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  1. #21
    Quote Originally Posted by Soulwind View Post
    They're animals. They're big and scaly, but they're no harder to kill than an elephant. The only ones that would survive among humans would be the compys, as they seem to reproduce rapidly, they'd be a pest and at worst they would make some birds and insects extinct. Anything larger than that would be dead within the week.
    I think the velociraptors would do pretty good.

  2. #22
    Whats the point of a Jurassic Park tv show/film if nobody can die in it? Especially when it looks like they spent all the CGI budget on the Dinosaurs and so paid a couple interns with experience to make the humans.

  3. #23
    Legendary! Ihavewaffles's Avatar
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    the trailer, lots of dinos



    coming to Netflix September 18th

    oh, that's next friday!

  4. #24
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    well, that was sooner than I expected..


    Season 2 Trailer | JURASSIC WORLD CAMP CRETACEOUS | NETFLIX

    Jurassic World
    Dec 15, 2020



    Adapt. Evolve. Survive. Everything's at stake in all new episodes of Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous, coming to Netflix on January 22nd.

  5. #25
    Legendary! Ihavewaffles's Avatar
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    dino graphics haf improved, Rexxy looks scary


    Sneaking Into the T-Rex Nest | JURASSIC WORLD CAMP CRETACEOUS | NETFLIX

    Jurassic World
    Jan 13, 2021


  6. #26
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    just watched ep2 and that Sammy who wanted to free the predator from its cage, I would have slapped her, how can anyone be so dumb?.."but they are a family!" yeah, a family that eats humans...

    I am on ep3 and that whole watering hole idea was just dumb, you still need to keep your distance, what kind of dumbass messages does this send? I hope nobody is stupid enough to try this with lions in some reserve in africa after having seen this..or they get taken out by a crocodile

    Kenji with his deadly weapon, the almighty plastic knife xD

    Having seen the rest, this whole woke crusade to "save the dinosaurs" or rather one from each species from getting shot, just went too far, not like they kill each other anyways n die eventually?..they blew their only escape from the island to be "heroes" felt so over the top..

    Dork boy riding bumpy was cool, but that growth rate was too much...I wonder what new dinosaur gets loose at the end, some new hybrid? a new I-Rex? or a huge Spino, it would be about time to re-introduce a spino...although the island will blow up so it'll die anyways eventually..

    How the male hunter died, seriously neither of them being hunters had a knife? How were they going to get all those heads they were going to collect? Chew them off?...


    Show, was alright, entertaining at least. Not better than the 1st season..
    Last edited by Ihavewaffles; 2021-01-23 at 12:40 PM.

  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by Ihavewaffles View Post
    just watched ep2 and that Sammy who wanted to free the predator from its cage, I would have slapped her, how can anyone be so dumb?.."but they are a family!" yeah, a family that eats humans...

    I am on ep3 and that whole watering hole idea was just dumb, you still need to keep your distance, what kind of dumbass messages does this send? I hope nobody is stupid enough to try this with lions in some reserve in africa after having seen this..or they get taken out by a crocodile

    Kenji with his deadly weapon, the almighty plastic knife xD

    Having seen the rest, this whole woke crusade to "save the dinosaurs" or rather one from each species from getting shot, just went too far, not like they kill each other anyways n die eventually?..they blew their only escape from the island to be "heroes" felt so over the top..

    Dork boy riding bumpy was cool, but that growth rate was too much...I wonder what new dinosaur gets loose at the end, some new hybrid? a new I-Rex? or a huge Spino, it would be about time to re-introduce a spino...although the island will blow up so it'll die anyways eventually..

    How the male hunter died, seriously neither of them being hunters had a knife? How were they going to get all those heads they were going to collect? Chew them off?...


    Show, was alright, entertaining at least. Not better than the 1st season..
    Remember, it is a kids show in a fictional world.

    There is a lot that doesn't make much sense if you think about it too hard.
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  8. #28
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    My Thoughts On Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous SEASON 2 - Spoiler Review.

