@sporkbot I haven't actually seen any of the live-action movies, though I heard Bumblebee was pretty good. I kinda want to start watching them given that that was something of a reboot.
Cormac McCarthy’s writing was mean, and despairing, with a pretty withering view of humankind, and the cruel engines that drive it. but he had that faint flicker of belief that it could be different. “He can know his heart, but he don’t want to.” gotta tend that flame folks. RIP.
Jurassic Park premiered thirty years ago today. It's a great example of a movie that's better than the book. Crichton's novel is okay, but has a dourness that gets in the way of all the rad dino action.
Spielberg, though, leans into "fuck yeah dinosaurs," and it's beautiful.
Anyway, Jurassic Park is thirty years old now. It's an amazing piece of cinema! And it's so much better than its source material. I can totally see why the movie lives on, and why the novel hasn't had nearly as much of an afterlife.
I guess that's just the reactionary brain at work. I read almost everything Crichton wrote when I was a teenager, hoping it would make me feel the way Jurassic Park did.
Instead it was just paranoid and sad. It was science fiction, but without wonder and enthusiasm.