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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<text id=93TT1865>
<title>
June 14, 1993: Jaws II
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Jun. 14, 1993 The Pill That Changes Everything
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CINEMA, Page 69
JAWS II
</hdr>
<body>
<p>In Jurassic Park, Steven Spielberg has a monster movie with
a lot of bite
</p>
<p>By RICHARD CORLISS--With reporting by David S. Jackson/San Francisco
</p>
<p> John Hammond is a man in love with an idea. Inspired by motives
of applied science and pure profit, he has pursued a scheme
to clone dinosaurs from their preserved dna and show off the
brand-new behemoths on an island preserve. He has imperiled
some noted scientists, and even his two young grandchildren,
by inviting them to inspect the park before it is ready. Dino
disaster awaits.
</p>
<p> Hammond might be an ogre, twisting genetic research into capitalist
exploitation, creating the ultimate carnival sideshow, where
the freaks eat the gawkers. That is pretty much how Michael
Crichton sketched the old man in the novel Jurassic Park. But
the Hammond played by Richard Attenborough in Steven Spielberg's
movie version is another fellow altogether; the director calls
him "a cross between Walt Disney and Ross Perot." Hammond is
certainly a visionary, a fabulous showman, an enthusiast, an
emperor of ice cream, a kid with a great new toy. "Top of the
line!" he chirps. "Spared no expense!" Why, he might be Spielberg
as a foxy grandpa.
</p>
<p> Top of the line? Jurassic Park, like every other Spielberg movie,
is couture for the masses: a cunning design, elegantly tailored.
Spared no expense? Just ask the picture's sponsor, Universal,
which has not had a $100 million winner at the domestic box
office since 1989 (with the Spielberg-produced Back to the Future
Part II) and urgently needs a megahit. Hence the marketing tie-in
with McDonald's, the imminent Jurassic Park ride at Universal's
theme parks, and the saturation of action figures, jammies and
cologne. The director did cut costs with a decent, modest cast
of nonstars, and he tried shooting every dialogue scene in no
more than five takes. But the expert exertions of the 483 other
artists and technicians listed in the credits ensured that Jurassic
Park would cost about $65 million, or $1 for every year since
dinosaurs became extinct.
</p>
<p> But enough money talk. This is a monster movie. So how are they?
</p>
<p> Amazing. Dinosaurs live. You are there, once upon a time, before
mammal walked or man dreamed. You can pet a triceratops and,
if you wish, examine its droppings. You can feed a vegetarian
brachiosaur, whose movements are graceful, endearing. At times
the beasts (animated, mostly, by the computer sorcerers from
Industrial Light & Magic) move in a hazier space than the humans
in the foreground, but in the intimate scenes the dinos are
utterly convincing. Spielberg loves to mix wonder with horror,
and he has fun creating a living Museum of Natural Fantasy.
</p>
<p> Then he scares you witless. Here come a nosy tyrannosaur and
a fan-faced, bilious dilophosaur. Nastiest of all are the velociraptors,
smart, relentless punks in packs--Saurz N the Hood. They have
a special appetite for kids, just like the great white shark
in the movie that made Spielberg's rep. Now it has some worthy
successors: primeval creatures with personality and a lot of
bite. Jurassic Park is the true Jaws II.
</p>
<p> Like the films to which it pays elaborate homage--Gertie the
Dinosaur, King Kong (and its Universal theme-park spin-off,
Kongfrontation), The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Godzilla, Bringing
Up Baby--this one sometimes creaks when it's not playing with
the beasties. For the first half-hour--the pre show before
the thrill ride--you are advised to bide your time. Screenwriter
David Koepp's subplot, in which a paleontologist (Sam Neill)
is force-fed lessons in fatherhood by his paleobotanist girlfriend
(Laura Dern), is laid on with a trowel. And the plot occasionally
beggars belief. If you were up a huge tree and a van were teetering
on the branch above you, would you race down the side of the
tree just ahead of the plummeting vehicle, or would you move
sensibly to the other side of the tree? But that is just another
horror-movie tradition Spielberg observes: smart people doing
really dumb things.
</p>
<p> So what? This is at heart a picture about animals doing really
smart things. The dilophosaur can inspire dread just by staring
at its prey; the raptors by breathing on a window or opening
a door. The T. rex goes for broader gestures: tipping over that
rickety van, gobbling half of a lawyer, and shaking the other
half like a cat with a mouse between its teeth. (And if you
miss the book's creepiest scene, where the T. rex curls its
tongue around a child hiding inside a waterfall, it's not here
because, Spielberg says, "the tongue we made just wasn't convincing.
It looked like Dino from The Flintstones.")
</p>
<p> Most of the movie eschews overt violence for its much more satisfying
alternative--the threat of violence. The guts and gore are
seen mostly in the viewer's lurid imagination. That is why Jurassic
Park slips so neatly into its PG-13 rating. "I do think this
movie is inappropriate for children under 13," Spielberg says.
"In general, though, I think children are more traumatized by
violence that can be re-created in a natural setting: a movie
about child abuse or a movie about murder. This is a movie that
not only can't happen, but can't even be emulated. Even if audiences
buy into the notion that dinosaurs are back, they still have
the reassurance that they won't be attacked by a tyrannosaur
on the way home. I guarantee that won't happen."
</p>
<p> Ever since the director hit it big with Jaws, people have been
telling him to grow up. They want him to tackle more personal
themes, to address adult subject matter, to please stop making
Steven Spielberg movies. Perhaps Schindler's List, the Nazi-era
drama he has already completed shooting for Christmas release,
will satisfy those who want Spielberg to enter an auteur rehab
clinic.
</p>
<p> But no film could be more personal to him than this one. With
its next-generation effects and its age-old story line, this
is a movie whose subject is its process, a movie about all the
complexities of fabricating entertainment in the microchip age.
It's a movie in love with technology (as Spielberg is), yet
afraid of being carried away by it (as he is). The film even
has a resident conscience, chaos theoretician Ian Malcolm (Jeff
Goldblum), who insists that what God has put asunder, no man
should join together.
</p>
<p> Of course, if Hammond listens to him and shuts down the park,
there's no film. The director of such beautiful dramas as Empire
of the Sun and Always knows Malcolm is right; the director of
E.T. and the Indiana Jones movies knows he must be ignored.
Spielberg needs the dinosaurs to run amuck, as they so handsomely,
plausibly do.
</p>
<p> Yet Malcolm's words are a warning to all directors dazzled by
the great new toys of filmmaking. "Dennis Muren and the ILM
team," Spielberg says, "have perfected the dinosaur. Now what
we need are stories. Without them, technology is an orphan.
Without a good yarn, it's just a bunch of convincing pictures."
</p>
<p> Thanks to Crichton, Spielberg had a good yarn to work with.
Thanks to his effects wizards, the pictures were convincing.
But it was the director who put the drama in every snazzy frame.
For dinosaurs to rule the earth again, the monsters needed majesty
as well as menace. And Spielberg got it all right.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>