Jurassic World: Dominion Becomes the Most Expensive Movie Ever Made

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Move over, Star Wars — there’s a new budget-breaking king in town. And it’s not about Jedi or Sith. It’s about dinosaurs. Hungry, expensive, CGI-packed dinosaurs.

Universal Studios has officially dropped the mic (and millions of dollars) with Jurassic World: Dominion , the 2022 finale to the Jurassic World trilogy. According to Universal’s financial reports, the film cost a jaw-dropping $583.9 million to make — officially dethroning Star Wars: The Force Awakens as the most expensive movie ever produced.

Yes, you read that right. This dinosaur flick cost more than some small countries’ GDP.


Why Was It So Damn Expensive?

You might be wondering: how do you spend almost $600 million on a movie where Chris Pratt mostly runs from bugs and raptors?

Well, turns out, making a global blockbuster during a global pandemic isn’t exactly cheap.

Filming took place largely in the UK in 2020, right when the world decided to shut down for a while. The cast, crew, and every caterer within a 10-mile radius were stuck in lockdown bubbles together. That meant:

  • Quarantine hotels
  • Daily health checks
  • Sanitizing Chris Pratt’s jeep between takes
  • Paying actors to sit around doing nothing but looking concerned

And then there were the special effects. Because if you’re going to bring back Jeff Goldblum in a tank top, you better also have enough CGI to melt a graphics card.

Not to mention the star-studded cast :

  • Chris Pratt (still pretending he’s Indiana Jones)
  • Bryce Dallas Howard (in heels, again)
  • Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum returning like cinematic comfort food

This wasn’t just a movie. It was an event. A very, very expensive one.


British Government to the Rescue (Sort Of)

Universal did get a helping hand — or rather, a £89.1 million one — from the UK government. Thanks to tax relief programs aimed at boosting the country’s film industry (especially during the chaos of a global health crisis), the studio managed to recoup part of its investment.

So technically, taxpayers helped fund a scene where a T. rex crashes through a McDonald’s billboard. You’re welcome.


Box Office Roar

Despite mixed reviews (“More dinosaurs, less plot!” critics cried), Dominion made over $1 billion worldwide , proving once again that people will always pay to see CGI creatures destroy things — even if they’ve already seen it five times before.

It also marked the end of a trilogy that began with Jurassic World in 2015 — a saga that started with wonder, peaked with weird giant locusts, and ended with… well, let’s just say we’ll remember it for the merch.

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