From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise

Widely celebrated for its ground-breaking CGI and computer-generated dinosaurs, Jurassic Park’s (Spielberg, 1993) human actors have long been relegated to secondary roles. Directly following the popular action films of the 1980s, the “musculinity” of these stars (McDonald, 2019) is far removed from...

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Main Author: Gillian Kelly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Bologna 2023-12-01
Series:Cinergie
Subjects:
Online Access:https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/16746
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author Gillian Kelly
author_facet Gillian Kelly
author_sort Gillian Kelly
collection DOAJ
description Widely celebrated for its ground-breaking CGI and computer-generated dinosaurs, Jurassic Park’s (Spielberg, 1993) human actors have long been relegated to secondary roles. Directly following the popular action films of the 1980s, the “musculinity” of these stars (McDonald, 2019) is far removed from the type of masculinity embodied by actors Sam Neill and Jeff Goldblum as Jurassic Park’s scientists Drs. Alan Grant and Ian Malcolm, respectively. This noteworthy paradox provides comment on changes within the film industry and American society, and yet, despite the film’s continued critical attention, a lack of serious consideration of its stars remains. This paper examines and reassesses the actors’ “normalised” star personas and screen performances, juxtaposing their performance styles, physicality and character development with both the hyper-masculine actors preceding them and Chris Pratt as a Velociraptor wrangler in the new chapter of the franchise, Jurassic World (2015-2022). As Owen Grady, Pratt exemplifies a new generation of twenty-first-century masculine stars: a safer, more “everyday” version of the extreme masculinity of the 1980s action hero and more relatable to audiences. Grady is presented in terms of brawn rather than brains, explicitly positioned as erotic object and the “alpha” male to “beta” Blue, the female leader of the Velociraptor pack he trains; but, as explored, scientists Grant and Malcolm do not fit this type and thrust into the role of dominant male as a necessity for survival.
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spelling doaj.art-ea4a4c13812e49299eee1dabcff0089a2023-12-21T17:33:42ZengUniversity of BolognaCinergie2280-94812023-12-0124253610.6092/issn.2280-9481/1674615102From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park FranchiseGillian Kelly0Independent ScholarWidely celebrated for its ground-breaking CGI and computer-generated dinosaurs, Jurassic Park’s (Spielberg, 1993) human actors have long been relegated to secondary roles. Directly following the popular action films of the 1980s, the “musculinity” of these stars (McDonald, 2019) is far removed from the type of masculinity embodied by actors Sam Neill and Jeff Goldblum as Jurassic Park’s scientists Drs. Alan Grant and Ian Malcolm, respectively. This noteworthy paradox provides comment on changes within the film industry and American society, and yet, despite the film’s continued critical attention, a lack of serious consideration of its stars remains. This paper examines and reassesses the actors’ “normalised” star personas and screen performances, juxtaposing their performance styles, physicality and character development with both the hyper-masculine actors preceding them and Chris Pratt as a Velociraptor wrangler in the new chapter of the franchise, Jurassic World (2015-2022). As Owen Grady, Pratt exemplifies a new generation of twenty-first-century masculine stars: a safer, more “everyday” version of the extreme masculinity of the 1980s action hero and more relatable to audiences. Grady is presented in terms of brawn rather than brains, explicitly positioned as erotic object and the “alpha” male to “beta” Blue, the female leader of the Velociraptor pack he trains; but, as explored, scientists Grant and Malcolm do not fit this type and thrust into the role of dominant male as a necessity for survival.https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/16746jurassic parkjurassic worldsam neilljeff goldblumchris pratt
spellingShingle Gillian Kelly
From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
Cinergie
jurassic park
jurassic world
sam neill
jeff goldblum
chris pratt
title From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
title_full From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
title_fullStr From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
title_full_unstemmed From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
title_short From Brains to Brawn: Changing Masculinity in the Jurassic Park Franchise
title_sort from brains to brawn changing masculinity in the jurassic park franchise
topic jurassic park
jurassic world
sam neill
jeff goldblum
chris pratt
url https://cinergie.unibo.it/article/view/16746
work_keys_str_mv AT gilliankelly frombrainstobrawnchangingmasculinityinthejurassicparkfranchise