The Lost World: Jurassic Park review

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Those madcap dinosaurs first. There's no denying that they're incredible in a way never seen before. Well, maybe once. From the chicken-sized toddlers to the lumbering herbivores and pterodactyls on the wing (which disappointingly only appear as cameos right at the end), all are superb in their believability.

That they're integral to their settings is the one truly amazing thing about this film. Monsters crash and lumber through bushes (presumably computer-generated too) in an utterly convincing fashion; a tethered monster swings its head back and sends two rope-holding goons about 30 feet - a seamless blend of live action and CGI. In other sequences, we see the beasts on bouncy, jolty, hand-held film, which looks for all the world like hastily snatched footage of real-life animals on the hoof. It's incredible stuff, to the point that you're hard-pressed to guess which shots are real (ie, animatronic) and which are the result of some super computer's imagination (apart from the baby T-rex, which harks back to an earlier age of dino effects and is obviously made of rubber). So it's an utter shame, then, that The Lost World is such a monotonous, predictable sequel - empty, sterile, unengaging and (the technical triumphs aside) thoroughly pointless. Yes, we do get a bigger T-rex roaring scene, a faster 'raptor shot and even a larger car-getting-dropped-over-a-cliff take, but, unable to regenerate its audience's awe at seeing dinosaurs roam the planet once more, The Lost World's shabby framework sits up and howls at you. Being bored by a slow-moving film is bad enough. Being dulled to death by a $76 million blockbuster that features carnage and bangs every few minutes is unforgivable. But when the only truly exciting scene in the movie involves not the rampant dinos, but a slowly cracking windscreen, then you know something has gone terribly wrong.

Take a mish-mash of yesterday's ideas, throw in some stock cliffhanger sequences and top with a dollop of politically correct eco nonsense. Then sit back and watch everyone else on the planet queue to watch it.

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