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Jurassic Park Ultimate Trilogy Gift Set (Blu-ray + Digital Copy) (1993)

Alessandro Nivola , Ariana Richards  |  PG-13 |  Blu-ray
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (624 customer reviews)

List Price: $119.98
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Blu-ray Blu-ray + Digital Copy $46.99  
  Blu-ray + Digital Copy (Ultimate Trilogy Gift Set) $55.77  
DVD Five-Disc Widescreen Edition $33.16  
Please note: This product contains a digital copy. An activation code can be found on a sheet of paper inside the product case with instructions on how to redeem the code to receive the Digital and/or UltraViolet Digital Copy. This redemption code may have an expiration date. This expiration date can also be found on the insert inside the product case. Click here for more information on digital copy.
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Frequently Bought Together

Jurassic Park Ultimate Trilogy Gift Set (Blu-ray + Digital Copy) + Indiana Jones: The Complete Adventures (Raiders of the Lost Ark / Temple of Doom / Last Crusade / Kingdom of the Crystal Skull) [Blu-ray] + Back to the Future: 25th Anniversary Trilogy [Blu-ray]
Price for all three: $157.65

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Product Details

  • Actors: Alessandro Nivola, Ariana Richards, Arliss Howard, B.D. Wong, Bob Peck
  • Format: AC-3, Blu-ray, Color, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, Dubbed, Limited Edition, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
  • Language: English (DTS-HD Master Audio 7.1), French (DTS 5.1), Spanish (DTS 5.1)
  • Subtitles: English, French, Spanish
  • Dubbed: French, Spanish
  • Region: All Regions
  • Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 3
  • Rated: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Studio: Universal Studios
  • DVD Release Date: October 25, 2011
  • Digital Copy Expiration Date: April 30, 2015 (Click here for more information)
  • Run Time: 349 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (624 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B0057R5G6E
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #6,906 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
  • Learn more about "Jurassic Park Ultimate Trilogy Gift Set (Blu-ray + Digital Copy)" on IMDb

Special Features

Bonus Features Digital Copy of all three films (offer expires 4/30/15)

Return to Jurassic Park: Six-part documentary featuring all-new interviews with directors Steven Spielberg and Joe Johnston plus cast and crew

Archival Featurettes

The Making of All 3 Jurassic Park Films

Original Featurettes on the Making of the Films

Steven Spielberg Directs Jurassic Park

Hurricane in Kauai Featurette

The Jurassic Park Phenomenon: A Discussion with Author Michael Crichton

The Compie Dance Number: Thank You Steven Spielberg From ILM

The Dinosaurs of Jurassic Park III

The Special Effects of Jurassic Park III

The Industrial Light & Magic Press Reel

The Sounds of Jurassic Park III

The Art of Jurassic Park III

Montana: Finding New Dinosaurs

Behind the Scenes

Early Pre-Production Meetings

Location Scouting

Animatics

Before and After the Visual Effects

Foley Artists

Storyboards

Tour of Stan Winston Studio

A Visit to ILM

Spinosaurus Attacks the Plane

Raptors Attack Udesky

The Lake

Production Archives: Production Photographs, Design Sketches, Illustrations, Conceptual Paintings, Models, The World of Jurassic Park, The Magic of ILM, Posters and Toys

Deleted Scenes

Jurassic Park: Making the Game

Jurassic Park III Feature Commentary with Special Effects Team

Theatrical Trailers

Blu-ray Exclusives

BD-Live: Access the BD-Live Center through your Internet-connected player to watch the latest trailers and more

My Scenes: Bookmark your favorite scenes

Pocket BLU App: Experience an exciting new way with the app for iPhone, BlackBerry, Android and now enhanced for iPad

