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Cloverfield

Cloverfield is a 2008 American found footage monster film directed by Matt Reeves, produced by J. J. Abrams, and written by Drew Goddard. It stars Lizzy Caplan, Jessica Lucas, T.J. Miller, Michael Stahl-David, Mike Vogel, and Odette Yustman. The plot follows six young New York City residents fleeing from a massive monster and various other smaller creatures that attack the city during a farewell party.

Cloverfield
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMatt Reeves
Written byDrew Goddard
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyMichael Bonvillain
Edited byKevin Stitt
Music byMichael Giacchino
Production
company
Distributed byParamount Pictures
Release date
  • January 18, 2008 (2008-01-18)
Running time
85 minutes[1]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$25–30 million[2][3]
Box office$172.4 million

Development began when producer J. J. Abrams started conceptualizing a new monster and enlisted Neville Page to design the creature, called Clover. In February 2007, the project was secretly greenlit by Paramount Pictures and produced by Abrams's Bad Robot Productions. Principal photography took place in Los Angeles and New York City in 2007. The project had several working titles, including Slusho, Cheese, and Greyshot. As part of a viral marketing campaign, a teaser trailer was released ahead of screenings of Transformers (2007) without a title. The final title was revealed in a second teaser trailer attached to screenings of Beowulf (2007). With limited pre-release details, it garnered online speculation, including forums and websites dedicated to uncovering hidden information about the film. Several tie-ins, including a prequel manga series, were released as part of the marketing campaign.

Cloverfield was released on January 18, 2008, and received positive reviews from critics, who praised Reeves's direction and the cinéma vérité style narrative. It earned $172 million worldwide at the box office against a $25 million budget. It is the first installment of the Cloverfield franchise, followed by 10 Cloverfield Lane in 2016 and The Cloverfield Paradox in 2018. A direct sequel is in development.

Plot

The film is presented as footage from a personal camcorder recovered by the United States Department of Defense in the area "formerly known as Central Park", bearing a disclaimer stating multiple sightings of a case designated Cloverfield.

This earlier footage, from April 27, 2008, shows Robert "Rob" Hawkins waking up with Elizabeth "Beth" McIntyre in her father's apartment above Columbus Circle before sharing a special day across New York City and Coney Island. Fragments of this overwritten footage appear during the course of the film.

Rob has a farewell party on May 22, 2008, thrown by his brother Jason and Jason's girlfriend Lily, celebrating Rob's new job as vice-president for a company in Japan. Jason gets Rob's best friend Hudson "Hud" Platt to film testimonials for Rob during the party. Beth, who Rob has now broken up with, brings a new man to the party. Beth and Rob argue over her guest, and Beth leaves shortly before a massive earthquake occurs, causing a brief citywide power outage; the local news reports a capsized oil tanker near Liberty Island. From the roof, the party-goers witness an explosion in the distance and flee as flaming debris flies in their direction.

As the party-goers leave the building, the severed head of the Statue of Liberty is hurled into the street in front of them. In the chaos, Hud records an enormous creature several blocks away collapsing the Woolworth Building. During the group's planned evacuation of Manhattan, the creature's tail destroys the Brooklyn Bridge, killing Jason and dozens of other people. News reports show the Army National Guard's 42nd Infantry Division attacking the monster. Smaller parasite creatures fall off its body and attack nearby pedestrians and soldiers.

Rob listens to a phone message from Beth, in which she indicates she is trapped in her apartment at the Time Warner Center and unable to move. Going against the crowd, Rob, Hud, Lily, and Hud's crush, Marlena Diamond, venture into Midtown Manhattan to rescue Beth. By 3:17 a.m., they get caught in a battle between the creature and the Army National Guard, run into the subway, and are attacked by several of the parasites. While saving Hud, Marlena is bitten by one of the creatures. The four escape the subway and enter a below ground mall where she begins to feel unwell. They are found by military and taken to a command center and field hospital nearby. In reaction to being bitten, Marlena begins bleeding from her eyes. She is forcibly taken into a tent, where she appears to explode. Rob, still intending on saving Beth, persuades one of the military leaders to let them go. He is then informed when the last evacuation helicopter will depart before the military executes its "Hammer Down Protocol", which will destroy Manhattan in its entirety in order to kill the monster.

They travel to Beth's apartment building to discover it toppled on its side. After crossing roofs from the opposite building, the group finds her impaled on exposed rebar. They free her and make their way to the evacuation site at Grand Central Terminal, where they encounter the creature again. Lily is first rushed into a departing Marine Corps helicopter to escape before the terminal is destroyed. Moments later, Rob, Beth, and Hud are taken away in a second helicopter and witness the creature being bombed. The bombing causes the creature to fall and success is assumed, but then it lunges out of the smoke, hitting the helicopter and causing it to crash in Central Park, killing the pilot and everyone inside except Rob, Beth, and Hud.

Less than an hour later, a voice on the crashed helicopter's radio warns that the Hammer Down protocol will begin in fifteen minutes. The three friends regain consciousness, and attempt to flee; Hud turns back to retrieve the camera when the creature suddenly appears and kills him. Rob and Beth grab the camera and take shelter under an arch as sirens blare, and the bombing starts. Rob and Beth each provide their last testimony of the day's events. The bridge begins to crumble, and the camera is knocked out of Rob's hand and buried beneath rubble. Rob and Beth proclaim their love for each other just as the bomb explodes, the camera freezing up before the footage cuts.

The film ends with the finale of Rob and Beth's trip to Coney Island on a Ferris wheel. Unseen by them, an indiscernible object falls from the sky into the ocean. Just before the camera cuts out, Beth states, "I had a good day."

After the credits, a voice can be heard saying, "Help us..." When played in reverse, it says, "It's still alive."

Cast

In addition, NY1 TV journalist Roma Torre has a cameo as herself, reporting on a television screen watched by the party-goers. The film's director, Matt Reeves, provides the uncredited voice for the two brief phrases (one normal, one in reversed audio) after the credits.[4]

Production

Development

J. J. Abrams conceived 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 need our own American monster, and not like 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 just insane and intense."[5][6]

In February 2007, Paramount Pictures secretly greenlit Cloverfield, to be produced by Abrams, directed by Matt Reeves, and written by Drew Goddard. The project was produced by Abrams's company, Bad Robot Productions.[3]

The severed head of the Statue of Liberty was inspired by the poster of the 1981 film Escape from New York, in which the head lies on a street in New York. Reeves explained, "It's an incredibly provocative image. And that was the source that inspired producer J. J. Abrams to say, 'Now this would be an interesting idea for a movie'."[7]

Title

The film was initially titled Cloverfield, changed several times throughout production, and was reverted. Matt Reeves explained this was due to the hype caused by the teaser trailer. "That excitement spread to such a degree that we suddenly couldn't use the name anymore. So we started using all these names like Slusho and Cheese.[8] And people always found out what we were doing!" He said that "Cloverfield" was the government's case designation for the events caused by the monster, comparing the titling to that of the real Manhattan Project, though the government did not originate this.[9] Cloverfield Blvd is the highway exit Abrams takes to his Santa Monica office,[8][10] and which used to lead to the Santa Monica Airport, which originally bore the name Clover Field.[11]

The final title Greyshot was proposed, taken from the archway that the two survivors take shelter under at the end of the movie, but Director Reeves said this was rejected because the film was already so well known as Cloverfield.[12]

The film received a subtitle in Japan, where it was released as Cloverfield/Hakaisha (クローバーフィールド/HAKAISHA, Kurōbāfīrudo/HAKAISHA). The subtitle "Destroyer" was chosen by Abrams and was translated into Japanese as Hakaisha (破壊者, lit. "Destroyer") by Paramount Japan at his request.[13] The subtitle Kishin (鬼神, lit. "Demon [ic] God") was chosen for the manga spin-off, Cloverfield/Kishin, released exclusively in Japan.[citation needed]

Casting

Casting was done in secret, with no script sent to candidates. To prevent the leaking of plot information, instead of auditioning the actors with scenes from the film, scripts from Abrams's previous productions were used, such as the television series Alias and Lost. Some scenes were also written specifically for the audition process, not intended for use in the film. Lizzy Caplan stated that she accepted a role in Cloverfield without knowing the premise, solely because she was a fan of the Abrams-produced Lost, and her experience of discovering its true nature initially caused her to state that she would not sign on for a film in the future "without knowing full well what it is". She indicated that her character was a sarcastic outsider, and that her role was "physically demanding".[14]

Production

With an estimated production budget of $30 million, principal photography began in mid-June 2007 in New York.[3] One cast member said that the film would look like it cost $150 million, though without recognizable and expensive actors.[14] Filmmakers used the Panasonic HVX200 for most of the interior scenes, and the Sony CineAlta F23 high-definition video camera to record nearly all of the New York exterior scenes.[15] Filming took place on Coney Island, with scenes shot at Deno's Wonder Wheel Amusement Park and the B&B Carousel.[16] The scenes of tanks firing at the creature while the main characters hide in a stairwell were filmed on Hennesy Street on Warner Bros. Studios backlot in Burbank, California. Some interior shots were taped on a soundstage at Downey, California. Bloomingdale's in the movie was actually shot in an emptied Robinsons-May store that was under reconstruction in Arcadia, California. The outside scenes of Sephora and the electronics store were taped in Downtown Los Angeles.[17]

 
Brooklyn Bridge, as viewed through the film's first-person narrative

The film was shot and edited in a cinéma vérité style,[18] to look like it was taped with one hand-held camera, including jump cuts similar to ones found in home movies. T.J. Miller, who plays Hud, has said in various interviews that he taped a third of the movie and almost half of it made it into the film.[19] Director Matt Reeves described the presentation, "We wanted this to be as if someone found a Handicam, took out the tape and put it in the player to watch it. What you're watching is a home movie that then turns into something else." Reeves explained that the pedestrians documenting the severed head of the Statue of Liberty with the camera phones was reflective of the contemporary period. According to him: "Cloverfield very much speaks to the fear and anxieties of our time, how we live our lives. Constantly documenting things and putting them up on YouTube, sending people videos through e-mail – we felt it was very applicable to the way people feel now."[20]

VFX and CGI were produced by effects studios Double Negative and Tippett Studio.[citation needed]

Several of the filmmakers are heard but not seen in the film. The man yelling "Oh my God!" repeatedly when the head of the Statue of Liberty lands in the street is producer Bryan Burk, and director Matt Reeves voiced the whispered radio broadcast at the end of the credits.[12] After viewing a cut of the film, Steven Spielberg suggested giving the audience a hint at the fate of the monster during the climax, which resulted in the addition of a countdown overheard on the helicopter's radio and the sounding of air raid sirens to signal the forthcoming Hammer Down bombing.[12]

Style of cinematography

 
Sign at an AMC theater warning customers by comparing the film to a roller coaster.

