‘Jurassic World’ 2 Will Be From Quotes Inspired From ‘Jurassic Park’

Tags
Colin Trevorrow
Jurassic World

Director Colin Trevorrow hints that the Jurassic World 2 will be inspired by the quotes from the original movie Jurassic Park released back in 1993.

Trevorrow said that he and his cowriter Derek Connolly are intensely focussing on a quote from the original version Jurassic Park in making the most awaited sequel Jurassic World 2. The inspirational words are "Dinosaurs and man, separated by 65 million years of evolution, have been thrown back into the mix together. How can we know what to expect?" used by paleontologist Alan Grant played by Sam Neill in the original version, according to IB Times.

The director assured that the new film will be different from the older versions and also noted that audience has granted him the needed permission to take the film to the next level. Trevorrow clarified that it is not the scale he is talking about, using bigger, better or more dinosaurs. On the other hand it is about making a larger story with the given plot and the animals' relationship with people and the dynamic created by bringing those animals back to life, reported Daily News.

Trevorrow noted on the making of Jurassic World 1 with the inspirational quote from Jeff Goldblum's character Ian Malcolm in the Jurassic Park 1. "It's, 'You stood on the shoulders of geniuses to accomplish something as fast as you could, and before you knew what you had, you patented it, you packaged it, slapped it on a plastic lunchbox, and now you want to sell it,'" noted Trevorrow. "That to me is 'Jurassic World.' That's why I had all the product placement, that's what it was," added the director.

In the Jurassic World 1 the park goers finally give up the island for the dinosaurs to inhabit. This being the case it is not clear how those animals will affect humankind in the upcoming flick. However, Trevorrow assures that the upcoming movie wouldn't just be the huge creatures chasing people on the island.

Join the Discussion

Latest News

Real Time Analytics