These included the Baryonyx and, especially, the Indoraptor, a genetically modified super predator and arguably the film’s marquee dinosaur, a beast bigger than a regular velociraptor but smaller than a T-Rex. Unlike the previous installment, which took place entirely on the tropical island where the park existed, Nicholson was building human environments that had to enclose their non-human hunters. “I think the biggest challenge we had was the scale of the creatures we were dealing with,” Nicholson says. With the action in Fallen Kingdom moving from Isla Nublar to the mainland, Nicholson and his team had to build sets that could conceivably hold marauding dinosaurs-some of whom who have been genetically modified-without the film turning into a series of shots of beasts crashing through walls. This was especially true for production designer Andy Nicholson, who was tasked with creating a literal house of horrors for director J.A. While prehistoric mayhem set in the present is precisely what Jurassic fans expect, it’s a major challenge for the film crew. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom boasts more dinosaurs than any previous film in the Jurassic franchise- combined.
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