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X-E loves Cloverfield!


WARNING: CLOVERFIELD SPOILERS BELOW AND IN COMMENTS. READ AT YOUR OWN CLOVERISK.

I adored it. Absolutely adored it. You know, it's one of those things where you can hear the arguments "against" coming from a mile away, and thought you can't really refute them, you just don't care. An opinion is just that, and I say with all sincerity that Cloverfield is one of my favorite films in a long, long time, and among my favorite moviegoing experiences ever.

I could've given you this review last Tuesday, as I was fortunate enough to see an early press screening. I just really wanted to see it again before saying anything, because I went into that first viewing with sky-high expectations set from months of crazy hype, and because, frankly, seeing a movie like this in a relatively stuffy "press screening atmosphere" robbed it of some of its punch. Yesterday, I saw it with regular folks and without those prayers for the impossible created by months of daydreaming, and Christ, this may be the first movie since Burton's Batman that I see more than twice in theaters.

Is it a perfect movie? Fuck no. It's not even a revolutionary experience in the same way The Blair Witch Project was. But it's damn effective: It's fun, it's funny, it's scary, it's brutal, it's big, and it's a bona fide experience. I think you'd have to go into this with an extremely contrary-prone mind to not at least leave feeling like you just experienced something. You can't just "watch" Cloverfield.

What surprised me is how I liked it for entirely different reasons than I expected. I didn't expect to really care about the characters as anything more than devices, but here I am, ready to proclaim Hud and Marlena as two of my favorite movie characters ever. And I can't even explain why. I really can't. But something about both of those characters makes me know that I'm going to be forever loyal to the actors that played them, even if the remainder of their careers are filled with bad choices and awful roles. I'll forever root for them.


Course, Cloverfield is going to be weighed by the effectiveness of the monster and the destruction said monster caused. Overall, I was totally impressed by the creature. I'm one of the many thousands of fans who spent months trying to come up with a rough estimation of what the monster was going to look like, and it was absolutely 100% different from any of the popular theories. Truth be told, it's nearly impossible to describe what you saw without the aid of photos. (Photos and clips have already made their way online, but I don't want to be that kind of spoiler guy.)

The best monster scenes are the ones where we don't get an amazingly clear view of it, and fortunately, those account for all but one of the creature's appearances. When they finally make good on their vow to show it clearly near the end of the film, you can sense that they're doing it begrudgingly: It looks cool and badass, but the overall effect is nothing compared to earlier shots of the semi-obscured beast lumbering around/past/straight through buildings. During the scene where our heroes have to cross roofs between damaged skyscrapers, Hud points the camera down the long avenue, and we see the monster more or less in full, plodding down the streets as jets bomb it to all fuck. The shot was just gorgeous. Not like I wasn't going to anyway, but I'd totally get the DVD just for the opportunity to screencap that shot and make it my desktop wallpaper for the next year.

As for the mini-monsters (the "parasites" that drop off the big guy), viewer opinion seems to be split. I'd agree that the spider-like things could've stood to be a bit less derivative of some of wacky creatures we've already seen in other movies and video games, but then, we don't know the whole story. It could be that they're totally natural sea parasites mutated by drawing blood from this possibly-alien creature, and that's a fucking awesome concept. The beauty about Cloverfield even at this late stage is that so much stuff is left wide open for interpretation. I know that a lot of people wish they were given more solid answers, but I'm so glad we weren't. When you know all there is to know, there isn't much left to think about. Right now, there is, and this film's lore is a heck of a lot of fun to think about.

I got off-track: The mini-monsters were a welcome addition. As insane as the main creature was, New York City is a big place: A second threat that could turn up anywhere was almost a necessity. The smaller creatures may have seemed more pestilent than horrific, but considering that their bites cause people to explode, they really upped the film's surrealistic nature.

