The Weekend Warrior: Jurassic World

There’s no question that despite the success of summer releases Avengers: Age of Ultron, Pitch Perfect 2, Mad Max: Fury Road and San Andreas, the box office is still down from last summer, which is why the release of one of the most long-awaited franchise returns is going to do its best to resuscitate things as Jurassic World is thought to be the next big blockbuster of the summer.

Jurassic World

Benefits:

Way back in the early ‘90s, director Steven Spielberg was already a big deal having had huge hits in earlier decades with Jaws and E.T. The Extraterrestrial and he found his next big idea in the bestselling novel by Michael Crichton, Jurassic Park, about a wealthy man who discovers a way of bringing dinosaurs back to life with the idea of creating a theme park where they could be seen. The movie opened with $47 million in June 1993 on its way to $357 million (not adjusted for inflation) making it the third highest-grossing movie behind Star Wars and E.T. Even 22 years later, Jurassic Park is still in the Top 20 highest-grossing movies with the addition $45 million it made from its 20th Anniversary 3D rerelease in 2013.

Four years later, Spielberg directed the sequel The Lost World: Jurassic Park, also based on a Crichton novel, and that opened with $90.2 million over the four-day Memorial Day weekend in 1997, which at the time and for a long time after that, would remain the biggest opening for a movie. (These days, that $72.1 three-day opening of The Lost World isn’t nearly as impressive, but back then it was huge.)

In 2001, Captain America: The First Avenger director Joe Johnson was hired to continue the franchise with Jurassic Park III, which surprisingly, opened much weaker with just $50.7 million and grossing $181 million. That still wasn’t bad for 14 years ago, but it wasn’t anything particularly groundbreaking, which may have been why we didn’t see a fourth installment for so long.

It’s taken a long time for Steven Spielberg to crack a plot for a fourth movie, but he finally figured it out and hired the unknown Colin Trevorrow, whose indie sci-fi film Safety Not Guaranteed received raves at Sundance, to direct. More importantly, they cast the super-hot Chris Pratt, coming off last year’s blockbusters Guardians of the Galaxy and The LEGO Movie, to star, which presumably will get a lot more people interested in the movie, in case the dinosaurs themselves are not enough. Pratt is joined by Bryce Dallas Howard, who previously starred in Spider-Man 3, the failed Terminator Salvation relaunch a few years back, and she also appeared in the last couple installments of “The Twilight Saga,” so she’s fairly well known. The rest of the cast is fairly diverse, including Irffan Khan (who also appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man) and even BD Wong is reprising his role from the original Jurassic Park (but sadly, he’s the only returning cast member.)

The aforementioned 3D rerelease of Jurassic Park helped to get a new, younger audience into the movie, which is a great way to help tease the revival of the franchise, which Universal hopes to join the “Fast and Furious” and “Bourne” as one of their mainstays. (Oddly, no sequel has been announced or dated as of yet although other movies coming out this summer already have sequels in the works.)

One great thing going for Jurassic World is its PG-13 rating, which gives it a far wider range of moviegoers that might want to see it, including younger kids with liberal parents who aren’t worried about giving them nightmares for weeks. (It’s a pretty scary movie, but only parents will know how their kids will react to an Indominus Rex on the rampage and whether they want to spend the next few weeks sharing a bed with scared kids.)

Jurassic World is also the only new movie in wide release this weekend, opening a week after two R-rated films and a horror movie, none of which have as much mainstream appeal as this summer tentpole, which will have far wider appeal to different demographics. That should allow it to dominate as other older returning movies start losing theaters.

While reviews are still under embargo, I think they will generally be good as will the reaction among audiences, so buzz will continue to build leading into the weekend, helping convince the doubters (see below) that Jurassic World is worth seeing.

Drawbacks: 

Though kids, especially younger boys, generally love dinosaurs, parents with kids under 9 or 10 might be wary of bringing them to see the movie because there’s a lot of potential for gory dinosaur violence that might be too intense for them. And with Disney•Pixar’s Inside Out opening next weekend, parents might be fine holding off taking their kids to the movies for one more week.

It has been 14 years since the last installment of the series, which might make one wonder how much the franchise will be relying on adults and parents to introduce their kids to the movies in the time since Jurassic Park 3. The original Jurassic Park is beloved enough that you would think that the prime teen audience will have seen it (even if it was the 3D version for 2013), so this might not be a big problem. George Miller’s Mad Max: Fury Road has generally been doing well despite there not being an installment of that franchise in thirty years.

