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Cloverfield
Plot
The film comes to seem as if it were a video file recovered from a digital video camera by the Department of Defense. The film begins with a warning that the following images about to be seen is a case called "Cloverfield" and was found in the area that was "formerly known as Central Park."
Robert "Rob" Hawkins awakes in the morning after sleeping 27 above a platonic friend, Elizabeth "Beth" McIntyre April. They plan to leave for Coney Island that day. The footage cuts next month, when Jason Rob brother and his girlfriend Lily prepare a farewell party for Rob. At the party, his friend Hudson "Hud" Platt used the camera to film Rob testimony accidentally recording Rob and Beth in Coney Island trip. During recording, Hud unsuccessfully flirts with Marlena, another party guest. After Beth leaves the party, which seems an earthquake strikes, and the city suffers a blackout shortly. The local news reports that a tanker has overturned near Liberty Island. An explosion in Lower Manhattan makes the party attendees to leave the building and witness the head of the Statue of Liberty crashing near the street. Hud records what appears to be a more giant monster blocks away. Many took refuge in a convenience store as the Woolworth Building collapses. Rob, Jason, Lilly, Hud and Marlene attempt to escape from Manhattan Bridge Brooklyn. A huge tail breaks the bridge, sending Jason and hundreds of others in the water. The survivors are forced to flee back to Manhattan.
Rob heard the message Beth saying that she is trapped in his apartment and unable to move. The news shows the National Guard to attack the monster and smaller, vicious creatures that are going out of your body (called HSP or human parasites scale "research mode special Blu-Ray). Rob, Hud, Lily and Marlena risk to rescue Beth.
Soon they are caught in a crossfire between the monster and the army and escaped to an underground station. They decide to go through the subway tunnels to reach Beth apartment, but they are attacked by several parasites. One of them bites Marlena. The group escapes into the department store Bloomingdale's, where they are greeted by Sergeant Pryce and a local squad of U.S. Army soldiers. They have created a field hospital and command center in the store. As Rob tries to enlist the help of Beth, Marlena's eyes start to bleed and she was removed before exploding behind a curtain.
Seargent Pryce allows other to leave, but warns them to report to a military evacuation site before 6:00 am, when the last helicopter evacuates Manhattan and the Army render its "Hammerdown" protocol. This would entail the bombing of the city in an effort to destroy the monster.
The group found the apartment tower Beth at the Time Warner Center has collapsed against another tower in the center. To climb the standing tower and cross on the roof of the building of Beth and work their way into her apartment. Beth is trapped and crushed by a concrete reinforcing bar, but are able to release it. After the rescue, the four make their way to the place of refuge where they are with the monster once again on the Grand Central Station, while the army continues to participate. Lily was run out by helicopter without her friends. Moments Later, Rob, Beth and Hud are taken in a second helicopter and witness a U.S. Air Force B-2 Spirit carpet-bomb the monster. Just as Hud begins hailing victory on the monster, who comes and attacks the helicopter, causing it to crash in a clearing of grass in the park center. A voice on the radio says helicopter crashed protocol Hammerdown be effective in fifteen minutes and said that anyone hearing the sirens in the area of the explosion.
Hud and Beth pull an injured Rob clear of debris the helicopter, but Hud returns to recover the camera and as it does a monster appears above him. This is the first time the monster is clearly seen and the light of day. Curiously examines Hud for a moment, then attempts to eat, spit out the top half of your body. Rob and Beth grabs the camera recording and shelter under a bridge in Central Park as air raid sirens began to sound and bombers can be heard in the distance, indicating that the protocol is Hammerdown about to begin. Rob and Beth take turns leaving their last testimonies of the day, as Rob mentioned Saturday, May 23 in the chamber. Several explosions occur out as the output is carried out massive bombing and the child is heard screaming in pain. Since the bridge collapse and debris covers the camera (the "military intelligence" contained in special research mode version of the Blu-ray, said it was the only thing protecting the camera during the hammer down protocol) Rob and Beth can be heard professing their love for each other as another bomb explodes, stopping the recording of the camera. The film then cuts to images of Rob and Beth Coney Island, where the date in the distance, an object can be seen falling into the ocean.