D-Box


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Jurassic Park
Steven Spielberg's 1993 mega-hit rivals Jaws as the most intense and frightening film he'd ever made prior to Schindler's List, but it was also among his weakest stories. Based on Michael Crichton's novel about an island amusement park populated by cloned dinosaurs, the film works best as a thrill ride with none of the interesting human dynamics of Spielberg's Jaws. That lapse proves unfortunate, but there's no shortage of raw terror as a rampaging T-rex and nasty raptors try to make fast food out of the cast. The effects are still astonishing (despite the fact that the computer-generated technology has since been improved upon) and at times primeval, such as the sight of a herd of whatever-they-are scampering through a valley. --Tom Keogh

The Lost World - Jurassic Park
In the low tradition of knockoff horror flicks best seen (or not seen) on a drive-in movie screen, Steven Spielberg's sequel to Jurassic Park is a poorly conceived, ill-organized film that lacks story and logic. Screenwriter David Koepp strings along a number of loose ideas while Jeff Goldblum returns as Ian Malcolm, the quirky chaos theoretician who now reluctantly agrees to go to another island where cloned dinosaurs are roaming freely. Along with his girlfriend (Julianne Moore) and daughter, Malcolm has to deal with hunters, environmentalists, and corporate swine who stupidly bring back a big dino to Southern California, where it runs amok, of course. Spielberg doesn't seem to care that the pieces of this project don't add up to a real movie, so he hams it up with big, scary moments (with none of the artfulness of those in Jurassic Park) and smart-aleck visual gags (a yapping dog in a suburb mysteriously disappears when a hungry T-rex stomps by). A complete bust.--Tom Keogh

Jurassic Park III
Surpassing expectations to qualify as an above-average sequel, Jurassic Park III is nothing more or less than a satisfying popcorn adventure. A little cheesier than the first two Jurassic blockbusters, it's a big B movie with big B-list stars (including Laura Dern, briefly reprising her Jurassic Park role), and eight years of advancing computer-generated-image technology give it a sharp edge over its predecessors. While adopting the jungle spirit of King Kong, the movie refines Michael Crichton's original premise, and its dinosaurs are even more realistic, their behavior more detailed, and their variety--including flying pteranodons and a new villain, the spinosaurus--more dazzling and threatening than ever. These advancements justify the sequel, and its contrived plot is just clever enough to span 90 minutes without wearing out its welcome.

Posing as wealthy tourists, an adventurous couple (William H. Macy, Téa Leoni) convince paleontologist Alan Grant (Sam Neill) and his protégé (Allesandro Nivola) to act as tour guides on a flyover trip to Isla Sorna, the ill-fated "Site B" where all hell broke loose in The Lost World: Jurassic Park. In truth, they're on a search-and-rescue mission to find their missing son (Trevor Morgan), and their plane crash is just the first of several enjoyably suspenseful sequences. Director Joe Johnston (October Sky) embraces the formulaic plot as a series of atmospheric set pieces, placing new and familiar dinosaurs in misty rainforests, fiery lakes, and mysterious valleys, turning JP3 into a thrill ride with impressive highlights (including a T. rex versus spinosaurus smack-down), adequate doses of wry humor (from the cowriters of Election), and an upbeat ending that's corny but appropriate, proving that the symptoms of sequelitis needn't be fatal. --Jeff Shannon

Product Description

All 3 Films Digitally Remastered with New 7.1 Audio for Perfect Picture and Purest Digital Sound Available. Plus Hours of All-New Bonus Features!

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
336 of 353 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Jurassic Park: Great Video & (finally) Uncompressed Audio November 13, 2011
Format:Blu-ray|Amazon Verified Purchase
In the light of so many negative customer reviews of this set, I decided, before writing this review to do a direct comparison between the DVD version of Jurassic Park vs. the Blu-ray. I made it a point to set my BD player audio compression to wide range and set the volume levels for each version to be approximately at the same level for the spoken dialog to give each version a fair comparison.

I chose four sections to compare:

1. The scene at Sam Neill's dig beginning with the brushing away of sand from a fossil.
2. The helicopter ride into Jurassic Park.
3. The first encounter with the brachiosaurus beginning when the jeeps come to a stop and Sam Neill and Laura Dern first see the creature.
4. The night storm scene with the T-Rex encounter.

