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Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom - FULL REACTION

I actually had a good time watching this one! I thought it was funny though how closely these movies have followed the same plot as the first trilogy. All the cloning stuff and sending the dinosaurs to the mansion was wild! Enjoy :)

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom - FULL REACTION

Comments

Rewatching this for the third time now🙂‍↕️ can't wait for you dominion reaction, now that rebirth was release🙂‍↕️🙂‍↕️

Maike_Staytiny

I doubt you will see this comment in time now at this point, but PLEASE, when you get to Jurassic World Dominion, watch the extended cut (or at least consider it) because the theatrical cut is just universally bad. and the extended version, while it doesn't transform the movie like the BvS ultimate edition, does make it a bit more forgivable and gives more fun dino scenes and connecting tissue, so to speak.

Ventena

00:27:43 if you like dystopia, might I suggest Alita: Battle Angel. it’s a bit clique and cheesy, but the action is excellent and if you like action and sci-fi, you’ll enjoy this one :)

aquaraeus

i reccomend the movie Dinosaur. One of my favorite movies

Natalie Weibel

The Rocky Mountains in the US are gorgeous, especially when they're covered in snow imo. Montana, Utah, Colorado. Of those three, Utah has 5 national parks and has the greatest variety in scenery. Jan-Feb if you want to see lots of snow, April if you want to miss winter but still see a little snow on them, or May-Oct if you want to hike them.

Geothro

"Anywhere with mountains" Well do you want our Eldest mountains? That would be from the Grand Portage, MN area down and around following Lake Superior into the Keweenaw Peninsula in Michigan. That area is around 2 Billion years old. Theyre more hills than anything compared to newer mountains and were formed by the Keweenaw rift, a very ancient volcano that is no longer around, but the iron, basalt, etc are all still seen throughout the area. The Appalachians are around 480 million to 1 billion years old. Highest point is Mount Mitchell (2037m) in NC. Their range also connect to the Scottish Highlands, and Atlas Mountains in North Africa. All 3 are technically the same mountains based on geological dating and features from when Pangea was still a thing. We then have the Rockies. They span from BC, Canada down into New Mexico. The highest point is Mount Elbert in Colorado at 4400m above sea level. Theyre only about 50-80million years old. For reference the Himalayan mountains are a little younger at 40-50 million :D So youve got your choice of ranges lol I suggest going oldest to newest or they wont seem as Amazing according to some people. I still find awe in the Keweenaw regardless how many times ive gone to Appalachia though lol

feyatsirk


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