FindKey

FindKeyは、100万件を超える映画・ドラマ作品、そして数百万人の人物データと独自の16類型CTI診断を統合した、日本初の感情特化型映画レコメンドエンジンです。

Find (見つける) + Key (鍵・正解)

映画に限らず、人生のヒントを見つける場所です。

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ロスト・ワールド/ジュラシック・パーク
ロスト・ワールド/ジュラシック・パーク

ロスト・ワールド/ジュラシック・パーク

“そして 何かが生き残った...”

19972h 9m★ 6.6アドベンチャーアクションサイエンスフィクション

あらすじ

コスタリカの沖合いに浮かぶ離れ小島、ロス・シンコ・ムエルタス。そこは“サイトB”と呼ばれる、<ジュラシック・パーク計画>において恐竜をクローン生産させるための拠点だった。ところがハモンドの会社は倒産寸前で、この危機を救おうと甥のルドローは恐竜を生け捕り、見せ物にする計画を発表する。マルカムはハモンドに探検隊のリーダーを依頼されたが、一度は断った。だが恋人の恐竜学者サラがすでに出発したことを知り、慌てて彼も“サイトB”へ向かうのだが…。

原作との違い・作品考察

本作は前作を超え、制御不能な自然の荒々しさと人間の傲慢さを冷徹に描いています。マルコムの皮肉な視点は、科学が倫理を置き去りにした代償を鋭く突きつけます。親子の情愛すら凶器に変わる恐竜の猛威は、映像美を超えた生命の根源的な恐怖を私たちに植え付けます。 原作が緻密な科学的崩壊を綴る一方、映画はスピルバーグ流のダイナミズムを追求。サンディエゴ上陸という大胆な改変は、文明が野性に侵食されるカタルシスを生み、映像ならではの圧倒的臨場感へと昇華させました。静寂と咆哮が織りなす極限の没入体験は、今なお色褪せない魅力に溢れています。

興行成績

製作費: $73,000,000 (110億円)

興行収入: $618,638,999 (928億円)

推定収支: $545,638,999 (818億円)

※製作費・興行収入はTMDBのデータを参照しています。収支は(興行収入 - 製作費)で算出したFindKey独自の推定値であり、広告宣伝費や諸経費は含まれません (1ドル=150円換算)。

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キャスト

ジェフ・ゴールドブラム
ジェフ・ゴールドブラム
Ian Malcolm
ジュリアン・ムーア
ジュリアン・ムーア
Sarah Harding
ピート・ポスルスウェイト
ピート・ポスルスウェイト
Roland Tembo
Arliss Howard
Arliss Howard
Peter Ludlow
Richard Attenborough
Richard Attenborough
John Hammond
ヴィンス・ヴォーン
ヴィンス・ヴォーン
Nick Van Owen
Vanessa Lee Chester
Vanessa Lee Chester
Kelly Curtis
ピーター・ストーメア
ピーター・ストーメア
Dieter Stark
Harvey Jason
Harvey Jason
Ajay Sidhu
Richard Schiff
Richard Schiff
Eddie Carr

スタッフ・制作会社

監督: スティーヴン・スピルバーグ

脚本: デヴィッド・コープ / マイケル・クライトン

音楽: ジョン・ウィリアムズ

制作: Colin Wilson / Gerald R. Molen / キャスリーン・ケネディ

撮影監督: ヤヌス・カミンスキー

制作会社: Universal Pictures / Amblin Entertainment

TMDB ユーザーのレビュー

Gimly
Gimly
★ 4

If you loved the charismatic Doctor Ian Malcolm of the first film, then get ready for him to take centre stage, and immediately have every interesting character trait stripped away! Did the original have you believing dinosaurs walked the Earth with its seamless blend of practical effects and groundbreaking CGI? Too bad! That's gone too! Sense of wonder? Poof! Marvel as each and every actor phones it in over an absurdly bloated runtime in: _Jurassic Park II_! I mean, _Jurassic Park II: The Lost World_... I mean, _The Lost World_! I mean, _The Lost World: Jurassic Park_ for some damn reason. _Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product._