Cast
Further information: List of characters in the Cloverfield universe
Michael Stahl-David as Robert "Rob" Hawkins
Mike Vogel as Jason Hawkins
TJ Miller as Hudson "Hud" Platt
Odette Yustman as Elizabeth "Beth" McIntyre
Jessica Lucas as Lily Ford
Lizzy Caplan as Marlena Diamond
Ben Feldman as Travis
To prevent leakage information on plot, instead of auditioning the actors with scenes from the film, scripts from Abrams's previous productions were used as TV series Alias and Lost. Some scenes were written specifically for the audition process, not intended for use in the film. Despite not having been informed of the premise of the film, Lizzy Caplan said he accepted a role in "Cloverfield" the mere fact that he was a fan of the Abrams-produced TV series Lost (in the related to his former co-star Kiele Sanchez was a recurring character) and his experience of discovering its true nature initially led her to say she would not sign in a movie in the future "without really knowing what it is." Indicated that its character was a strange sarcastic, and that his role was "physically demanding."
Production
Development
The poster for Escape from New York (1981) inspired by the scene of the severed head of the Statue of Liberty in Cloverfield.
JJ Abrams developed a new monster after he and his son visited a toy store in Japan while promoting 'Mission: Impossible III. He explained: "We saw all these Godzilla toys, and I thought, we have our own [American] monster, and not King Kong. I love King Kong. King Kong is adorable. And Godzilla is a charming monster. We love Godzilla. But I wanted something that was crazy, and intense. "Abrams pays homage to King Kong about 67 minutes of the film, just after a helicopter crash. When the video camera is broken, a quick scene of Coney Island is. This is followed by several frames of the movie set King Kong original. There are two frames of others still in "pre-recorded" sequences, one film! and one of The Beast from 20,000 fathoms - these two films are also listed in the credits.
In February 2007, Paramount Pictures secretly green light "Cloverfield," which will be produced by Abrams, directed by Matt Reeves and written by Drew Goddard. The project was produced by Abrams' company, Bad Robot Productions. Visual effects producer Chantal Feghali was.
Head cut from the Statue of Liberty was inspired by the movie poster Escape from New York 1981, which had shown the head lying in the streets of New York. According to Reeves, "It's a very provocative image. And that was the source that inspired producer JJ Abrams said:" Now this would be an interesting idea for a movie '. "
Title
The film was titled Cloverfield from the beginning, but the title changed throughout production before completion as the original. Matt Reeves explained that the title was changed frequently due to the publicity caused by the teaser trailer, "That excitement spread to such a degree that suddenly could not use the name more. So we started using all these names like Slush and cheese. And people always knew what we were doing! "The director said that "Cloverfield" was the government's designation for events caused by the monster, comparing the degree of the Manhattan Project. "And is not a project for himself. It's the way this case has been designated. That is why it is in the trailer, and it becomes clear in the film. This is how you relate this phenomenon [or] this case, "said the director. final title of the film, Cloverfield is the name of the exit Abrams takes his office in Santa Monica.
A final title, Greyshot was proposed before the movie was officially titled Cloverfield. The name is taken from the arc Greyshot the two survivors take refuge at the end of the film. Director Matt Reeves said he decided not to change the title of Greyshot because the movie was already so well known as Cloverfield.
