Yet these flaws feel minor against the film’s ambition. Fallen Kingdom is the Empire Strikes Back of the Jurassic series: dark, morally complex, and ending on a note of profound uncertainty. It dares to ask: If we can resurrect the dead, should we? And if we do, who are we to then lock them in a cage? Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom is not a perfect film, but it is a brave one. It killed the island. It made the dinosaurs refugees. It gave us a child clone who chooses chaos over extinction. And it set the stage for Dominion , where humans and dinosaurs must coexist—not in harmony, but in an uneasy, bloody cohabitation.
In the end, the film’s true monster is not the Indoraptor. It is the human heart: sentimental enough to clone a daughter, greedy enough to sell a species, and arrogant enough to think we can control any of it. When the Brachiosaurus disappears into the ash, we are not watching a dinosaur die. We are watching an innocence die—the innocence of the first Jurassic Park , where dinosaurs were magic. In Fallen Kingdom , they are ghosts. And ghosts, as the film reminds us, never truly leave. They just find a new house to haunt. jurassic world fallen kingdom
The climax is a three-way confrontation: Owen vs. the Indoraptor, Claire vs. Mills, and the door to the outside world. In the mansion’s rotunda, under a stained-glass skylight, the Indoraptor corners Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon), the film’s secret weapon. Maisie is a clone—Lockwood’s “granddaughter,” created after his daughter died. In a moment of shattering emotional weight, she looks at the dying Indoraptor (shot by Owen with a poison dart, then impaled on a Triceratops skull) and then at a button that would open the mansion’s gates, letting the dinosaurs escape into the California redwoods. Yet these flaws feel minor against the film’s ambition
And Maisie, her voice trembling, says:
A Gothic, heartbreaking, and thrillingly dark chapter that elevates the franchise from summer blockbuster to moral horror. The dinosaurs have never been scarier, and the humans have never been more human. And if we do, who are we to then lock them in a cage
The result is the most Gothic, emotionally complex, and aesthetically bold film in the franchise—a hybrid of disaster film, haunted house thriller, and moral fable about extinction, commodification, and the blurred line between preservation and playing God. The film opens not with fanfare, but with silence. Three years after the Jurassic World incident, Isla Nublar is no longer a wonderland; it is a graveyard. The volcano, Mt. Sibo, has become active, threatening to turn the island into a second Pompeii. In a haunting pre-credits sequence, mercenaries retrieve the bone of the Indominus rex from the lagoon—a scene dripping with dread—only to be stalked by the Mosasaurs . It’s a prologue that establishes Bayona’s signature: long, tension-filled takes and a reverence for primal terror.