Why would being US Navy prepare someone to be a great velociraptor trainer?

Why would being US Navy prepare someone to be a great velociraptor trainer? - UK flag on creased paper

This bugged me right the way through Jurassic World.

Before Chris Pratt as Owen the velociraptor trainer is introduced, we're primed to expect a tough, world-class expert on animal psychology with this dialogue (adapted from this transcript):

MASRANI: So the paddock is quite safe, then?

CLAIRE: (nods) We have the best structural engineers in the world.

MASRANI: Yeah, so did Hammond.

Claire doesn't respond

MASRANI: There's an American Navy man here. Part of a research program one of my companies is running. Owen Grady.

CLAIRE: I know who he is.

MASRANI: His animals often try to escape. They're smart. He has to be smarter.

What I couldn't make sense of is - what does being an "American Navy man" have to do with outsmarting animals and training dinosaurs?

In the context of the conversation, making the fact he's a "Navy man" the very first piece of information shared feels like an appeal to authority - an implied "of course you should defer to his superior expertise on dinosaur psychology, he's US Navy".

I don't understand how being a Navy man establishes his credibility as a dinosaur trainer? Why the Navy?

(in contrast, for example, with the original Jurassic Park, where their raptor expert's credibility was established by introducing him as a ranger / game hunter, with many years' experience tracking, monitoring and hunting dangerous wildlife)

What am I missing?


The closest I can find to an answer online is this from the wiki:

During his time in the Navy he trained dolphins (presumably under the United States Navy Marine Mammal Program)

...which, if true, bridges the gap slightly, but I don't remember any mention of anything like this in the film, and the word "dolphin" doesn't appear in the above linked transcript of the first part of the film.

Even if the wiki is accurate here, I don't understand how the viewer is expected to make that link from an exposition / character development point of view. Especially in a world where dinosaurs had been around so long as to be passè - would there not be actual specialists whose whole careers had been focused on training dinosaurs, rather than needing to rely on moonlighting navy people who might be ex-dolphin trainers?

What am I missing?



Best Answer

It was explained by an interview with Pratt:

We [Pratt and likely Director Colin T.] came together and decided that the backstory is that he’s a guy who probably trained dolphins for the Navy, and he saw what type of treatment those animals received, which is always not great for the animal. We decided that the likelihood is that, in the years that he’s been working for the park, this isn’t his first set of raptors. Raptors didn’t make it through some of the training. These animals died on his watch. They killed each other on his watch.

So it's word-of-god as to the Navy and Dolphins. And Owen has been at it for a long time, so he's the person whose career is the dinosaur training that you speculate about. Aside from most people involved with these passe dinosaurs tend to die (See Park 1, 2, 3, natch), and observation of genetically spliced/unnatural dinosaurs doesn't translate into training skills.

While the general viewing public may not understand the implied reference to the Navy dolphin training, generally speaking, they still have a high regard for military personnel, including Navy. They could have easily inferred Owen to be a Navy Seal, highly trained, disciplined, and skilled. But the main thing is that the line isn't important in giving Owen screen cred. His saving the kid from his raptors was all the audience needed.




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Who trained the Raptors?

They lived in the Raptor Research Arena where they were trained by Owen Grady and were taken care of by Barry. Owen taught them over 40 commands.

What did Owen Grady do in the Navy?

After graduating in University of Virginia, Owen Grady became a Navy SEAL. He worked with SEAL team 4 in 2004-2008, under James Holden. He was a expert marksman and skilled combatant of the SEAL team. He is also known to be an expert in explosives, weapons and tactics.

Why did the T Rex leave blue?

(at least 22 years). Histologic analysis of Tyrannosaurus rex say that aprox 30 years of age may have been close to the maximum for the species. They are also very territorial, seeing the Indominus as a threat, not Blue, thus ignoring it.

Did T Rex and Velociraptors live at the same time?

The newly discovered dino, dubbed Acheroraptor temertyorum, was a two-legged meat-eater and close cousin of the Velociraptor. "We have had scanty evidence for more than a century that raptors lived with Tyrannosaurus rex until the end of the Cretaceous," said Currie.



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Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: vectors icon, Anna Shvets, Karolina Grabowska, Karolina Grabowska