    Klayton Fioriti
    Jan 24, 2021

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fPF64bBegBc

    Season 2 of Netflix's Jurassic World show, Camp Cretaceous has just come out! The kids are stuck in the park and the dinosaurs are everywhere! Bumpy, Rexy, Blue and a whole lot of other animals are taking over and a sinister group of hunters upset a family of Baryonyx. Here are my spoiler filled thoughts on the new episodes! Hope you all enjoy!

  9. #29
    Merely a Setback Kaleredar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lothal View Post
    Did you read the book? That is absolutely something that fits into the universe.
    Having read both multiple times, neither book alludes to human-Dino hybrids.
    “Do not lose time on daily trivialities. Do not dwell on petty detail. For all of these things melt away and drift apart within the obscure traffic of time. Live well and live broadly. You are alive and living now. Now is the envy of all of the dead.” ~ Emily3, World of Tomorrow
    Quote Originally Posted by Wells View Post
    Kaleredar is right...
    Words to live by.

  10. #30
    Merely a Setback Kaleredar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    Aside from the fact that the dinosaurs were already chimeras?
    Yes.

    Because replacing specific genes with frog genes to serve as a plot foil to allow the dinosaurs to breed and thus illustrate the foolishness of man in thinking they can control nature is an actually good narrative twist that serves the ultimate message of the books and first film.

    And human-Dino hybrids is a conceptually dumbfucking stupid idea. That’s some scifi channel original movie nonsense right there.


    I don’t want movies to be bad. I don’t want to get the feeling that the director is saying “people will pay to see this cgi schlock, now sit down and watch it and shut up.” I don’t want movies like that to be made or encouraged.

    There is no universe where “human-Dino hybrids” does not acquiesce into that kind of a movie.
    “Do not lose time on daily trivialities. Do not dwell on petty detail. For all of these things melt away and drift apart within the obscure traffic of time. Live well and live broadly. You are alive and living now. Now is the envy of all of the dead.” ~ Emily3, World of Tomorrow
    Quote Originally Posted by Wells View Post
    Kaleredar is right...
    Words to live by.

  11. #31
    So it's an animated show on Netflix with dino-human hybrids... but it's still too much of a risk to update the dinosaurs to accurately have feathers?

    Have they even started properly calling the "Velociraptor" Deinonychus?
    Quote Originally Posted by Tojara View Post
    Look Batman really isn't an accurate source by any means
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    It is a fact, not just something I made up.

  12. #32
    Merely a Setback Kaleredar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Vegas82 View Post
    Yeah, it’s fucking stupid to be able to cross classes. Wait. They already did. And they’ve been planning on this direction for more than a decade soooooo.... maybe the franchise has jumped the shark for you.
    Seeing as the main premise of the Jurassic Park series is roughly "man and his hubris vs nature," I really don't see how "man and his hubris vs man, but also part dinosaur" fits into that.

    Like I said. I want good movies, not bad ones. Moreover, I want to see dinosaurs in my dinosaur movies, not rejects from the Species storyboards.
    “Do not lose time on daily trivialities. Do not dwell on petty detail. For all of these things melt away and drift apart within the obscure traffic of time. Live well and live broadly. You are alive and living now. Now is the envy of all of the dead.” ~ Emily3, World of Tomorrow
    Quote Originally Posted by Wells View Post
    Kaleredar is right...
    Words to live by.

  13. #33
    Merely a Setback Sunseeker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Kaleredar View Post
    Seeing as the main premise of the Jurassic Park series is roughly "man and his hubris vs nature," I really don't see how "man and his hubris vs man, but also part dinosaur" fits into that.

    Like I said. I want good movies, not bad ones. Moreover, I want to see dinosaurs in my dinosaur movies, not rejects from the Species storyboards.
    Because it fits in perfectly with the rather tried and true concept of genetically-engineered super-humans and the consequences such things have on society? The story is still fundamentally the same: humans are playing with nature in ways they don't fully grasp the consequences of and, SURPRISE! consequences happen.

