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Ariel 2022-04-19 09:01:27
Jurassic World: both a gift and a curse
After watching Jurassic World 2, I endured a sore bladder and sat in the movie theater waiting for Easter eggs. The Easter egg came out, it was very simple, just a few pterosaurs fell on the iron tower of the Paris Hotel in Las Vegas. This shot can be seen as a symbol that this Jurassic World is...
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Archibald 2022-04-20 09:01:17
awesome blu
It's worth watching dinosaurs, that's the plot, the routine of monster films: monsters (good) - a few bad guys (just no brains, and finally get their own fruit) - a legendary heroine who is more powerful than the hero, good people and monsters establish a good relationship , In the end, the bad guy...

Neil Bishop
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Grady 2022-03-22 09:01:20
Except for dinosaurs, everyone has an IQ of 0. And, they are living beings, so are the others? Bitch to die.
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Kristy 2022-03-17 09:01:03
In terms of a two-hour film, the plot has a lot of loopholes...The only dinosaur doctor has never seen a real dinosaur, and the biology team who has studied real dinosaurs for decades can't even draw blood, secret. The cage is directly covered in the home of the gold master, occasional narcotic bombs, and optional male errands... But the most unbearable thing is that the second episode and the third episode are mixed together in the first paragraph. Okay, why did it suddenly become "Home Alone"?
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom quotes
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Ian Malcolm: I think that we should allow our, uh, magnificent , glorious dinosaurs to be taken out by the volcano.
Senator Sherwood: [crowd mumbling] Silence please!
Ian Malcolm: As deeply sad as that would be, we altered the course of natural history. This is a correction.
Senator Sherwood: Are you suggestion that the Almighty is taking matters into his own hands?
Ian Malcolm: Senator, with all do respect, God's not part of the equation. No. What I mean is that in the last century, we amassed landmark technological power. And we've consistently proven ourselves incapable of handling that power. 80 years ago, who could have predicted nuclear proliferation and then there it was. And now we've got genetic power, so how long is it going to take to spread around the globe and what's going to be done with it? It ain't going to stop with the de-extinction of the dinosaurs.
Senator Sherwood: I'm not sure I know that you're talking about.
Ian Malcolm: I'm talking about man-made cataclysmic change.
Senator Sherwood: What kinda of change?
Ian Malcolm: Change is like death. You don't know what it looks like till you're standing at the gates.
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Ian Malcolm: How many times do you have to see the evidence? How many times must the point be made? We're causing our own extinction. Too many red lines have been crossed. And our home has, in fundamental ways, been polluted by avarice and political megalomania. Genetic power has now been unleashed and of course, that's going to be catastrophic. This change was inevitable from the moment we brought the first dinosaur back from extinction. We convince ourselves that sudden change is something that happens outside the normal order of things, like a car crash, or that it's beyond our control, like a fatal illness. We don't conceive of sudden, radical, irrational change as woven into the very fabric of existence. Yet, I can assure you, it most assuredly is. And it's happening now. Humans and dinosaurs are now gonna be force to coexist. These creatures were here before us. And if we're not careful, they're gonna be here after. We're gonna have to adjust to new threat that we can't imagine. We've entered a new era. Welcome to Jurassic World.