The film's shaky camera style of cinematography, dubbed "La Shakily Queasy-Cam" by Roger Ebert, caused some viewers (particularly in darkened movie theaters) to experience motion sickness, including nausea and a temporary loss of balance. Audience members prone to migraines have cited the film as a trigger. Some theaters showing the film, such as AMC Theatres, provided poster and verbal warnings, informing viewers about the filming style of Cloverfield, while other theatres like Pacific Theatres just verbally warned customers in detail at the box office about experiencing motion sickness upon viewing the film and what to do if they had to step out and vomit.[21]

The cinematography choice, camera panning, affects the encoding of the video and can cause compression artifacts due to fast motion across the field of view.[citation needed]

Creature design

Visual main effects supervisor Nick Tom and Phil Tippett's "Tippett Studio" were enlisted to develop the visual effects for Cloverfield.[22] Because the visual effects were incorporated after filming, cast members were only familiar with early conceptual renderings of the beast and had to react to an unseen creature during their scenes.[23] Artist Neville Page designed the monster, creating a biological rationale for it, though many of his ideas, including an "elongated, articulated external esophagus," would not show up on screen.[24] His central concept was that of an immature creature suffering from "separation anxiety." This recalls real-life circus elephants who get frightened and lash out. The director stated that "there's nothing scarier than something huge that's spooked."[25]

Marketing

Before the film's release, Paramount carried out a viral marketing campaign to promote the film which included viral tie-ins similar to Lost Experience.[26] Filmmakers decided to create a teaser trailer that would be a surprise in the light of commonplace media saturation. Rather than edit the teaser from footage taken from the finished film, footage was captured during the preparation stages solely for creation of the teaser. Ernest Holzman, who would later be replaced with Lost cinematographer Michael Bonvillain, utilized the Thomson Viper FilmStream Camera for the shoot.[27] The teaser was then used as a basis for the film itself. Paramount Pictures encouraged the teaser to be released without a title attached, and the Motion Picture Association of America approved the move.[20] As Transformers showed high tracking numbers before its release in July 2007, the studio attached the teaser trailer for Cloverfield that showed the release date of January 18, 2008, but not the title.[3] A second trailer was released on November 16, 2007, which was attached to Beowulf, confirming the title.[28]

The studio had kept knowledge of the project secret from the online community, a cited rarity due to the presence of scoopers that follow upcoming films. The controlled release of information on the film has been observed as a risky strategy, which could succeed like The Blair Witch Project (1999) or disappoint like Snakes on a Plane (2006), the latter of which had generated online hype but failed to attract large audiences.[29]

Pre-release plot speculation

The sudden appearance of the untitled teaser for Cloverfield, and limited details available in the lead up to the film's release fueled wide media speculation over the film's plot, with many expecting it to be an adaptation of an existing property. Among the possibilities reported on, The Star Ledger suggested that the film could be based on the works of H. P. Lovecraft, or a new entry in the Godzilla series.[30] The Guardian reported the possibility of a spin-off to Abrams' television show Lost,[31] and a misinterpretation of the trailer's line "It's alive!" as "It's a lion!" led USA Today to speculate on a live-action adaptation of Japanese animated series Voltron.[25][32] IGN and Time Out suggested that the film would feature an alien called "The Parasite", with that rumored to be the working title of the film.[33][34] Elsewhere online, Slusho and Colossus had been discussed as other possible titles,[35] as well as Monstrous,[36] although this was dispelled by Abrams at ComicCon.[6]

The viral marketing campaign drew the attention of alternate reality game enthusiasts, hoping to uncover information about the film hidden online. Members of the forums at argn.com and unfiction.com have investigated the background of the film, with the "1-18-08" section at Unfiction generating over 7,700 posts in August 2007. The members have studied photographs on the film's official site, potentially related MySpace profiles,[37] and the Comic-Con teaser poster for the film.[38] A popular piece of fan art posited that the monster was a mutated humpback whale.[25]

Viral tie-ins

All of the major characters received a personal Myspace page, all of which are accessible and featuring available photos, though blog posts have been removed.

Unlike most viral marketing campaigns, this one had virtually nothing to do with the film's plot or characters. Instead it focused mainly on the fictional drink Slusho! and the fictional company Tagruato, slowly giving clues of the secret origin of the monster that isn't addressed properly in the film. Following various clues, players discovered that the monster is an ancient amphibious organism discovered during the construction of Chuai Station, an oil platform off the coast of Connecticut belonging to the Japanese company Tagruato, which had the purpose of extracting a substance called Sea Bed Nectar that would become the secret ingredient of a drink created by its founder Ganu Yoshida,[39] named Slusho. Tagurato Repurposes Chuai Station after said discovery[40] (and pulling a coverup involving the ordered assassination of the employee who originally made the discovery[41]) using the front as an oil drilling platform also for surveillance of the monster and its parasites,[42] who are using Sea Bed's nectar as a means of nourishment for their host, applying the substance on its back. Eventually, the monster awakens and destroys the station,[43][44] before finding its way to the shores of New York at the beginning of the film.[45]

Puzzle websites containing Lovecraftian elements, such as Ethan Haas Was Right, were originally reported to be connected to the film.[31][46] On July 9, 2007, producer J. J. Abrams stated that, while a number of websites were being developed to market the film, the only official site that had been found was 1-18-08.com.[47] At the site, which now redirects to the Paramount Pictures home page, a collection of time-coded photos were available to piece together a series of events and interpret their meanings. The pictures could also be flipped over by repeatedly and rapidly moving the mouse side to side. Also, if the page was left open for six minutes, the monster's roar could be heard. Eventually, Cloverfield Movie.com was created.[48] The site provided both a trailer and a number, 33287, which, when texted from a mobile phone, provided a ringtone of the monster's roar and a wallpaper of a decimated Manhattan. This eventually turns out to be a Paramount number (people later received material on Iron Man, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Kung Fu Panda, and The Love Guru).[49]

The drink Slusho! served as part of the viral marketing campaign. The drink had already appeared in producer Abrams' previous creation, the TV series Alias.[50] Websites for Slusho! and Taguruato were launched to add to the mythology of Cloverfield. The Japanese phone number in the Tagruato website did work, but only played recorded messages. For example, one of the messages was: "Thank you for calling Tagruato. Due to high call volumes, your call has been transferred to an automated answering service. There are no updates at this time. After the tone, please leave a message, and one of our associates will find you as soon as possible". A building bearing the company logo for Tagruato can also be seen in the TV spot of the 2009 Star Trek film, and Uhura orders a Slusho! during the bar scene.[26] When Cloverfield was hosted at Comic-Con 2007, gray Slusho! T-shirts were distributed to attendees.[51] Fans who had registered at the Slusho! website received e-mails of fictional sonar images before the film's release that showed a deep-sea creature heading toward Manhattan.[52] Fans who ordered merchandise received pieces of torn Tagruato documents and Japanese newspapers along with their products. A cup of Slusho! appears briefly in The Cloverfield Paradox, and it has also appeared in Fringe and Heroes. A Slusho! bobblehead figure also appears shaking in The Cloverfield Paradox trailer and film.

Producer Burk explained the viral tie-in, "It was all done in conjunction with the studio... The whole experience in making this movie is very reminiscent of how we did Lost."[26] Director Reeves described Slusho! as "part of the involved connectivity" with Abrams' Alias and that the drink represented a "meta-story" for Cloverfield. The director explained, "It's almost like tentacles that grow out of 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 it's one experience... But there's also this other place where you can get engaged where there's this other sort of aspect for all those people who are into that. All the stories kind of bounce off one another and inform each other. But, at the end of the day, this movie stands on its own to be a movie.... The Internet sort of stories and connections and clues are, in a way, a prism and they're another way of looking at the same thing. To us, it's just another exciting aspect of the storytelling."[50]

Merchandise

A four-installment prequel manga series by Yoshiki Togawa titled Cloverfield/Kishin (クローバーフィールド/KISHIN, Kurōbāfīrudo/KISHIN) was released by Japanese publisher Kadokawa Shoten.[53] The story focuses on a Japanese high school student named Kishin Aiba, who somehow bears a connection to the monster.[54]

Based on the film's successful opening weekend, Hasbro began accepting orders for a 14-inch (36 cm) collectible toy figure of the monster with authentic sound[55] and its parasites that were shipped to fans by December 24, 2008.[56]

Music

Rob's Party Mix
Compilation album by
various artists
ReleasedJanuary 17, 2008
Length64:02

Due to its presentation as footage from a consumer digital recorder, Cloverfield has no film score, with the exception of the composition "Roar! (Cloverfield Overture)" by Michael Giacchino that plays over the end credits. Similarities between "Roar!" and the music of Godzilla composer Akira Ifukube have been noted, and it has been suggested that Giacchino's overture is a tribute to Ifukube's work,[57][58] which was confirmed by Matt Reeves in the DVD's commentary track.[12] The soundtrack was supervised by William Files[citation needed] and Douglas Murray at Skywalker Sound.[59]

Rob's Party Mix or Cloverfield Mix is a collection of the music played in the opening party sequences of the film that was released exclusively on Apple's iTunes Store on January 22, 2008, in lieu of a traditional soundtrack album. The Cloverfield score, "Roar! (Cloverfield Overture)" by Michael Giacchino that plays over the end credits[60] is not featured on the album, as it is the mixtape played at the party and is not the official soundtrack of the film. This album was distributed to guests at a Cloverfield premiere party held at the Dark Room in New York City on January 17, 2008.[61]

A complete soundtrack release of all the music in the film, including Giacchino's "Roar!" end title piece, has now also been released exclusively on iTunes; it has not been officially released in retail stores. A CD entitled Rob's Party Mix comes packaged in a special edition of Cloverfield made available for sale in Canadian Wal-Mart stores beginning on April 22, 2008.[citation needed]

Track listing
No.TitleArtistLength
1."West Coast"Coconut Records3:32
2."Taper Jean Girl"Kings of Leon3:05
3."Beautiful Girls"Sean Kingston4:01
4."Do I Have Your Attention"The Blood Arm3:35
5."Got Your Moments"Scissors for Lefty3:11
6."Give Up the Funk (Tear the Roof off the Sucker)"Parliament5:46
7."19-2000"Gorillaz3:27
8."The Underdog"Spoon3:42
9."Pistol of Fire"Kings of Leon2:20
10."Disco Lies"Moby3:22
11."Do the Whirlwind"Architecture in Helsinki4:39
12."Grown So Ugly"The Black Keys2:24
13."Four Winds"Bright Eyes2:09
14."The Ride"Joan As Policewoman3:09
15."Seventeen Years"Ratatat4:26
16."Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games"Of Montreal4:15
17."Fuzz" (ファズ)Mucc4:47

Release

Theatrical

First publicized in a teaser trailer in screenings of Transformers, the film was released on January 17 in New Zealand, Russia and Australia; January 18 in North America; January 24 in South Korea; January 25 in Taiwan; January 31 in Germany; and February 1 in the United Kingdom, Ireland and Italy. In Japan, the film was released on April 5.

Home media

The DVD was released on April 22, 2008, in two versions: the standard single-disc edition and an exclusive "steel-book" special edition that was sold at Suncoast and FYE retailers in the US and Future Shop in Canada. Other store exclusives include an exclusive bonus disc titled "T.J. Miller's Video Diary" with the DVD at all Best Buy retailers, an exclusive mix CD titled "Rob's Goin' to Japan Party Mix" with the DVD at all Target and Wal-Mart retailers and an exclusive ringtone with the DVD at all Kmart and Sears retailers. Borders also had an exclusive booklet encased with their DVD.

The Region 2 DVD was released on June 9 in both one-disc and two-disc editions. The limited steel-book edition is only available from HMV, while Play.com offers exclusive cover artwork. The HMV-exclusive steel-book contains two discs.

