Steven Spielberg’s first look at “Jurassic World Rebirth” left director Gareth Edwards “relieved and inspired.” The executive producer rang the editing suite to deliver what Edwards calls “the moment you dream of and fear,” asking only fine-tuning before praising the cut. ScreenRant later reported that Spielberg found the thriller leaner and scarier than recent entries. Released in U.S. cinemas on 2 July, the franchise reset is heading for a projected USD 312 million worldwide debut by Sunday.
Spielberg’s most vivid note arrived as a culinary metaphor: “The audience has to leave hungry,” he told Edwards, reframing pacing as anticipation rather than indulgence. The comment carried weight, Edwards said, because the caller’s résumé contains “every masterpiece you’ve ever loved”. Homages to “Jaws” and “Raiders of the Lost Ark” in the new film reflect that influence.
Edwards described the script he first read as one that “didn’t have the words Jurassic World on the front,” signalling a fresh covert-ops narrative built around dinosaur DNA retrieval on a quarantined island. Hired in early 2024, he completed the picture in barely twelve months, an exhausting sprint he openly acknowledges.
The director says he borrowed Spielberg’s “sinister trick” of folding horror into family adventure, a choice Universal embraced. Scarlett Johansson’s casting—she is “psyched to be here,” according to The Sunday Times—has widened audience appeal.
Commercial signals are strong. there are reports of a USD 141.2 million five-day domestic haul and USD 171 million overseas, giving Universal its USD 312.5 million launch estimate. Vulture places the domestic three-day slice at about USD 85 million, slotting “Rebirth” mid-table among the series’ seven releases.
Wikipedia’s live tally shows USD 82.1 million already booked against a reported USD 180 million budget. Edwards, still tired from the quick turnaround, told NBC Insider he is “1,000 per cent cool” if the next chapter proceeds without him—even as box-office momentum and Spielberg’s endorsement all but guarantee dinosaurs will stomp back soon.