Other tentative film titles were:
1-18-08 (USA) (promotional title)
Cheese (USA) (fake working title)
Clover (USA) (Fake working title)
Monstrous (USA) (promotional title)
Slush (USA) (fake working title)
Untitled JJ Abrams Project (USA) (working title)
Greyshot (USA) (proposed title)
Filming
The casting process took place in secret without sequence of commands that are sent to candidates. With output estimated to have a budget of $ 30 million, filming began in mid-June 2007 New York. A cast member said that the film would be like a $ 150 million, despite producers not recognizable and expensive actors. The filmmakers used The Panasonic HVX200 for most of the interior scenes, and the Sony CineAlta F23 camera high definition video to film almost every scene outside New York. Shooting took place in Coney Island, with scenes shot at Deno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park and the Carousel B & B. Some interior shots were filmed on a soundstage in Downey, California, Bloomingdale's in the movie was actually filmed in an emptied Robinsons-May store is being rebuilt in Arcadia, California, and the scenes outside the shop Sephora and electronics were filmed in downtown Los Angeles.
Brooklyn Bridge, as seen through the first-person narrative film
The movie was filmed and edited in a style vrit MIBC, to look like it was filmed with a handheld camera, including jump cuts similar to those found in films home. TJ Miller, who plays Hud, has said in several interviews that he shot a third of the film, and almost half of it did in the movie. Director Matt Reeves describes the presentation, "We wanted to be treated as if somebody found a Handicam, took the tape and put it in the player to view. What you're seeing is a home movie then becomes something else. "Reeves explained that pedestrians documenting the severed head of the Statue of Liberty with camera phones was a reflection of the contemporary era. According to him: "Cloverfield talks a lot of fear and anxieties of our time, how we live our lives. Constantly documenting things and putting them on YouTube, sending people videos through e-mail we felt it was very applicable to the way people feel now. "
Several of the filmmakers heard but not seen in the movie. The man shouting "Oh my God!" several times when the head of the Statue of Liberty of land on the street is the producer Bryan Burk, and director Matt Reeves said the radio broadcast whispered at the end of the credits.
After seeing a cut of film, Steven Spielberg suggested giving the audience an allusion to the fate of the monster during the climax, which resulted in the addition of a countdown heard on the radio the helicopter and the sound of air raid sirens to signal the next Hammerdown attack.
Creature Design
Article Home: Clover (creature)
Principal visual effects supervisor Phil Tippett and his company Tippett Studio was enlisted to develop visual effects for "Cloverfield." Since the visual effects were added after filming, the cast members had to react to a nonexistent creature during scenes, only to be familiar with the first conceptual representations of the beast. Artist Neville Page designed the monster, or creating a biological basis of the creature, although many of its ideas as elongated, and articulated external esophagus does not appear on the screen. The key idea behind the monster that was immature creature suffering from "anxiety separation. This recalls the real-life elephants who get frightened and lash out at the circus, because the director felt "there is nothing scarier than something very large it is scared. "
Marketing
Before the movie release, Paramount Pictures carried out a viral marketing campaign to promote the film that included viral tie-ins similar to Lost Experience. The filmmakers decided to create a teaser trailer to be a surprise in light of the saturation of media common, which together during the preparation stage of the production process. The trailer was used as the basis for the movie itself. Primal Pictures encouraged the teaser which was launched untitled connected, and the Motion Picture Association of America approved the move. As Transformers showed high tracking numbers before its release in July 2007, the study attached the teaser trailer for Cloverfield that showed the release date of January 18, 2008 no, but the title. A second trailer was released on 16 November 2007, which was attached to Beowulf, confirming the title.
The study had kept the project secret knowledge of the online community, a rarity before due to the presence of the buckets that follow upcoming films. The controlled release of information about the film has been seen as a risky strategy which could succeed like The Blair Witch Project (1999) or disappoint like Snakes on the Plane (2006), the latter of which had generated online hype, but failed to attract large audiences. Chad Hartigan of Exhibitor Relations Co. saw several potential problems with the film, including the lack of big stars, performance unimpressive Godzilla films in the U.S. style, and the film's scheduled release in January, considered a "dumping ground for movies bad. "
Pre-release plot speculation
The sudden appearance of the untitled trailer for Cloverfield fueled speculation in the media on the film's plot. U.S. Today reported the possibilities of the film is based on the works of HP Lovecraft, a live-action adaptation of Voltron (based on an interpretation wrong trailer line "It's alive!" as "It's a lion!"), a new film about Godzilla, or a spin-off series Lost TV. The Star Ledger also reported the possibility that the film is based on the tradition of Lovecraft or Godzilla. The Guardian reported the possibility loss of spin-off, while Time Out reported that the film was about an alien called The Parasite. " IGN also backed the possibility that premise, with the parasite is rumored that a working title for the film. Online, slush and Colossus had been discussed at other possible titles. Entertainment Weekly also disputed reports that the film would be about a parasite or a colossal Asian robot such as Voltron.