On the other hand, not everyone is so gung-ho about this relaunch as a lot of the cynical internet geek crowd have been down on this movie from the first trailers that showed the plot involving a genetically-modified dinosaur. There’s also been criticism (again, from the trailers) about the quality and amount of CG even though the technology used to create the dinosaurs is heads and shoulders ahead of where it was 14 years ago. I guess more moviegoers are starting to enjoy the use of practical stunts like in Mad Max: Fury Road, so when you see Chris Pratt riding a motorcycle surrounded by velociraptors, it’s hard not to be cynical.

Although reviews should generally be good, Universal has requested that reviews be held until Wednesday, which is an odd decision since good reviews might help change some of the minds above who are dubious of the relaunch. Strong reviews could make a big difference for the doubters and haters.

Prediction:

With enough interest and demand among all four quadrants of moviegoers—moreso than many other recent movies–the low-end for this one should be around $100 million, although how much more than that it will make will depend on whether word-of-mouth from those early Thursday/Friday screenings carry through the weekend. With Inside Out and Ted 2 opening over the next two weeks, it might be hard to hold on, but there should be enough business now that schools are out to keep it going through July. Expect it to end up with a domestic total of $260 to 270 million or more if it catches on.

Interview with Colin Trevorrow

Jurassic World Review


 This Weekend Last Year

This Week’s Updated Predictions

It’s great to have a weekend where it’s so blatantly obvious what will win the weekend and by a wide margin, and the only real question is not so much whether Jurassic World will hit $100 million in its opening weekend but how much more than that it can make. (Note: There’s a chance that Roadside Attractions’ Brian Wilson film Love & Mercy might break into the bottom of the Top 10 bumping Aloha if it expands into more theaters on Friday.)

UPDATE: Our source for theater counts is still being slow with updating on Thursday nights although we do have a higher theater count for Jurassic World than we originally projected.  A lot of other outlets are predicting an opening in the $125-130 million region and maybe ticket sales warrant it but the reaction to the movie has been more mixed than we previously assume and there could be a certain amount of misreading of the tracking by those getting their hands on it.  I’m thinking it’s probably going to end up with $45 million plus on Friday (including Thursday previews) but will tail off on the weekend since it is summer and most younger people won’t be in school. 

1. Jurassic World (Universal) – $112.8 million N/A (up $5.6 million)

2. Spy (20th Century Fox) – $17.5 million -41%

3. San Andreas (New Line/WB) – $12.3 million -52%

4. Insidious Chapter 3 (Gramercy/Focus Features) – $8.0 million -65%

5. Entourage (New Line/WB) – $4.6 million -55%

6. Pitch Perfect 2 (Universal) – $4.2 million -45%

7. Mad Max: Fury Road (Warner Bros.) – $4.1 million -48%

8. Tomorrowland (Disney) – $3.5 million -50%

9. Avengers: Age of Ultron (Marvel Studios/Disney) – $3.1 million -52%

10. Aloha (Sony) – $1.5 million -55% 

Next Week:

Pixar Animation and Oscar-winning Up director Pete Docter are back with Inside Out (Disney•Pixar), an animated look into the mind of 11-year-old Riley featuring the voices of Amy Poehler, Bill Hader and more, as well as Rick Famuyiwa’s Sundance favorite Dope (Open Road).


 This Week’s Must-Sees

Me and Earl and the Dying Girl Review

Interview with Thomas Mann

Interview with Director Alfonso Gomez-Rejon

The Yes Men Are Revolting (The Orchard)

Director: The Yes Men (Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno), Laura Nix

Stars: Andy Bichlbaum, Mike Bonanno

Genre: Documentary, Politics, Comedy

What It’s About: Andy Bichlbaum and Michael Bonanno, collectively known as “The Yes Men,” continue their activism through elaborate pranks and hoaxes in the interest of getting the word out about global climate change the corporations and governments that exploit or deny the situation. This third documentary, which premiered at last year’s DOC-NYC, looks at their latest endeavors into environment activism while balancing that with their own personal issues.

It opens in New York at the IFC Center on Friday, June 12 (after playing as part of the Human Rights Watch Film Festival) as well as in other cities. You can find out where and when it’s playing on the Official Site.

