At least we’re (mostly) free of the mutants and locusts… The Jurassic franchise refuses to go extinct, even with all of the opportunities it has had. And really that seems to be because the public just likes dinosaurs so much, and this is the only series seemingly allowed to occupy that lucrative space. People will come to these movies simply for that gimmick, and maybe the dumber gimmick of mutant dinosaurs. And so even after Jurassic World: Dominion tried to tie up its own little continuity, we are back to the dino island once again for Jurassic World: Rebirth . For this however, Universal chose a fairly back-to-basics approach, similar to the original set of Jurassic Park movies of dropping some characters off on a dinosaur island where they must try to survive. Granted, the Jurassic World movies never completely strayed from this formula -refusing to realize the potential of that title- but they always stuck to it in concert with baffling and convoluted creat...
In the American Civil War, as the Union army pushed into Confederate territory, emancipating slaves along the way, General Tecumseh Sherman ordered that freed families be given plots of no more than forty acres and mules to aide in the farming. It was the first ever form of reparations offered to families of the enslaved, and naturally after the war the government of Andrew Johnson reneged on this and other promises -putting way more effort into southern reconstruction instead. ‘Forty acres and a mule’ has long held as a testament to that broken pact, to the chasm of trust between black people and the American government, and as a reminder that reparations for slavery have never come to fruition. So powerful it is as a statement that naturally Spike Lee named his production company after it. And it is also evoked by the title of 40 Acres , a Canadian movie that does let a part of that dream be realized, though against the most frightful of contexts. It is the feature debut of direc...