Visitors of the website Is not It Cool News have pointed allusions 11.09 on the basis of the destruction in New York as the Statue of Liberty decapitated. The film also has produced reality game alternative fans who have followed other viral marketing campaigns, as laid down for the television series Lost, the video game Halo 2 and Halo 3, the album Nine Inch Nails, Year Zero, and the newest Batman movie The Dark Knight. The members of the forums and unfiction.com argn.com have investigated the background of the film, with "1-18-08" section in the generation of more than 7,700 jobs in August 2007 Unfiction. Members have studied the pictures on the official site of the film, potentially related MySpace profiles, and the teaser poster at Comic-Con for the movie. A popular piece of fan art that posits the monster was a whale Humpback mutated.
Viral tie-ins
Photos in the marketing website 1-18-08.com viral
websites that contain elements of puzzle Lovecraft, as Ethan Haas Was Right, originally reported to be connected to the film. On July 9, 2007, producer JJ Abrams said that while a number of Web sites are developing the film market, the official site they had found was only 1-18-08.com. On the site, a collection of photos with time code is provided visitors to build a series of events and interpret their meanings. The images can be rotated several times and quickly moving the mouse away. Also, while the 1-18-08.com, if the page has been left long enough, the monster roar is heard. Finally, www.cloverfieldmovie.com was created. The site provides both a trailer and a number, 33,287, which, by text message to a mobile phone, always a tone monster roar and a wallpaper of a decimated Manhattan. This eventually turns out to be a series of Paramount (the people later received the material in Iron Man, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Kung Fu Panda and The Love Guru).
As part of the viral marketing campaign, the drink Slush! has served as a tie-in. The drink had already appeared in the highest setting producer Abrams above, the television series Alias. viral websites slush! and a Japanese drilling company called Tagruato (, Taguruato?) were put in place to add the mythology of Cloverfield. A building that bears the logo of the company Tagruato also be seen in the television commercial of the eleventh Star Trek film, another Abrams production. When Cloverfield was hosted at Comic-Con 2007, gray Slush! T-shirts were distributed to attendees. Fans who had registered in the Slush! site Cloverfield website to receive emails from fictional sonar images prior to the release of the film that showed a deep-sea creature heading to Manhattan.
The Tagruato website, the only page in addition to the home page that has the "deformed bar" symbol is perforation at sea, and the "Clover" that supposedly originated from the ocean surrounding Coney Island. If someone is going to feature our interactive map the nearest station is "Chuai station" is set to open four months after the attack on New York. Is needed in the "News" the section was an altercation and shall be brief as I have sent special teams to tackle the problem. It also states that Tagruato tracking a piece falling satellite is a satellite made by the Japanese government, no luck so far, but says that "According to data Hatsui disappeared in the Atlantic Ocean last week "(Hatsui is the name of a satellite that the satellite went down earlier).
Tagruato.jp addition, Slusho.jp, 1-18 Jamieandteddy.com and 08.com, at least a "deformed bar" symbol in each Slush. which has on its website, has 1-18-08.com picture behind Teddy Hansen and Jamieandteddy.com which has on its homepage, making it seem as if the relationship between the three. On this site, a suggestion that the monster was given after moving the photos around for some time.
