Super 8
Super 8 (2011)

Super 8

2/5
(33 votos)
7.0IMDb72Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

After the train wreck, Alice's car is dirty, covered in ash and debris When the kids get in the car to leave the train station, the car is clean.

When the kids get to the train station Martin's pages blow away and he chases after them (at around 45 mins).

He is immediately seen in the next shot sitting on a bench studying his lines (at at 11:46).

There was not enough time to get to the bench, whether he managed to get the lost pages or not.

When Joe is in his room painting one of his monster models, you can see in the background a model of _The Invisible Man (1933)_ (qv)(at around 21 mins).

This model was not released until 2009 by Moebius models.

Although the model was created in the classic Aurora models style, this model was not available during 1979.

The Lillian Airfield sign (at around 46 mins) shows "Town of Lillian, Ohio".

In a later shot, the film shows another sign showing City of Lillian, Ohio.

Ohio does not recognize any incorporated area as a town, only village or city.

In Joe's room is a model of the Space Shuttle and the external fuel tank is red/orange (at 09:35 along the right side of the frame in front of the Space Shuttle poster and again at 01:01:55).

This change did not occur until the 80's as a cost saving measure.

Shuttle models before this had a white tank.

The morning after the film's pivotal train wreck, Joe and Charlie are watching coverage of the story on local TV.

The typeface on the screen is the now-ubiquitous Microsoft computer font Arial, most recognizable by its distinctive 'R'.

However Arial was not invented until 1982 and not in broad use until after 1990.

The movie is set in 1979.

After the train wreck, one scene shows the car they came in has a steel or wooden beam/bar stuck into the rear wheel area and debris is piled close to the car - yet when they get in it to escape, the car is clear and they easily pull out of the lot (at around 35 mins).

When Joe rides up to his house (at around 12 mins), late 80's architecture can be seen in the brickwork around the garage door.

Although Joe and Cary quickly find a rope to climb down into the alien's tunnel, it isn't unreasonable to think a cemetery's maintenance shed would have a rope in it they could use.

When the four boys are locked in the back of the military vehicle being attacked, Martin is seen clearly screaming and frantic.

The very next shot shows him listening to the other talk in a relative calm way.

When Joe asks Cary to give him sparklers, he grabs some unlit ones (at around 1h 30 mins) and runs down a cave tunnel.

In the next shot, the sparkler is lit.

(This is an error only if one assumes Joe had no lighter or matches.

) Although middle schools were not widespread until the 1980s, the National Middle School Association (now the Association for Middle Level Education) was founded in 1973, and is headquartered in Ohio, so the town in the movie could definitely have had a middle school in 1979.

When they show the map of where the dogs went (at around 31 mins), it shows I-675 as complete.

I-675 was started in the early 1970s, but they only built it from I-70 to Fairborn.

They resumed building I-675 a decade later, and was completed in 1987.

The map shows it clearly going all the way from I-70 to I-75.

It wasn't even close to reaching I-75 in 1979.

At the end of the film many of the soldiers guns are shown to be pulled out of their hands with considerable force.

Moments later in the scene, most if not all the soldiers have guns back in their hands.

However this may be not a mistake, since the alien appears to draw the objects to his construction selectivelyOnly one car gets picked up in the air from the parking lot, and by the end of the scene Joe's locket is the only object that gets drawn to the ship.

When the main characters are viewing the teacher's film in the classroom, the label design on the TDK audio cassette tape shown dates from the mid 1980s (at around 1h 15 mins).

The _Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)_ (qv) figure seen being played with in the film (Benji Kaznyk's toy at 43:40) was not produced until the mid 1990s.

When the kids are watching the home movie it is clear they are in the projector's light but the cut to the film playing has no shadows on it (at 58:51 as Joe and Alice watch a film of young Joe).

When the bus overturns, the window is obviously breakaway candied glass, which breaks into large pieces and easily falls out of the frame (at around 1h 23 mins).

Real vehicles use tempered safety glass, which shatters into tiny pea sized pieces but retains its general form.

Although tempered glass was patented in 1900, it did not become federal mandate until 1977.

Vehicles manufactured before that time may have in fact not had the same safety features known today.

In addition, the relative cost of tempered glass instead of candied glass is prohibitive when shooting multiple takes of a movie.

Even with its $50M budget, one has to assume that some lifelike replicas had to be made, rather than destroying actual vehicles and houses.

After Joe and Charles board an evacuation bus (at around 1h 08 mins), a string of M35 2-and-a-half ton trucks pass one way and 5 ton trucks pulling red trailers pass the other way.

The first M35 truck has the new central tire inflation system (CTIS) which was not put on M35 trucks until 1994 which is 15 years after the film's setting date of 1979.

The CTIS can be readily identified by looking at the wheels on the truck.

Notice instead of a typical basic lug system there is a large plate looking device over about a third of the wheel.

After the children are apprehended in the school, they are put aboard an Air Force bus.

When the camera pans away from the bus and down to Donny in his car, the chain towing the bus is visible in the lower right corner of the screen (at around 1h 08 mins).

When Joe and Cary are running through the tunnel with a sparkler in Joe's right hand (1:30:45 to 1:30:47), the sparkler in the next shot is in his left hand (at around 1h 30 mins).

The movie is set in southwest Ohio.

