[ad_1]
Jurassic World: Dominion receives an expected PG-13 rating for intense violence, though the MPAA’s wording reads differently this time around.
Jurassic World: Dominion is now rated, and while the film’s content warning doesn’t appear to differ from previous films, there are several small changes worth noting.
The Motion Picture Association of America, as reported by Bloody Disgusting, recently gave Dominion a PG-13 rating for “intense sequences of action, some violence and language.” Each of the franchise’s previous five films received a PG-13 rating for similar reasons, yet Dominion is the first to not have its violence classified as “science-fiction violence,” perhaps suggesting more grounded or realistic violence between humans instead of solely the dinosaurs. What’s more, Dominion is also the first film in the series to have a content warning for “language,” while several previous entries included mild swearing without receiving the same label.
Details are currently sparse on the plot of the upcoming film, though some insight was provided when an extended preview for Dominion surfaced online last month. The preview, which was previously shown before IMAX screenings of F9, shows off several dinosaur species from 65 million years ago before jumping into the present-day to follow a Tyrannosaurus rex rampage through a drive-in movie theater. Keen-eyed viewers will even spot a number of brief nods to the original 1993 Jurassic Park film.
Director Colin Trevorrow commented on the film and its extended preview back in June, expressing what he believes makes Dominion stand out from the franchise’s previous installments. “Ever since I was a kid, I have wanted to see dinosaurs in their natural habitat,” said Trevorrow. “It may have taken a few decades, but with a little help from ILM, Universal and Amblin, it has finally happened. This preview is just a glimpse of the film we’ve made. It’s an epic celebration of everything Steven Spielberg and Michael Crichton created, and I can’t wait to share it with the world next summer.”
Trevorrow elaborated on the process of making the dinosaurs appear as scientifically accurate as possible during an interview in November. “I think we have a really good logical explanation for why these are dinosaurs that look different than the other Jurassic dinosaurs have looked in the past,” the director explained. “There was no frog DNA used to bridge the gaps in the genomes, so it gave us an opportunity to show dinosaurs with feathers.” In fact, Trevorrow mentioned the dinosaurs shown in the preview will be returning in a big way, with the director saying, “several of these are going to play major roles in the film itself.”
Jurassic World: Dominion roams into theaters June 10, 2022.
Source: Bloody Disgusting
About The Author
[ad_2]