The DVD includes two alternative endings, which vary only slightly. The first alternative ending shows Rob and Beth exiting the Coney Island–Stillwell Avenue station instead of on the Ferris wheel and features different sirens in the background as Rob talks to the camera. In the second alternative ending, just after the final explosion, Beth can be heard screaming "Rob!", followed by a very brief clip of an unknown person looking at the camera (in the commentary, Reeves said that it was one of the crew members) and brushing rubble off the lens. The film then ends with the original final clip of Rob and Beth on their Coney Island date recording themselves on the Ferris Wheel as the camera tape runs out, with two differences: there is no timestamp in the lower left-hand corner of the screen, and there is an additional beeping tone indicating the end of the tape.[62]

A Blu-ray edition was released on June 3, 2008.[63] It includes a "Special Investigation Mode," as well as all the bonus features of the 2-disc DVD in HD.

On the film's 10th anniversary, Paramount issued a 4k UHD Blu-ray version of the film, accompanied by the standard Blu-ray and bonus extras, it was released on January 23, 2018.[64]

Reception

Box office

Cloverfield opened in 3,411 theaters on January 18, 2008, and grossed a total of $16,930,000 on its opening day in the United States and Canada. It made $40.1 million on its opening weekend, which at the time was the most successful January release (record then taken by Ride Along in 2014 with a weekend gross of $41.5 million).[65] Moreover, the film simultaneously beat Titanic and Black Hawk Down to have the biggest Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend and opening weekend grosses.[66] Worldwide, it has grossed $170,602,318, making it the first movie in 2008 to gross over $100 million.[2] In Japan, the film held the top spot in the box office rankings for one week before the release of Kamen Rider Den-O & Kiva: Climax Deka took the top spot in its first weekend.[67]

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 78% based on 212 reviews, with an average rating of 6.80/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A sort of Blair Witch Project crossed with Godzilla, Cloverfield is economically paced, stylistically clever, and filled with scares".[68] According to Metacritic, the film has received an average score of 64 out of 100 based on 37 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[69] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C" on an A+ to F scale.[70]

Marc Savlov of The Austin Chronicle called the film "the most intense and original creature feature I've seen in my adult moviegoing life [...] a pure-blood, grade A, exhilarating monster movie". He cites Matt Reeves' direction, the "whip-smart, stylistically invisible" script and the "nearly subconscious evocation of our current paranoid, terror-phobic times" as the keys to the film's success, saying that telling the story through the lens of one character's camera "works fantastically well".[71] Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter called it "chillingly effective", generally praising the effects and the film's "claustrophobic intensity". He said that though the characters "aren't particularly interesting or developed", there was "something refreshing about a monster movie that isn't filled with the usual suspects".[72] Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly said that the film was "surreptitiously subversive, [a] stylistically clever little gem", and that while the characters were "vapid, twenty-something nincompoops" and the acting "appropriately unmemorable", the decision to tell the story through amateur footage was "brilliant".[73] Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film three stars out of four and wrote that it is "pretty scary at times" and cites "unmistakable evocations of 9/11". He concludes that "all in all, it is an effective film, deploying its special effects well and never breaking the illusion that it is all happening as we see it".[74]

Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film an "old-fashioned monster movie dressed up in trendy new threads", praising the special effects, "nihilistic attitude" and "post-9/11 anxiety overlay." but said, "In the end, [it's] not much different from all the marauding creature features that have come before it".[75] Scott Foundas of LA Weekly was critical of the film's use of scenes reminiscent of the September 11 attacks in New York City and called it "cheap and opportunistic". He suggested that the film was engaging in "stealth" attempts at social commentary and compared this unfavorably to the films of Don Siegel, George A. Romero and Steven Spielberg, saying, "Where those filmmakers all had something meaningful to say about the state of the world and [...] human nature, Abrams doesn't have much to say about anything".[76] Manohla Dargis in the New York Times called the allusions "tacky", saying, "[The images] may make you think of the attack, and you may curse the filmmakers for their vulgarity, insensitivity or lack of imagination", but that "the film is too dumb to offend anything except your intelligence". She concludes that the film "works as a showcase for impressively realistic-looking special effects, a realism that fails to extend to the scurrying humans whose fates are meant to invoke pity and fear but instead inspire yawns and contempt".[18] Stephanie Zacharek of Salon.com calls the film "badly constructed, humorless and emotionally sadistic", and sums up by saying that the film "takes the trauma of 9/11 and turns it into just another random spectacle at which to point and shoot".[77] Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune warned that the viewer may feel "queasy" at the references to September 11, but that "other sequences [...] carry a real jolt" and that such tactics were "crude, but undeniably gripping." He called the film "dumb", but "quick and dirty and effectively brusque", concluding that despite it being "a harsher, more demographically calculating brand of fun", he enjoyed the film.[60] Bruce Paterson of Cinephilia described the film as "a successful experiment in style but not necessarily a successful story for those who want dramatic closure". Some critics also pointed out the similarity to the Half-Life video game series, in particular the "Ant-lion" monsters from Half-Life 2, and the constant first-person perspective.[78]

Empire magazine named it the fifth best film of 2008.[79] The French film journal Cahiers du Cinéma named the film as the third best of 2008.[80] Bloody Disgusting ranked the film number twenty in their list of the "Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade", with the article calling the film "A brilliant conceit, to be sure, backed by a genius early marketing campaign that followed the less-is-more philosophy to tantalizing effect...much like Blair Witch nearly ten years earlier, Cloverfield helped prove, particularly in its first half hour, that what you don't see can be the scariest thing of all".[81] In 2022, Aedan Juvet of Screen Rant revisited the original film, labeling it as an "influential" found footage, sci-fi hybrid.[82]

Accolades

Year Award Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
2008 Saturn Awards Best Science Fiction Film Cloverfield Won [83]
Best Supporting Actress Lizzy Caplan Nominated
Golden Schmoes Awards Best Horror Movie of the Year Cloverfield Won [84]
Most Underrated Movie of the Year Nominated
Trippiest Movie of the Year Nominated
Best Sci-Fi Movie of the Year Nominated
Best Special Effects of the Year Nominated
Favorite Movie Poster of the Year Nominated
Best Trailer of the Year Nominated
Golden Trailer Awards Best Thriller Cloverfield Nominated [85]
Most Original Nominated
Internet Film Critics Society Awards Most Experimental Film Cloverfield Won [86]
Italian Online Movie Awards Best Special Effects Cloverfield Nominated [87]
Scream Awards Best Science Fiction Movie Cloverfield Nominated [88]
Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie: Horror/Thriller Cloverfield Nominated [89]
Choice Movie: Horror/Thriller Actor Michael Stahl-David Nominated
Choice Movie: Horror/Thriller Actress Odette Yustman Nominated
2009 ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Top Box Office Films Michael Giacchino Won [90]
International Film Music Critics Awards Film Music Composition of the Year Michael Giacchino Nominated [91]
Fangoria Chainsaw Awards Best Wide Release Film Cloverfield Nominated [92]
Worst Film Nominated
Best Score Michael Giacchino Won
Gold Derby Awards Visual Effects Kevin Blank, Mike Ellis and Eric Leven Nominated [93]
Golden Reel Awards Best Sound Editing - Dialogue and ADR in a Feature Film Douglas Murray, Will Files, Cheryl Nardi, Sue Fox and Gwendolyn Yates Whittle Nominated [94]
Best Sound Editing - Sound Effects and Foley in a Feature Film Will Files, Douglas Murray, Luke Dunn Gielmuda, Robert Shoup, Josh Gold, Andrea Gard, Steve Bissinger, Kim Foscato, Samuel H. Hinckley, Andy Malcolm and Goro Koyama Nominated
International Online Cinema Awards Best Visual Effects Cloverfield Nominated [95]
Best Sound Mixing Anna Behlmer, Will Files and Ed White Nominated
Best Sound Editing Douglas Murray and Will Files Nominated
Visual Effects Society Awards Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects-Driven Feature Motion Picture Cloverfield Nominated [96]
Best Single Visual Effect of the Year Nominated
Outstanding Created Environment in a Feature Motion Picture Nominated

Sequels

At the Cloverfield premiere, director Matt Reeves talked about possibilities of what a sequel will look like if the film succeeds.[97] According to Reeves:

While we were on set making the film we talked about the possibilities and directions of how a sequel can go. The fun of this movie was that it might not have been the only movie being made that night, there might be another movie! In today's day and age of people filming their lives on their camera phones and Handycams, uploading it to YouTube... That was kind of exciting thinking about that.[98]

In another interview, Reeves stated:

There's a moment on the Brooklyn Bridge, and there was a guy filming something on the side of the bridge, and Hud sees him filming and he turns over and he sees the ship that's been capsized and sees the headless Statue of Liberty, and then he turns back and this guy's briefly filming him. In my mind that was two movies intersecting for a brief moment, and I thought there was 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 happening that evening and we just saw one piece of another.[25]

Reeves also pointed out that the final scene on Coney Island shows something falling into the ocean in the background without an explanation. This may have been either the satellite owned by the fictional Japanese media company, Tagruato, or the creature itself. A company news piece on the Tagruato website mentions that a piece of the Japanese Government's ChimpanzII satellite fell off into the Atlantic. Producers Bryan Burk and J. J. Abrams also revealed their thoughts on possible sequels to Entertainment Weekly. According to Burk, "The creative team has fleshed out an entire backstory which, if we're lucky, we might get to explore in future films". Abrams stated that he does not want to rush into the development of the sequel merely because the first film has been a success; he explained that he would rather create a sequel that is true to the previous film.[99]

At the end of January 2008, Reeves entered early talks with Paramount to direct a sequel, which would likely be filmed before Reeves's other project, The Invisible Woman.[100] Reeves said:

The idea of doing something so differently is exhilarating. We hope that it created a movie experience that is different. The thing about doing a sequel is that I think we all really feel protective of that experience. The key here will be if we can find something that is compelling enough and that is different enough for us to do, then it will probably be worth doing. Obviously it also depends on how Cloverfield does worldwide and all of those things too, but really, for us creatively, we just want to find something that would be another challenge.[101]

In September 2008, when asked by CraveOnline what the current status is on Cloverfield 2,[102] Abrams stated that at this point, they were still discussing it; however, he still feels reluctant to work on a sequel. In the same interview, Abrams said that they were working on something that "could be kind of cool." When asked if it would take place in a different location, Abrams replied by saying that "it would be a totally different kind of thing but it's too early to talk about."[103] In a 2010 interview with Attack of the Show!, Abrams stated that they might abandon the filming style, stating that he and the rest of the crew would like to try something new.[104]

The film Super 8 was initially speculated to be either a sequel or prequel to Cloverfield,[105] but this was quickly denied by Abrams.[106]

In January 2011, horror film fan site BloodyDisgusting.com stated that a Cloverfield sequel may in fact never happen. They talked to director Reeves and he said that if he can ever get the time to sit down and talk with Drew Goddard and J. J. Abrams about sequel possibilities they will certainly make a sequel, but due to all three's busy schedules Reeves does not see this happening any time soon.[107] In a 2011 interview, Matt Reeves gave an update on the status of Cloverfield 2, saying:

Getting the right idea together has been taking a long time.  ... You are going to see it – we just don't know when [laughs] ... At the moment we are talking about the story quite a lot. Drew Goddard, who wrote the original, is going to pen the sequel and J. J. Abrams is very much involved. ... However, the three of us have been so busy that getting the right idea together has been taking a long time.

