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Plot Details Emerge As J.J. Abrams Talks ‘Super 8’

Maybe it’s just because virtually every other Super Bowl trailer felt like being headbutted by an exploding Playstation in a candy store, but the first proper look at J.J. Abrams‘ top-secret “Super 8” seemed to stand head and shoulders above the rest; sure, it’s got its fair share of things blowing up too, but it teased an actual movie, not just a bloated CGI-fest. Word’s been typically quiet from the secretive hyphenate’s latest project since the surprise announcement teaser last summer, but Abrams broke cover as the TV spot was aired to talk to Hero Complex, and a few more concrete details have emerged, both about the plot, and what the writer-director is aiming for.

Abrams reveals to the site that the film is actually a combination of two separate projects that he’d been working on; a non-genre coming-of-age tale about teenagers seeing the world through their Super 8 camera, which the director was developing, to no avail, with Steven Spielberg, and a pitch sold to Paramount about a train traveling from Area 51 that never reaches its destination. Abrams reveals that, just as Spielberg decided to tell a personal story about divorce with sci-fi trappings for “E.T.” (clearly the film’s closest cousin), he was inspired to combine the two projects.

Set in Ohio in 1979, the final film follows six young people making a zombie movie with their Super 8 camera, who witness a horrific train crash, and catch a glimpse of a creature escaping from the wreck. In true Abrams/Spielberg fashion, the more fantastical elements will be grounded by what the helmer describes as a story “about overcoming loss and finding your way again and finding your own voice. A boy who loses his mother and the man who’s lost his wife. There’s this father who, because of the era, never really had to be the parent. He’s a good man, he works hard, he’s a deputy in the town, but he’s never stepped up as a father.”

As this melding might suggest, Abrams describes a film that doesn’t sit easily in one box. “As the process went along I realized I had the potential makings of my favorite sort of movie, which is the one that is the hardest genre to define. That because you could say — and be right — that it’s a science fiction movie; or you could say — and be right — that it’s a love story; or you could say — and be right — that it’s a comedy; or you could say — and be right — that it’s a special-effects spectacle. That sort of cocktail is for me what I love about movies…that was the beginnings of this movie coming together.”

Indeed, Abrams typically says that he wishes that he was able to keep the film under wraps until release, although acknowledging that, as a film not based on an existing property, it needs to make a splash in order to survive in a crowded summer: “To me, all people need to know is that it’s an adventure about a small town and it’s funny, it’s sweet, it’s scary and there’s a mystery: What is this thing that has escaped? What are the ramifications of its presence? And what is the effect on people? But I know that’s not enough. Look, I feel we need a little bit of a coming-out party because we are up against massive franchises and brands and most people don’t know what ‘Super 8’ means. We’re a complete anomaly in a summer of huge films … and we don’t want to be so silent or coy that people don’t care or don’t hear about it.”

It all sounds increasingly promising, and the film has become easily one of our most anticipated tentpoles of the year — and considering the near-unanimously positive reaction to the TV spot, we imagine it should have no problem standing up against its bigger competitors. We’ll find out if Abrams has pulled it off when “Super 8” opens on June 10th.

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6 COMMENTS

  1. @goldfarb,
    Did Nolan actually flip an 18-wheeler or not? Yes, he did. Ok then. I don\’t care how much CG is used, what matters is how it is used. In the Super 8 trailer you can tell it is a CD train wreck. In Nolan\’s films you can never see the CG. I\’d rather see compressed air shooting out of the back of an 18-wheeler than basically a cartoon thrown into the middle of a live action movie, which is what a lot of overly CG action sequences look like.

  2. it\’s does look good – and not surprisingly has an early Spielberg feel (all the better)…I think we all know what Abrams is talking about regarding the genre and I\’m sure many of us would prefer a little more mystery in film marketing…

    @ rodie
    people really need to get their facts straight about how little (or how much) CG Nolan uses in his films – and the 18 wheeler flip in Dark Knight could have used a little digital clean up to get rid of the blindingly obvious compressed air shooting out the back of it…

  3. Yes, this DOES look like a good movie, but I do think the whole CGI train wreck really stuck out like a sore thumb. I wish Abrams had gone completely old-school with the visual effects. If Christopher Nolan can actually flip an 18-wheeler, Abrams could have found a way to shoot a train wreck with minimal CG.

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