When we see Bryce Dallas Howard’s Claire and Maisie (Isabella Sermon) releasing the captive creatures at Lockwood Estate, it’s around 18 enclosures she opens. While in the new Planet of the Apes movies we saw genetically modified simians grow intelligence and learn to organize and then militarize themselves, that’s going to be tougher for the dinos. The ending felt a bit like the rebooted Planet of the Apes franchise, with the juxtaposition of dinosaurs against built up urban areas and man-made structures (think a chimp jumping over cars on the Golden Gate Bridge). Humans and dinos must now either find a way to co-exist, or will end up battling against one another. We are finally welcomed to the real Jurassic World. The end of his presumably closing statements also close out the film by promising that the faux sense of control of Jurassic Park and the “World” that followed has given way to an actual planet in evolutionary chaos and upheaval. Ian Malcolm (Jeff Goldblum) testifying before a congressional comittee on Capitol Hill, arguing that the dinosaurs should be left to die on Isla Nublar. By the close of the movie many of the baddies have been eaten and the surviving dinosaurs have now been released into mainland America.
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