When asked if the sequel will be shot in real time, Reeves stated, "You see, that's a difficult part: we want it to be shot like the first but how can you continue that idea successfully for a second time? ... We have a lot of affection for the original and the sequel can't just be the same thing. But that is tricky when you need to have a monster destroying stuff once again."[108]

In a 2012 interview, screenwriter Goddard gave an update saying, "I'm in, I'm ready to do it...someone call J. J. and tell him to get moving, but because Matt and J. J. and I have been fortunate enough to be busy, it's hard syncing our schedules up. We're all very passionate about returning to that world." When asked if an idea is on paper, he responded, "If you asked each of us what we wanted to do, you'll get three different answers, which is how the first film was. The aesthetic of Cloverfield benefits from that. Three voices pulling it. Look, nothing would make me happier than to get the three of us in the room to get started."[109] In a later interview in April of that same year, Goddard said:

We didn't set out to make a franchise, we set out to make a good movie. But I love that world and that universe, so if there was an idea that excited us enough, and we felt like there was a reason to do it, we would do it. The nice thing about when you work with a guy like J.J., and the power he gets, the studio's not going to force him to do anything. And he has been able to say, we'll do it when we're ready. We're not going to just do it because it will help your bottom line, we're going to do it because there's an idea that excites us. And so that's informed our discussions. We don't feel like we have to, so it's like 'Can we come up with something that excites us enough to do it?'[110]

On January 14, 2016, 10 Cloverfield Lane was revealed by Bad Robot Productions, with Abrams as a producer and Reeves and Goddard credited as executive producers.[111] The film is described as "a blood relative" but not "a literal sequel" to Cloverfield by Abrams, who produces the film.[112] The film was released on March 11, 2016, and it marks the theatrical feature film directorial debut of Dan Trachtenberg.[113]

During an interview with Abrams to promote 10 Cloverfield Lane, he said the creative team behind the original had some ideas on developing Cloverfield 2, but the release of movies such as Godzilla and Pacific Rim led them to abandon them as they found the concept of kaiju movies had played out. However, Abrams also suggested that he has thought of something that if they are lucky enough to get it made "could be really cool that [it] connects some stories" in a future film, even teasing a larger Cloverfield universe.[112][114] Interviews with Dan Trachtenberg and Mary Elizabeth Winstead, director and actress of 10 Cloverfield Lane, respectively, confirm that the movie is, and always was intended to be, an expansion of the first film, with Trachtenberg calling it the "Cloververse".[115]

In October 2016, it was reported that an Abrams-produced project, tentatively titled God Particle, would be the next film set in the Cloverfield universe.[116] The sequel was originally announced as a February 2017 release but has since seen its release date pushed back, most recently to a tentative April 2018 date, with the God Particle title having been dropped and the film now being referred to as Untitled Cloverfield Sequel. It has also been suggested that the original plot device of a god particle may have been completely removed from the script.[117] On February 4, 2018, during Super Bowl LII, a TV commercial aired announcing the film would be entitled The Cloverfield Paradox and would have a surprise release on Netflix after the game.

In an April 2018 conference at CinemaCon, Abrams stated that "we're actually developing a true, dedicated Cloverfield sequel."[118] He also said that the sequel would be released theatrically, a departure from the previous installment, The Cloverfield Paradox, which was only released on Netflix.[119] Abrams went on to say that the Cloverfield sequel is coming "very soon."[120]

In June 2019, Michael Stahl-David produced and starred in The Cloverfield Files, an unofficial short film sequel in which he reprised his role as Robert "Rob" Hawkins from Cloverfield.[121]

In January 2021, it was announced that Joe Barton was selected to write the script for a new Cloverfield film and direct sequel to the 2008 film, produced by Abrams.[122]

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External links

  •   Quotations related to Cloverfield at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Cloverfield at Wikimedia Commons
  • Cloverfield at Box Office Mojo  
  • Cloverfield at AllMovie  
  • Cloverfield at IMDb  