All of the above begin at a chapter change of both disc versions, making them quick to locate.

The video: In no instance can the DVD version compare with the Blu-ray.

In scene 1, the sand particles are fully defined in the Blu-ray and are a blur with the DVD. When Sam Neill rises into the frame the landscape is richly defined in the Blu-ray until the camera refocuses onto Neill's face. Later we see the sheen of sweat on Neill's face with the Blu-ray which is not noticeable at all with the DVD. The improvement in facial definition of the people standing behind Neill when he is lecturing them.

In scene 2, the improvement in the definition of the sea water below the helicopter, the facial definition of the passengers, the clear definition of the weave in Sam Neill's hat. Later the foliage clarity as the helicopter (a miniature, I believe) flies through the canyon.

In scene 3, the improved definition of the tree foliage which is a blur with the DVD and outstandingly defined in the Blu-ray. The definition of the details of the creatures they are observing.

In scene 4, the improved details in the night scene, objects really look wet from the rain. The amazing definition of the wet scales of the T-Rex.

The audio: When I first heard the audio of the DVD, I knew that it was shamefully compressed compared with the LD (Laser Disc) issue that I still have. Also missing were the fundamentals in bass sounds which also have been fully restored with the DTS sound track of the Blu-ray.

In scene 1. When the seismic charge in detonated, you can feel it in the floor with the BD. Not there at all with the DVD.

In scene 3. When the brachiosaur rises on its hind legs and howls, it is really loud with the BD, terribly compressed with the DVD.
When it falls back down onto its forelegs, you feel it in your chest. No such thing with the DVD.

In scene 4. The sound of the thunder, the bass elements of the T-Rex growls, the thumps of its footsteps are all very powerful with the BD and missing in the DVD. When the T-Rex howls at the children and they clap their hands over their ears you hear why they are doing it with the Blu-ray.
The DVD doesn't capture this at all.

The above noted audio differences will not be noticeable at all when using standard TV speakers. A decent home audio system is required with the Blu-ray player set to wide range audio (least compression). I recommend monitoring your volume setting carefully at first to safe-guard your speakers.

I can say without reservation that all three of the films in this collection benefit immeasurably with the Blu-ray format in picture and sound.

The films themselves:

Jurassic Park: Of course the film most people will remember because it made the greatest initial impression. It deserves to be remembered because nothing quite like it had been previously accomplished from a technical standpoint. It's an enormously entertaining and absorbing picture with a fine cast and somehow manages to convince you of the possibilities implied, at least for a while.

The Lost World -- Jurassic Park: The most disappointing of the three, especially considering that it was directed by Spielberg. It more resembles a "monster movie" in the class of "The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms" or some such -- one highly improbable crisis after another. There are a few CG errors noticeable even in the DVD version. In the stegosaurus scene, the creature's front foot suddenly unrealistically moves horizontally in the pond water without being lifted, which should have been corrected.

Jurassic Park III: An interesting title considering that there is no film titled Jurassic Park II. Still, a greatly entertaining film in the style of a grand adventure. The search for the missing young boy makes the story more compelling. This film also benefits from a fine cast which the second film generally lacks.

I would have preferred the packaging to be similar to the book form used for the "Star Wars" saga in the interest of saving shelf space but I certainly find the collection to be very entertaining and technically very impressive.
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50 of 56 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Jurassic Park Trilogy July 12, 2002
Format:DVD
Steven Spielberg's 1993 blockbuster is still the best of the Jurassic trilogy, and the film retains all the amazement and anticipation it had when it was first released.
Taken from Michael Crichton's thrilling novel, Jurassic Park is one Spielberg's most expertly-crafted films. The special effects are from FX maestro Stan Winston, who did the special effects for Aliens (1986) and Terminator 2 (1991). The seamless combination of CGI and robotic creatures creates some truly terrifying action set- pieces.