John Chard
John Chard
★ 7

Actually where you're going is the only place in the world where the geese chase you! The Lost World: Jurassic Park is directed by Steven Spielberg and adapted to screenplay by David Koepp from the novel written by Michael Crichton. It stars Jeff Goldblum, Julianne Moore, Pete Postlethwaite, Vince Vaughn, Richard Schiff, Peter Stormare, Vanessa Lee Chester, Arliss Howard and Harvey Jason. Music is scored by John Williams and cinematography by Janusz Kamiński. Four years on from the horrors of Jurassic Park on Isla Nublar, it transpires that there is a second dinosaur site on Isla Sornar. Dr. Ian Malcolm (Goldblum) is forced to head off to face the horrors once again when he learns that his paleontologist girlfriend, Sara Harding (Moore), is already on the island as a forerunner to a team John Hammond (Richard Attenborough) is assembling to document the dinosaurs in their habitat. Once there, though, the problems soon arise, especially when a team from InGen arrive with other ideas about the dinosaurs on their minds. Given the massive success of Jurassic Park in 1993, a sequel was inevitable. What transpires is pretty much more of the same, it's very safe film making by Spielberg. Coming off of the emotional exertions of his last film, Schindler's List, few can deny that the director was entitled to wind down with The Lost World project, there was after all nothing safe about Schindler's, but although Jurassic 2 is a hugely enjoyable family blockbuster, a jazzy bit of hi-tech fun, it lacks the requisite brains to make it an inspiring sequel. Formula follows the same path, humans in peril on the island, with some added and new dinosaurs (double T-Rex a bonus), and then the "twist" in the narrative sees some monster peril come to San Diego, King Kong style, for the finale. There's inter fighting between the good dudes led by Malcolm and the bad guys led by the weasel Peter Ludlow (Howard) who is Hammond's conniving nephew and current head of InGen. Family issues also feature, of course since this is Spielberg after all, while the dangers of tampering with science message remains as strong as ever. Cast are ably led by a witty Goldblum, who is a reassuring presence carried over from the first film, and the tech-credits are as expected, very high. Some scenes soar, such as a sequence shot from under a pane of glass that starts to crack under the weight of a character, others not so, such as having Malcolm's teenage daughter turn into Nadia Comăneci for one credulity stretching scene. But all told it's an honest blockbuster purely aimed at the target audience who helped to see it make over $600 million in profit. Safe often pays you see, and as sequels go it's one of the better ones in the 90s. It's exciting if intellectually stunted. 7/10

Manuel São Bento
Manuel São Bento
★ 6

MORE REVIEWS @ https://www.msbreviews.com/ The Lost World definitely didn't deserve its originally bad reception. Sure, it's far from the incredible 1993's Jurassic Park. Less interesting character arcs and overall (silly) story. However, it remains fun enough with equally memorable dinosaur sequences. Goldblum rocks. Rating: B-

Peter McGinn
Peter McGinn
★ 7

I feel I should point out that my overall positive review is based on entertainment value and not at all on scientific accuracy and the like. This sequel mirrors a few of the winning elements from the successful first movie: they retain Ian Malcolm, who is one of the highlights of the first film; they bring in a child, because it is much more dramatic to endanger children; they have at least one bad guy who we root for to become Dino-dinner; and there are plenty of action sequences with heart-stopping chases and hair-raising escapes. Several of the great one-liners are again given to Ian. My favorite line for all the Jurassic movies occurs early on. After they watch the cute Triceratops herd pass closely by them, Ian says, “Well yeah, ooh and ahh; that’s how it always starts, but then later there is running and then screaming.” And four years after the first movie, they have learned one thing from other action films: increasing the body count. Why kill of a handful of people when you can easily send a large team in to capture the dinosaurs and start picking them off one at a time? They even have a T-Rex wandering the streets of San Diego like King Kong at the end. So it sticks to the formula with a few variances and is entertaining.

Andre Gonzales
Andre Gonzales
★ 5

Now they are trying to recover from the devastation that happened from the 1st one. This movie is pretty boring and not much happens.

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