    Ultimately though, the genetic engineering element of Jurassic Park is one of its biggest flaws. The same end goal "man and his hubris..." could have been accomplished with simple cloning. "Oh we found dino DNA perfectly preserved, lucky us!" and the movies would have played out more or less the same. But the underlying "we found dino DNA, but it was flawed so we discovered how to splice dna" leaves room for all the "hybrid dinos" and ultimately, hybrid humans. Because if we can combine two completely different species (dinosaurs and frogs) and then combine two of the same species (two dinosaurs) and then combine dinosaurs with multiple other species (cuttlefish and whatnot) then humanity experimenting with human DNA is completely believable. In fact Jurassic Park (the in-world amusement park) does the heavy lifting for being a suitable base for humanity to start by being the test-bed for DNA manipulation.

    So yeah, if you're upset about dino-human hybrids being dumb, okay. But unrealistic? Nah, that ball was set rolling in the first movie when they decided to say "We revived dinosaurs because we discovered how to manipulate DNA!" instead of "oh yeah it's just cloning, lucky us."
    Human progress isn't measured by industry. It's measured by the value you place on a life.

    Just, be kind.

  14. #34
    The Unstoppable Force Chickat's Avatar
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    So do people die in this show? If not im not interested.

  15. #35
    Quote Originally Posted by Chickat View Post
    So do people die in this show? If not im not interested.
    Haven't watched it but, I mean.....it's a kids show? I wouldn't expect Airbender level storytelling, and they were conservative about even bad guys dying.

    So no, I wouldn't expect people to die.

  16. #36
    The Unstoppable Force Chickat's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nynax View Post
    Haven't watched it but, I mean.....it's a kids show? I wouldn't expect Airbender level storytelling, and they were conservative about even bad guys dying.

    So no, I wouldn't expect people to die.
    I understand that, I guess im not the target audience. It doesn't make much sense to not have death in a JP show but oh well.

  17. #37
    Merely a Setback Kaleredar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sunseeker View Post
    So yeah, if you're upset about dino-human hybrids being dumb, okay.
    Yeah, that's pretty much it.

    And I'm not upset so much as I'm... disappointed. Disappointed were hundreds of millions of dollars to be pissed away on making something with no spark of being decent. It'd be like saying "Oh hey look, Michael Bay is making another transformers movie! What's the plot? Who cares; shut up and sit down and watch 200 million dollars wasted on drek!" and saying people shouldn't call it out for being stupid because "well it's transformers and it's giant robots fighting; why expect it to be good?"

    As for the "tonality" of it, like I said... the dinosaurs being a narrative for the primeval force of nature that man, in his hubris, foolishly tries to control is a pretty good metaphor and more or less runs throughout all of the Jurassic park films. I don't really buy how people intentionally making human-dinosaur hybrids... for some god-only-knows-why plot reason... fits that narrative, or at least, even attempts to fit that narrative well. Jurassic World was lame, but at least it also started with the premise that corporate greed (the reason the I. Rex was created) drives humanity once more into pushing the boundaries of what they think they can control, and having nature overwhelm them because of it. Again, that idea wasn't executed very well, but at least the bare bones of something, ANYTHING, was there.
    “Do not lose time on daily trivialities. Do not dwell on petty detail. For all of these things melt away and drift apart within the obscure traffic of time. Live well and live broadly. You are alive and living now. Now is the envy of all of the dead.” ~ Emily3, World of Tomorrow
    Quote Originally Posted by Wells View Post
    Kaleredar is right...
    Words to live by.

  18. #38
    Legendary! Ihavewaffles's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mormolyce View Post
    So it's an animated show on Netflix with dino-human hybrids... but it's still too much of a risk to update the dinosaurs to accurately have feathers?

    Have they even started properly calling the "Velociraptor" Deinonychus?
    Uh...there are no dino-human hybrids...that was an idea for 1st jurassic world movie that got scrapped...

