I agree. Arrogance comes across too much for me from most of the characters, and the pretentiousness of much of the main characters made them hard to sympathize with. No argument there.
The arrogance was intended.
The Park was up and running, something Hammond never managed, until the events of Jurassic World, there had been no incidents since it opened and after the disaster in Jurassic Park, they (In Gen) went to Nubla and actually built the park while the island was populated with Dinosaurs (remember it's the original T-Rex) they were making a shit tonne of money and Wu and his gang of mad scientists had perfected making these extinct animals from 65 million years ago. Finally, the powers that be at Jurassic World thought they could play god and just like in the first roll of the dice, it was just a matter of time till things went spectacularly tits up.
All of which would make sense if we were just talking about the level of arrogance of believing that creating dinosaurs won't lead to trouble or even the level of arrogance of thinking they could just throw together a completely new dinosaur without carefully planning what it would be. The arrogance in this movie, though, is a whole other level beyond that. They deliberately created a Raptor/T-rex hybrid which was 50 feet long, strong enough to smash through all their defenses, smart enough to outwit humans AND capable of rendering itself perfectly invisible in the visual AND infrared spectrums. That's not even arrogance anymore, it's outright insanity.
Anyway, even in so far as the arrogance of those characters who didn't take part in this insanity is a deliberate part of the film's message, it's still far too heavy-handed and really drags the movie down.
I agree. The arrogance was too over the top for me to find any sympathy when things went wrong. It was like they were asking things to go wrong.
That annoys me because Masarani, in particular, has such a fascinating extension of Hammond's point of view, except he is more out of touch from the danger. There's the arrogance, but there isn't even a moment of hubris that causes his death. He just ends up dying for stupid, insane, reasons.
Frustrating.
It's a fine fun film, but if you think I'm overthinking it, then this is just the tip of the iceberg, for me. Also, over thinking, on a Star Trek forum?These questionable actions and the duplicity of InGen are the perfect setup (they positively telegraphed that in the film) for the next film.
I'm not quite sure now, but InGen wasn't all peaches and cream in the original book, was it?
Of course it wasn't. But there's a difference between unethical and insane. No military would actually want an I. Rex, except perhaps for terrorist groups. If you buy a weapon bigger than a tank and invisible, you want to be able to control it, not just hopefully point it in the right direction.
And I'm sorry, but if the best idea they can think of for the next movie is Raptor Commandos in the Middle East, then they're better off just not making one.
You are over-thinking this, I'm afraid.
Jurassic World is a very good film and captures the tone of the original book far better than the other movies.
It's not on Gone with the Wind or Towering Inferno levels of good, but it delivers what it promises: Mindless, escapist fun.

I agree that it captures the tone of the first film in a wonderful way, but it had the opportunity to explore some different avenues and points of view regarding dinosuars and their interactions with humanity. Wu's point of view fascinates me (as I pointed out before) as is Owen's but they are never really explored to their full possible consequences.
It may be "escapist fun" but that doesn't mean there is not a message being conveyed in it.