The Day the Earth Stood Still | |
---|---|
![]() Theatrical release poster |
|
Directed by | Scott Derrickson |
Produced by | Erwin Stoff Paul Harris Boardman |
Written by | David Scarpa (screenplay) Harry Bates (original short story) Ryne Douglas Pearson Stuart Hazeldine |
Starring | Keanu Reeves Jennifer Connelly Kathy Bates Jon Hamm John Cleese Jaden Smith Kyle Chandler |
Music by | Tyler Bates |
Cinematography | David Tattersall |
Editing by | Wayne Wahrmann |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date(s) | December 12, 2008 |
Running time | 103 minutes |
Country | United States Canada Australia |
Language | English |
Budget | $80,000,000[1] |
Gross revenue | $230,718,794[1] |
The Day the Earth Stood Still is a 2008 American science fiction film, a remake of the 1951 film of the same name. The screenplay is based on the 1940 classic science fiction short story, "Farewell to the Master", by Harry Bates, and the 1951 screenplay adaptation by Edmund H. North.
Directed by Scott Derrickson and starring Keanu Reeves as Klaatu, this version replaces the Cold War theme of nuclear warfare with the contemporary issue of humankind's environmental damage to the planet. It follows Klaatu, an alien sent to try to change human behavior or eradicate them from Earth.
The film was originally scheduled for release on May 9, 2008, but was released on a roll-out schedule beginning December 12, 2008, screening in both conventional and IMAX theaters.[2][3] The critical reviews were mixed; typically the film was found to be "heavy on special effects, but without a coherent story at its base".[4] In its opening week, the film took top spot at the U.S. box office and has since grossed over $230 million worldwide. The Day the Earth Stood Still was released on home video on April 7, 2009.
Contents |
In 1928, on an expedition in the snowy mountains of India, a mountaineer encounters a glowing sphere. He touches it and then finds himself awakening after a sudden loss of consciousness, with the sphere now gone and a scar on his hand.
In the present day, the United States government hastily assembles a group of scientists, including Princeton professor Dr. Helen Benson, to formulate a survival plan when it is feared that a large unknown object with a speed of approximately one-tenth the speed of light, is due to impact Manhattan.
The object slows down just before impact and is revealed to be a large spherical spaceship, which lands gently in Central Park. A being named Klaatu emerges from the sphere, around which the military has established a perimeter. Amidst the confusion, Klaatu is shot. A gigantic robot emerges, emitting a sound that temporarily paralyzes humans and disrupts all electrical systems in New York City. Before the robot can take the being back, Klaatu orders it to shut down.
While recovering from his injuries, Klaatu takes on the appearance of the man from the opening scene of the film. He informs Regina Jackson, the United States Secretary of Defense, that he is a representative of a group of alien races sent to talk to the United Nations. Jackson instead orders that Klaatu be sent to a secure location for investigation. Klaatu manages to escape with the help of Helen, and is pursued by the authorities throughout Newark, New Jersey, and the forested Highlands, with Helen and her stepson, Jacob.
Meanwhile, the presence of the sphere has caused a worldwide panic. The United States military manages to capture the robot after it thwarts their attempts to destroy the sphere using unmanned aerial vehicles that launch missiles. Klaatu meets with Mr. Wu, another alien who had been assigned by the group of alien civilizations to live with the humans for 70 years. Upon confirming humanity's destructive tendencies, Klaatu determines that humans shall be exterminated to ensure that the planet—with its rare ability to sustain complex life—can survive. Mr. Wu decides to stay on Earth, having seen another side to humanity, having grown to love humanity and being willing to die with it. Klaatu orders smaller spheres—hidden on Earth—to begin taking animal species off the planet, and Jackson, the United States Secretary of Defense, fears that a cataclysm is imminent.
The robot, named "GORT" (Genetically Organised Robotic Technology) by the United States government, is subjected to experiments in an underground facility in Virginia. After receiving the order from Klaatu, it then transforms itself into a swarm of self-replicating insect-like nanites that begin destroying everything in their path.
Helen takes Klaatu to the home of Nobel Prize-winning Professor Barnhardt, where they discuss how Klaatu's own species went through a drastic evolution to survive its own star's demise. Klaatu is convinced by Helen and Jacob that humans can change their ways and are worth saving.[5] The three go toward the sphere in Central Park, where Klaatu warns that even if he manages to stop GORT, there will be a price to the human way of life. The nanobot cloud arrives before they can reach the sphere and they hide from it just under a footbridge.
