confirm it.
The same could happen in Jurassic World: Dominion, with dinosaurs evolving to fit into their new environment. Moreover, since these dinosaurs are genetically modified, there is already evidence that they were able to evolve at an accelerated rate - as proven by the ability of dinosaurs to reproduce asexually, a characteristic that the original prehistoric creatures did not possess. And so evolution can happen at an astonishing speed. It's even possible that the Pyroraptor discovered by Owen and his friends in the Jurassic World: Dominion trailer is a new creature, not a fugitive from the Lockwood Estate.
Jurassic World: Dominion Could Bring The Story To A Climax
This approach may be dramatic, but it would be far more satisfying than simply trying to restore the status quo that existed before the events of Jurassic World I. The focus in most films that work on this kind of scale is on humans trying to stay in control, but director Colin Trevorrow's Jurassic World can reverse that by putting dinosaurs in the real world — and keeping them there. Furthermore, since dinosaurs evolved by themselves, As is so often the case in Jurassic Park and Jurassic World franchises, life had found a way.
Such an arc would also mean that the Jurassic world of Trevorrow fulfills Trevorrow's dream, with one narrative running through the entire trilogy. The first will introduce a new amusement park on the island of Isla Nublar, the second will unleash the dinosaurs, and the third will establish an entirely new status quo. It will make this trilogy even more daring than the original Jurassic Park films because it was thought of from the start rather than putting together one movie at a time. The only question, of course, is just how this new status quo comes about — and whether any of the heroes of Jurassic World: Dominion would oppose it.