Producer Bryan Burk said the tie-in virus, "[It] was made in conjunction with the study ... Any experience in making this film is very reminiscent [of] how we did "Lost." Director Matt Reeves described Slush! As "part concerned connectivity "with Abrams' Alias and that the drink is a" meta-story "Cloverfield. He explained:" It's almost like tentacles arising from the film and lead also to the ideas in the film. And there's this weird way where you can go see the movie and is an experience ... But There is this other place where you can get involved when there is another kind of aspect to all those who are in it. [...] All the stories kind of bounce off each other and inform each other. But at the end of the day, this film is itself to be a movie. [...] The Internet sort of stories and connections and the tracks are in some way, a prism and is another way of seeing the same thing. For us, it's just another interesting aspect of the narrative. "
Merchandise
A prequel to the manga series of four installments by Yoshiki Togawa titled Cloverfield / Kishin (/ Kishin, Kurbfrudo / Kishin?) Is being published by Japanese publisher Kadokawa Shoten. The story centers on a Japanese school student named Kishin Aiba high, which somehow has a connection to the monster.
On the basis of the first order successful week of Cloverfield in theaters, Hasbro began accepting orders for a 14-inch (36 cm) figure of the monster toy collection with the authentic sound and their parasites to be shipped to the fans on December 24, 2008.
Music and sound
Rob's Party Mix
Compilation album by various artists
Released
From January 17, 2008
Gender
Alternative rock, blues-rock, Britpop, electronica, indie pop, indie rock
Length
64:02
Because of its presentation as images of a consumer digital recorder, Cloverfield has no film score, with the exception of the song "Roar! (Cloverfield Overture) "by Michael Giacchino that plays over the closing credits. Similarities between" Roar! "And the music of Godzilla composer Akira Ifukube have been observed, and it has been suggested that Giacchino's overture is a tribute to work Ifukube, which was confirmed by Matt Reeves on the DVD commentary track. The soundtrack was supervised by William Douglas Murray files and Skywalker Sound.
Rob's Party Mix or blend of Cloverfield is a collection of music played in the opening sequences from of the film that was released exclusively on Apple's iTunes store on 22 January 2008 instead of a traditional soundtrack album. Feedback Cloverfield, "Roar! (Cloverfield Overture) "by Michael Giacchino that plays over the closing credits not included in the album, the mixtape is played in the game and not the official soundtrack of the film. This album was distributed to guests at a party for the premiere of Cloverfield held in the darkroom in New York on January 17, 2008.
A statement from the full score of all the music of the film, including Giacchino "Roar!" final piece of the title, has been released exclusively on iTunes, but has not was officially launched in retail stores. A CD titled Rob Party Mix is packaged in a special edition of Cloverfield available for sale in Canadian stores Wal-Mart from April 22, 2008.
Although Ashley Tisdale "He Said, She Said" was in the movie, which was cut from the album.
Song List
#
Title
Artist
Length
1.
"West Coast"
Coconut Records
3:32
2.
Taper Jean Girl "
Kings of Leon
3:05
3.
"Beautiful Girls"
Sean Kingston
4:01
4.
"No I have your attention "
The Blood Arm
3:35
5.
"Got Your Moments"
Scissors for Lefty
3:11
6.
"Leaving the Funk (Tear the roof of the Sucker)"
Parliament
5:46
7.
"19-2000"
Gorillaz
3:27
8.
"The Underdog"
Spoon
3:42
9.
"Pistol of Fire"
Kings of Leon
2:20
10.
"Disco Lies "
Moby
3:22
11.
"Not the Whirlwind"
Architecture in Helsinki
4:39
12.
"As ugly"
The Black Keys
2:24
13.
"Four Winds"
Bright Eyes
4:16
14.
"The Ride"
Joan As Police Woman
3:09
15.
"Seventeen Years"
Ratatat
4:26
16.
"Wraith Pinned to the Mist and other games "
Of Montreal
4:15
17.
