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Jursky svet: Zanik rise DVD / Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (Versión checa)
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DVD
"Vuelva a intentarlo" | — | — |
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| 19,99 € | — |
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Descripción del producto
Versión checa PAL Region 2 DVD - Compruebe la compatibilidad de su reproductor de DVD. Audio: Czech: DD 5.1, English: DD 5.1, Hungarian: DD 5.1. Subtitular: Czech, Bulgarian, Croatian, Hungarian, English for the deaf, Romanian, Slovenian. Actor: Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Jeff Goldblum, Ted Levine, Toby Jones, James Cromwell, BD Wong, Rafe Spall, Daniella Pineda, Geraldine Chaplin, Peter Jason, Justice Smith, Isabella Sermon, Michael Papajohn, Robert Emms, Kamil Lemieszewski, Charlie Rawes, Cory Peterson, Ronan Summers, Eric Kofi Abrefa, Kevin Layne. Director: Juan Antonio Bayona. USA, Spain, 2018.
Detalles del producto
- Referencia del fabricante : U00102
- Formato multimedia : PAL
- Tiempo de ejecución : 124 minutos
- Subtítulos: : Inglés, Checo, Húngaro
- ASIN : B08KRQ8K8Q
- Opiniones de los clientes:
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It's three years since the events of that film. Owen and Claire haven't exactly lived happily ever after. But are reunited when the volcano on the island where the park was becomes active. And it's a race to save the dinosaurs.
But then they find there's more to the expedition than meets the eye...
Like the previous film, this does exactly what you would expect, with lots of dinosaur set pieces and humans in peril as a result. But it also does, to it's credit, try to do things a little differently. Which is why the plot does take the story to places the franchise has never been before. It is written as the middle of a trilogy, and like many of those that I've read in book form, it does move things along and set things up for a third and final one.
It is a thoroughly watchable and likeable blockbuster bit of escapism. Like the first film, it doesn't ever try or promise to be anything more than that. But whilst it is as watchable a bit of escapism as that was, it just doesn't quite have the freshness that that did. Thus it's a four rather than five star release.
Jeff Goldblum does reprise his role from the original Jurassic Park. For only a couple of minutes of screentime.
Do be aware that although the film does contain dinosaurs, some bits might be too scary for the very young, and they might be a bit too young to follow the plot as well. In which case, there's no point In letting them watch it, is there? Yes, lady who was behind me in the cinema, I am talking about you...
The disc has the following language and subtitle options:
Languages: English,. English audio description.
Subtitles: English. Arabic.
The disc begins with several trailers, which can be skipped via the next button on the dvd remote.
It contains the usual flyer with code for downloading a copy of the film from a website onto a digital device.
And dvd owners actually do quite well with this for once when it comes to extras:
There are ten different featurettes. None run more than five mins, and you can't select play all for them so have to watch them one at a time. They all look at different aspects of the production, and despite being short are all pretty good. It helps to have Chris Pratt at the front of most as he is an affable presenter.
Same goes for the other extra section, Chris Pratt's Jurassic Journals. These are twelve short films, all no longer than a minute, in which he interviews various production staff and in two of them, actors. All are short and fun watches, and you will learn a lot about various roles on a movie set from this. These can be watched individually, or via a play all option.


‘FK’ is a box-ticker, fair enough: Dull action-man lead; dragon-breath hot leading lady; wise-cracking support you find initially annoying but grow to like (from “Am I dead?” onwards); mean mega-millionaire exploit-nature-for-their-own-end types . .
Ho, again and again, hum.
A volcano is killing all the dinosaurs so a corrupt private sec engages a team of callous mercenaries to rescue them - not for their good, you understand - but so he can auction them off to big-suited, big-walleted arms-dealing cronies.
Whoever’s getting huge wads for writing this bonkers-ness deserve multiple hats taking off to them. It all sounds plausible . .
Maybe not. As the whole jolly pantomime indulges itself an insane climax at a California castle (child peril shoed in - tick another box), ‘FK’ turns just plain silly. The rooftop stuff reminded me of ‘Q’.
And predictable - Soon as you see the snarling, slavering Indorapter, you just know poor old Blue is gonna end up fighting it.
Stars for 40’s-chassied Bryce Dallas Howard, who’s dazzlingly watchable rump is the best thing in the film. Raptor-wrinkly Geraldine Chaplin a joy in a non-role created purely to advance clues to the little girl’s amazing origins. Toby Jones is wryly entertaining as the droll dino-auctioneer. B D Wong as Dr Wu is an always welcome recurring player, flitting as he does between serious genealogist and venal mad scientist.
The little girl, Isabella Sermon, looks like the star child at the end of ‘2001’.
Effects are sensational, but watch ‘FK’ next to ‘One Million Years BC’ or even ‘Gwangi’ and see it utterly consumed.


It’s all the fault of these greedy billionaire owners. But there is military involvement as well as the armed forces thought it a great idea to turn velociraptors into combat machines... yes this is beyond my comprehension. But then you wonder why those small velociraptors and not the T-rexes? On top of all this, clearly none of these people have taken notice of Murphy’s law because it’s begging for disaster. I could see from the first few minutes that dino excrement would hit the fan big time.
But it gets even more disturbing: two children are sent to this park to get some distraction while their parents are handling a divorce ... who would do that?!
I think I’m not spoiling too much by disclosing that there is some fiction in this movie. However there are much deeper and more subtle themes in here as well: it is about how mankind’s greed and ambition turns into disaster, as it always does. And it mocks society’s tendency to always demand more for mere entertainment: “people want bigger jaws and bigger teeth”. And its about how authority ignoring the opinions of experts accelerates disaster. These things happen every day! I wish people would wake up. It also cunningly exposes the arrogance of science; not everything that can be achieved should be done!. There are many lessons here.
So this movie, albeit gruesome stayed with me for days. It's a classic and a real eye-opener that surpasses the original on many counts.


Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 27 de marzo de 2019
It’s all the fault of these greedy billionaire owners. But there is military involvement as well as the armed forces thought it a great idea to turn velociraptors into combat machines... yes this is beyond my comprehension. But then you wonder why those small velociraptors and not the T-rexes? On top of all this, clearly none of these people have taken notice of Murphy’s law because it’s begging for disaster. I could see from the first few minutes that dino excrement would hit the fan big time.
But it gets even more disturbing: two children are sent to this park to get some distraction while their parents are handling a divorce ... who would do that?!
I think I’m not spoiling too much by disclosing that there is some fiction in this movie. However there are much deeper and more subtle themes in here as well: it is about how mankind’s greed and ambition turns into disaster, as it always does. And it mocks society’s tendency to always demand more for mere entertainment: “people want bigger jaws and bigger teeth”. And its about how authority ignoring the opinions of experts accelerates disaster. These things happen every day! I wish people would wake up. It also cunningly exposes the arrogance of science; not everything that can be achieved should be done!. There are many lessons here.
So this movie, albeit gruesome stayed with me for days. It's a classic and a real eye-opener that surpasses the original on many counts.


