14 JUNE 22�29, 2022 NOW PLAYING NEW RELEASES IN THE WORLD OF MOVIES ‘Jurassic World Dominion’ gets a jolt from original stars By Chris Hewitt Star Tribune What is Albert Einstein’s defi - nition of insanity? Letting the di- nosaurs out of their cages, over and over, and expecting them not to slaughter all of humanity this time? That happens — again — in “Jurassic World Dominion,” which takes an hour to get going but becomes satisfying, largely thanks to old cinematic friends who haven’t united since the original “Jurassic Park” in 1993. Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum and Sam Neill all return in “Domin- ion,” and they are the best thing about it. In the fi rst hour, those OGs keep us interested in a movie that seems unsure what we want from the sixth in the series (hint: It’s dinosaurs). The world has become so used to dinos that some are being domesticated, even weaponized. After reintroducing us to Bryce Dallas Howard and Chris Pratt, who starred in fi lms No. 4 and 5 — and now live in a Utah cabin that looks like a box From left: Dr. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum), Dr. Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Dr. Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern), Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), Owen Grady (Chris Pratt), Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon) and Kayla Watts (DeWanda Wise) in “Jurassic World Dominion,” co-written and directed by Colin Trevorrow. John Wilson/ Universal Pictures of human meat to their dino- neighbors — “Jurassic” takes an extraneous detour into 007-style international intrigue, with scenes set in Malta, Italy and elsewhere. It’s OK (there’s a spectacular motorcycle chase) but the fi lm seems to have forgotten the fi rst word of its title. Dern, Goldblum and Neill never do. Dern and Neill’s scientists, of- fi cially the slowest-burning will- they-or-won’t-they? in cinematic history, have stumbled onto a corrupt company called Biosyn that is using dinosaurs to take over the world food supply and perhaps something even more nefarious. So they journey to corporate headquarters to meet their frenemy Goldblum, who helps turn the tables on Biosyn’s evil leader, played by Campbell Scott. (Like Mark Rylance in “Don’t Look Up,” Scott seems to be doing a white-haired riff on Apple’s seemingly mild Tim Cook). The appeal of the fi rst and still THE JOSEPHY CENTER JOSEPHY.ORG best “Jurassic” was its simplic- ity: “Dinosaurs! Cool! Uh-oh!” Director Colin Trevorrow gums up “Dominion” with too many complications — including an amusing performance by De- Wanda Wise as a daring pilot but also several people who won’t interest you — and that makes for a choppy fi lm. Just when LO S T I N E , O R E G O N SUMMER HOURS WEDNESDAY - SUNDAY 8 AM TO 8 PM 10 am L - A 8 T pm pm Fri A and E Wed, O N F Thurs, R I D A Sun Y A • N 10 D am S A - T 9 U RD Y Sat 541-569-2285 HOURS: MONDAY-SATURDAY 12-4PM S C R AT C H M A D E BEER PIZZA DENIM AND MORE G L A C I E R C O L D • FA W N F R E S H something gets interesting in the fi rst hour, we’re off to another subplot. The last hour, though, is one dangerous set piece after another, and they all work. The characters, who’ve been on separate missions, fi nally unite to the strains of John Williams’ original “Jurassic Park” theme, and the movie gets down to the business of watching humans we like just barely escape from rapacious dinosaurs. Maybe Trevorrow thought the movie needed new ele- ments because we’ve grown too accustomed to special-eff ects dinosaurs, but don’t worry. The “Jurassic” innovators still have several nasty creatures to creep us out with. They still have the original trio, too. No disrespect to Platt and Howard, who are fi ne, but it feels like the wonder, fear and curi- osity that Dern, Goldblum and Neill brought to “Jurassic Park” comes rushing back here. Each is given a lovely echo of a moment from the fi rst movie, and each brings a quality that enlivens “Dominion”: the amaze- ment of Dern, the decency of Neill and the wit of Goldblum, who is to “Jurassic” movies what Maggie Smith is to the “Down- ton” universe. Every single word he says is hilarious. In the end, “Dominion” suc- ceeds not because of anything fresh but because of its familiar- ity: Kids are saved from peril, bad guys get eaten and it all ends with a helicopter zoom- ing into the distance, unaware of dangers that lurk in the next sequel.