"Fuzz" ()
Mucc
4:47
Reception
Cloverfield opened in 3411 theaters on January 18, 2008 and grossed $ 16,930,000 in its opening day in the United States and Canada. He made $ 40,058,229 in its first weekend, making it the most successful January release date. Globally, it has raised $ 170,602,318, making it the first film in 2008 raised more than $ 100 million. Critics largely praised "Cloverfield", the April 27, 2008, revision total website Rotten Tomatoes reported that 76% of critics gave the film positive reviews, based on 173 reviews. According to Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 comments mainstream press, the film has received an average score of 0.64, based on 37 reviews.
Marc Savlov of The Austin Chronicle calls the film "The property of intense and original creature I've seen in my adult life to the movies [...] a thoroughbred, Grade A, exhilarating monster movie." Quote direction of Matt Reeves, the "whip-smart, stylistically invisible" script and the "almost subliminal evocation of our current times paranoid phobic terror "as the keys to the success of the film, saying that telling the story through the lens of the camera a character" works fantastically good. "Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter called" effective chilling, "praising the effects and the movie" claustrophobic intensity. " He said that although the characters "are not particularly interesting or developed," which was "something refreshing in a monster movie that is filled with the usual suspects. "Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly said the film was" surreptitiously subversive, [a] stylistically clever little jewel, and while the characters were "vapid fools, twenty-something" and acting "right immemorial," the decision to tell the story through amateur footage was "brilliant." Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times wrote that the film is "quite scary at times" and cites "unmistakable evocations of 9 / 11." Concludes that "all in all, it is effective film, deploying its special effects and art time and never under the illusion that everything is happening as we see it. "
Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film an "old monster movie dress with new fashion items, "praising the special effects," nihilistic attitude "and" post-9/11 anxiety overlay, "but said:" When end, [is] not very different from all the marauding creature features that came before him. "Scott Foundas of LA Weekly criticized the use of film scenes reminiscent of September 11, 2001 in New York and called it "cheap and opportunistic." Suggested that the film was the participation in "stealth" attempts at social commentary and compared it unfavorably to the films of Don Siegel, George A. Romero and Steven Spielberg, saying: "When the filmmakers all had something important to say about the state of the world and [...] human nature, Abrams does not have much to say about anything. "Manohla Dargis in the New York Times called the allusions" bad taste, "he says," [Images] may suggest the attack, and you may curse the filmmakers for their vulgarity, insensitivity or lack of imagination ", but" the film is too dumb to offend anything but their intelligence. "She concludes that the film "Functions as a showcase for the amazing special effects that look real, realism does not extend to humans whose fates are meant running to invoke pity and fear, but inspire yawns and contempt. "Stephanie Zacharek of Salon.com calls the movie" badly constructed, humorless and sadistic emotionally, "and summarized by saying that the film" has the trauma of 11 / 9 show and becomes just another random in which to aim and shoot ". Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune warned that the viewer can feel" nauseous "in the references to September 11, but that" other sequences [...] Lead to a real jolt "and that such tactics were" crude, but certainly exciting. "He called the film" dumb " but "quick and dirty and effectively brusque," concluding that despite being "a tougher, more demographically calculating brand of fun" liked the movie. Bruce Paterson of cinephilia described the film as "a successful experiment in style, but not necessarily a success story for those they want the dramatic end. "
Cloverfield appeared on the lists of critics' top ten best films of 2008. Empire Magazine is named the fifth best film of 2008. However, the prestigious French film magazine Cahiers du Cinema Name the movie as the worst third in 2008. Bloody Disgusting movie ranked as the number twenty on the list of 'Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade', Article by calling the film "A brilliant pride, no doubt backed by a precocious genius marketing campaign that followed the philosophy" less is more tempting indeed ... as Blair Witch almost ten years ago helped prove Cloverfield, especially in its first half hour, you can not see the scariest thing of all. "
The film was nominated for four awards, was nominated for two Saturn Awards for "Best supporting actress (Lizzy Caplan)" and "Best science film fiction. "was nominated for two Golden Trailer Awards for" Best Thriller Trailer "and" Most original trailer. "[citation needed] The film won the Saturn Award for "Best science fiction film." Also took the # 12 in Bravo 13 scary Movie Moments. [Citation needed]
Shaky camerawork
Sign up for an AMC theater warning customers to compare the film to a roller coaster.
