Quote from: HuDaFuK on May 29, 2015, 10:13:58 AM
Straying into a dangerous animals' territory and being killed is not the same as being hunted.
But that's all that happens with the Raptors in the movie. Every single one of the films, people walk into their territory.
JP: Humans literally walk into them trying to turn the power back on. Raptors follow them a fairly short distance (The power station isn't that far from the visitor centre, the film makes a point of this).
TLW: Humans, again,
literally walk into their hunting ground. They're explicitly told to avoid the middle of the island because that's where the predators hunt, and they're explicitly told not to go into the tall grass for the same reason.
Again, it's not far from the tall grass to the visitor centre.
JPIII:
Yet again, the humans run into the Raptors. This time, they take an egg, which is
explicitly given as the reason the Raptors follow them so much in the film. They aren't hunting them just for food, they want their baby back.
The Raptors have
never been shown to excessively hunt humans. Ellie and Muldoon encounter the Raptors, the Raptors follow her back to the visitor centre nearby. The InGen peeps go into the long grass, Malcolm et al. follow soon after, get followed to the visitor centre. And so on.
The
only dinosaur portrayed as needlessly hunting people is the Spinosaurus (and I only say that because I can't remember the film that well), and
arguably the T-Rex in the first movie -- but even then it was clearly just hunting around.