Video Interview with the Yes Men and Laura Nix 

Live from New York! (Abramorama)

Director: Bao Nguyen

Stars: Will Ferrell, Amy Poehler, Maya Rudolph, Alec Baldwin, Chris Rock, Jimmy Fallon, Chevy Chase, Andy Samberg, Candice Bergen, Tina Fey, Jane Curtin

Genre: Documentary

What It’s About: The opening night film of this year’s Tribeca Film Festival looks at the 40 years of NBC’s popular late night comedy sketch show with interviews with many of the cast members and regular hosts talking about why the show has lasted so long. It opens in New York and other cities on Friday.

Other Limited Releases of Note:

Eli Roth Presents: The Stranger (IFC Midnight)

Director: Guillermo Amoedo

Stars: Ariel Levy, Lorenza Izzo, Aaron Burns, Nicolas Duran

Genre: Suspense Thriller

What It’s About: The latest from Eli Roth’s “Chilewood” program involves a mystery man who shows up at a small Canadian town looking for his wife but once there, he discovers something horrifying that’s threatening the entire community.

Madame Bovary (Alchemy)

Director: Sophia Barthes

Stars: Mia Wasikowska, Ezra Miller, Logan Marshall-Green, Henry Lloyd-Hughes, Laura Carmichaelm, Rhys Ifans, Paul Giamatti

Genre: Drama

What It’s About: An adaptation of Gustave Flaubert’s literary classic starring Mia Wasikowska as the title character of Emma Bovary who marries a small-town doctor in order to get away from her father’s pig farm and experience the world of high society, although she soon gets bored of her husband and life and starts to look for new excitement outside of marriage.

Set Fire to the Stars

Director: Andy Goddard

Stars: Celyn Jones, Elijah Wood, Shirley Henderson, Steven Mackintosh, Kelly Reilly, Andy Goddard

Genre: Drama, Biography

What It’s About: In the 1950s, New York academic John Malcolm Brinnin (Elijah Wood) brings acclaimed Welsh poet Dylan Thomas (Celyn Jones) to America where he deals with alcoholism and other excesses in the Big Apple. Shot in black and white, the film opens in select cities. 

Soaked in Bleach (Leveraging Emerging Pictures)

Director: Benjamin Statler

Stars: Kurt Cobain, Sarah Scott, Daniel Roebuck, Tyler Bryan, August Emerson, Kurt Loder

Genre: Documentary, Drama

What It’s About: Mixing archival footage and dramatizations, this follows private investigator Tom Grant (Daniel Roebuck) who was hired by Courtney Love (Sarah Scott) to find her husband Kurt Cobain (Tyler Bryan) who had gone missing days before his body is found in their Seattle home, reportedly dead from suicide. Through his own investigation, Grant decides that foul play was involved and Statler’s film combines interviews with experts and witnesses with dramatic recreations.

The Wolfpack (Magnolia)

Director: Crystal Moselle

Stars: Bhagavan Angulo, Govinda Angulo, Narayana Angulo, Mukunda Angulo, Krisna Angulo, Jagadesh Angulo, Visnu Angulo, Susanne Angulo, Oscar Angulo

Genre: Documentary

What It’s About: For their entire lives, the Angulo brothers have been locked up in their Lower East Side New York apartment by their domineering father, watching movies and trying to recreate them using homemade props and costumes, but when one of the brothers goes out into the world, they discover that there’s more out there than just what they experience in movies. 

Vendetta (Lionsgate/WWE Studios)

Director: Jen and Sylvia Soska

Stars: Dean Cain, Paul “Big Show” Wight, Michael Eklund, Benjamin Hollingsworth, Adrian Holmes, Matthew MacCaull, Kyra Zagorsky

Genre: Action, Thriller

What It’s About: Detective Mason Danvers (Dean Cain) had just caught and jailed the deadly Abbott brothers but when Victor Abbott (WWE’s “The Big Show”) escapes and kills Danvers’ wife, he’ll do anything he can to get revenge including getting arrested so that he’ll be thrown into jail with Victor. (And yes, if that sounds like the stupidest way to try and get justice, then you would be absolutely correct.) 

You can post any comments or questions below, or you can get in touch with the Weekend Warrior on Twitter.

Copyright 2015 Edward Douglas

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