The film style shaky camera of films, dubbed "Queasy-Cam" by Roger Ebert, has led some viewers (especially in dark movie theaters) to experience motion sickness, including nausea and temporary loss of balance. Audience members prone to migraines have cited the film as a trigger. Some cinemas showing the film, AMC Theatres, warning signs, informing viewers about the filming style of "Cloverfield", while other theaters such as the Pacific Theater verbally warned guests at the box office experience dizziness while watching the film and what to do if I had to leave.
Film influences the encoding video and can cause compression artifacts in fast moving field of view.
Home Press Release
The DVD was released on 22 April 2008 two versions: the standard edition of a single disk and an exclusive "steel-book" special edition that was sold at Suncoast stores and year-end in the U.S. and the future of stores in Canada. Other stores include an exclusive bonus disc exclusive entitled "TJ Miller's Video Diary" DVD in all stores Best Buy, an exclusive mix CD titled "Rob's Goin 'to Japan Party Mix" with the DVD at all Target stores and Wal-Mart and a tone of exclusivity the DVD at all Kmart and Sears stores. Borders also has an exclusive booklet covering your DVD.
Region 2 DVD was released on June 9 in two editions of a disk-two. The limited edition metal box is only available from HMV, while Play.com offers exclusive home. The metal cabinet contains exclusive HMV two discs.
The DVD includes two alternate endings, which vary only slightly. The first alternative ending shows Rob and Beth come out of Coney Avenue station instead Islandtillwell of the Ferris wheel and features different sirens in the background as Rob talks to the camera. In the second alternate ending, right after the final explosion, Beth can be heard screaming "Rob", followed by a brief clip of an unknown person looking at the camera (in the commentary, Matt Reeves said it was one of the crew members) and brushing the debris the lens. The film ends with the original final clip of Rob and Beth in Coney Island date of recording of themselves in the wheel of fortune as the film camera runs out, with two differences: no timestamp in the lower left corner of the screen, and there are additional beep indicating the end of the tape.
A Blu-ray edition was released on June 3, 2008. It includes a "Special Investigation Mode" and all bonus features of the 2-disc DVD in HD.
Sequel
At the premiere of the movie, Matt Reeves talked about possibilities of how a sequel in turn, if the movie succeeds. According to Reeves, "While we were on set making the film, we talked about the possibilities and directions on how may be a sequel. The fun of this movie was that it could not have been the only movie that did that night, there might be another movie! On this day and age of people filming their lives on their phones with camera and Handycam, upload it to YouTube ... That was kind of exciting thinking about that. "
In another interview, Reeves states:
There is a moment in the Brooklyn Bridge, and there was a guy filming something on the side of the bridge, and Hud sees him filming and turns and sees the ship that has capsized and sees the Statue of Liberty head, and then briefly back and shoot this guy. In my mind that two movies intersecting for a brief moment, and I thought I had something interesting in the idea that this incident happened and there are so many different points of view, and there are several different movies at least spending the night and just saw a piece of another.
Reeves also points to the final scene on Coney Island shows something falling into the ocean in the background (pointed out by fans to be on the far right of the view wheel of fortune, a little to the left of a boat sitting in the water seen falling as it emits a beep), but gave no details. (This is, however, many days before the start of the film and shows the two main characters in Coney Island before meeting again at the start of the game as evidenced by the date stamp on pictures of the camera. This refers to how events began to happen and satellite falling from orbit owned by the Japanese media company mentioned.)
Producers Bryan Burk and JJ Abrams also announced their thoughts to Entertainment Weekly about possible sequels. According to Bryan Burk, "The team Creative has materialized entire backstory which, if we're lucky, we might explore in future films. "
Abrams said he did not want to rush in development of the sequel to the success of the first film and would not lead to a sequel that is true to the previous film.
