People expecting the latest film in the series to deliver a similar technical impact will be in for a disappointment, as Jurassic World Dominion basically ticks a few boxes and that's it. Dinosaurs: check. Frantic chases: check. Gobsmackingly stupid behavior whenever the script calls for it: check. Familiar faces: check, and DOUBLE-check, as probably the biggest selling point this time is the team-up of the Jurassic Park crew (Sam Neill as Alan Grant, Laura Dern as Ellie Sadler and Jeff Goldblum as Jeff Goldblum though they call him Ian Malcolm) with the Jurassic World crew (Chris Pratt as Owen Grady, Bryce Dallas Howard as Claire Dearing and Isabella Sermon as Maisie Lockwood).
Meanwhile, dinosaur wranglers Owen and Claire battle evil dinosaur poachers, and try to keep their cloned step-daughter Maisie a secret. Surprise surprise: the poachers work for Dodgson, and he needs Maisie and the velociraptor baby Beta for his nefarious plan. The poachers manage to get their hands on both Maisie and baby Beta, causing Owen and Claire to travel around the world to try and get them back. All trails lead to Dodgson's research facility, a gigantic dinosaur-filled valley in the Dolemites, an environment which is perfectly secluded and controlled. What could possibly go wrong? Well... this is the sixth Jurassic Park -slash- Jurassic World film, so by now you should know at least five possible reasons already...
Colin Trevorrow has the directing duties this time, as he had in Jurassic World and the Jurassic World short Battle at Big Rock. His approach to the material is decent enough, and the big chase in Malta surely gets the blood pumping, but overall his vision lacks the originality and visual flair J.A. Bayona showed in the previous film (my review of which was surprisingly positive). All the main actors reprise their roles well enough and seem to have fun doing so, with young Isabella Sermon being a standout, playing a very sympathetic character who doubts her place in the world as a clone. The newcomers fare less well. DeWanda Wise and Mamoudou Athie are basically just there as wafer-thin add-ons, and Dichen Lachman is just there to be evil and exotic, traits she can play in her sleep by now.
In the end, it is what it is. If you want dinosaurs, chases and familiar faces, Jurassic World Dominion delivers. If you want some spice, blood and surprise, you'll have to look somewhere else.