侏罗纪公园3 Jurassic Park 3 (2001) Movie Script

杰瑞发布于2023-12-14

《侏罗纪公园3》是一部于2001年上映的美国科幻冒险片,是《侏罗纪公园》系列的第三部作品,也是该系列中唯一一部既不是由斯蒂芬·斯皮尔伯格导演,亦非根据迈克尔·克莱顿所著小说改编的电影,不过片中有部分场景来源于克莱顿的原著小说《侏罗纪公园》和《失落的世界》。 由乔·庄斯顿执导,山姆·尼尔、威廉姆·H·梅西、劳拉·邓恩、蒂娅·里欧妮等联袂出演,于2001年7月18日在美国上映。 Dr. Alan Grant is now a happy man with the previous incidents of Jurassic Park now behind him. Grant is that happy that he announce in public, that nothing on Earth can persuade him back onto the islands. Maybe nothing, except Paul Kirby. Kirby and his wife, Amanda want a plane to fly them over Isla Sorna, with Dr. Grant as their guide. But not everything Kirby says is true. When the plane lands, Dr. Grant realizes that there is another reason why they are there, that he doesn't know of. Now, Dr. Grant is stuck on an island he has never been on before, with what was a plane journey now turned into a search party.

Grant gets in his car. Starts the ENGINE.
He's about to pull off when Ellie knocks on the window. He rolls it down.
ELLIE (CONT'D) When I met you, I thought that one day millions of years ago, all the dinosaurs became extinct. Wiped out. But you told me otherwise. When conditions changed, dinosaurs changed. They became other things.
They evolved.
GRANT:
A well-accepted theory.
ELLIE:
(simply) Alan don't be afraid to evolve.
Grant hears her, but Ellie knows it didn't really get through.
A forced half-smile, than Grant waves goodbye.
Ellie watches as he drives off.
7 INT. AUDITORIUM - DAY 7 The last stop on Grant's fund-raising tour, it's a public lecture hosted by some foundation. There are SCIENTISTS and STUDENTS here, but also a lot of DINO-FANS, some even with costumes.
Grant finishes his speech to what was a full house -- some ATTENDEES are grabbing their coats and sneaking out. This wasn't the exciting guest speaker they were all expecting.
A new slide comes up. Just black and white, and indecipherable.
GRANT:
It's through the painstaking study of the Interior chamber in multiple specimens that we can determine this exciting correlation between the larynx and the upper plate. That lets us theorize -- theorize, mind you -- that the raptor might have been capable of bird- like vocalizations. Which as you can imagine, would be a tremendous breakthrough.
He's finished, but no one seems to notice at first. Then the SYMPOSTUM LEADER stands up, leading a smattering round of APPLAUSE.
SYMPOSTIUM LEADER Thank you very much Dr. Grant. Now does anyone have a question?
Nearly every hand goes up. Grant doesn't seem surprised.
GRANT:
Does anyone have a question that doesn't relate to Jurassic Park?
Quite a few hands go down.
GRANT (cont'd) Or the incident in San Diego, which I'll remind you, I did not witness.
Now most of the hands are down. Picking one of the few remaining... MALE STUDENT: Your theory on raptors is good and all, but isn't all this conjecture kind of moot?
The STUDENT'S BUDDY nods in agreement.
MALE STUDENT (CONT'D) I mean, once the U.N. and Costa Rica and everyone decides how to handle the second island, scientist will just go in and look for themselves.
TOO-CLEVER SCIENCE REPORTER Isn't paleontology itself in danger of extinction?
Recognizing those as fighting words, the symposium leader is about to step in. But Grant will take this himself.
GRANT:
No, and let me be perfectly clear on this point. Dinosaurs lived 65 million years ago.