cloverfield, this, article, about, 2008, film, film, franchise, franchise, 2008, american, found, footage, monster, film, directed, matt, reeves, produced, abrams, written, drew, goddard, stars, lizzy, caplan, jessica, lucas, miller, michael, stahl, david, mik. This article is about the 2008 film For the film franchise see Cloverfield franchise Cloverfield is a 2008 American found footage monster film directed by Matt Reeves produced by J J Abrams and written by Drew Goddard It stars Lizzy Caplan Jessica Lucas T J Miller Michael Stahl David Mike Vogel and Odette Yustman The plot follows six young New York City residents fleeing from a massive monster and various other smaller creatures that attack the city during a farewell party CloverfieldTheatrical release posterDirected byMatt ReevesWritten byDrew GoddardProduced byJ J Abrams Bryan BurkStarringLizzy Caplan Jessica Lucas T J Miller Michael Stahl David Mike Vogel Odette YustmanCinematographyMichael BonvillainEdited byKevin StittMusic byMichael GiacchinoProductioncompanyBad Robot ProductionsDistributed byParamount PicturesRelease dateJanuary 18 2008 2008 01 18 Running time85 minutes 1 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 25 30 million 2 3 Box office 172 4 millionDevelopment began when producer J J Abrams started conceptualizing a new monster and enlisted Neville Page to design the creature called Clover In February 2007 the project was secretly greenlit by Paramount Pictures and produced by Abrams s Bad Robot Productions Principal photography took place in Los Angeles and New York City in 2007 The project had several working titles including Slusho Cheese and Greyshot As part of a viral marketing campaign a teaser trailer was released ahead of screenings of Transformers 2007 without a title The final title was revealed in a second teaser trailer attached to screenings of Beowulf 2007 With limited pre release details it garnered online speculation including forums and websites dedicated to uncovering hidden information about the film Several tie ins including a prequel manga series were released as part of the marketing campaign Cloverfield was released on January 18 2008 and received positive reviews from critics who praised Reeves s direction and the cinema verite style narrative It earned 172 million worldwide at the box office against a 25 million budget It is the first installment of the Cloverfield franchise followed by 10 Cloverfield Lane in 2016 and The Cloverfield Paradox in 2018 A direct sequel is in development Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 3 1 Development 3 2 Title 3 3 Casting 3 4 Production 3 4 1 Style of cinematography 3 5 Creature design 4 Marketing 4 1 Pre release plot speculation 4 2 Viral tie ins 4 3 Merchandise 5 Music 6 Release 6 1 Theatrical 6 2 Home media 7 Reception 7 1 Box office 7 2 Critical reception 7 3 Accolades 8 Sequels 9 References 10 External linksPlot EditThe film is presented as footage from a personal camcorder recovered by the United States Department of Defense in the area formerly known as Central Park bearing a disclaimer stating multiple sightings of a case designated Cloverfield This earlier footage from April 27 2008 shows Robert Rob Hawkins waking up with Elizabeth Beth McIntyre in her father s apartment above Columbus Circle before sharing a special day across New York City and Coney Island Fragments of this overwritten footage appear during the course of the film Rob has a farewell party on May 22 2008 thrown by his brother Jason and Jason s girlfriend Lily celebrating Rob s new job as vice president for a company in Japan Jason gets Rob s best friend Hudson Hud Platt to film testimonials for Rob during the party Beth who Rob has now broken up with brings a new man to the party Beth and Rob argue over her guest and Beth leaves shortly before a massive earthquake occurs causing a brief citywide power outage the local news reports a capsized oil tanker near Liberty Island From the roof the party goers witness an explosion in the distance and flee as flaming debris flies in their direction As the party goers leave the building the severed head of the Statue of Liberty is hurled into the street in front of them In the chaos Hud records an enormous creature several blocks away collapsing the Woolworth Building During the group s planned evacuation of Manhattan the creature s tail destroys the Brooklyn Bridge killing Jason and dozens of other people News reports show the Army National Guard s 42nd Infantry Division attacking the monster Smaller parasite creatures fall off its body and attack nearby pedestrians and soldiers Rob listens to a phone message from Beth in which she indicates she is trapped in her apartment at the Time Warner Center and unable to move Going against the crowd Rob Hud Lily and Hud s crush Marlena Diamond venture into Midtown Manhattan to rescue Beth By 3 17 a m they get caught in a battle between the creature and the Army National Guard run into the subway and are attacked by several of the parasites While saving Hud Marlena is bitten by one of the creatures The four escape the subway and enter a below ground mall where she begins to feel unwell They are found by military and taken to a command center and field hospital nearby In reaction to being bitten Marlena begins bleeding from her eyes She is forcibly taken into a tent where she appears to explode Rob still intending on saving Beth persuades one of the military leaders to let them go He is then informed when the last evacuation helicopter will depart before the military executes its Hammer Down Protocol which will destroy Manhattan in its entirety in order to kill the monster They travel to Beth s apartment building to discover it toppled on its side After crossing roofs from the opposite building the group finds her impaled on exposed rebar They free her and make their way to the evacuation site at Grand Central Terminal where they encounter the creature again Lily is first rushed into a departing Marine Corps helicopter to escape before the terminal is destroyed Moments later Rob Beth and Hud are taken away in a second helicopter and witness the creature being bombed The bombing causes the creature to fall and success is assumed but then it lunges out of the smoke hitting the helicopter and causing it to crash in Central Park killing the pilot and everyone inside except Rob Beth and Hud Less than an hour later a voice on the crashed helicopter s radio warns that the Hammer Down protocol will begin in fifteen minutes The three friends regain consciousness and attempt to flee Hud turns back to retrieve the camera when the creature suddenly appears and kills him Rob and Beth grab the camera and take shelter under an arch as sirens blare and the bombing starts Rob and Beth each provide their last testimony of the day s events The bridge begins to crumble and the camera is knocked out of Rob s hand and buried beneath rubble Rob and Beth proclaim their love for each other just as the bomb explodes the camera freezing up before the footage cuts The film ends with the finale of Rob and Beth s trip to Coney Island on a Ferris wheel Unseen by them an indiscernible object falls from the sky into the ocean Just before the camera cuts out Beth states I had a good day After the credits a voice can be heard saying Help us When played in reverse it says It s still alive Cast EditFurther information List of Cloverfield characters Lizzy Caplan as Marlena Diamond a fellow partygoer and Hud s crush Jessica Lucas as Lily Ford Jason s fiance T J Miller as Hud the cameraman capturing the events Michael Stahl David as Rob Hawkins Beth s boyfriend Mike Vogel as Jason Hawkins Rob s brother Odette Yustman as Beth McIntyre Rob s girlfriend Jamie Harlen as Jamie Lascano character that is part of Viral that appears in the film Ben Feldman as Travis Marello Beth s friend Margot Farley as Jenn Theo Rossi as Antonio Kelvin Yu as Clark Brian Klugman as Charlie Billy Brown as Sergeant PryceIn addition NY1 TV journalist Roma Torre has a cameo as herself reporting on a television screen watched by the party goers The film s director Matt Reeves provides the uncredited voice for the two brief phrases one normal one in reversed audio after the credits 4 Production EditDevelopment Edit J J Abrams conceived 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 need our own American monster and not like 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 just insane and intense 5 6 In February 2007 Paramount Pictures secretly greenlit Cloverfield to be produced by Abrams directed by Matt Reeves and written by Drew Goddard The project was produced by Abrams s company Bad Robot Productions 3 The severed head of the Statue of Liberty was inspired by the poster of the 1981 film Escape from New York in which the head lies on a street in New York Reeves explained It s an incredibly provocative image And that was the source that inspired producer J J Abrams to say Now this would be an interesting idea for a movie 7 Title Edit The film was initially titled Cloverfield changed several times throughout production and was reverted Matt Reeves explained this was due to the hype caused by the teaser trailer That excitement spread to such a degree that we suddenly couldn t use the name anymore So we started using all these names like Slusho and Cheese 8 And people always found out what we were doing He said that Cloverfield was the government s case designation for the events caused by the monster comparing the titling to that of the real Manhattan Project though the government did not originate this 9 Cloverfield Blvd is the highway exit Abrams takes to his Santa Monica office 8 10 and which used to lead to the Santa Monica Airport which originally bore the name Clover Field 11 The final title Greyshot was proposed taken from the archway that the two survivors take shelter under at the end of the movie but Director Reeves said this was rejected because the film was already so well known as Cloverfield 12 The film received a subtitle in Japan where it was released as Cloverfield Hakaisha クローバーフィールド HAKAISHA Kurōbafirudo HAKAISHA The subtitle Destroyer was chosen by Abrams and was translated into Japanese as Hakaisha 破壊者 lit Destroyer by Paramount Japan at his request 13 The subtitle Kishin 鬼神 lit Demon ic God was chosen for the manga spin off Cloverfield Kishin released exclusively in Japan citation needed Casting Edit Casting was done in secret with no script sent to candidates To prevent the leaking of plot information instead of auditioning the actors with scenes from the film scripts from Abrams s previous productions were used such as the television series Alias and Lost Some scenes were also written specifically for the audition process not intended for use in the film Lizzy Caplan stated that she accepted a role in Cloverfield without knowing the premise solely because she was a fan of the Abrams produced Lost and her experience of discovering its true nature initially caused her to state that she would not sign on for a film in the future without knowing full well what it is She indicated that her character was a sarcastic outsider and that her role was physically demanding 14 Production Edit With an estimated production budget of 30 million principal photography began in mid June 2007 in New York 3 One cast member said that the film would look like it cost 150 million though without recognizable and expensive actors 14 Filmmakers used the Panasonic HVX200 for most of the interior scenes and the Sony CineAlta F23 high definition video camera to record nearly all of the New York exterior scenes 15 Filming took place on Coney Island with scenes shot at Deno s Wonder Wheel Amusement Park and the B amp B Carousel 16 The scenes of tanks firing at the creature while the main characters hide in a stairwell were filmed on Hennesy Street on Warner Bros Studios backlot in Burbank California Some interior shots were taped on a soundstage at Downey California Bloomingdale s in the movie was actually shot in an emptied Robinsons May store that was under reconstruction in Arcadia California The outside scenes of Sephora and the electronics store were taped in Downtown Los Angeles 17 Brooklyn Bridge as viewed through the film s first person narrative The film was shot and edited in a cinema verite style 18 to look like it was taped with one hand held camera including jump cuts similar to ones found in home movies T J Miller who plays Hud has said in various interviews that he taped a third of the movie and almost half of it made it into the film 19 Director Matt Reeves described the presentation We wanted this to be as if someone found a Handicam took out the tape and put it in the player to watch it What you re watching is a home movie that then turns into something else Reeves explained that the pedestrians documenting the severed head of the Statue of Liberty with the camera phones was reflective of the contemporary period According to him Cloverfield very much speaks to the fear and anxieties of our time how we live our lives Constantly documenting things and putting them up on YouTube sending people videos through e mail we felt it was very applicable to the way people feel now 20 VFX and CGI were produced by effects studios Double Negative and Tippett Studio citation needed Several of the filmmakers are heard but not seen in the film The man yelling Oh my God repeatedly when the head of the Statue of Liberty lands in the street is producer Bryan Burk and director Matt Reeves voiced the whispered radio broadcast at the end of the credits 12 After viewing a cut of the film Steven Spielberg suggested giving the audience a hint at the fate of the monster during the climax which resulted in the addition of a countdown overheard on the helicopter s radio and the sounding of air raid sirens to signal the forthcoming Hammer Down bombing 12 Style of cinematography Edit Sign at an AMC theater warning customers by comparing the film to a roller coaster The film s shaky camera style of cinematography dubbed La Shakily Queasy Cam by Roger Ebert caused some viewers particularly in darkened movie theaters to experience motion sickness including nausea and a temporary loss of balance Audience members prone to migraines have cited the film as a trigger Some theaters showing the film such as AMC Theatres provided poster and verbal warnings informing viewers about the filming style of Cloverfield while other theatres like Pacific Theatres just verbally warned customers in detail at the box office about experiencing motion sickness upon viewing the film and what to do if they had to step out and vomit 21 The cinematography choice camera panning affects the encoding of the video and can cause compression artifacts due to fast motion across the field of view citation needed Creature design Edit Main article Clover creature Visual main effects supervisor Nick Tom and Phil Tippett s Tippett Studio were enlisted to develop the