
Preview:
- ‘Bridgerton’s Jonathan Bailey’s in talks for the new ‘Jurassic World’.
- He’d join Scarlett Johansson in the movie.
- ‘The Creator’s Gareth Edwards is directing.
Now that it has a director in place –– ‘Rogue One: A Star Wars Story’/‘The Creator’s Gareth Edwards –– and a star ready to take her chances hanging out with giant reptilian beasties (Scarlett Johansson), the pieces are starting to fall into place for the next iteration of the ‘Jurassic World’ franchise.
Universal, according to Deadline, now has ‘Bridgerton’ and ‘Fellow Travelers’ actor Jonathan Bailey in talks to join Johansson in the movie.
Bailey, of course, is already aboard a big film (or two) that Universal is pinning its hopes on: he’s starring as Fiyero in the two-part adaptation of ‘Wicked’ that will launch this Thanksgiving.
iDV9ECfrlJVXq7MAkRW8k1What’s the story of the new ‘Jurassic World’ movie?

Universal is mostly keeping the details of the new movie trapped behind fences and concrete barriers for now. What can we predict? Big-toothed beasts causing trouble for the humans that foolishly interact with them.
A bigger question, though, is which humans… It’ll reportedly be set in the ‘Jurassic World’ era, but won’t directly connect to the previous three movies, so an appearance from characters such as those films’ Owen Grady (Chris Pratt) or Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howards) appears unlikely for now –– though we won’t rule anything out at this point.
From the sounds of it, this new movie would take the franchise in a fresh new direction, so we’re also not predicting (for now) the return of ‘Jurassic Park’ trio Alan Grant (Sam Neill), Ellie Sattler (Laura Dern) and Jeff Goldblum’s chaotician Malcolm.
Who else might be in the new ‘Jurassic World’ movie?

While Johansson is locked in and Bailey appears close to a deal, there are other actors whose names have been floated as potentials. Scooper Daniel Richtman has pointed to Dev Patel possibly taking on a role (his directorial debut, ‘Monkey Man’, produced by Jordan Peele, was picked up for distribution and released by Universal a couple of weeks ago).
And Richtman has also mentioned that Colman Domingo, of ‘Rustin’, ‘The Color Purple’ and –– the Universal connection –– ‘Drive-Away Dolls’, is being talked about as the movie’s villain. The human one, of course.
It remains to be seen if either of them graduates from the world of rumors to reality.
Related Article: New ‘Jurassic World’ Movie: Scarlett Johansson in Talks for Lead Role
Who is making the new ‘Jurassic World’ movie?

David Koepp, who wrote both the 1993 classic ‘Jurassic Park’ (directed by Steven Spielberg) and its 1997 sequel, ‘The Lost World: Jurassic Park’ (also directed by Spielberg, to less critical praise, but still healthy box office), crafted the new movie’s screenplay.
Longtime producer Frank Marshall, who worked on all three of the ‘Jurassic World’ movies is on board this one also, and the studio seems bullish about the progress so far. And of course, Spielberg will weigh in since he helped birth the franchise.
When will the new ‘Jurassic World’ movie be in theaters?
The dinosaurs should be roaring onto screens on July 2nd, 2025, release slot.

Other Movies in the ‘Jurassic Park’ Franchise:
- ‘Jurassic Park‘ (1993)
- ‘The Lost World: Jurassic Park‘ (1997)
- ‘Jurassic Park III‘ (2001)
- ‘Jurassic World‘ (2015)
- ‘Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom‘ (2018)
- ‘Jurassic World Dominion‘ (2022)











































“It wasn’t as good as the first one. But it was very successful.”
1.
2. Even so, Spielberg and “Jurassic Park” screenwriter
3. The little girl attacked by tiny dinosaurs in the opening scene (above) is played by
4. Early in the film, while Goldblum rides the subway,
5. Koepp got the names for characters Roland (
6. Vaughn was all but unknown when Spielberg cast him. The director had first noticed him while watching a pre-release edit of “
7. While many shots in the film make use of advances in CGI that had occurred in the four years since “Jurassic Park,” close-up shots of menacing carnivores were accomplished as before, with animatronic creatures built by monster-effects wizard
8. The two T-Rex parents he built were so massive (19,000 pounds each — and they were just head-and-torso) that they couldn’t leave the soundstage, and sets had to be built around them. They were mounted on carts that ran on fixed tracks.
9. The crew had the most fun staging the T-Rex tracks’ attack on the trailer, creature designer Shane Mahan recalled.
10. The cliff over which the damaged trailer dangles was built out of a parking garage on the Universal Studios lot.
11. Most of the outdoor footage was shot in the redwood forests of Northern California. Yeah, in real life, there are no redwood forests in Costa Rica, but the ancient, enormous trees gave the scenes the prehistoric look that Spielberg wanted.
12. The sequence where velociraptors attack in the tall grass had to be planned a year in advance, in order for the seed sown by the production crew to grow tall enough. The crew planted eight full acres, in case scenes required multiple takes, since the grass, once trampled, wouldn’t spring back up.
13. The screenplay’s original ending had the humans fleeing the island in helicopters while being attacked by pteranodons, but the flying lizards wouldn’t get their due on screen until “
14. The idea of ending the movie with a T-Rex attacking San Diego came from Conan Doyle’s novel, whose finale brought a pterodactyl to London, and from Spielberg’s delight at the idea of making his own little “
15. How did the crew of the ship get eaten if the T-Rex was still locked in the cargo hold? Apparently, there was supposed to be a scene showing raptors aboard the ship, but it was never filmed.
16. The “Godzilla” gag isn’t at all subtle, except for the fact that one of the fleeing Japanese businessmen is saying, in Japanese, “I moved from Tokyo to get away from all this!” At least the filmmakers dropped their early idea of printing out that punchline in subtitles.
17. Koepp (above) has a cameo as “Unlucky Bastard,” who is eaten by the runaway T-Rex during the San Diego sequence.
18. We still get a kick out of those blink-and-you’ll-miss-’em posters for imaginary movies in the San Diego video store:
19. The budget of “Lost World” was reportedly $73 million, just $8 million more than “Jurassic Park” had cost in 1993.
20. “Lost World”
21. It’s no wonder Spielberg followed “Lost World” with dialogue-heavy dramas “
Don’t hold on to your butts — go ahead and park them in theaters for “