A: Fantastically entertaining movie! What's amazing is that if you break it down and analyze any subpart of it (plot, logic, characters, science, CGI) there are many shortcomings, flaws, and outright failures, but as a whole it transcends them.
The park itself is a wonderful creation onscreen, and I think they were right to spend so much of the beginning of the movie going through it, because it's the main thing that distinguishes it from
Jurassic Park. Ironically thanks to the 3 previous movies dinosaurs are almost routine; the new park is a special effect as good as any dinosaur. So unlike the first movie where we were anxious to get to the dinosaurs and dino v. people action, I was ok in letting things play out.
Chris Pratt as Owen riding with the raptors looked incredibly hokey in the trailers and would have sunk the movie if they botched it, but his relationship and (tenuous) control over the raptors was well developed. I for one loved the OTT Hoskins as the shady military guy trying to get Pratt to go along with weaponizing the raptors. Afterwards when you think about it it's complete nonsense, but when he talks of the advantages of raptors over drones, with those raptors onscreen, you almost buy it!
Loved BD Wong as Dr. Wu - a massive upgrade on his glorified cameo in
Jurassic Park in substance if not screentime. His smooth, arrogant scientist role really emphasized the dark side of creating dinosaurs. And most important for us science/movie geeks, he completely resolves the "No feathers on Dinosaurs!" complaint that's been echoed so often. In the novel, Wu tells Hammond that he wants to unroll a new version of dinosaurs more like what people imagine (slow lizards), and disputing Hammond's objections that it would make the dinos less 'real'. "There isn't any reality here", Wu says, and in his thoughts he details all the genetic addons needed to make dinos. In the movie, when Khan's Masrani objects to how he created the Indominus Rex, Wu basically gives the explanation Wu did in the book, with the critical add-on that Wu says had they displayed dinosaurs as close to what the DNA they had would have indicated, "they would have looked a lot different." In other words:
feathers!
Feathered dinosaurs weren't discovered till 1996 or so in China. Now we have an explanation: back in the late 1980s when the dinos were being made (referring to
The Lost World novel), Dr. Wu and his staff must have encountered a rude surprise: WTF our raptors look like overgrown turkeys!

Back to the drawing boards! In any sequels from now on the film producers have my permission to display non-feathered dinos (not that I would oppose them being shown).
Bryce Dallas Howard gave a great overall performance as Claire; I did feel a lot of character miscues, as if her words and actions were not consistent with what her character was portrayed as being, which I also attribute to the script - like after she shoots the pterodactyls and the kids aren't appreciative of her vs Pratt. They kinda sabotaged her that way. That being said, she was the heart of the movie - had she been mainly either a screaming damsel in distress or an iron emotionless warrior the movie would have failed, so bravo!
The villainous Indominus Rex was not particularly special effectwise after the T Rex and Spinosaurus, but damn was it vicious. Loved its Nolanesque Joker-escape plan!

(of course it's completely ridiculous if you think about it: couldn't they use the tracking implant? Hear it? Smell it?) Utterly ruthless against man and dino alike (poor ankylosaur and brontosaurs

), yet Pratt gave such sensible-sounding explanations for its behavior that you almost felt sorry for it, like Frankenstein's monster.
The raptors were ok, although their design may actually have been better in
Lost World and
JP3). The film does its homework in laying down the (crazy) conceit that Pratt can train these animals, and it's a genuine thrill when they're unleashed. But worthy of a WWE show, I loved the sudden heel turn by the raptors when they meet the I. Rex!
I do wish the I Rex fought the Spinosaurus while the kids were in the Restricted Zone.
Jurassic World took a dump on JP3 with the T Rex made its entrance and smashed the Spino skeleton, but the Spinosaurus was by far the best thing about JP3. Having the I Rex dispatch a Spino as fast or faster than the Spino dispatched T Rex would have made it even more badass. Also plot-related, it was never clear the relationships between Masrani and Hoskins were; it sounded like the uberbillionaire Masrani had bought out the remnants of InGen to create Jurassic World, but then Hoskins is representing InGen?

Never got that cleared out.
The special effects (I include the park) were great, although the big herbo dinos did look kind of weightless, and the shadows cast looked off (a common problem with CGI objects in movies). The final battle was spectacular, and I admit I never saw the mososaur finishing move coming!
There are shortcomings of course, unfortunately mainly surrounding the actors - or more properly what the actors had to act out. The kids' presence in
JW are appropriate on a plot level, unlike
Lost World &
JP3, as they are the park's intended audience, but they were especially grating before the action started, and just ok after. There's a lot of online controversy about the way Zara died (absolutely horrifying). Plotwise I was ok with it because it was so shocking; it was a way to make clear the seriousness of events without going into R territory. Let's face it seeing faceless soldiers and workers getting dino'd can only have mild shock effect 4 movies in.
One more criticism: the dinos became way,
way too anthropomorphized in
Jurassic World, I mean it was almost Disney's
Dinosaur-level bad. I swear, the raptor was literally winking at and telling Pratt to run!
Can't wait to see it again, even though I'm betting the flaws are really going to stick out!