J.J.
Abrams harnesses element of surprise for '10 Cloverfield
Lane'
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[March 12, 2016]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Coming off the mass marketing
for "Star Wars: The Force Awakens," filmmaker J.J.
Abrams decided to change things up for "10 Cloverfield
Lane," a surprise follow-up to his 2008 cult disaster
movie "Cloverfield."
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"No one was anticipating this movie and there was no
expectation whatsoever," Abrams told Reuters. "It's been fun to
see people react surprised at this announcement, as opposed to
vaguely curious about something that's a calendar year away."
Until the trailer was released unexpectedly in January, no one
had known of "10 Cloverfield Lane," an unconventional strategy
in Hollywood, where studios promote films months ahead of
release to build anticipation and box office revenue. The movie
will be out in U.S. theaters on Friday.
Abrams himself released a teaser for "The Force Awakens," which
he wrote and directed, a year before its December release. It
went on to become the third-highest-grossing movie of all time.
Viacom Inc-owned Paramount Pictures' "10 Cloverfield Lane,"
produced by Abrams and directed by newcomer Dan Trachtenberg,
takes place some years after the events of "Cloverfield," in
which a group of friends fight for survival as giant aliens
attack Manhattan.
The new film centers on budding designer Michelle (Mary
Elizabeth Winstead) in the aftermath of a car crash. She's
locked in an underground bunker with the mysterious Howard (John
Goodman), who tells her that the world outside has been invaded,
and no one's coming for her.
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Michelle navigates a tense and claustrophobic sequence of events, as
the tone fuses horror, thriller, comedy and science-fiction, playing
with the element of surprise.
"So much of the film is non-verbal, and yet you know everything
she's thinking and feeling and she's so resourceful," Trachtenberg
said, likening Michelle to Sigourney Weaver's Ripley from "Alien."
Made for around $10 million, the film provided Abrams with a "nice
kind of balance" as he simultaneously worked on the $200 million
"Star Wars" saga.
"It was wonderful to see something that was so intimate and
granular," Abrams said, adding that the smaller budget "created for
greater tension, greater terror and more interesting and memorable
sequences."
If "10 Cloverfield Lane" performs well at the box office, Abrams has
plans to make the "Cloverfield" series into a platform for new
talent such as Trachtenberg.
(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Bernadette Baum)
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