The ominous new clip taken from Jurassic World showed another glimpse of the Indominus Rex, the terrifying new dinosaur created by the Hammond Creation Lab, with Irrfan Khan's Simon Masrani and Bryce Dallas Howard's Claire Dearing looking on to it and contemplating the effect the dinosaur will have on park visitors.

"You think it'll scare the kids?" Dearing asks Masrani.

"The kids? This will give the parents nightmares," Masrani answered.

Not contented with the answer, Dearing presses on: "Is that good?"

Masrani does not take his eyes away from the dinosaur and shows a deadpan expression as he answers softly, "It's fantastic."

The movie directed by Colin Trevorrow has been generating a lot of buzz leading up to its June 12 release date, and lead star Chris Pratt even talked to Movie Magic about why the upcoming movie will feature "bigger and scarier" dinosaurs than the previous Jurassic films.

"It's been 22 years since the events of Jurassic Park took place," he said. "The main thing that I think is different is we're exploring a different society now. Thematically we're talking about a generation of people whose relationship to cutting edge, mind-blowing science is different."

Since the fictional park opened, said Pratt, there have been 20,000 people visiting it every single day, and that is why they are bored with the dinosaurs they've seen and want to see something more.

The dinosaurs have "been around for 20 years. They're not new and exciting the way they would have been back then. They're just another thing that you can see if you want," the actor said.

Because of this, the executives of Jurassic World are dealing with the financial loss of attendance falling off, so they decided to introduce newer, bigger, scarier creatures to get the kids more involved.

"Of course, that's what they're doing. They're meddling with nature now in a way to generate profit," said Pratt. "It's a parable about the classic ethical tale of man meddling with the natural order of things for his own entertainment. Like the first one, but this one has a new theme which is kind of shining a mirror to society that's a little disenfranchised with the wonderment around them."

Aside from Pratt, Khan, and Howard, other stars in the film include Vincent D'Onofrio as Vic Hoskins, Jake Johnson as Lowery, Nick Robinson as Zach, Ty Simpkins as Gray, and B.D. Wong as Dr. Henry Wu.