After the success of the first installment of "Jurassic World," its upcoming sequel is reported to be a statement on animal abuse. Colin Trevorrow, director of the first installment, reveals that the movie's giant creatures will be a parable of how animals are being treated today.
In one of Trevorrow's recent interview, the director reveals that the next installment of the "Jurassic Park" movie franchise will be all about the abuse, the lab experimentation, keeping wild animals in the zoo as if in prison, the pets and how military use them as weapons. He explains that "Jurassic World 2" will tackle deeper concepts compared to the first one, which is said to be a "reflection of problems inherent in capitalist society" according to reports.
"The second part will be a very different movie that will explore new paths," And because of this, Trevorrow believes Bayona is the director for it, saying "to have it grow and evolve with his very personal vision." Director J. A. Bayona is a Spanish film director who is known for directing "The Impossible" and "The Orphanage", which was the second highest grossing debut Spanish film in the history. He was even considered to direct "The Twilight Saga: Eclipse" but was not interested.
It can be recalled that the first movie installment has slightly addressed animal abuse issue where Chris Pratt's character discovers the military are planning to weaponize the velociraptors and be used for combat. At the same time, the movie also shows that these dinosaurs, just like any animal, are living creatures and deserves a life of their own.
The first movie installment was a global box office hit with a total earnings of $1.7 billion."Jurassic World 2" is set to be released in summer of 2018 with confirmed actor's Chris Pratt and Bryce Dallas Howard.