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Chickat View Post
    So do people die in this show? If not im not interested.
    T-Rex eats people, at least twice if I recall, other predators eat people too, so yes people die.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Colin Trevorrow Interview: Jurassic World Camp Cretaceous.

    https://screenrant.com/jurassic-worl...row-interview/
    BY JOHN ORQUIOLA 13 HOURS AGO

    The thing I liked most about season two of Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous was the watering hole. I thought it really recaptured the Spielberg-ian magic of the original Jurassic Park. How hands-on are both you and Steven Spielberg in producing Camp Cretaceous?

    Colin Trevorrow: I'll let Steven answer that one for himself - he'll actually just show up at DreamWorks Animation and talk to the writers on his own accord, and I know how much they love it. That much I know, but for most of those occasions, I wasn't there. They got to have their own experience with him, which is pretty cool.

    I was got to be a part of the writer's room. I got to go sit in there for a pretty significant amount of time, and to be able to lay out a set of values that we all shared about the franchise and what was important to us about it, and what elements we felt were a third rail and we don't want to go here. That kind of basic stuff.

    It was just a completely different set of people, and all of them have their own perspective on Jurassic Park, why they love it, and what's important to them about it. I was able to listen to them and build something from the ground up with people who are for the most part younger than me, who had a very different experience with Jurassic World than anyone my age ever could be. We're Jurassic Park people, anyone in their 40s.

    Maybe it's a bit of a tangent, but I too have to put myself into the mindset of a kid who was 7 or 8 and saw Jurassic World first. That was their jam. As we go through this and make a show that might be the first time certain kids are ever exposed to anything Jurassic, we've got to make sure that it has all the things the movie has. That it's emotional, and it has real characters with fears that resonate with us, and it's thrilling and funny. And it's scary; even though it's a kid show, it's gotta be scary.

    Part of the fun of season 1 was how it synced up to Jurassic World, and you got to see the story happen before, during, and after your film. What was important to you about exploring the campers' next story in season 2?

    Colin Trevorrow: I wouldn't call having to be a part of a story that was running concurrently with Jurassic World to be a crutch - but if it was a crutch, it removed that crutch. The training wheels were off. I'm looking for the right metaphor and failing

    But it allowed this show to finally come into its own and be its own thing, and not be in any way related to the events that we saw in the first film. And that was very exciting for me, just because the writers did such an incredible job building characters that we really wanted to follow on an adventure. When you start off this season, suddenly realize these kids are in a really high stakes scenario, and they've lost somebody. This is sad and scary.

    I love those early episodes because it feels a little destitute. It feels really dark at moments. And I think for a lot of kids now, that's gonna resonate. It's a scary time to be a kid.

    Season 2 showed a Jurassic story the movies haven't really dealt with: what the island was like right after the dinosaurs took it over. What excited you about doing that story? What do we have to see that you thought was really important?

    Colin Trevorrow: It was a story that you were able to tell from the animals' perspective, which is something that I really like. It's from the kids' perspective as well, but I feel like we left Jurassic World a Zoo, and we came back to a completely wild environment that had been brought back into the natural world. To be able to show how these creatures, who were used to being fed and used to being cared for and used to having bars and electric fences all around them, are adapting to becoming wild animals again was great.

    I consider them all characters. As you can see in the show, they are recurring characters and you really get to know who are our dinosaurs. Getting to follow that alongside the kids, who are really going through the same thing - they didn't have anyone to care for them anymore, their parents are gone, and they don't have any food - got to be this pretty interesting parallel of humans and dinosaurs having a shared experience.

    Can you say how far ahead Camp Cretaceous is planned out? Because we know from Fallen Kingdom that the volcano's gonna explode in a couple of years. How close will the show push up against that?

    Colin Trevorrow: We do have a story that I think you can see that we're building, and a mystery, and all kinds of larger elements that will take these kids deeper into a journey that pulls further and further away from Jurassic World. But it's also always running parallel to the story that we're telling in the movies.