There, it is revealed that Jacob and Helen have been infected by the nanites. She pleads with Klaatu to save Jacob, rather than herself. Klaatu saves both of them by transferring the infection to his own body, then walks through the nanites to the sphere and touches it. His actions cause the sphere to emit a massive electromagnetic pulse which destroys the nanobot cloud, saving humanity, but at the expense of all of Earth's technology becoming useless and immobile.[6] Klaatu disappears, and the giant sphere leaves Earth.
In 1994, 20th Century Fox and Erwin Stoff had produced the successful Keanu Reeves film Speed. Stoff was at an office at the studio when he saw a poster for The Day the Earth Stood Still, which made him ponder a remake with Reeves as Klaatu.[14] By the time David Scarpa started writing a draft of the script in 2005,[16] Thomas Rothman was in charge of Fox and felt a responsibility to remake the film.[14] Scarpa felt everything about the original film was still relevant, but changed the allegory from nuclear war to environmental damage because "the specifics of [how] we now have the capability to destroy ourselves have changed."[5] Scarpa noted the recent events of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 informed his mindset when writing the screenplay.[16] He scrapped Klaatu's speech at the conclusion of the story because "audiences today are [un]willing to tolerate that. People don't want to be preached to about the environment. We tried to avoid having our alien looking out over the garbage in the lake and crying a silent tear [from the 1970s Keep America Beautiful ads]."[17]
Director Scott Derrickson admired the original film's director Robert Wise, whom he met as a film student.[5] He generally dislikes remakes, but he enjoyed the script, which he decided was a retelling of the story and not a true remake.[7] He also explained that The Day the Earth Stood Still is a not a widely seen classic film, unlike The Wizard of Oz, which he would not bother remaking.[16] Derrickson's benchmark was Philip Kaufman's 1978 remake of Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Klaatu was made more menacing than in the original, because the director felt he had to symbolize the more complex era of the 2000s.[18] There was debate over whether to have Klaatu land in Washington, D.C., as in the original; but Derrickson chose New York City because he liked the geometry of Klaatu's sphere landing in Central Park.[19] Derrickson also did not write in Gort's original backstory, which was already absent from the script he read. He already thought the script was a good adaptation and didn't want the negative connotations of fascism from the original film.[20]
Astronomer Seth Shostak served as scientific consultant on the film, reviewed the script several times for errors, gave suggestions for making the scientists appear less dry, and noted that they would refer to one another on a first-name basis. He said, "Real scientists don't describe an object entering the solar system as 'notable for the fact that it was not moving in an asteroidal ellipse, but moving at nearly three times ten to the seventh meters per second.' More likely, they would say that there was 'a goddamned rock headed our way!'"[13]
Filming took place from December 12, 2007, to March 19, 2008, at Vancouver Film Studios,[19][21] Vancouver Forum, Deer Lake, Jericho Park, and Simon Fraser University.[22] The film was originally scheduled for release on May 9, 2008, but it was delayed until December 12, 2008, because filming commenced later than scheduled.[23] The shoot was unaffected by the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike;[14] by then Scarpa had written 40 drafts of the script.[16] The film was mostly shot on sets because it was winter in Vancouver.[5]
Derrickson was fascinated by color schemes. He chose blue-green and orange as the primary colors for The Day the Earth Stood Still. The missile silo converted by the military for experimenting on Gort emphasized gray and orange, which was inspired by an image of lava flowing through a gray field. Derrickson opted to shoot on traditional film, and rendered the colors in post-production to make them more subtle, for realism.[5]
To film Barnhardt and Klaatu writing equations on a blackboard, general relativity sums were drawn by Marco Peloso from the University of Minnesota, and William Hiscock of Montana State University in faint pencil marks. Keanu Reeves and John Cleese drew over these in chalk.[13]
As Fox had a mandate to become a carbon neutral company by 2011, The Day the Earth Stood Still's production had an environmentally friendly regimen. "Whether it was because of this movie thematically or it was an accident of time, there were certain things production-wise we've been doing and been asked to do and so on," said Erwin Stoff.[14] To prevent the wasting of paper, concept art, location stills and costume tests were posted on a website created by the production for crew members to reference. Costumes were kept for future Fox productions or given to homeless shelters, rather than thrown away. Hybrid vehicles were used and crew members had orders to turn off their car engines if they sat in their vehicles for more than three minutes.[5]
Weta Digital created the majority of the effects, with additional work by Cinesite and Flash Film Works. The machines of Klaatu's people have a biological basis rather than a mechanical one, as Derrickson theorized their level of advancement would be shown by their mastering of ecology.[5] Derrickson deemed a modern audience would find the original's flying saucer amusingly obsolete and unique to the original's milieu.[19] The director also noted many films had been influenced by The Day the Earth Stood Still, so they needed to bring new ideas to the remake.[14]