Despite what some critics thought when the film was released, I feel that all the principal actors give good performances, especially Sam Neill as Alan Grant and Jeff Goldblum as Dr. Ian Malcolm. But admittedly, the dinosaur creations are the main attraction, and Winston's monsters (which won him another Oscar after Terminator 2) are truly frightning. Great entertainment.

The Lost World is an exciting adventure starring Jeff Goldblum, Vince Vaughn, Julianne Moore and Pete Postlethwaite. The film picks up four years after the incident at Jurassic Park, where a corporate businessman Peter Ludlow (Arliss Howard) plans to take dinosaurs off the second island (Isla Sorna, where dinosaurs have been breeding) and bring them to a theme park in San Diego.

Spielberg knows what the audience wants; the film has more dinosaurs, even better CGI and impressive animatronic dinosaurs from the maestro Stan Winston. The action throughout the film is exciting and while not as astonishing as Jurassic, the effects are first-rate. Although the action is good, the story isn't one of Spielberg's best. That said, the principal cast are fine, especially Goldblum as Malcolm ("Ooh, aah, that's how it always starts, and then later the running and screaming") and Postewaite as Roland Tembo, a game hunter intent on shooting one of the Tyrannosaurs. Silly in parts, it's still an exciting adventure movie, with enough action and light humour to satisfy audiences.

Joe Johnston, taking over the reigns from Spielberg, has created an adventure that starts off quickly and hardly ever lets up. Sam Neill, returning to the role which made him famous in the original, is a stronger presence than in the first Jurassic, and the supporting cast of William H. Macy and Tea Leoni manage not to get lost amidst the barrage of CGI dinosaurs. The special effects are, of course the main stars, with Stan Winston's excellent dinosaurs surpass the ones for the original. And the plot (a bunch of people get stuck on an island with dangerous dinosaurs) provides plenty of great scares (a scene with nasty pterodactyls is the high-point) and fast-paced action to satisfy audiences. Great fun.

The trilogy DVD extras are first- rate, with superb picture and sound for all the discs. The special features are exceptional, with a 50 minute 'making of' of the film. Most interesting, however, is the footage of early pre-production meetings with Spielberg and the FX team discussing how certain shots and effects should be done. Also there are storyboards, production photos and web links.

The extras for The Lost Wolrd are fantastic, with a comprehensive 'making of', deleted scenes, trailers and ton of production info. The highlight on the JP3 Disc is the Commantary from the special effects team of Stan Winston, Michael Lantieri and some of the crew. Also, you get a series of 'making of's and trailers. Best of all is Disc 4 "Beyond Jurassic Park" featuring over two hours of never-before-available bonus material from all three films. Excellent entertainment that is a must-have for Jurassic fans.

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191 of 227 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars DINO-MITE!!! January 2, 2006
Format:DVD|Amazon Verified Purchase
Yeah, I know the title of this review is corny, but you have to admit that this is a pretty nice boxed set. It contains all three films from the "Jurassic Park" film series. The first film stands alone as one of the most impressive and progressive films of its time. It featured the best special effects of its time and each film builds on these effects. Let's break each film down:

"Jurassic Park" Five stars

Perhaps the greatest dinosaur film ever made, "Jurassic Park" features brilliant special effects, wonderful acting and a great plotline filled with suspense and horror. With Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, and Richard Attenborough heading up a small cast of characters including Samuel L. Jackson, this film is sure to be a winner in anyone's collection. Briefly, this is the tale of a man who hopes to cash in on genetically bred dinosaurs by creating a sort of theme park that allows the average man to get an up-close-and-personal look at T-Rex, stegosaurus, and those wicked velociraptors. Of course, when a small group arrives to approve the park, things go awry. Highly recommended flick worthy of multiple views.

"The Lost World" Three Stars

The weakest flick in the series. Jeff Goldblum reprises his role from the original flick as he goes to a second island where the dinos from the original film were allowed to grow before being shipped to the park. He's there to help a small group study the dinosaurs in an environment untouched by man. Then a gang of hunters come along in a last ditch effort to save the pocketbooks of the JP stockholders and bring a T-Rex back to San Diego, CA to cash in. Unfortunately, this film was weighed down by eco-terrorism and way too many characters. Though the cast was very good, there just wasn't enough to work with here. Not worthy of many viewings, but it's nice to have in the set.