visual effects for Cloverfield 22 Because the visual effects were incorporated after filming cast members were only familiar with early conceptual renderings of the beast and had to react to an unseen creature during their scenes 23 Artist Neville Page designed the monster creating a biological rationale for it though many of his ideas including an elongated articulated external esophagus would not show up on screen 24 His central concept was that of an immature creature suffering from separation anxiety This recalls real life circus elephants who get frightened and lash out The director stated that there s nothing scarier than something huge that s spooked 25 Marketing EditBefore the film s release Paramount carried out a viral marketing campaign to promote the film which included viral tie ins similar to Lost Experience 26 Filmmakers decided to create a teaser trailer that would be a surprise in the light of commonplace media saturation Rather than edit the teaser from footage taken from the finished film footage was captured during the preparation stages solely for creation of the teaser Ernest Holzman who would later be replaced with Lost cinematographer Michael Bonvillain utilized the Thomson Viper FilmStream Camera for the shoot 27 The teaser was then used as a basis for the film itself Paramount Pictures encouraged the teaser to be released without a title attached and the Motion Picture Association of America approved the move 20 As Transformers showed high tracking numbers before its release in July 2007 the studio attached the teaser trailer for Cloverfield that showed the release date of January 18 2008 but not the title 3 A second trailer was released on November 16 2007 which was attached to Beowulf confirming the title 28 The studio had kept knowledge of the project secret from the online community a cited rarity due to the presence of scoopers that follow upcoming films The controlled release of information on the film has been observed as a risky strategy which could succeed like The Blair Witch Project 1999 or disappoint like Snakes on a Plane 2006 the latter of which had generated online hype but failed to attract large audiences 29 Pre release plot speculation Edit The sudden appearance of the untitled teaser for Cloverfield and limited details available in the lead up to the film s release fueled wide media speculation over the film s plot with many expecting it to be an adaptation of an existing property Among the possibilities reported on The Star Ledger suggested that the film could be based on the works of H P Lovecraft or a new entry in the Godzilla series 30 The Guardian reported the possibility of a spin off to Abrams television show Lost 31 and a misinterpretation of the trailer s line It s alive as It s a lion led USA Today to speculate on a live action adaptation of Japanese animated series Voltron 25 32 IGN and Time Out suggested that the film would feature an alien called The Parasite with that rumored to be the working title of the film 33 34 Elsewhere online Slusho and Colossus had been discussed as other possible titles 35 as well as Monstrous 36 although this was dispelled by Abrams at ComicCon 6 The viral marketing campaign drew the attention of alternate reality game enthusiasts hoping to uncover information about the film hidden online Members of the forums at argn com and unfiction com have investigated the background of the film with the 1 18 08 section at Unfiction generating over 7 700 posts in August 2007 The members have studied photographs on the film s official site potentially related MySpace profiles 37 and the Comic Con teaser poster for the film 38 A popular piece of fan art posited that the monster was a mutated humpback whale 25 Viral tie ins Edit All of the major characters received a personal Myspace page all of which are accessible and featuring available photos though blog posts have been removed Unlike most viral marketing campaigns this one had virtually nothing to do with the film s plot or characters Instead it focused mainly on the fictional drink Slusho and the fictional company Tagruato slowly giving clues of the secret origin of the monster that isn t addressed properly in the film Following various clues players discovered that the monster is an ancient amphibious organism discovered during the construction of Chuai Station an oil platform off the coast of Connecticut belonging to the Japanese company Tagruato which had the purpose of extracting a substance called Sea Bed Nectar that would become the secret ingredient of a drink created by its founder Ganu Yoshida 39 named Slusho Tagurato Repurposes Chuai Station after said discovery 40 and pulling a coverup involving the ordered assassination of the employee who originally made the discovery 41 using the front as an oil drilling platform also for surveillance of the monster and its parasites 42 who are using Sea Bed s nectar as a means of nourishment for their host applying the substance on its back Eventually the monster awakens and destroys the station 43 44 before finding its way to the shores of New York at the beginning of the film 45 Puzzle websites containing Lovecraftian elements such as Ethan Haas Was Right were originally reported to be connected to the film 31 46 On July 9 2007 producer J J Abrams stated that while a number of websites were being developed to market the film the only official site that had been found was 1 18 08 com 47 At the site which now redirects to the Paramount Pictures home page a collection of time coded photos were available to piece together a series of events and interpret their meanings The pictures could also be flipped over by repeatedly and rapidly moving the mouse side to side Also if the page was left open for six minutes the monster s roar could be heard Eventually Cloverfield Movie com was created 48 The site provided both a trailer and a number 33287 which when texted from a mobile phone provided a ringtone of the monster s roar and a wallpaper of a decimated Manhattan This eventually turns out to be a Paramount number people later received material on Iron Man Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull Kung Fu Panda and The Love Guru 49 The drink Slusho served as part of the viral marketing campaign The drink had already appeared in producer Abrams previous creation the TV series Alias 50 Websites for Slusho and Taguruato were launched to add to the mythology of Cloverfield The Japanese phone number in the Tagruato website did work but only played recorded messages For example one of the messages was Thank you for calling Tagruato Due to high call volumes your call has been transferred to an automated answering service There are no updates at this time After the tone please leave a message and one of our associates will find you as soon as possible A building bearing the company logo for Tagruato can also be seen in the TV spot of the 2009 Star Trek film and Uhura orders a Slusho during the bar scene 26 When Cloverfield was hosted at Comic Con 2007 gray Slusho T shirts were distributed to attendees 51 Fans who had registered at the Slusho website received e mails of fictional sonar images before the film s release that showed a deep sea creature heading toward Manhattan 52 Fans who ordered merchandise received pieces of torn Tagruato documents and Japanese newspapers along with their products A cup of Slusho appears briefly in The Cloverfield Paradox and it has also appeared in Fringe and Heroes A Slusho bobblehead figure also appears shaking in The Cloverfield Paradox trailer and film Producer Burk explained the viral tie in It was all done in conjunction with the studio The whole experience in making this movie is very reminiscent of how we did Lost 26 Director Reeves described Slusho as part of the involved connectivity with Abrams Alias and that the drink represented a meta story for Cloverfield The director explained It s almost like tentacles that grow out of 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 it s one experience But there s also this other place where you can get engaged where there s this other sort of aspect for all those people who are into that All the stories kind of bounce off one another and inform each other But at the end of the day this movie stands on its own to be a movie The Internet sort of stories and connections and clues are in a way a prism and they re another way of looking at the same thing To us it s just another exciting aspect of the storytelling 50 Merchandise Edit A four installment prequel manga series by Yoshiki Togawa titled Cloverfield Kishin クローバーフィールド KISHIN Kurōbafirudo KISHIN was released by Japanese publisher Kadokawa Shoten 53 The story focuses on a Japanese high school student named Kishin Aiba who somehow bears a connection to the monster 54 Based on the film s successful opening weekend Hasbro began accepting orders for a 14 inch 36 cm collectible toy figure of the monster with authentic sound 55 and its parasites that were shipped to fans by December 24 2008 56 Music EditRob s Party MixCompilation album by various artistsReleasedJanuary 17 2008Length64 02Due to its presentation as footage from a consumer digital recorder Cloverfield has no film score with the exception of the composition Roar Cloverfield Overture by Michael Giacchino that plays over the end credits Similarities between Roar and the music of Godzilla composer Akira Ifukube have been noted and it has been suggested that Giacchino s overture is a tribute to Ifukube s work 57 58 which was confirmed by Matt Reeves in the DVD s commentary track 12 The soundtrack was supervised by William Files citation needed and Douglas Murray at Skywalker Sound 59 Rob s Party Mix or Cloverfield Mix is a collection of the music played in the opening party sequences of the film that was released exclusively on Apple s iTunes Store on January 22 2008 in lieu of a traditional soundtrack album The Cloverfield score Roar Cloverfield Overture by Michael Giacchino that plays over the end credits 60 is not featured on the album as it is the mixtape played at the party and is not the official soundtrack of the film This album was distributed to guests at a Cloverfield premiere party held at the Dark Room in New York City on January 17 2008 61 A complete soundtrack release of all the music in the film including Giacchino s Roar end title piece has now also been released exclusively on iTunes it has not been officially released in retail stores A CD entitled Rob s Party Mix comes packaged in a special edition of Cloverfield made available for sale in Canadian Wal Mart stores beginning on April 22 2008 citation needed Track listingNo TitleArtistLength1 West Coast Coconut Records3 322 Taper Jean Girl Kings of Leon3 053 Beautiful Girls Sean Kingston4 014 Do I Have Your Attention The Blood Arm3 355 Got Your Moments Scissors for Lefty3 116 Give Up the Funk Tear the Roof off the Sucker Parliament5 467 19 2000 Gorillaz3 278 The Underdog Spoon3 429 Pistol of Fire Kings of Leon2 2010 Disco Lies Moby3 2211 Do the Whirlwind Architecture in Helsinki4 3912 Grown So Ugly The Black Keys2 2413 Four Winds Bright Eyes2 0914 The Ride Joan As Policewoman3 0915 Seventeen Years Ratatat4 2616 Wraith Pinned to the Mist and Other Games Of Montreal4 1517 Fuzz ファズ Mucc4 47Release EditTheatrical Edit First publicized in a teaser trailer in screenings of Transformers the film was released on January 17 in New Zealand Russia and Australia January 18 in North America January 24 in South Korea January 25 in Taiwan January 31 in Germany and February 1 in the United Kingdom Ireland and Italy In Japan the film was released on April 5 Home media Edit The DVD was released on April 22 2008 in two versions the standard single disc edition and an exclusive steel book special edition that was sold at Suncoast and FYE retailers in the US and Future Shop in Canada Other store exclusives include an exclusive bonus disc titled T J Miller s Video Diary with the DVD at all Best Buy retailers an exclusive mix CD titled Rob s Goin to Japan Party Mix with the DVD at all Target and Wal Mart retailers and an exclusive ringtone with the DVD at all Kmart and Sears retailers Borders also had an exclusive booklet encased with their DVD The Region 2 DVD was released on June 9 in both one disc and two disc editions The limited steel book edition is only available from HMV while Play com offers exclusive cover artwork The HMV exclusive steel book contains two discs The DVD includes two alternative endings which vary only slightly The first alternative ending shows Rob and Beth exiting the Coney Island Stillwell Avenue station instead of on the Ferris wheel and features different sirens in the background as Rob talks to the camera In the second alternative ending just after the final explosion Beth can be heard screaming Rob followed by a very brief clip of an unknown person looking at the camera in the commentary Reeves said that it was one of the crew members and brushing rubble off the lens The film then ends with the original final clip of Rob and Beth on their Coney Island date recording themselves on the Ferris Wheel as the camera tape runs out with two differences there is no timestamp in the lower left hand corner of the screen and there is an additional beeping tone indicating the end of the tape 62 A Blu ray edition was released on June 3 2008 63 It includes a Special Investigation Mode as well as all the bonus features of the 2 disc DVD in HD On the film s 10th anniversary Paramount issued a 4k UHD Blu ray version of the film accompanied by the standard Blu ray and bonus extras it was released on January 23 2018 64 Reception EditBox office Edit Cloverfield opened in 3 411 theaters on January 18 2008 and grossed a total of 16 930 000 on its opening day in the United States and Canada It made 40 1 million on its opening weekend which at the time was the most successful January release record then taken by Ride Along in 2014 with a weekend gross of 41 5 million 65 Moreover the film simultaneously beat Titanic and Black Hawk Down to have the biggest Martin Luther King Jr Day weekend and opening weekend grosses 66 Worldwide it has grossed 170 602 318 making it the first movie in 2008 to gross over 100 million 2 In Japan the film held the top spot in the box office rankings for one week before the release of Kamen Rider Den O amp Kiva Climax Deka took the top spot in its first weekend 67 Critical reception Edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film holds an approval rating of 78 based on 212 reviews with an average rating of 6 80 10 The website s critical consensus reads A sort of Blair Witch Project crossed with Godzilla Cloverfield is economically paced stylistically clever and filled with scares 68 According to Metacritic the film has received an average score of 64 out of 100 based on 37 reviews indicating generally favorable reviews 69 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of C on an A to F scale 70 