The Jurassic World Dominion trailer promises to answer a question Alan Grant posed in the first Jurassic Park movie. The main theme of the Jurassic Park franchise has always centered on the human obsession to toy with nature. Regardless of how perfect scientific advancements can become, their quality can't guarantee an appropriate usage by human beings. InGen's experiments epitomize this problem, as in every Jurassic Park installment, including the animated TV show Camp Cretaceous, the human characters are the ones who suffer the disastrous consequences of genetic meddling. Dr. Alan Grant knew this from the very beginning.
Despite the tragic precedent of the original Jurassic Park, human beings continued to want bigger and tougher dinosaurs. By the events of Jurassic World Dominion, dinosaurs not only proved themselves to be more than a theme park attraction but also a threat to all humankind. With the animals free to roam the Earth, there will be a need to fight for superiority. This climactic confrontation will be a bookend to an ominous warning stated in the original Jurassic Park.
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Before things went south in the first Jurassic Park, the well-meaning John Hammond relied on Alan Grant's relevant expertise to alleviate everyone's fears about the dangers of the park. Instead of sugarcoating the situation, Grant illustrated what everyone had in mind: «Dinosaurs and man, two species separated by 65 million years of evolution have just been suddenly thrown back into the mix together. How can we possibly have the slightest idea what to expect?» Indeed, the first Jurassic Park disaster was a small taste of how utterly doomed humans are when
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