Jurassic Park will turn 24 next month. 27 if you’re talking about the original novel. If it were a person, that means the beloved franchise would be old enough to legally rent a car and would be on track to finishing its doctorate. It would be looking for condos and taking Tinder a little more seriously.
However, if the new Jurassic World exhibit at the Field Museum is any indication of its success, then Jurassic Park isn’t worried about its quarter-life crisis.

It’s more than just nostalgia, though. Nowadays, a lot of millennial childhood memorabilia is repackaged for consumption with a fresh-slap of paint and a retro-looking label, but Jurassic World lives up to doing something refreshing. The environment feels genuine, the stages of the tour flow nicely and the animatronics are far and way better than anything you’ve seen in a Chuck E. Cheese. The level of detail is something you’d expect at a theme park rather than a museum where there’s usually limited engagement, which may have been the point entirely.
While the exhibit is family-friendly (the dinosaurs stay penned in this time, which may or may not disappoint you depending on the excitement level you’re looking for), it’s more than just an educational display for youngsters. Couples on dates and families three-generations deep into their love of thunder lizards all wander the halls. In one room, kids are excitedly chattering about whether it’s a brachiosaurus or a brontosaurus they’re seeing. In the next, adults are just as excited to be pushing buttons in the InGen lab, and of course, everyone gawks in awe at the life-sized T. rex.

If you’re looking for an interesting date, buy a pass and take a look. Grab a beer like Off Color’s Tooth and Claw at the bar before heading in. If you’re looking for a cool outing with the kids that’ll keep the parents happy too, stop by on a weekend afternoon, and also grab a Tooth and Claw at the bar (you’re a parent, you’ve earned it).
Jurassic World: The Exhibition runs at the Chicago Field Museum until January 7, 2018.
Featured Image Credit: Field Museum