Marc Savlov of The Austin Chronicle called the film the most intense and original creature feature I ve seen in my adult moviegoing life a pure blood grade A exhilarating monster movie He cites Matt Reeves direction the whip smart stylistically invisible script and the nearly subconscious evocation of our current paranoid terror phobic times as the keys to the film s success saying that telling the story through the lens of one character s camera works fantastically well 71 Michael Rechtshaffen of The Hollywood Reporter called it chillingly effective generally praising the effects and the film s claustrophobic intensity He said that though the characters aren t particularly interesting or developed there was something refreshing about a monster movie that isn t filled with the usual suspects 72 Lisa Schwarzbaum of Entertainment Weekly said that the film was surreptitiously subversive a stylistically clever little gem and that while the characters were vapid twenty something nincompoops and the acting appropriately unmemorable the decision to tell the story through amateur footage was brilliant 73 Roger Ebert in the Chicago Sun Times gave the film three stars out of four and wrote that it is pretty scary at times and cites unmistakable evocations of 9 11 He concludes that all in all it is an effective film deploying its special effects well and never breaking the illusion that it is all happening as we see it 74 Todd McCarthy of Variety called the film an old fashioned monster movie dressed up in trendy new threads praising the special effects nihilistic attitude and post 9 11 anxiety overlay but said In the end it s not much different from all the marauding creature features that have come before it 75 Scott Foundas of LA Weekly was critical of the film s use of scenes reminiscent of the September 11 attacks in New York City and called it cheap and opportunistic He suggested that the film was engaging in stealth attempts at social commentary and compared this unfavorably to the films of Don Siegel George A Romero and Steven Spielberg saying Where those filmmakers all had something meaningful to say about the state of the world and human nature Abrams doesn t have much to say about anything 76 Manohla Dargis in the New York Times called the allusions tacky saying The images may make you think of the attack and you may curse the filmmakers for their vulgarity insensitivity or lack of imagination but that the film is too dumb to offend anything except your intelligence She concludes that the film works as a showcase for impressively realistic looking special effects a realism that fails to extend to the scurrying humans whose fates are meant to invoke pity and fear but instead inspire yawns and contempt 18 Stephanie Zacharek of Salon com calls the film badly constructed humorless and emotionally sadistic and sums up by saying that the film takes the trauma of 9 11 and turns it into just another random spectacle at which to point and shoot 77 Michael Phillips of the Chicago Tribune warned that the viewer may feel queasy at the references to September 11 but that other sequences carry a real jolt and that such tactics were crude but undeniably gripping He called the film dumb but quick and dirty and effectively brusque concluding that despite it being a harsher more demographically calculating brand of fun he enjoyed the film 60 Bruce Paterson of Cinephilia described the film as a successful experiment in style but not necessarily a successful story for those who want dramatic closure Some critics also pointed out the similarity to the Half Life video game series in particular the Ant lion monsters from Half Life 2 and the constant first person perspective 78 Empire magazine named it the fifth best film of 2008 79 The French film journal Cahiers du Cinema named the film as the third best of 2008 80 Bloody Disgusting ranked the film number twenty in their list of the Top 20 Horror Films of the Decade with the article calling the film A brilliant conceit to be sure backed by a genius early marketing campaign that followed the less is more philosophy to tantalizing effect much like Blair Witch nearly ten years earlier Cloverfield helped prove particularly in its first half hour that what you don t see can be the scariest thing of all 81 In 2022 Aedan Juvet of Screen Rant revisited the original film labeling it as an influential found footage sci fi hybrid 82 Accolades Edit Year Award Category Recipient s Result Ref 2008 Saturn Awards Best Science Fiction Film Cloverfield Won 83 Best Supporting Actress Lizzy Caplan NominatedGolden Schmoes Awards Best Horror Movie of the Year Cloverfield Won 84 Most Underrated Movie of the Year NominatedTrippiest Movie of the Year NominatedBest Sci Fi Movie of the Year NominatedBest Special Effects of the Year NominatedFavorite Movie Poster of the Year NominatedBest Trailer of the Year NominatedGolden Trailer Awards Best Thriller Cloverfield Nominated 85 Most Original NominatedInternet Film Critics Society Awards Most Experimental Film Cloverfield Won 86 Italian Online Movie Awards Best Special Effects Cloverfield Nominated 87 Scream Awards Best Science Fiction Movie Cloverfield Nominated 88 Teen Choice Awards Choice Movie Horror Thriller Cloverfield Nominated 89 Choice Movie Horror Thriller Actor Michael Stahl David NominatedChoice Movie Horror Thriller Actress Odette Yustman Nominated2009 ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards Top Box Office Films Michael Giacchino Won 90 International Film Music Critics Awards Film Music Composition of the Year Michael Giacchino Nominated 91 Fangoria Chainsaw Awards Best Wide Release Film Cloverfield Nominated 92 Worst Film NominatedBest Score Michael Giacchino WonGold Derby Awards Visual Effects Kevin Blank Mike Ellis and Eric Leven Nominated 93 Golden Reel Awards Best Sound Editing Dialogue and ADR in a Feature Film Douglas Murray Will Files Cheryl Nardi Sue Fox and Gwendolyn Yates Whittle Nominated 94 Best Sound Editing Sound Effects and Foley in a Feature Film Will Files Douglas Murray Luke Dunn Gielmuda Robert Shoup Josh Gold Andrea Gard Steve Bissinger Kim Foscato Samuel H Hinckley Andy Malcolm and Goro Koyama NominatedInternational Online Cinema Awards Best Visual Effects Cloverfield Nominated 95 Best Sound Mixing Anna Behlmer Will Files and Ed White NominatedBest Sound Editing Douglas Murray and Will Files NominatedVisual Effects Society Awards Outstanding Visual Effects in a Visual Effects Driven Feature Motion Picture Cloverfield Nominated 96 Best Single Visual Effect of the Year NominatedOutstanding Created Environment in a Feature Motion Picture NominatedSequels EditMain articles 10 Cloverfield Lane and The Cloverfield Paradox At the Cloverfield premiere director Matt Reeves talked about possibilities of what a sequel will look like if the film succeeds 97 According to Reeves While we were on set making the film we talked about the possibilities and directions of how a sequel can go The fun of this movie was that it might not have been the only movie being made that night there might be another movie In today s day and age of people filming their lives on their camera phones and Handycams uploading it to YouTube That was kind of exciting thinking about that 98 In another interview Reeves stated There s a moment on the Brooklyn Bridge and there was a guy filming something on the side of the bridge and Hud sees him filming and he turns over and he sees the ship that s been capsized and sees the headless Statue of Liberty and then he turns back and this guy s briefly filming him In my mind that was two movies intersecting for a brief moment and I thought there was 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 happening that evening and we just saw one piece of another 25 Reeves also pointed out that the final scene on Coney Island shows something falling into the ocean in the background without an explanation This may have been either the satellite owned by the fictional Japanese media company Tagruato or the creature itself A company news piece on the Tagruato website mentions that a piece of the Japanese Government s ChimpanzII satellite fell off into the Atlantic Producers Bryan Burk and J J Abrams also revealed their thoughts on possible sequels to Entertainment Weekly According to Burk The creative team has fleshed out an entire backstory which if we re lucky we might get to explore in future films Abrams stated that he does not want to rush into the development of the sequel merely because the first film has been a success he explained that he would rather create a sequel that is true to the previous film 99 At the end of January 2008 Reeves entered early talks with Paramount to direct a sequel which would likely be filmed before Reeves s other project The Invisible Woman 100 Reeves said The idea of doing something so differently is exhilarating We hope that it created a movie experience that is different The thing about doing a sequel is that I think we all really feel protective of that experience The key here will be if we can find something that is compelling enough and that is different enough for us to do then it will probably be worth doing Obviously it also depends on how Cloverfield does worldwide and all of those things too but really for us creatively we just want to find something that would be another challenge 101 In September 2008 when asked by CraveOnline what the current status is on Cloverfield 2 102 Abrams stated that at this point they were still discussing it however he still feels reluctant to work on a sequel In the same interview Abrams said that they were working on something that could be kind of cool When asked if it would take place in a different location Abrams replied by saying that it would be a totally different kind of thing but it s too early to talk about 103 In a 2010 interview with Attack of the Show Abrams stated that they might abandon the filming style stating that he and the rest of the crew would like to try something new 104 The film Super 8 was initially speculated to be either a sequel or prequel to Cloverfield 105 but this was quickly denied by Abrams 106 In January 2011 horror film fan site BloodyDisgusting com stated that a Cloverfield sequel may in fact never happen They talked to director Reeves and he said that if he can ever get the time to sit down and talk with Drew Goddard and J J Abrams about sequel possibilities they will certainly make a sequel but due to all three s busy schedules Reeves does not see this happening any time soon 107 In a 2011 interview Matt Reeves gave an update on the status of Cloverfield 2 saying Getting the right idea together has been taking a long time You are going to see it we just don t know when laughs At the moment we are talking about the story quite a lot Drew Goddard who wrote the original is going to pen the sequel and J J Abrams is very much involved However the three of us have been so busy that getting the right idea together has been taking a long time When asked if the sequel will be shot in real time Reeves stated You see that s a difficult part we want it to be shot like the first but how can you continue that idea successfully for a second time We have a lot of affection for the original and the sequel can t just be the same thing But that is tricky when you need to have a monster destroying stuff once again 108 In a 2012 interview screenwriter Goddard gave an update saying I m in I m ready to do it someone call J J and tell him to get moving but because Matt and J J and I have been fortunate enough to be busy it s hard syncing our schedules up We re all very passionate about returning to that world When asked if an idea is on paper he responded If you asked each of us what we wanted to do you ll get three different answers which is how the first film was The aesthetic of Cloverfield benefits from that Three voices pulling it Look nothing would make me happier than to get the three of us in the room to get started 109 In a later interview in April of that same year Goddard said We didn t set out to make a franchise we set out to make a good movie But I love that world and that universe so if there was an idea that excited us enough and we felt like there was a reason to do it we would do it The nice thing about when you work with a guy like J J and the power he gets the studio s not going to force him to do anything And he has been able to say we ll do it when we re ready We re not going to just do it because it will help your bottom line we re going to do it because there s an idea that excites us And so that s informed our discussions We don t feel like we have to so it s like Can we come up with something that excites us enough to do it 110 On January 14 2016 10 Cloverfield Lane was revealed by Bad Robot Productions with Abrams as a producer and Reeves and Goddard credited as executive producers 111 The film is described as a blood relative but not a literal sequel to Cloverfield by Abrams who produces the film 112 The film was released on March 11 2016 and it marks the theatrical feature film directorial debut of Dan Trachtenberg 113 During an interview with Abrams to promote 10 Cloverfield Lane he said the creative team behind the original had some ideas on developing Cloverfield 2 but the release of movies such as Godzilla and Pacific Rim led them to abandon them as they found the concept of kaiju movies had played out However Abrams also suggested that he has thought of something that if they are lucky enough to get it made could be really cool that it connects some stories in a future film even teasing a larger Cloverfield universe 112 114 Interviews with Dan Trachtenberg and Mary Elizabeth Winstead director and actress of 10 Cloverfield Lane respectively confirm that the movie is and always was intended to be an expansion of the first film with Trachtenberg calling it the Cloververse 115 In October 2016 it was reported that an Abrams produced project tentatively titled God Particle would be the next film set in the Cloverfield universe 116 The sequel was originally announced as a February 2017 release but has since seen its release date pushed back most recently to a tentative April 2018 date with the God Particle title having been dropped and the film now being referred to as Untitled Cloverfield Sequel It has also been suggested that the original plot device of a god particle may have been completely removed from the script 117 On February 4 2018 during Super Bowl LII a TV commercial aired announcing the film would be entitled The Cloverfield Paradox and would have a surprise release on Netflix after the game In an April 2018 conference at CinemaCon Abrams stated that we re actually developing a true dedicated Cloverfield sequel 118 He also said that the sequel would be released theatrically a departure from the previous installment The Cloverfield Paradox which was only released on Netflix 119 Abrams went on to say that the Cloverfield sequel is