Jurassic World Rebirth has so far been teased as an film that will bring the franchise back to the elements that made it exceptional.

Speaking with Slash Film, Koepp spoke about the new direction the franchise is headed in. He made sure to note that the new movie won’t be retconning anything from its predecessors, and that the new ideas were instead speculations about how the onscreen world has changed over the past five years. Read his comments below:

We didn't want to deny any events that occurred. [The new film is set] in that world. But how might that world have changed in the last five years, and whose story is this now? So it was a chance to start over, and still play in this incredibly fun sandbox with the enthusiasm of a big studio behind you. It was the best of all possible worlds. And Steven and I got to do the absolute most fun part of filmmaking, which is, 'Hey, what if...' and then you just make up stuff.

What This Means For Jurassic World Rebirth

An Exciting Chance To Start Over While Respecting What Came Before

Alan Grant with a Triceratops in Jurassic Park
Universal Pictures

Koepp’s comments effectively paint a clearer picture of the new movie’s intentions and its relationship with the two previous trilogies. The groundwork laid by its predecessors presents Jurassic World Rebirth with an established lore ripe with opportunity. It seems like the creative team behind the film is taking advantage of this, creating new ideas while staying within the sandbox that is the franchise, utilizing one of the most common, but also most exciting writing prompts: “What if?”

While the prompt is more commonly used to present alternate realities and outcomes of significant events within a franchise, almost feeling like fan-fiction — perhaps most prominently seen in the Marvel show What If...? — Koepp and his collaborators seemed to have taken a more canonical approach with Jurassic World Rebirth. Their new ideas might align with the powerful themes of the folly of man and the dangers of advancement alongside the horror tropes present in the first two movies of the original trilogy, thus paving the way for a fresh yet familiar narrative.

Our Take On Koepp’s Comments

Hopefully, The New Direction Isn't Too Outlandish

Mahershala Ali looking scared with a flare in Jurassic World Rebirth

A plotline for the Jurassic World trilogy was the weaponizing of dinosaurs with the intention of using them for war, something I found implausible and somewhat outlandish. As long as Koepp and his collaborators strayed away from such fantastical ideas, I can see myself advocating for the film's success.

I do have high hopes, as the film is being helmed by Godzilla and Rogue One director Gareth Edwards, who has a knack for marinating his films in gritty and grounded tones. Assuming that’s what he was brought onto the project for, I'm confident that Jurassic World Rebirth’s ideas will return the franchise to its thought-provoking and terrifying form while steering it in a unique direction.

Source: Slash Film

Jurassic World Rebirth official poster
Jurassic World Rebirth
Release Date
July 2, 2025
Runtime
134 Minutes
Director
Gareth Edwards
Writers
David Koepp, Michael Crichton

Five years after Jurassic World Dominion, Earth's ecology confines dinosaurs to equatorial zones. Zora Bennett, a covert ops expert, leads a team to secure genetic material from massive dinosaurs for a life-saving drug.

Franchise(s)
Jurassic Park
Main Genre
Adventure
Distributor(s)
Universal Pictures