During its original theatrical release, Steven Spielberg's 1993 science fiction adventure blockbuster "Jurassic Park," based on the 1990 Michael Crichton novel of the same name, grossed over $900 million worldwide in its original theatrical run and has spawned two sequels, "The Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Jurassic Park III," both of which were box office successes.

The fourth installment in the series, Colin Trevorrow's upcoming "Jurassic World," is scheduled to be released on June 12, and given the whopping $4.5 million that Universal Pictures is shelling out for the 30-second commercial that will premiere at some point during Super Bowl XLIX, it looks like the film is becoming one of the most anticipated movies of 2015.

Moviepilot.com blogger-writer Matt Timmy Creamer has come up with a few theories of his own surrounding the third sequel in the franchise, and, according to the film aficionado, viewers may want to take another few of first film in the series, "Jurassic Park."

Expected to be one of the summer's highest grossing films, at the moment, the second trailer for "Jurassic World" airs during the 49th Super Bowl -- scheduled to kick off at the University of Phoenix Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Feb. 1 -- is the only major motion picture ad that has been announced to air. It should also be noted that when the movie hits theaters, there will not be any cinematic competition on its opening weekend to contend with.

Fans of the film may remember Dennis Nedry (played in the film by Wayne Knight), a lead programmer who is bribed and shuts down the original theme park's power to sneak out with dinosaur embryos samples to sell to a corporate rival named BioSyn. Nedry is eventually killed off by a spitting Dilophosaurus after crashing his Jeep in a heavy rainstorm, getting lost and failing to deliver the embryos to the island's docks. But what of the embryos? Creamer notes that this could be the basis for the film.

He argues that BioSyn could have hired a crew and sent them to Isla Nublar, where the events of the first film took place, to retrieve the embryos and, provided scientists were successful, this became the tipping point for a new generation of dinosaurs to be cloned on the island. This makes sense given that the sequels, "The Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Jurassic Park III," do not take place on Isla Nublar but on its sister island, Isla Sorna. In the second film, the facility at Isle Sorna is kaput and a storm demolishes the containment lavatories, which granted the dinos to roam free in the wild.

The writer also says that in Jurassic Park mythology, BioSyn went bankrupt and was probably bought out by Masraini Inc. which explains why Jurassic World has opened more than two decasdes after the events of all the original trilogy.