Not knowing exactly what happened at the end was...well, it was exactly what the movie called for. Aside from the added benefit of being able to leave the movie feeling as though the monster was still destroying everything in sight, the door is open for future stories, whether they come by way of a sequel, comics or some screwy viral website. It's left us wanting to know more, but in a way that will help avoid needing to retcon anything we've already seen or heard.

I've been reading a ton of fan reviews, and for all the people that loved it, there are plenty who hated it. I can understand why someone might feel a bit let down: The hype was so tremendous, and if I was being honest, all of the trailers and promos pointed to a movie with a far scarier tone than Cloverfield actually had. But isn't it more fair to judge the film based on what we were given, rather than on what we might've been teased with? When I force myself to do that, I am beyond satisfied. I can't wait to see it again, and I'm salivating over the prospects of what the future may hold. The film has done tremendous business so far, so we're definitely poised to get more of the story in some form.

For now, I'll just have fun theorizing about what's what and what's not, and imagining horrible and awesome events every time I go into work and look up at the big buildings. I believe that a film that can serve as such a fantasy catalyst is a different kind of success, and any faults I can find with Cloverfield are totally eradicated by the fact that it's one of the few pieces of entertainment in recent memory that's really got me dreaming again.

I could go on and on in circles and ovals, but I'll stop here...except for a few small points about the movie, after the jump. Just want to point out a couple of things you may have missed or been confused about if you saw Cloverfield without any pre or post research...

More than one giant monster?
There's been a lot of speculation that more than a single monster attacked, explaining its ability to turn up in vastly different locations from one seeming moment to the next, and the fact that it seemed to look a little bit different in each of the scenes it was in. I don't personally believe that this was the case, but I do think that it may end up being the case later. If/when there is a sequel -- even if it's simply another group's tape of the same events -- I'd put money on there being more than one monster. Intentionally or not, they've laid the groundwork for it, and it was really fun to watch the film for a second time with that perspective in mind. There's a lot in support of it even in spite of the evidence against.

Did you see it?
At the very end of the film, when it cuts to Rob and Beth in Coney Island, the establishing shot of the ocean hides a subtle secret. Look close at the boat at the bottom right of the screen, and you'll notice something shoot down and splash into the water, like a meteor. It's extremely subtle: I didn't see it in my first viewing, and would not have noticed it the second time if I hadn't read about it first.

Without going into too much detail on the viral campaign, this object could be one of four things. The first option: It's the monster itself arriving on earth a month before its grand debut in NYC. Option 2: It's a piece of a satellite crashing into the ocean, which could be nothing more than a nod to fans who've followed the viral stuff. Option 3: It's a piece of the satellite with the monster attached to it; a satisfying answer both for those who followed the campaign and those who didn't. Option 4: A meaningless red herring.

If the true answer was obvious, we wouldn't be discussing it, so don't bet on anyone coming forward with a tell-all just yet. As with some of the other debatable plot points, I think they've done a terrific job of covering their tracks so that any future answers given won't necessarily contradict what we've already seen.


Poor Marlena
If you've followed Cloverfield, this will come as no surprise, but if you just saw the movie on a whim, you might've missed the point. Though some people suspect that the "infected" Marlena was shot behind the curtain as a matter of "containment" during the scene in the makeshift hospital full of Hazmat suits, the silhouette you saw actually depicts Marlena's stomach rapidly expanding before exploding.

So, the running theory is that being bit by one of the spider-esque creatures delivers a foreign toxin which reacts very badly with human physiology, turning what might've normally been a poisonous death sentence into something far more visual. There's some speculation that being bit causes a person to give birth to another mini-monster, but there's no solid proof to support that, nor was there enough commotion behind the curtain to suggest that a mini-monster leapt from Marlena's stomach to attack anyone. Still, if any sequels or extended lore dared to add that in as fact, we couldn't really contradict it with the vague answers we received.

Shhhhhh.
At the end of the credits, there's a small bit of whispering. If you play that whisper backwards, it sounds like Rob (or possibly someone else) saying, "it's still alive." Yay!