coming very soon 120 In June 2019 Michael Stahl David produced and starred in The Cloverfield Files an unofficial short film sequel in which he reprised his role as Robert Rob Hawkins from Cloverfield 121 In January 2021 it was announced that Joe Barton was selected to write the script for a new Cloverfield film and direct sequel to the 2008 film produced by Abrams 122 References Edit CLOVERFIELD 15 British Board of Film Classification January 4 2008 Retrieved June 29 2013 a b Weekend Box Office Box Office Mojo Retrieved February 26 2008 a b c d Kit Borys Siegel Tatiana July 6 2007 Paramount rolls in the Cloverfield The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on July 8 2007 Retrieved July 6 2007 Kelly Kevin io9 Talks To Cloverfield Director Matt Reeves io9 Retrieved August 3 2017 Billington Alex July 26 2007 Comic Con Live Paramount Panel Star Trek Indiana Jones IV and More First Showing Retrieved September 17 2007 a b J J Abrams talks Cloverfield moviesonline ca Movies Online Archived from the original on February 18 2008 Retrieved March 8 2008 Collura Scott December 14 2007 Exclusive Cloverfield Director Speaks Part Two IGN com Retrieved December 22 2007 a b Sciretta Peter September 5 2007 What will Cloverfield 1 18 08 Be Titled SlashFilm com Archived from the original on September 9 2012 Retrieved September 5 2007 Collura Scott December 14 2007 Exclusive Cloverfield Director Speaks IGN com Retrieved December 22 2007 Newman Bruce January 18 2008 Cloverfield A monster for the MySpace generation San Jose Mercury News Retrieved January 18 2008 Masters Nathan March 27 2018 Before Santa Monica Airport There Was Clover Field KCET Retrieved May 14 2020 a b c d Cloverfield Commentary by director Matt Reeves DVD Paramount Pictures 2008 全米大ヒット クローバーフィールド HAKAISHA に続編の噂 American Blockbuster Cloverfield Hakaisha Sequel Rumors Eiga com January 23 2008 Retrieved May 17 2010 a b Lizzy Caplan The Meanest Girl in Hollywood BlackBook Magazine November 15 2007 Retrieved November 16 2007 Sony s F23 high definition camera cuts its teeth in the making of Cloverfield Sony Electronics January 21 2008 Archived from the original on April 30 2008 Retrieved January 22 2008 Weinstein Farrah July 16 2007 Bait Balls of Fire New York Post Retrieved July 17 2007 Blake Lisa August 22 2007 Bases harnessed for double duty Variety Retrieved August 27 2020 a b Dargis Manohla January 18 2008 We re All Gonna Die Grab Your Video Camera The New York Times Retrieved January 18 2008 Cloverfield TJ Miller Interview YouTube Retrieved June 11 2009 dead YouTube link a b Rotten Ryan December 14 2007 EXCL Cloverfield Director Speaks ShockTillYouDrop com Archived from the original on December 22 2007 Retrieved December 22 2007 Hit Horror Flick Leaving Local Moviegoers Queasy Koco com Oklahoma City News January 22 2008 Retrieved June 11 2009 Ball Ryan September 27 2007 Tippett Making Abrams Monster Animation Magazine Retrieved December 6 2007 Rotten Ryan January 2 2008 EXCL Michael Stahl David Talks Cloverfield Experience Shock Till You Drop Archived from the original on January 5 2008 Retrieved January 8 2008 BOTF March 12 2008 Tagruato Interview Cloverfield Lead Creature Designer Neville Page Retrieved March 13 2008 a b c d Evry Max January 21 2008 Reeves Runs Merrily Through Cloverfield ComingSoon net Retrieved January 21 2008 a b c DiLullo Bennett Tara December 17 2007 Producer Talks Cloverfield Sci Fi Wire Archived from the original on December 20 2007 Retrieved December 22 2007 ICG Magazine icgmagazine com Retrieved August 25 2020 Richards Olly November 19 2007 Exclusive The New Cloverfield Trailer Empire Retrieved November 19 2007 Waxman Sharon August 21 2006 After Hype Online Snakes on a Plane Is Letdown at Box Office The New York Times Retrieved December 19 2022 Rose Lisa July 9 2007 Hush hush project stirs wild speculation The Star Ledger Archived from the original on June 15 2009 Retrieved July 9 2007 a b Trailer for Abrams film lost on moviegoers The Guardian July 11 2007 Retrieved July 26 2007 Wolfson Julie January 9 2008 LAist Interview Matt Reeves Director of Cloverfield Laist com Archived from the original on October 1 2011 Retrieved August 21 2010 It s Alive 1 18 08 IGN July 5 2007 Retrieved July 10 2007 Tilly Chris July 11 2007 What is Cloverfield Time Out Retrieved July 26 2007 Morago Greg August 22 2007 Our summer of mystery ads Daily Press Was Monstrous Supposed To Be The Title Cloverfieldnews com September 5 2007 Retrieved February 3 2012 Young Chaping January 17 2008 Cloverfield s Fake MySpace Pages Current Archived from the original on January 21 2008 Retrieved January 17 2008 Gallaga Omar L August 3 2007 To market a movie no name is needed just create mystery and some Web buzz Austin American Statesman Dennis September 30 2007 Cloverfield Clues Tagruato jp Cloverfield Clues Retrieved July 6 2022 Dennis December 18 2007 Cloverfield Clues Whistle Blower Memo 2 pseunmoisuf Cloverfield Clues Retrieved July 6 2022 T I D O Death of Tagruato Biologist December 27 2007 Archived from the original on December 27 2007 Retrieved July 6 2022 Dennis May 2 2008 Cloverfield Clues USGX8810B467233PX Now Open Cloverfield Clues Retrieved July 6 2022 Chuai Station English News CloverfieldClues com retrieved July 6 2022 Dennis January 7 2008 Cloverfield Clues More Chuai Station News Videos English Russian and Japanese Cloverfield Clues Retrieved July 6 2022 The Cloverfield ARG FULL EXPLANATION My Whole Thing Ep 1 retrieved July 6 2022 Breznican Anthony July 9 2007 Mystifying trailer transforms marketing USA Today Retrieved July 16 2007 Knowles Harry July 9 2007 J J Abrams drops Harry a Line on all this 1 18 08 stuff Ain t It Cool News Retrieved July 9 2007 afrench14 September 14 2010 Research into viral marketing SlideShare SlideShare Inc Retrieved August 26 2012 Movie codenamed Cloverfield next blockbuster Courier Mail News Queensland August 11 2007 Retrieved August 26 2012 a b Lesnick Silas December 14 2007 IESB Exclusive Interview Cloverfield Director Matt Reeves IESB Archived from the original on December 17 2007 Retrieved December 22 2007 Carroll Larry July 27 2007 Comic Con J J Abrams Secret Project And The Dark Knight Go Guerrilla With Marketing Tactics MTV Retrieved December 22 2007 Pavia Will January 2 2008 The cloak and dagger approach to hype The Australian Shoten Kadokawa January 19 2008 Kadokawa Shoten Official Website in Japanese Kadokawa Shoten Retrieved January 19 2008 Shonen Ace Posts Cloverfield Movie Tie In Manga Online Anime News Network January 16 2008 Retrieved January 19 2008 Hasbro toys with Cloverfield monster Project Cloverfield March 6 2008 Retrieved March 6 2008 Graser Marc January 21 2008 Hasbro toys with Cloverfield monster Variety Retrieved January 22 2022 Cloverfield review Syracuse New Times January 2008 Retrieved June 11 2009 ScoreKeeper Has News About The Release Of Michael Giacchino s CLOVERFIELD Overture Ain t it Cool News March 2008 Retrieved June 11 2009 Cloverfield Skywalker Sound Lucasfilm Ltd Retrieved April 7 2020 a b Phillips Michael January 16 2008 Movie review Cloverfield Chicago Tribune Archived from the original on January 20 2008 Retrieved January 22 2008 The Rob s Party Sweepstakes Official Rules Paramount Pictures Corporation January 7 2008 Retrieved January 23 2008 Cloverfield Special Features Alternative Endings DVD Paramount Pictures April 2008 Blu ray Disc Release Dates High Def Digest Retrieved June 11 2009 Cloverfield 4k Ultra HD Blu Ray High Def Digest January 22 2018 Retrieved May 1 2019 Top Opening Weekends by Month January Box Office Mojo 2014 Retrieved January 3 2014 King Day crown for Cloverfield The Hollywood Reporter January 22 2008 映画興行成績 仮面ライダー電王 女性人気で堂々1位 クローバーフィールド は2位に 4月12 13日 Archived from the original on April 21 2008 Retrieved April 16 2008 Cloverfield 2007 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved March 27 2021 Cloverfield Metacritic Fandom Inc Retrieved April 1 2021 Rich Joshua January 23 2008 Cloverfield sets box office records Entertainment Weekly But its quite poor CinemaScore grade of C from an audience that was mostly young and male naturally is troubling Savlov Marc January 18 2008 Cloverfield The Austin Chronicle Retrieved January 18 2008 Rechtshaffen Michael January 17 2008 Bottom Line It s The Blair Godzilla Project and that s a compliment The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on December 16 2008 Retrieved January 17 2008 Schwarzbaum Lisa January 16 2008 Movie Review Cloverfield Entertainment Weekly Retrieved January 17 2008 Ebert Roger January 17 2008 Review Cloverfield Chicago Sun Times Retrieved December 9 2021 McCarthy Todd January 16 2008 Cloverfield review Variety Retrieved January 17 2022 Foundas Scott January 16 2008 Cloverfield Is a Horror LA Weekly Archived from the original on January 18 2008 Retrieved January 17 2008 Zacharek Stephanie January 17 2008 Cloverfield Do we really need the horror of 9 11 to be repackaged and presented to us as an amusement park ride Salon com Retrieved January 18 2008 Cloverfield is Half Life The Guardian February 14 2008 Retrieved March 23 2013 Metacritic 2008 Film Critic Top Ten Lists Metacritic Archived from the original on January 2 2009 Retrieved January 11 2009 Cahiers du Cinema Top Ten Lists 1951 2009 Alumnus caltech edu Archived from the original on March 27 2012 Retrieved August 21 2010 00 s Retrospect Bloody Disgusting s Top 20 Films of the Decade Part 4 Bloody Disgusting December 16 2009 Retrieved January 3 2010 Cloverfield 7 Storylines Worth Exploring In The Upcoming Sequel ScreenRant January 14 2022 Retrieved February 14 2022 Sciretta Peter June 25 2008 2008 Saturn Awards Winners Film Film Retrieved March 1 2018 Golden Schmoes Winners and Nominees 2008 JoBlo com Archived from the original on February 21 2018 Retrieved March 1 2018 GTA9 Nominees 2008 Nominees Categories Golden Trailer Awards Golden Trailer Awards Retrieved March 1 2018 permanent dead link 2008 IFCS Awards Internet Film Critics www internetfilmcritics com Retrieved March 1 2018 Le nomination IOMA 2008 CinemaItaliano info CinemaItaliano info in Italian Retrieved March 1 2018 Seijas Casey Comics Take Over 2008 Scream Awards As Nominees Announced MTV News Retrieved March 1 2018 2008 Teen Choice Awards winners and nominees Los Angeles Times June 17 2008 Archived from the original on September 12 2008 Retrieved March 1 2008 ASCAP Honors Top Film and Television Music Composers and Songwriters at 24th Annual Awards Celebration ascap com American Society of Composers Authors and Publishers Retrieved March 1 2018 2009 IFMCA Awards filmmusiccritics org International Film Music Critics Association November 25 2010 Retrieved March 1 2018 The 2009 FANGORIA Chainsaw Awards Results GoreMaster News June 26 2009 Retrieved March 1 2018 2009 Gold Derby Film Awards GoldDerby com March 7 2016 Retrieved March 1 2018 Kilday Gregg January 25 2009 Button among Golden Reel nominees The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved March 1 2018 7th Annual International Online Cinema Awards Awards Daily AwardsDaily Retrieved March 1 2018 7th Annual VES Awards Retrieved December 21 2017 SpookyDan January 19 2008 Cloverfield Sequel News Fearnet Retrieved January 19 2008 SpookyDan January 17 2008 Cloverfield Sequel Talk Violent Plans Bloody Disgusting Archived from the original on March 8 2012 Retrieved January 17 2008 SpookyDan January 27 2008 Cloverfield Monster Has History More Sequel Talk Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on February 18 2014 Retrieved January 27 2008 Fleming Michael January 30 2008 Paramount sows Cloverfield sequel Variety Retrieved January 22 2022 There s a good chance the sequel will be Reeves next film in which case he will direct The Invisible Woman afterward Woman is a Hitchcock style thriller Parfitt Orlando February 1 2008 Matt Reeves Clarifies Cloverfield Sequel Status Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on April 16 2008 Retrieved February 1 2008 J J Abrams is on the Fringe CraveOnline com September 11 2008 Archived from the original on February 25 2011 Retrieved December 13 2009 Moody Mike January 15 2010 J J Abrams talks Cloverfield sequel digitalSpy com Retrieved January 18 2010 J J Abrams Talks Cloverfield Sequel Dreadcentral com January 19 2010 Retrieved August 21 2010 We ve Got Details on J J Abrams s Secret Movie Trailer for Super 8 New York May 4 2010 Yuan Jada May 5 2010 J J Abrams s Cloverfield esque Super 8 Has Nothing Whatsoever to Do With Cloverfield Vulture New York Media LLC Retrieved August 26 2012 Eggertsen Chris January 27 2011 Matt Reeves Cloverfield 2 Update It May Never Happen Bloody Disgusting com Retrieved March 9 2011 Matt Reeves talks Cloverfield 2 TotalFilm com March 15 2011 Retrieved August 11 2011 ShockTillYouDrop com March 7 2012 A Cloverfield 2 Update From Drew Goddard Comingsoon net Retrieved August 26 2012 Han Angie April 17 2012 Sequel Bits James Cameron Wants More T 800 in Terminator 5 Plus Mission Impossible 5 Cloverfield 2 Grown Ups 2 Star Trek Video Game Film FILM Retrieved August 26 2012 Thrower Emma March 16 2016 Exclusive J J Abrams talks 10 Cloverfield Lane Empire Retrieved January 11 2018 a b Davis Erik February 24 2016 Exclusive J J Abrams Talks 10 Cloverfield Lane and Its Connection to the Larger Cloverfield Universe Fandango Retrieved January 11 2018 Chitwood Adam January 14 2016 10 Cloverfield Lane Is J J Abrams Secret Bad Robot Movie Collider Retrieved January 11 2018 Sullivan Kevin P February 25 2016 Cloverfield J J Abrams already knows what the third movie would be Entertainment Weekly Retrieved January 11 2018 Evry Max March 10 2016 Mary Elizabeth Winstead and the 10 Cloverfield Lane Director comingsoon net Retrieved January 11 2018 Donnelly Matt October 26 2016 J J Abrams God Particle Is Next Film in Cloverfield Series Exclusive TheWrap Retrieved January 11 2018 Davidson Matt January 3 2018 Cloverfield 3 Delayed Again May Have New Title IGN Retrieved January 11 2018 J J Abrams Says Another Cloverfield Movie Is Happening Complex Retrieved April 26 2018 J J Abrams Promises A Sequel To Cloverfield Is Coming To Theaters UPROXX April 26 2018 Retrieved April 26 2018 Paramount Confirms True Cloverfield Sequel In The Works Screen Rant April 25 2018 Retrieved April 26 2018 Albuquerque Bruno January 13 2020 The Cloverfield Files Filme Completo Short Film Horror Sci Fi CC YouTube Archived from the original on January 13 2020 Retrieved June 13 2019 Kit Borys January 29 2021 Cloverfield Sequel in the Works With Batman TV Spinoff Showrunner Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved January 29 2021 External links Edit Quotations related to Cloverfield at Wikiquote Media related to Cloverfield at Wikimedia Commons Cloverfield at Box Office Mojo Cloverfield at AllMovie Cloverfield at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cloverfield amp oldid 1136453173, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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