"Jurassic Park III" Four stars

The best sequel and it saves the saga from the forgettable "Lost World." This film brings back Sam Neill's character who gets conned into going back to the islands and ends up having to save the son of a wealthy and on-the-outs couple(played wittingly by William H. Macy and Tea Leoni). It has a brief but wonderful cameo by Laura Dern and takes a potshot at the purple dino, Barney. This film is the most wide open of the bunch as it ditches the suspense of the original and the morality tale of "Lost World" and goes straight for the action. It's a wonderful popcorn flick that works well for what it is. Definitely worthy of multiple viewings and definitely worth owning.

As a whole, this set is really wonderful to own. You get all three films for less than the price of two of them if you purchased each separately. The packaging is pretty cool since it resembles the opening gates that are so famous from the first film. There are plenty of extras for folks into that kind of stuff and two out of three of these films is worth watching more than once. The original flick is timeless, "JPIII" is a rollercoaster ride, and "The Lost World" is nice to have if you're a completionist. Get this set today if you can't get enough of the dino-action and dino-horror that is the "Jurassic Park Adventure Pack."
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic American Sci Fi Flims
The Jurassic Park movies are all well made and qualify, in my opinion, as classic American films. A true science fiction movie collection can not be complete with these fine films.
Published 20 hours ago by The Pizza Man
5.0 out of 5 stars Favorite movie
One of my favorite movie series and even being used it was in great shape and played without a issue.
Published 2 days ago by john hirschbock
5.0 out of 5 stars I love it
The Jurassic Model is wonderful and the discs itself are carefully design packaging and high quality of pictures. It make me want to buy another one.
Published 4 days ago by RACHAN L.
5.0 out of 5 stars Exploitive sci-fi adventure, but Jurassic Park III is a good movie
Many years had passed since my last viewing of the Jurassic Park movies, and my mind had buried their badness in favor of their goodness. Read more
Published 4 days ago by Solipso
4.0 out of 5 stars well worth it
Have to say that it was a good addition to my collection. Love the look of the T-Rex and really like the included extras.
Published 5 days ago by Terunesh Rao
5.0 out of 5 stars Takes me back
Loved these movies as a kid and probably haven't seen the first one in I don't know how many years. Decided to buy it and bought the trilogy and watched all three in probably as... Read more
Published 5 days ago by Sammy N. Mastroianni
5.0 out of 5 stars Great set!
Sure the last one was hit-or-miss, but the first one and second one are great! Digital copies were a great addition as well!
Published 6 days ago by Pablo
5.0 out of 5 stars I love it.
It was perfect. I love Jurassic Park and I love the statue and the fact this had hard and digital copies.
Published 6 days ago by Margaret L Santiago
5.0 out of 5 stars JURASSIC PARK TRILOGY GIFT SET (BLU-RAY)
Love this set. The T-Rex at the gate is a nice bonus. I was hooked on J.P. the moment I saw the first one at the theatre. Highly recommended. ENJOY !!!
Published 6 days ago by Joe Sporta
5.0 out of 5 stars Good Gets Better
The movies were already good on the DVD trilogy that I had and I was considering upgrading to blu-ray anyway, but the high quality of this packaging, as well as the bonus' of the... Read more
Published 7 days ago by Kelayans
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does it include the dinosaur and jp gates figure?
someone please answer this!!!!!
Apr 11, 2013 by moodapiller |  See all 8 posts
For the people crying about the grain......... Be the first to reply
just placed my preorder for jurassic park bluray!
I would have opted for this set but gosh... what moron made the Trex look so bad? And she's green? C'mon... this is Jurassic Park. Make the 'rex look like the one from the movie, and at least make it look as good as the original toys did. This is like early 90s style dinosaur toy bad.
Jun 30, 2011 by VinnyC |  See all 5 posts
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