A Jurassic World Theory Blends Human DNA With Its Scariest Monster

The Jurassic Park franchise showed audiences the wonders and dangers of genetic experimentation on extinct species. However, the Jurassic World franchise took things to the next logical step and, rather than focusing on creating dinosaurs, sought to push the limits in worse ways. As a result, cloning and its use to benefit the powers that became the main focus, which inadvertently pulled away from the core idea of the franchise surrounding dinosaurs and the risks of trying to control nature.With Jurassic World, audiences saw the bride between the original trilogy and the risky next steps of the second trilogy, and it came in the Indominus Rex. Though it appeared as a dinosaur, the Indominus Rex was more of a monster as it was a genetic hodgepodge of everything from a T-Rex and Velociraptor to a cuttlefish and so much more. But it also featured a strange attribute that made a huge evolutionary difference to the character: thumbs. These additions led fans to speculate about the possibility that the Indominus Rex may have been formed with some human DNA. As Owen Grady mentioned, once the Indominus Rex escaped in Jurassic World, it was no dinosaur. While it had similar attributes, many of its features came from more modern animals. For example, its ability to camouflage came from the cuttlefish, which allowed it to violently kill the ACU troopers sent to capture it. However, with the DNA of a Velociraptor in the mix, it also had a heightened intelligence bolstered by the modern predators that made it up. As a result, ut used its skill to outsmart any that hunted it and even turn a pack of raptors against their alpha. Though it had the size of a T-Rex, its longer arms also gave it an evolutionary advantage as it could grab and claw with ease, making it the perfect killing machine.RELATED: Jurassic Park Writer Explains Walt Disney’s Influence on A Major Character

The Jurassic Park franchise showed audiences the wonders and dangers of genetic experimentation on extinct species. However, the Jurassic World franchise took things to the next logical step and, rather than focusing on creating dinosaurs, sought to push the limits in worse ways. As a result, cloning and its use to benefit the powers that became the main focus, which inadvertently pulled away from the core idea of the franchise surrounding dinosaurs and the risks of trying to control nature.

RELATED: Jurassic Park Writer Explains Walt Disney’s Influence on A Major Character

With Jurassic World, audiences saw the bride between the original trilogy and the risky next steps of the second trilogy, and it came in the Indominus Rex. Though it appeared as a dinosaur, the Indominus Rex was more of a monster as it was a genetic hodgepodge of everything from a T-Rex and Velociraptor to a cuttlefish and so much more. But it also featured a strange attribute that made a huge evolutionary difference to the character: thumbs. These additions led fans to speculate about the possibility that the Indominus Rex may have been formed with some human DNA.

As Owen Grady mentioned, once the Indominus Rex escaped in Jurassic World, it was no dinosaur. While it had similar attributes, many of its features came from more modern animals. For example, its ability to camouflage came from the cuttlefish, which allowed it to violently kill the ACU troopers sent to capture it. However, with the DNA of a Velociraptor in the mix, it also had a heightened intelligence bolstered by the modern predators that made it up. As a result, ut used its skill to outsmart any that hunted it and even turn a pack of raptors against their alpha. Though it had the size of a T-Rex, its longer arms also gave it an evolutionary advantage as it could grab and claw with ease, making it the perfect killing machine.

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