The effects team approached the new spacecraft's design as inter dimensional portals resembling orbs. The script had specified the inside of the orbs as a "white limbo-y thing", but visual effects consultant Jeff Okun explained this was deleted for being too "cheesy".[19] Derrickson felt not showing the inside of the ship, unlike the original, would make the audience more curious.[5] As well as computer-generated spheres—such as Klaatu's 300-foot (91 m) ship, or a 3,000-foot (910 m) tall orb that rises from the sea—700-pound (320 kg) spheres, 9 feet (2.7 m) in diameter, were sculpted by Custom Plastics, which built spheres for Disney theme parks. The spheres were split in two to make transportation easier. It was difficult placing lights inside them without making them melt. The visual effects team looked at natural objects, including water droplets and the surfaces of Jupiter and Saturn for the spheres' texture.[5]
Derrickson emphasized a Trinity-like relationship between the sphere, Klaatu, and Gort.[14] Klaatu is initially depicted as a radiant focus of sentient light. He is then depicted as a seven-foot tall gray "walking womb" shape which finally takes on a completely human appearance. The filmmakers conceived the transitional form because they pondered the idea of humans mistaking space suits for alien skin. Computer-generated imagery and practical effects achieved the transformation.[5] The creation of the alien form was led by Todd Masters (Slither), who hired a sex toy maker to sculpt the suit with thermal plastic and silicone.[19]
Gort was described as nanotechnology in the script by the time the director signed on, although it did not specify his appearance.[24] The 15th draft of the script[16] had depicted the robot as a four-legged "Totem" that stands upright after firing its weapon beam.[25] Okun explained there were many more "horrific" or "amazing" concepts, but it made sense that the robot would assume a familiar human shape. He cited the Monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey as an inspiration for Gort's texture, noting "it's a simple shape, it has no emotion [...] it just simply is",[7] which makes Gort more frightening because the audience cannot tell what he is thinking. The computer-generated robot was estimated by the animators to be 28 feet (8.5 m) tall, whereas in the original he was played by the 7-foot-7-inch (2.31 m) tall Lock Martin.[5] Gort's computer model was programmed to reflect light, and the filmmakers spent time on motion capture sessions to guide the performance. An actor wore weights on his hands and feet, allowing the animators to bring a sense of weight and power to Gort.[5] His destructive capabilities were based on locust swarms.[16]
The Day the Earth Stood Still (Soundtrack) | |
---|---|
![]() |
|
Soundtrack by Tyler Bates | |
Released | December 16, 2008 |
Length | 52:43 |
Label | Varèse Sarabande |
Tyler Bates was brought in to compose the score for The Day the Earth Stood Still after Derrickson heard his work on The Devil's Rejects and Slither. Bates decided that instead of imitating the original score by Bernard Herrmann, he would try and convey the message of the new film, which was different, and assumed that most people would not even realize it was a remake. Bates said, "People revere an original property and feel that it's sacred, but frankly, there's a good story to be retold, as it applies to the climate of the world now. If that's something beyond the scope of a person's ability to take in, on a new level, without necessarily using the original as a criteria for whether or not they're going to enjoy it, then they probably shouldn't bother themselves with it." The origins for the sound on the new score came from Bates attending the filming of a few scenes with Reeves and Smith. When he got back to L.A., he created a sound loop on his GuitarViol to which Derrickson responded, "I think that's the score!", when it was played for him.[26] Bates utilized the theremin, which Herrmann heavily used for the original film's score. Bates and the theremin player he hired used the instrument in a manner reminiscent of a sound effect, especially during Klaatu's surgery.[27]
Track listing | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Length | |||||||
1. | "Stars" | 0:39 | |||||||
2. | "Mountain Climber" | 2:41 | |||||||
3. | "National Security" | 2:47 | |||||||
4. | "This Is Not an Exercise" | 0:52 | |||||||
5. | "Do You Feel That?" | 2:00 | |||||||
6. | "Military Approach" | 1:07 | |||||||
7. | "G.O.R.T" | 2:42 | |||||||
8. | "Surgery" | 1:30 | |||||||
9. | "Interrogation" | 2:33 | |||||||
10. | "You Should Let Me Go" | 2:24 | |||||||
11. | "A Friend to the Earth" | 1:55 | |||||||
12. | "Fighter Drones" | 1:23 | |||||||
13. | "Came to Save the Earth" | 0:45 | |||||||
14. | "I'm Staying" | 1:10 | |||||||
15. | "Helen Drives" | 0:44 | |||||||
16. | "Containing G.O.R.T" | 0:44 | |||||||
17. | "The Day the Earth Stood Still" | 2:41 | |||||||
18. | "They're Not Afraid of Us" | 1:20 | |||||||
19. | "Flash Chamber" | 0:54 | |||||||
20. | "Helicopter Collision" | 5:14 | |||||||
21. | "See My Son" | 2:11 | |||||||
22. | "Cemetery" | 3:19 | |||||||
23. | "Distress" | 1:59 | |||||||
24. | "Wrong Place Wrong Time" | 0:55 | |||||||
25. | "Aphid Reign" | 4:17 | |||||||
26. | "Power Down" | 0:56 | |||||||
27. | "He's Leaving" | 1:50 | |||||||
28. | "The Beginning" | 1:11 |
The Day The Earth Stood Still was orchestrated and conducted by Timothy Williams.