In late January 2008, Matt Reeves entered early talks with Paramount Pictures to direct a Cloverfield sequel, it would probably be filmed before Reeves's other project, The Invisible Woman. Reeves now reads:
The idea of doing something so differently is exhilarating. We hope that you have created a movie experience that is different. What do a sequel is that I think we all I feel really protective of that experience. The key will be whether we can find something that is attractive enough and that is different enough for us, then is probably worth doing. Obviously it also depends on how Cloverfield around the world and all those things too, but really, for us creatively, only we want to find something that would be another challenge.
In an interview with The attack of the show, JJ Abrams had stated that it could abandon the filming style, saying that he and the rest of the crew would like to try something new.
In September 2008, when asked about CraveOnline what the current situation Cloverfield is 2, Abrams said that at this moment, they are still arguing, however, he still is reluctant to work on a sequel. In the same interview, Abrams said they were working on something that "might be a little cold." When asked if he would be in a different location, said Abrams saying that "would be totally different kinds of things but it is too early to talk."
In January 2010, JJ Abrams confirmed that a sequel is in development ".
See also
Found images (Genus)
References
^ "Official Cloverfield uptime." Paramount Pictures. http://www.paramount.com/paramount.php. Retrieved on 18/03/2008.
^ "Box office / business for" Cloverfield. "IMDb. Http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1060277/business. Retrieved on 13/02/2008.
^ "Weekend Box Office." Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=cloverfield.htm. Retrieved on 26/02/2008.
^ ab "Lizzy Caplan and meanest girl in Hollywood?". BlackBook Magazine. November 15, 2007. http://www.blackbookmag.com/features/comments/lizzy/. Retrieved on 2007-11-16.
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^ JJ Abrams talks Cloverfield sequel
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Links External
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Cloverfield
Official Website (requires Adobe Flash Player)
Cloverfield at the Internet Movie Database
Cloverfield at Allmovie
Cloverfield at Rotten Tomatoes
Cloverfield Metacritic
Cloverfield Box Office Mojo
Viral marketing sites: 1-18-08.com, Slusho.jp, Tagruato.jp
Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Children of Men
Saturn Award for best science fiction film
2007
Succeeded
Iron Man
EV
Cloverfield universe
Film
Cloverfield
The manga adaptation
Cloverfield / Kishin
Characters
Clover List of characters in the Cloverfield universe
See also
JJ Abrams, Matt Reeves, Drew Goddard
EV
JJ Abrams
Writer
Taking Care of Business (1990) Regarding Henry (1991) Forever Young (1992) Gone Fishin '(1997) Armageddon (1998) Joy Ride (2001) Mission: Impossible III (2006)
Producer
The Pallbearer (1996) The Suburbans (1999) Joy Ride (2001) Cloverfield (2008) Star Trek (2009) Morning Glory (2010)
Director
Mission: Impossible III (2006) Star Trek (2009)
TV Series
Felicity (19982002) Alias (20012006) Lost (20042010) The Office (2005-present): "cocktails" (2007) What About Brian (20062007) Six Degrees (20,062,007) Fringe (2008resent) Anatomy of Hope (2009) Undercovers (2010-present)
Production Company
Bad Robot Productions
EV
Films directed by Matt Reeves
Pallbearer (1996) Cloverfield (2008) Let Me In (2010)
American films | English-language films | 2000 science fiction films | 2000 films horror | 2008 films | Categories: American science fiction films | Camcorder films | Disaster films | Films set New York | Films shot in New York | Films shot in Los Angeles, California | Giant monster films | Paramount films | Bad Robot Productions | Science fiction horror films | Films directed by Matt ReevesHidden categories: Articles containing Japanese text | All articles Wikipedia: statements | Articles with unsourced statements from June 2008 | Articles with statements without power October 2009 About the Author
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