I tried a matcha colada recently. It tasted like one would imagine an unfortunate frog would, had it been whizzed up in one of those whizzer things and poured into a glass. It had texture.
What has this got to do with Jurassic Park, you ask? Simple. 1) it’s an analogy I just thought up and 2) it’s about the DNA, specifically the frog DNA which this drink doesn’t have, but the dinosaurs do because their DNA was edited by Doctor Wu in the aforementioned book.
Wow. What a smooth segue.
I’ve read Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton. Boom. Segue.
Let me tell you – if I hadn’t been aware of the movies, I’d have lost my mind over this book. DINOSAUR CLONING? IN THIS ECONOMY? Sign me up. Yes, I accept.
As it is, I’ve watched Lost World and Jurassic World and Jurassic World: Lava Is Hotter Than That, Surely, but I still really enjoyed this book.
I wasn’t expecting so many people to be eaten and expressed this horror to a friend when we met up afterwork. I read the passage outloud where the newborn baby gets eaten by the little dinosaurs (‘THEY REALLY WENT THERE! ISN’T IT AWFUL? LISTEN TO THIS BIT.’) and hindsight is a beautiful thing and really, I don’t think reading it in public was a brilliant idea..
I read it on the train and at home and on a road trip and basically, if this book had a step counter, it would be quite high. But it doesn’t, so it can’t. (Unlike dinosaurs, books don’t have legs. FACTS.) And look, I’ve stared at the front cover far too much and thought WOW THAT’S SO CLEVER IT’S A SKELETON OF A T-REX BUT IT’S ROARING BECAUSE IN THE BOOK THE T-REX ROARS AND IT’S A CALL BACK TO MUSEUM EXHIBITS EXCEPT FOR THE FACT THAT IT’S A REAL DINOSAUR and yes, I am widely known for my intellect and astonishingly creative thinking – why do you ask?
Oh, and there’s these two kids on the island – Lex and Tim – and I kept on reading Tim as Tim Drake aka one of Batman’s Robins which lead to a very disorientating reading, especially when he gets to the computer monitors. Like, Tim, you literally could do this in your sleep. Why is it taking so long to- waiiiitttt.
Lex, boy oh boy, Lex annoyed me.
BUT, I think she’s well-written. She’s just a kid. A kid dragged to partially complete island resort with dinosaurs by her grandfather who is whack-a-doodle-dandy in his thinking. Grandfather Of The Year, I’m calling it now.
Obviously I had to watch the movie. I know! First time watching it? What an uncultured swine! I loved it. I finished it underneath a bridge, on my mobile phone, during a heatwave. (These are factors you do not, in fact, need to know.)
In short, I’d recommend both the movie and the book. I’m also desperately looking forward to watching Jurassic World: Dominion which apparently is terrible and therefore, entirely up my street.
OKAY BUT I REALLY LIKED JURASSIC WORLD: DOMINION
But I also had low expectations, so maybe that was part of it. Still, I don’t think it’s as bad as a lot of people were saying. I mean, it had DINOSAURS IN THE REGULAR WORLD and people had to just deal with it. So I liked that.
I also read the book this year and really liked it! But my goodness was Lex annoying.
THAT IS EXCELLENT NEWS!! I can’t wait to watch it!! Dinosaurs in the regular world? Sign. Me. Up.
(she was *so* annoying, my word!)
Yeah, but didn’t they do this already? Dinosaurs in the real world, I mean?
Yes, I found Jurassic Park, the book, very uncomfortable to read – but that was because people were being eaten. Very well written.
The first film is one of the best blockbusters ever made IMHO.
I watched Jurrasic World 1 and it wasn’t really the same for me. I didn’t really care about the characters as much. When people got eaten they were just some random unfortunates. It had a lot of cool ideas for the park, but not the suspense of the first couple of films.