The dinosaurs are bigger, the rides are scarier and there’s a dashing new leading pair as the main attraction: “Jurassic World” is open for business again and hoping to entice a new generation used to getting more bang for its movie buck. The film, out in U.S. theaters on Friday, revives the classic sci-fi action franchise that began with Steven Spielberg making dinosaurs come to life in 1993’s “Jurassic Park.” But two decades on, as Bryce Dallas Howard’s Claire slyly says in the film, no one is excited about seeing a dinosaur anymore. That’s why the theme park in which “Jurassic World” is set needs to amp up the danger for visitors drawn by the adrenaline-fueled experience of getting up close and personal with dinosaurs.