Yeah, if you didn’t know, the whole movie franchise is ultimately based on the book, Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton, who I honestly feel does not get enough credit as a genuinely compelling sci-fi thriller style of author… all the way back in 1969 he wrote Andromeda Strain, he’s written a lot of … yeah, sort of gritty, dense, thriller sci-fi novels.
The original series of movies… well, the first one is a pretty good, pretty faithful adaptation if you’re going for a wider, more family friendly audience… some characters are kind of merged together to keep the plot simpler to follow… its a reasonably faithful adaptation in terms of sticking to the exact contents of the novel, and of course, just a wildly succesful and beloved movie.
Crichton wrote Lost World, a sequel to his book… but the movie sequel Lost World… is basically an entire alternate timeline, a totally different story, only vaguely sharing some similarities with the book Lost World.
Then, every movie after that is just fan fiction, utterly diverged from the actual way the characters are portrayed in the books, plot is completely different, only really just keeping a few characters from the older movies around, but they’re no longer anything like they are in the books, and of course you’ve got all the new characters just shoved into this completely divergent timeline… bleck.
I would strongly encourage you to read at least the first book.
Either every, or nearly every chapter begins with a sort of… disembodied, tangentially relevant thought from Malcolm, who is often relating whatever is roughly going to go on in that chapter to the actual mathematical principles and formulae of chaos theory.
The book functionally gives you an actual ‘Intro to Chaos Theory 101’ lesson as you read through it, with many of the chapters serving as an example, in at least some analagous way, of the concepts in these sort of disembodied, psuedo narration blurbs from Malcolm.
Its some of the best ludonarrative, or maybe… meta, self referential at another scale, consistency, and depth that I can remeber reading in something that is also paced so well that I again call it a ‘thriller’.
Yeah, if you didn’t know, the whole movie franchise is ultimately based on the book, Jurassic Park, by Michael Crichton, who I honestly feel does not get enough credit as a genuinely compelling sci-fi thriller style of author… all the way back in 1969 he wrote Andromeda Strain, he’s written a lot of … yeah, sort of gritty, dense, thriller sci-fi novels.
The original series of movies… well, the first one is a pretty good, pretty faithful adaptation if you’re going for a wider, more family friendly audience… some characters are kind of merged together to keep the plot simpler to follow… its a reasonably faithful adaptation in terms of sticking to the exact contents of the novel, and of course, just a wildly succesful and beloved movie.
Crichton wrote Lost World, a sequel to his book… but the movie sequel Lost World… is basically an entire alternate timeline, a totally different story, only vaguely sharing some similarities with the book Lost World.
Then, every movie after that is just fan fiction, utterly diverged from the actual way the characters are portrayed in the books, plot is completely different, only really just keeping a few characters from the older movies around, but they’re no longer anything like they are in the books, and of course you’ve got all the new characters just shoved into this completely divergent timeline… bleck.
I would strongly encourage you to read at least the first book.
Either every, or nearly every chapter begins with a sort of… disembodied, tangentially relevant thought from Malcolm, who is often relating whatever is roughly going to go on in that chapter to the actual mathematical principles and formulae of chaos theory.
The book functionally gives you an actual ‘Intro to Chaos Theory 101’ lesson as you read through it, with many of the chapters serving as an example, in at least some analagous way, of the concepts in these sort of disembodied, psuedo narration blurbs from Malcolm.
Its some of the best ludonarrative, or maybe… meta, self referential at another scale, consistency, and depth that I can remeber reading in something that is also paced so well that I again call it a ‘thriller’.