A new image for Jurassic World featuring an Apatasourus, a Triceratops and a Gyrosphere has been discovered in Entertainment Weekly's 2015 summer preview! Once more scans are available, we'll be sure to share them here as well.
Thanks to RTH for the image!
UPDATE April 10th, 2015:
More scans from the Entertainment Weekly preview have been posted online and EW have also posted an online preview on their website! Read on to see it all!
From their website, EW shared a new still, which is just an edited screencap from the Super Bowl trailer. But what's really the draw of the article is their new interview with Jurassic World director Colin Trevorrow, who talks more about the film and what to expect when it hits theaters this June! Read on for exceprts!
Some things never change. In keeping with the previous films,Jurassic World is a tale of humans who get cut (or chomped) down to size when they try to outwit nature in the name of the almighty dollar. “We have seen that we will repeat our mistakes if there’s money on the table,” says director Colin Trevorrow. “It’s not about the danger of playing God. These animals are real, and they’re on our planet.”
To boost attendance at the swank new park, operations manager Claire (Howard) introduces a genetically modified dino into the mix. But of course the big baddie escapes and unleashes a rampage—right when Claire’s young nephews (Ty Simpkins and Nick Robinson) happen to be visiting the island. In one scene that pays homage to the first Jurassic’s iconic T. rex/Ford Explorer sequence, the unlucky lads come close to becoming the beast’s playthings. “There’s a ride at the park that allows you to get into a gyroscopic sphere and be out in the wild with dinosaurs and travel beneath them—and that goes horribly wrong,” says Trevorrow, whose only other feature is 2012’s time-travel indie Safety Not Guaranteed. “Imagine being inside a sphere and then suddenly it breaks and you’re rolling like a cat with a ball of yarn.” Enter Claire, who morphs into an Ellen Ripley-like heroine to protect her nephews. “Becoming a mother myself, I’ve realized being maternal is being wildly badass,” the actress says with a laugh.
Howard and Pratt also got to inject a bit of love/hate, Romancing the Stone-esque electricity into their characters. “They don’t like each other at all, and by the end that’s changed,” Trevorrow says. “We think that [classic conceit] absolutely can apply to a dinosaur movie.”
Be sure to read the whole thing on Entertainment Weekly!
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