For decades, Jurassic Park—and its Jurassic World rebranding —has effectively held a monopoly on large-scale dinosaur cinema in the mainstream film market.
That dominance has not been without turbulence, though, and recent years have seen increasing scrutiny aimed at the franchise’s creative direction.
That criticism intensified with Jurassic World Rebirth, which, despite earning $869.1 million worldwide last summer, was met with a largely negative critical response.

The seventh film in the long-running Jurassic series was widely criticized for its weak screenplay and poor character development.
Many fans also rejected its handling of established continuity, particularly its retconning of the global dinosaur premise introduced in Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom (2018) and expanded upon in Jurassic World Dominion (2022).

A new film is rumored to be in development, however, Universal hasn't confirmed anything yet. According to reports, it will be a direct sequel to Rebirth, with director Gareth Edwards and Scarlett Johansson said to be in talks to return. Still, there's no clear idea on where the franchise might be headed now that it has exhausted itself creatively.
Now, against that backdrop of uncertainty, a new contender has entered the conversation.
The second trailer for The End of Oak Street, released on June 1, has drawn significant attention online, with viewers noting its striking resemblance in tone and concept to Jurassic Park-style storytelling. Watch it below:
The upcoming sci-fi thriller is directed by David Robert Mitchell (It Follows), produced by J.J. Abrams, and stars Anne Hathaway (The Devil Wears Prada) and Ewan McGregor (Doctor Sleep). It follows a suburban family whose entire neighborhood is transported into a prehistoric environment after a mysterious storm-like event reshapes their reality.
Warner Bros. describes the story as:
“After a mysterious cosmic event rips Oak Street from suburbia and transports their neighborhood to someplace unknown, the Platt family soon discovers that their very survival depends on them sticking together as they navigate their now unrecognizable surroundings.”
Director David Robert Mitchell also commented on the origins of the idea in a recent interview with Entertainment Weekly, saying:
“A few years ago, I was walking through our neighborhood in Michigan, just walking down the street, and I was passing by this garage [with a] chain link fence and garbage cans. And I was struck by the image of, like, ‘It'd be really interesting if there was a dinosaur right there.'”
That concept has now been developed into a major studio production, which arrives at a moment when Jurassic Park fatigue is being increasingly discussed among fans and critics.
While Universal continues to develop its own dinosaur franchise, the creative response to Rebirth has raised questions about how sustainable the Jurassic Park series is creatively.
In contrast, The End of Oak Street arrives with a clean slate and a premise that leans into familiar dinosaur imagery without relying on decades of franchise continuity. That distinction alone leaves us wondering whether audiences may finally be ready to embrace a dinosaur franchise that has no relation to Jurassic Park.
The End of Oak Street will be released in theaters on August 14, 2026.
Do you think The End of Oak Street could spell trouble for Jurassic Park? Does Universal need to reboot the franchise to win back fans? Share your thoughts!