    That was part of the fun for me: to sit down with everybody and think about the long game. I told them everything that happened, so we were really able to work ways into this story that will feel like a culmination of this show as well. Every piece of the story we've told has value, and I think all of these kids will reveal themselves as the show goes on to really be part of the legacy of Jurassic Park. I think you can see it even more in this season than you could in the last, and I hope that'll continue.

    The show has such a great voice cast; not just the young actors playing the kids, but also some cool adults popping up like Bradley Whitford and Stephanie Beatriz in season 2. Are there plans for legacy characters to pop up in some way, shape, or form?

    Colin Trevorrow: I can't tell you now. I mean, we all know what they're doing during this time. I will probably leave that for you to discover.

    The only thing I'll promise is we're not going to kill the kids in the volcano. I just don't want you thinking that's what my whole master plan is. That would be really upsetting.

    As the master of Jurassic World right now, what is your favorite dinosaur?

    Colin Trevorrow: I would say associate master. Steven Spielberg will always be the master. I'm assistant to the general manager.

    Ankylosaurus is my favorite. It was cool that they made Bumpy an Ankylosaurus. That stemmed from, I think, they asked me that question and that was my answer. The evolution of Bumpy in this season is something that I love. My favorite episode is the one in the middle, with them learning how to survive and Bumpy growing up. Being able to go through that much of an emotional arc with a kid, it really felt like we were moving into territory that I hadn't seen in Jurassic Park before. To be able to do that on the show is what excites me the most. I want us to see new things.

    What about the Jurassic story overall do you find timeless? It translates so well across every medium. What is it that resonates so much about this universe?

    Colin Trevorrow: I think there's two things. One is that when you are born, you're usually alive for about two to three years before you look at a dinosaur and say, "I want to know more about that. I want to know right now, and I want to know as much as you can tell me." It's a really universal experience that crosses cultures, and it's pretty amazing. I don't think we can really explain it; it might be honestly something in our DNA that knows somehow we are connected to these creatures on a deeper level.

    That's why we love dinosaurs. I think the reason why Jurassic Park resonated is that, in a lot of ways, that the core concept of Jurassic Park is the hero's journey. Dinosaurs lived, they walked the earth, they died and they were resurrected. We're watching the hero's journey play out over 65 million years with these creatures that we love. And I think that's a pretty cool story to tell.

    How is post-production on Jurassic World: Dominion going?

    Colin Trevorrow: You know, I'm talking to you from the editing room, which is in a barn next to my house. This is the life we're all living. We are all virtual, so I see my editor all day every day through a system that we're able to edit remotely. I live out in the country, so I can take walks outside, breathe deep and think about the experience we had making it - which was a pretty emotionally rich one, to say the least.

    I'm cutting performances that are just really beautiful and really rich, and we've never been able to delve as deep into characters in a Jurassic movie as we have managed to do in this movie. I credit all the actors for that, and the fact that we were together in a shared space for four months. We all lived together in a hotel for four months of our lives. The process that we went through, and how much we were able to dig into each of these characters, is pretty unique even in movie history. People just don't spend four months living together, on weekends as well. We literally couldn't leave it.

    I think it's resulted in a very special movie, and I can't wait to share it.

  19. #39
    Quote Originally Posted by Ihavewaffles View Post
    Uh...there are no dino-human hybrids...that was an idea for 1st jurassic world movie that got scrapped...
    Oh I misunderstood the discussion then.
    Quote Originally Posted by Tojara View Post
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  20. #40
    Legendary! Ihavewaffles's Avatar
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    it has only been a few months since trailer for season 2 (last december!), and now we have trailer for season 3.
    the 'new' hybrid is called "Scorpius Rex", some speculate its dangerous n also a failure



    A sinister threat emerges on Isla Nublar in an all new season of Jurassic World: Camp Cretaceous. Coming to Netflix on May 21st.

    Minicle - 22 hours ago
    Plot twist. It's actually the raptor that got locked in the freezer.
    Last edited by Ihavewaffles; 2021-04-01 at 06:00 PM.

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