Jurassic World Dominion Quiz – Which Character Are You?

By:

Take this Jurassic World Dominion Quiz to find out which character you are. We update the quiz regularly and it’s the most accurate among the other quizzes.

When “Jurassic Park” was released twenty-nine years ago, computer-generated and digitally composited effects were still relatively new, but director Steven Spielberg’s team elevated them to a new level of credibility by using them sparingly, frequently in nighttime and rainy scenes, and combining them with old-fashioned practical FX work (mainly puppets and large-scale models). The end result evoked primal awe and terror in the minds of viewers. The T-Rex attack, in particular, was so well-crafted and terrifying that it threw this writer sideways in his seat, one arm raised in front of his face as if defending against a dinosaur attack. When there was a break in the mayhem, Spielberg cut to a very quiet scene, letting everyone hear how many people in the audience had screamed in terror, which naturally led to raucous laughter and a release of tension (a foolproof showman’s trick). “Mister, are you all right?” a small girl sitting near this writer asked, looking at his still-terror-contoured body.

Editor’s Picks

Nothing in “Jurassic World: Dominion” compares to the first “Jurassic Park” T-Rex attack or any other scene in the film. Or, for that matter, any of the scenes in Spielberg’s sequel “The Lost World,” which made the most of an unavoidable cash-grab situation by using the film as an excuse to stage a series of dazzling large-scale action sequences, with Jeff Goldblum’s chaos theorist Dr. Ian Malcolm playing the action hero. Goldblum’s “Lost World” performance became a wry-yet-cranky meta-commentary on corporate capitalism, which he reprises in “Dominion” alongside fellow original cast members Sam Neill and Laura Dern. Also, you must try to play this Jurassic World Dominion quiz.

Jurassic World Dominion Quiz

In fact, nothing in this new film compares to the best parts of “Jurassic Park III,” “Jurassic World,” and “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom,” the latter of which suffered from diminishing-returns syndrome while still managing to stage a crackerjack action scene or dino attack here and there. J.A. Bayona’s eclectic “Fallen Kingdom,” which provides literal and figurative DNA to the plot of “Dominion,” had the most unexpected twists since the original, conjuring Spielbergian images of wonder (think of that mournful shot of the brachiosaur left behind on the dock) and mixing gothic horror and haunted house-movie elements into its second half. The character of Maisie Lockwood (Isabella Sermon), a clone created by John Hammond’s business partner to replace the daughter he lost, was a reference to Michael Crichton’s original inspiration, Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. You might be wondering where you can watch Jurassic World Dominion online for free, but that’s not possible for now.

Maisie is one of many major characters in “Dominion,” and her tragic situation has a few disturbing new details added to it. Returning franchise director/co-writer Colin Trevorrow (writer/director of “Jurassic World”) and his collaborators, however, are unable to focus on their deeper implications for long enough to develop Maisie with the sophistication required for a great or even good science fiction/horror film.

The mishandling of Maisie is just one blunder in a dumpster of a sequel that throws ideas, images, characters, and plot twists together and calls it a movie. Claire Dearing (Bryce Dallas Howard), a former Jurassic World park operations manager turned activist Dinosaur Protection Group leader, begins the film by breaking into a ranch where baby plant-eaters are being kept and impulsively deciding to rescue one of them. Then she travels to a cabin in the snowy Sierra Nevada mountains, where Maisie is living with Owen Grady, the park’s former raptor whisperer (Chris Pratt). The three form an impromptu nuclear family is dedicated to protecting Maisie from parties seeking to exploit her for genetic and financial gain. Blue, a semi-domesticated raptor, also lives with them and has a child (mirroring Maisie’s relationship to her mother’s genetic material—though so haphazardly that it’s as if the filmmakers barely considered the two creatures as being thematically linked).

About the quiz

There’s also a corporate spy plot (as in most of the other films) involving a careless and/or sinister corporation that talks about magic and wonder but is primarily interested in exploiting the dinosaurs and the technology that created them. Since “The Lost World,” the heirs to park founder John Hammond (Richard Attenborough), a nice old man who meant well but failed to consider the consequences of his actions, have been actively treacherous Bad Guy types. Dr. Lewis Dodgson, a character from the original film who has been recast and promoted to CEO of BioSyn (‘bio sin,’ get it? ), is heavy in this one. Dodgson hired another recurring “Jurassic” character, B.D. Wong’s Dr. Wu (arguably the true villain of most of these films, though in an oblivious, John Hammond sort of way), breeds prehistoric locusts genetically programmed to devour every food crop except engineered plants sold exclusively by the company. Although Jurassic World is a theatrical release after some period you will be able to watch Jurassic World Dominion online for free at home on Reddit.

Dodgson is the mastermind behind Maisie and Blue’s child’s kidnapping. Actor Campbell Scott imbues the underwritten Dodgson with personality through inventive body language and unpredictable phrasings and pauses. He transforms him into a parody of two generations of tech-bro capitalist gurus, Baby Boomers and Generation X. He walks around like a peace-loving hippie but is actually a voracious yuppie who employs black marketeers and hired killers. Dodgson’s warm-voiced but dead-eyed delivery of “caring” is especially chilling—like a zombie Steve Jobs. It’s the film’s second most inventive performance, after Goldblum’s, who never moves or speaks exactly as you expect him to and blurts out things that sound improvised. (When colleagues move too slowly for his liking, he snaps, “Why are you skulking?”)

For more personality quizzes check this: Red Queen Quiz

Written By:

Kevin Miele

Kevin Miele is a seasoned writer, cinephile, and quiz enthusiast hailing from United States. Born with a love for storytelling and a penchant for detail, he has dedicated his talents to creating the ultimate cinematic quiz experience for movie buffs worldwide. From timeless classics to the latest blockbusters, Kevin's quizzes span across genres and eras, offering an inclusive and exciting challenge for film enthusiasts of all backgrounds. He believes that movies are not just a form of entertainment but a source of inspiration, reflection, and connection, and his quizzes aim to celebrate that.
jurassic world dominion quiz
Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on pinterest
Pinterest