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Split Pulled Off What Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane Could Not

Posted on the 27 April 2017 by Weminoredinfilm.com @WeMinoredInFilm

Split Pulled Off What Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane Could Not

Spoilers Below for Split, Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane. Obviously.

So, Split is a secret Unbreakable sequel, Prometheus a not-so secret Alien prequel and 10 Cloverfield Lane a sort of side sequel to Cloverfield. We know all of that now, but at some point in the lifecycle of those movies very few if any were hip to those big secrets.

Welcome to the brave new world of experimental sequels/prequels. While the majority of Hollywood is busy planting release date flags for sequel after sequel a handful of producers have dared to wonder what a sequel/prequel would look like if they just pretended it was an almost if not entirely unrelated, original movie. The results have been mixed, yet also remarkably rewarding for the uninitiated who end up feeling stunned when the "this new thing actually connects to that other thing" moment happens. It's increasingly difficult to actually surprise audiences like that, but perhaps the financial success of all three movies will lead to Hollywood unleashing a couple more cloak-and-dagger franchise extenders in the near future. After all, both Prometheus and Split performed well enough to earn sequels, with Alien: Covenant due out in weeks and the recently announced Split/ Unbreakable sequel Glass due in 2019.

To wiki-recap:

Split Pulled Off What Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane Could Not
Prometheus was always supposed to be an official Alien prequel. From the moment Fox and Ridley Scott first discussed the idea in 2002, it was going to be a film about the mysterious space jockey and that giant spaceship we only glimpsed in Alien back in 1979. Who the heck was that jockey, and how did his ship end up on that planet? Answer those questions and you've got yourself an Alien prequel. That was the pitch to the studio, and that was the kind of prequel script Jon Spaihts was hired to write.

Then in 2010 Lost's Damon Lindelof re-wrote the script, and the project was steered toward more of a spiritual prequel, with Scott telling MTV in early 2011, "While Alien was indeed the jumping-off point for this project, out of the creative process evolved a new, grand mythology and universe in which this original story takes place. The keen fan will recognize strands of Alien 's DNA, so to speak, but the ideas tackled in this film are unique, large and provocative."

The simple question remained whether or not Prometheus was an Alien prequel or not, but Scott, Lindelof and Fox's marketing department continued to resist offering a straight answer, lifting a page out of J.J. Abrams' mystery box playbook. They even created a viral campaign build around Michael Fassbender's android character David and a futuristic TED talk delivered by Guy Pierce's character Peter Weyland to steer the conversation away from "will there be a xenomorph in this movie or not?" and more toward "this movie looks fascinating all on its own."

However, all they ended up doing was frustrating and confusing audiences, and producing a film which, while admirable in its grand ambitions to explore the source of all life on Earth, feels at war with itself. Even when you watch it today you can still see Spaights' and Lindelof's rival scripts duking it out up there on the screen. It's no mistake then that the sequel is called Alien: Covenant, and the promised Prometheus 2 featuring Shaw and David traveling to the Space Jockey's home planet is now just a 2-minute prologue released online yesterday.

Whereas Prometheus was an Alien movie which took to pretending it was something different 10 Cloverfield Lane was a genuinely original concept which took to pretending it somehow had anything to do with Cloverfield.

Split Pulled Off What Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane Could Not
Originating as a spec script called The Cellar written by Josh Campbell and Matt Stuecken, what would eventually become 10 Cloverfield Lane ended up at Bad Robot with a distribution commitment from Paramount. It wasn't until a director (Dan Trachtenberg) had been hired, the primary actors had been cast and production had officially begun that the decision was made to turn this into a Cloverfield extender. As J.J. Abrams told EW, "The spirit of it, the genre of it, the heart of it, the fear factor, the comedy factor, the weirdness factor, there were so many elements that felt like the DNA of this story were of the same place that Cloverfield was born out of."

And he further explained to Fandango: "This movie is very purposefully not called Cloverfield 2, because it's not Cloverfield 2, [...] So if you're approaching it as a literal sequel, you'll be surprised to see what this movie is. But while it's not what you might expect from a movie that has the name Cloverfield in it, I think you'll find that you'll understand the connection when you see the whole thing."

That connection turned out to be aliens and one added-in-post street sign clarifying the entire film takes place on 10 Cloverfield Lane. However, the film's sudden turn in its final act from claustrophobic hostage horror into War of the Worlds proved too jarring for some, yet completely expected by others since, hey, the movie does have Cloverfield in the title. Conspiracy theories ran wild about the studio forcing through significant re-shoots to tack on a Cloverfield-esque ending for marketing purposes. However, Trachtenberg steadfastly ignored such theories, and the film, jarring finale and all, was a surprisingly early financial success at the 2016 box office.

Split Pulled Off What Prometheus & 10 Cloverfield Lane Could Not
So, Prometheus tried to trick audiences but mostly tricked itself. 10 Cloverfield was more forthcoming about its intentions but suffered a truly divisive last act. Split, though, knew what it was from the get-g0, and never wavered from hiding its big secret. M. Night Shyamalan had actually included James McAvoy's character, the multiple personality-suffering Kevin, in an early draft of the Unbreakable script, and kept him in mind even after having to cut him from the script. The intent was always to revisit Kevin, and Shyamalan eventually hit upon the genius idea of building a supervillain origin story movie around him without actually telling anyone it was a supervillain origin story.

He took part in EW's big oral history about Unbreakable, testing the waters for fan and stakeholder interest in doing something more in that world. Meanwhile, he put his head down and plugged away at turning himself into a low-budget director working for Jason Blum. When he restored his bankability as a director (via The Visit) he went straight into Split, and successfully prevented anyone from guessing/spoiling his big secret, even removing the Unbreakabl twist from the test and press screenings. Twists are kind of his thing, to the point of annoyance, but "this whole movie is actually a sequel!" is a different kind of gotcha than "he's been dead the entire time!"

Yet he pulled it off. He fashioned Split into a quality standalone thriller which just happens to have a Bruce Willis cameo in a mid-credits scene. There was no dicking around with audience expectations ala Prometheus nor was there a "this is connected to that other thing, but you'll have to watch to find out how" tease ala 10 Cloverfield. It's the type of risk which would drive a marketing department mad, but it's one you can make when your film costs less than $10m to make. The lesson to all others who might try this is to formulate your plan right away. If your movie is going to be a secret sequel/prequel decide that right away and stick to it.

Now, if only Life had turned out to be a Venom prequel. Sigh.


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