I'm curious to hear what you guys thought. And yes, you're allowed to hate the film...if you really want to.

Posted by Matt on 01/20/2008. E-mail me!



Discussion Thread: 126 comments

*Possible Spoiler*

My only gripe was the beginning… all the gossip and drama at the party. I kept waiting for it to end. I felt like it dragged on too long, but I guess in hindsight it set the movie up pretty well.

Overall, I thought it was really good though. I left satisfied! In my opinion though, the smaller “monsters” were scarier than the big monster.

Chestnuts roasted by Starsmudge @ 01/20/2008 7:56 PM


I’m with Mystie I don’t think I bought it. But having a great theater experience is pretty tempting. I have a force field that I have built myself to protect myself from clever marketing to put their hands in my pockets so I think that is what happened this movie’s hype got deflected from my force field. Unfortunately I don’t think you’ll see me very much around this thread.

Chestnuts roasted by Goob @ 01/20/2008 8:07 PM


You don’t have to talk about Cloverfield to be in this thread, Goob :P

I already have my cult movie, I guess. I still love Snakes on a Plane, so that marketing stuffs certainly worked.

Chestnuts roasted by Knegative @ 01/20/2008 8:21 PM


What surprised me is how I liked it for entirely different reasons than I expected.
I felt the same way! I really thought that I might find myself barely caring about the characters and waiting for the story to turn back to the monster, but it was so far from that. I cared about every last one of them, so the end was sad, but I still expected it. Didn’t the found footage aspect kind give the end away anyway? Just me? (Until now it hadn’t occurred to me that they might not really do the Hammerdown…I have to catch up on all the viral stuff now!)
I mentioned in the last thread that I didn’t spot any of the LOST references that were supposedly in there…but I did think that Hud shared a certain everyman charm with one Hugo Reyes. That scene as they were going down the stairs, and he was talking about the really terrible things? That was totally channeling Hurley :)
I thought the monster was perfectly scary. I expected not to see too much of it (based on 3 seasons of the LOST monster) but I didn’t think they ended up being coy about it. My favorite shot of the monster had to be the one where it came flying out of the rubble to knock the helicopter out of the air…so badass. As for the little monsters…maybe not as scary-looking as the ones in The Mist, but they were still creepier because the CGI was better, and then there’s the fact that if they bite you you’ll EXPLODE.
Anybody catch the Cloverfield gag on this week’s The Soup? Not quite as funny as the Grindhouse strawberry margarita gag from last year, but still cute.

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 01/20/2008 8:27 PM


I fucking loved the movie. It’s been a real long time since I’ve been to ANY film on opening night, and I doubt I’ll ever do that again due to the theater being filled with bored high-school students all screaming and throwing things (It made me feel old, honestly). My favorite part of the whole experience was the very end when 3/4ths of the audience stood up yelling “BULLSHIT!!!” and throwing their popcorn at the screen in anger.

For me and the wife though, BEST SHIT EVER. The Star Trek tease made me absolutely hard as well. Cannot wait for more background story, as I never paid any attention to the viral stuff.

Is there a website with a catalog of all of the viral information? Like a Cloverfield Wiki or something? Cause I still have no idea why the hell the movie is even called “Cloverfield”. Is it a reference to Central Park, or what?

Chestnuts roasted by Colquitt @ 01/20/2008 8:33 PM


There is a Wiki for Clover, which can be found here. If you have any specific questions, feel free to ask…I should know the answers! Regarding the title, I don’t think we’ve been given any clear indication as to why it’s called that. (Outside of there being a street named Cloverfield out by the studio or something.)

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 01/20/2008 8:40 PM


Colquitt, was the Star Trek teaser really that exciting? I thought that was the only disappointing part of the whole experience. Maybe if I was interested in Star Trek outside of this newest incarnation I would have found it more interesting.
So I was about to speculate on “Why Cloverfield?” but I think I’ll go read the Wiki first so I don’t make an idiot out of myself by being totally off. I can’t wait to go see the movie again :)

Chestnuts roasted by squee4242 @ 01/20/2008 8:50 PM


I don’t know if anybody’s seen it yet, but apparently a shit ton of people went to see this movie. It broke a January record with over $40 million dollars.

