Glad he liked it! Yes I know what you mean by the framing -- when you're in a smaller multiplex theater, it's actually a larger screen when it's exhibited 1.85 than 2.35 widescreen, which ends up being smaller in that sized theater. Plus -- I agree here also -- when you want to show the size and height of the dinosaurs, 1.85 compositionally is taller and makes more sense as well, so it was a smart move by Spielberg to use that aspect ratio.
A few things I noticed again this time around:
-Casting is one of the movie's biggest drawbacks for me. Why is Laura Dern laughing during that whole first scene in the desert? Her expressions in that sequence and reactions are just
odd. She looks good but doesn't exactly come off like a scientist, and it's one of several ineffective or at least "could've been better" performances in the film (Neill being likewise mediocre. He just looks uncomfortable, and/or constipated). Goldblum is so natural by comparison with the two of them.
-Wayne Knight is AWFUL. The mugging and broadness of his performance are almost hard to watch. Martin Ferraro is nearly as broad and unbelievable as the lawyer who gets consumed by T Rex.
-Williams' score is grand when it's called upon, but a lot of it is mickey-mouse "suspense music" and doesn't have the thematic richness of his Spielberg classics. It's probably why I've never listened to the album a whole lot over the years outside of a couple of tracks (and I had no interest in LLL's expansion; the original album was hard to get through as it was).
-The last scene is one of Spielberg's
best. Williams' music, the images of the birds, the shots of Neill with the kids -- it works beautifully. The more I see the movie, I just wish there were a few
more "magic moments" like that in the film.
I still contend JP is a good movie, with a couple of
classic set-pieces, and groundbreaking FX, but it's definitely not on the level of JAWS or CE3K or RAIDERS. It's clear Spielberg's mind was on Schindler's List (don't forget he handed post-production chores, including the scoring, over to George Lucas to supervise, evidenced by his "Special Thanks" credit) and the attention to detail, and especially the performances, just isn't there to the same degree as it is in his best films.
Of course I'll still rewatch it another dozen times in the next few years probably LOL.