Before its release, The Day the Earth Stood Still was nominated for Best Visual Effects and Best Sound at the 2008 Satellite Awards.[28] On the film's December 12, 2008 release, the Deep Space Communications Network at Cape Canaveral was to transmit the film to Alpha Centauri.[2]
Metacritic, a film review aggregator, gave the film a 40/100 approval rating based on 34 reviews by top rated reviewers, placing it in the "mixed reviews" category. Based on 148 reviews collected by Rotten Tomatoes, only 21% of them were positive. The majority found the film "heavy on special effects, but without a coherent story at its base, [the film] is subpar re-imagining of the 1951 science-fiction classic."[4] Bruce Paterson of the Australian Film Critics Association gave the film 3 out of 5 stars, writing that the generally poor reception for the film was "a sad fate for a surprisingly sincere tribute to Robert Wise's 1951 classic."[29] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times congratulated Keanu Reeves's performance and wrote in his review that "This contemporary remake of the science-fiction classic knew what it was doing when it cast Keanu Reeves, the movies' greatest stone face since Buster Keaton."[30]
A. O. Scott of the New York Times was not impressed with Reeves' performance, commenting that "even Klaatu looks bored and distracted, much as he did back when we knew him as Neo."[31] William Arnold of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer gave the film a B minus and wrote, "It's a decent enough stab at being what the old movie was to its time, following the same basic plot, full of respectful references to its model, updated with a gallery of fairly imaginative special effects."[32] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film two stars and noted that the film had "taken its title so seriously that the plot stands still along with it", but also stated that it was "an expensive, good-looking film that is well-made by Scott Derrickson".[33] Claudia Puig of USA Today gave the film two stars and wrote in her review she felt the film was "musty and derivative" and thought its only bright spot was 10-year-old Jaden Smith's "engaging, lively performance".[34]
The Day the Earth Stood Still opened in North America on December 12, 2008. During that opening weekend, and despite mixed response from critics, the film reached the #1 spot, grossing $30,480,153 from 3,560 theaters with an $8,562 average per theater.[1] Out of the film's opening weekend income, 12% was from IMAX; it was "the highest IMAX share yet for a two-dimensional title".[35] In 2008, it was the 27th highest grossing film during its opening weekend but 40th for the entire year. The Day the Earth Stood Still was able to stay in the top 10 for its first four weeks in theaters.[36] The film ended up grossing $79,366,978 domestically and $151,465,000 in foreign markets, a total of $230,831,978.[1]
The Day the Earth Stood Still was released on DVD and Blu-ray on April 7, 2009, almost four months after its release and only five days after its theater run ended. Bonus features include commentary with Scarpa along with a picture-in-picture showing the special effects footage, concept art, and photos. It also includes several featurettes: "Build Your Own Gort", "Re-Imagining The Day", "Unleashing Gort", "Watching the Skies: In Search of Extraterrestrial Life", and "The Day the Earth was Green." Also included were three still galleries and the film's trailer. Packaged with the film on a separate disc, is the original 1951 film. The Blu-ray release features a D-BOX motion code.[37]
According to data by Home Media Magazine, it came in first for rentals during its first and second weeks.[1] For the first week of its release it was ranked first in Blu-ray sales, and second on the regular DVD sales chart, behind Bedtime Stories, totaling $14,650,377 (not including Blu-ray).[38]
|
|