And i loved the ending, although it was a downer. But c’mon, it’s a monster destroying NYC. Did you really expect it to end on a happy, i’m-glad-we’re-alive type of ending? It was realistic.

Chestnuts roasted by Jameson @ 01/20/2008 8:51 PM


I had absolutely no interest in the new Star Trek film until I saw that trailer…then I got goosebumps. :)

Chestnuts roasted by Muppet Baby @ 01/20/2008 8:53 PM


Eh, the movie wasn’t anything special.Nothing bad but certainly far less entertaining than even the worst Godzilla movie…..well maybe not the worst, better than that.The monster of course is nothing special, it looks like a giant killer blue whale or something.The idea of the crab parasites was a good one, though, and something never really done in a giant monster flick before(barring the american Godzilla movie of course, but that wasn’t done nearly as well), so that’s something at least.

Chestnuts roasted by BloodMist @ 01/20/2008 9:03 PM


So funny that I’ve done a 180, for the Advent Calender I was into the viral and clues, and for Cloverfield I missed most of it and went in knowing only that it was a monster movie where the monster was a surprise. And yet despite being an outsider to all the hype I loved the movie. I was kinda dreading it following the typical plot, bore me for a half hour trying to get me to care about the characters, then show a bunch of CGI shots of a monster and then watch a bunch of normal people somehow stop a powerful monster. Instead it deviated and made me love it. I love that we never got a great shot of the monster. Personally I think its a spider type of monster that can stand on two of the six legs and the other four arms are actual arms like Goro from Mortal Kombat. I had almost hoped that the movie would end when the copter was attacked because it would be much more realistic if it really was just a tape from people who were killed instead of the typical average joe becomes hero movie but luckly it stayed that way. They have to make a sequel to this and actually it sets up perfect for like a five or six movie series. The first one was great and gave away nothing. They could easily do a sequel where its all new characters and they actually show the monster, then another movie where they explain its origin, then another where they start to figure out how to fight it and another where they have a final battle. And normally I hate being a fan boy, saying what they should do next but this movie stays so wide open that its hard not to.

The only thing I would disagree with Matt about is the attachment to the characters, I liked them all but more in a Friday the 13th or Elmstreet way where I rooted for them for this movie but the overall love was for the franchise which was the bad guy. If the next movie made no mention of these characters and instead focused on teh people who found the tape I would be totally fine with that. Maybe its because I had no viral love, that I’m in it for the monster and the mystery and not really Rob or Hud. I also loved how they threw out a few different origins but never said which one. JJ is just a superb storyteller and its a shame that so many artists restrict themselves to the same old tired and true way to make a buck because he has shown the way to make entertainment an actual artform.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 01/20/2008 9:06 PM


Hmmm…why isn’t the blog loading in IE? :(

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 01/20/2008 9:09 PM


I read that it was called Cloverfield because that was the military’s codename for a mass attack scenario

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 01/20/2008 9:10 PM


The one thing I left out of my love filled rant about Cloverfield was that I LOVED LOVED LOVED that they made it without a “star” actor. It made it so much more real since I had never seen them before and knew them only as the movie presented them.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 01/20/2008 9:22 PM


Great Review, as I’ve already said, I loved the film.
Looking forward to more story possibly told in comics or something (there is already a Manga being produced)
Definitely going to get the DVD.

Chestnuts roasted by Joker @ 01/20/2008 9:42 PM


Glad to see you back Matt! I was starting to worry that you had pulled a Hemingway. I hope the monster is at least as scary as the giant bunny at the end of the advent calender. Because I still cant go back and look at that scene! makes me feel like Im having a flashback.

