What does the perfect movie look like? Here’s your answer.
It’s Debate Week. This article is one of sixteen arguments competing for the prize of being named ‘Best Summer Movie Ever.’ Read the rest throughout the week here.
These days when you think about big summer movies — the kind that plays to air-conditioned theaters packed to the gills with popcorn-snarfing masses trying to escape the heat and the pressures of everyday life — you probably have some superhero in mind. You might even think of that moment when the tension has reached its crescendo, the energy in the crowded theater is magnificent, and the hero lands on one knee, ready to face off with the big bad for all the marbles. It’s the superhero landing, we’ve seen it a million times by now. And I’m not here to tell you that what David Koepp wrote in the Jurassic Park screenplay and what Steven Spielberg directed Laura Dern to do on-set somehow invented the superhero landing. But it is the best one. At that moment, the woman affectionately known as Dino Dern is the fearless, impossibly cool embodiment of what summer movies mean for the masses.
You are undoubtedly aware of what happens next. As two velociraptors close in on the characters we’ve spent an entire movie getting to know and love — through whose eyes we’ve seen the most wondrous spectacle — the co-hero of Jurassic Park, the terrifying, larger than life T-Rex shows up and saves the day all on the account of needing a snack. It is a most-perfect ending to a thrilling ride that, even though it released in 1993, holds up to this day.
The feeling of elation the audience experiences as our dirty, terrified, evolved faves are set free from the nightmare of their visit to Jurassic Park is overwhelming, but also deeply satisfying. But it would be meaningless if it hadn’t been for director Steven Spielberg’s masterful work at the beginning of the film. Before the horror show starts and butts must be held tight, Spielberg spends the first act of the film setting up the mystery of what he’s about to show us. They’ve re-created something on an island off the coast of Costa Rica that is very dangerous. In the carefully executed opening scene, we watch as something in the shadows — something that sounds unlike any kind of animal we’ve ever witnessed — is out moving giant steel cages and eating helpless workers. By the time we meet Alan Grant and Ellie Sattler, a pair of smart, earnest pair of scientists whose only real quirk is that he’s socially awkward around non-adults, we know so much more than they do. Yet it’s through their eyes that we eventually experience the rest of the park. It’s the perfect sort of introduction to something so grand, to do so through the eyes of two characters who are instantly likable and as much along for the ride as the audience. One rocky helicopter ride later and we’re in a Jeep, speeding toward the heart of Isla Nublar. They stop, and we get this perfect cinematic moment:
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