Jurassic World: Rebirth opens five years after Dominion, casting Scarlett Johansson as Zora and Mahershala Ali as a mission leader sent to a former dinosaur island to extract DNA from giant creatures in order to develop a heart‑disease treatment. On paper, that sounds fresh, but as critics have noted, this “heist‑style” plot merely rehashes the “humans trapped on dinosaur island” theme with a glossier sheen.
Yes, director Gareth Edwards and former Jurassic Park screenwriter David Koepp returned, and the film is packed with Easter eggs and visual nods to the franchise’s first era. But this feels more like style over substance. Ultimately, it’s derivative and lacks meaningful innovation or emotional weight.
A Franchise Running on Fumes
Numerous reviews describe Rebirth as bland, overfamiliar, and showing franchise fatigue. One critic bluntly wrote, “perhaps it’s time to let this series go extinct” Others agree: the film is fun in fits but never earns its runtime, with weak character arcs and forced emotional beats overshadowing the action.
Even positive reviews concede it’s more a nostalgic remix than something bold. It delivers moderate thrills and slick visual effects—but little else. As one review put it: “offers an updated version of the same basic ride… yet hardly feels essential”
Family Time in the Cinema
When I took my family to watch it this weekend, the kids were moderately engaged, but for the wife and I the popcorn was definitely the highlight. The movie grind, slow setup, stock character moments (like father-daughter bonding with a baby dinosaur), and repeated tropes, made it clear that Rebirth is part of the problem it claims to solve.
In the Valley of the Shadow of Extinction
For me, Rebirth feels like the final gasp of a franchise that peaked decades ago. The repetitive structure, the uninspired characters, and the lack of ambition all point to one conclusion: this series has overstayed its welcome. It’s time for Jurassic World to meet its fate and be left in the fossil record.
Summary Verdict
| Element | GeekHub Opinion |
| Story & originality | Derivative, repetitive, lacking fresh perspective |
| Characters & emotion | Flat, paint‑by‑numbers, emotionally uninvolving |
| Visuals & effects | Polished but hollow—no longer enough to carry the film |
| Entertainment value | Brief thrills, but predictable and tired |
| Franchise future | It’s time to retire the franchise before it evolves into parody |
In short: Jurassic World: Rebirth is visually competent and moderately entertaining on the surface but structurally and emotionally, it’s more of the same tired themes we’ve seen in previous entries. If you’re fed up with endless recycling of ideas, it might be time we let this dinosaur series go extinct.