Chestnuts roasted by Mortalwind @ 01/20/2008 9:45 PM


Hi, I still haven’t seen the movie yet…nor have I read most of the comments, fearing spoilage. Perhaps I should skip this thread until I actually see it?

Chestnuts roasted by Invader Norbert @ 01/20/2008 10:16 PM


Not much more that I can add, other than I too enjoyed it and completely agree with the idea that is was another “must see in a theater” experience. The only bad part was, as usual, or local audience. No one -NO ONE- in our town ever is educated about the movie they are going to see. One person screamed out “I was jipped” and “that sucked” and started a brief group of other idiots shouting out there comments. What were they expecting? Did they think the movie would be another ‘Will Smith fights the aliens’ type movie and be nothing like the trailers?

Other than that, great fun was had; glad so many people seem to be enjoying it as well. And the Star Trek trailer was just enough to get those old geek juices flowing again….

Chestnuts roasted by Shuanfu @ 01/20/2008 10:50 PM


You should, because I do plan on spoiling some stuff. Before I do, I would like to say: Hooray, Matt’s alive! The movie was so freaking intense. Some of the stuff Hud said reminded me of myself, even the “annoying” things. Because of that, I found him to be a much more likable character and occasionally I forgot I was watching a movie and not running through New York, away/toward a giant monster.

Spoiler time!
There was a scene where I thought the monster was an enormous T-Rex. Seriously. It looked long and thing, and even had the stubby arms. Smoke and mirrors?

In Hud’s final farewell of sorts, when you get to see the monster’s face, two characters came to my mind: Voldemort from Harry Potter and the Kraken from Clash of the Titans. So slap that head on a mega version of the thing from The Host… That’s what I thought it looked like. With backwards hand-feet. =P

Chestnuts roasted by Ben @ 01/20/2008 10:51 PM


As I said I was one of the un-initiated masses, in that I didn’t follow the pre movie hype and I loved it. Anyone who hated this movie should be forced to watch horrible movies for the rest of their lives.

Chestnuts roasted by Rob @ 01/20/2008 11:04 PM


Sorry about the downtime over the past few hours. Hey, if anyone’s using IE, please let me know if the blog loads properly. Thanks!

Chestnuts roasted by Matt @ 01/21/2008 12:21 AM


got a nosebleed before we left for the movie, and it didnt stop for nearly an hour. needless to say, i didnt go see it yet, but i did read the article, and now want to see it more.

Chestnuts roasted by Leigha @ 01/21/2008 12:34 AM


I think we all need a pair of these
http://shanalogic.com/item.php?item_id=326
We can wear them next year during advent time

Chestnuts roasted by ashley @ 01/21/2008 12:41 AM


Maybe, as Hud speculated, a “creVASSE… CREvasse” was jarred open — by the meteor/satellite Matt spotted in the Coney Island footage?? — but perhaps the monster and its monsterlings were from the Center of the Earth of lore! Their limbs were very adaptable to walking around.

Any which way — whether they’re from outer space, ocean depths, or subterranean caverns — they probably should have had an adverse reaction to daylight, though that would have been a lame Achilles’ heel dramatically speaking.

Why did the monsters just bite people and leave their corpses pretty much fully intact? I guess an incubation scenario would explain this, but again, it would be too rote for J.J. Abrams.

I don’t think Rob and Beth lived, because if they had, they would have taken the camera with them.

The monster from Cloverfield is a giant bee,
–Ultima

Chestnuts roasted by Ultima @ 01/21/2008 12:53 AM


I liked Cloverfield… a lot. If you noticed in the scene where the girl is taken behind the sheet and explodes… a soldier can be seen being pushed on a stretcher with a blown out tummy as well. There can’t be baby monsters that come out of the people, or we would have seen fighting behind the sheet. The theory that there are two monsters is very interesting. The scene at the end with the meteor, was rumored to be a satellite from the company the main dude was going to Japan to work for. It “woke” the monster up, but I guess that is only a theory. Great movie.

Chestnuts roasted by Steven @ 01/21/2008 12:54 AM


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