A woman mentions in a town meeting (at around 49 mins) that "Belmont County's without power".

Belmont County is in eastern Ohio.

Vicky tells Deputy Lamb on the walkie-talkie that Brook County is out of power (at 43:29 using the spelling of Brook County from the captions).

This is a fictitious county in Ohio, however principal shooting for the film was in Weirton, West Virginia, which is on the county line between Brooke County and Hancock County in northernmost West Virginia.

The kids are seen riding 'BMX style" bikes.

Many believe that this is a error, which is mainly because of misinformation.

Since the early years of the 70's, children drew inspiration from motor-cross and began to ride their bikes in that manner.

This grew into a sport and in '77 American Bicycle Association (ABA) was organized as a national sanctioning body for the growing sport.

So it would not be uncommon for those bikes to be seen in 79.

The gas station employee has a Sony Walkman (at around 31 mins) - Walkmans weren't available in the U.

until June 1980.

Just after the train wreck, one of the boys describes the small block shapes they found in the trains cargo-hold as looking "like white Rubik's Cubes or something" (at around 1 min).

Originally called the "Magic Cube" in 1977, the toy company Ideal® would not rename the toy "Rubik's Cube" until it was sold in the United States after May of 1980.

In the closeup of the metal cube vibrating on the table in Joe's bedroom (26:48-26:54), the cube has a different design and finish than it does in any other shot.

When Joe originally picks up that cube (at around 9 mins) and when he holds it while taking a bath (at around 29 mins), its sides are nearly flat.

The vibrating design cube is also shown at 57:32 as Alice climbs into Joe's room and again when it vibrates a second time from 1:01:29 to 1:01:54.

An Air Force man is seen talking into a WWII-era hand-held walkie-talkie.

In 1979 the military used the PRC-77 radio, which would be worn on the back and used a handset much like a telephone's.

At about 15 minutes-in, the kids arrive at the abandoned train station to shoot the 'parting scene' it appears to be very windy or gusty; yet when they start to shoot the scene the wind has all but gone.

The sheriff (at around 45 mins) and his deputies (at 03:45 and 46:46 to 45:56) are shown driving white cruisers with blue/gray fenders.

Up until the late 1990s, all sheriff's offices in Ohio used all black cruisers with white only on the roof and pillars with a 5-point star on the door.

During the fire scene there are several shots of rolling hills with horses (and other livestock) grazing in pastures (at 1:09:02 and 1:13:14).

Horses, in particular, have a mortal fear of fire.

With the impending fire, horses would have been running amok, neighing, and jumping fence rows to seek safety, not casually grazing.

When Joe is speaking to Alice on her front doorstep (from 30:01 to 30:06), modern vehicles can be seen driving on the street in the background.

Joe is shown building an Aurora Hunchback of Notre Dame glow-in-the-dark model which is correct for 1979, but the model box is the "long box" used for the non-glow in the dark model in the sixties (09:24 to 09:30).

The sheriff's deputies were all wearing semi-automatic pistols.

In 1979 (the year the movie takes place) revolvers were by far the most common side arm of American law enforcement.

While there are rare examples of law enforcement carrying semi-auto pistols during the 70s (the Illionois State Police adopted the Smith and Wesson model 39 in 1968), it was the mid to late 80s before semi-auto pistols became widely used, especially among smaller, rural agencies.

Some agencies did allow for officers to carry personal sidearms, including the semi-auto pistols of the day, and you might see an occasional officer doing so, but this would not account for every deputy of a small, rural agency carrying them.

When the boys break into a classroom at the school (at around 1h 14 mins), they break a window from a door and clear out all the glass.

Later when the soldiers come in, the same door now has some of the glass still there (at around 1h 17 mins).

The patch seen on the Ohio Deputy Sheriffs did not come into use until 1996 or 1997 the patch before that was a triangular patch that said Deputy Sheriff with a 5 pointed star under it and the seal of Ohio inside that star.

When the Air Force weapons begin to misfire (and the kids are running through the chaos), an airman is seen yelling into a radio about the situation (at around 1h 26 mins).

The radio he is yelling into is clearly not plugged in to his pack.

This is obvious due to the open cannon plug on the bottom of it.

The 'four months later' scene (at around 7 mins) when the kids film their movie at the depot takes place after school is out - presumably late May or early June 1979.

However, the TV in the background has 'Walter Cronkite' (qv) talking about the Three Mile Island accident (at around 28 mins), which took place March 28, 1979.

The police car lacks a partition between the front and rear seats.

The military M16s used by the Air Force should have 30-round magazines; the ones seen are 20-round magazines and haven't been used since the Vietnam era.

When Joe picks up one of the cubes in a close-up (at around 8 mins), the cuff of his jacket conspicuously covers his hand up to the second joints of his fingers.

When the scene cuts to a longer shot (at around 12 mins) the cuff is well back up his arm exposing his wrist.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
29 September 2011 USA USD 127,004,179
25 September 2011 USA USD 126,975,169
18 September 2011 USA USD 126,869,833
11 September 2011 USA USD 126,728,709
4 September 2011 USA USD 126,529,509
28 August 2011 USA USD 126,049,187
21 August 2011 USA USD 125,691,630
14 August 2011 USA USD 125,520,061
7 August 2011 USA USD 125,316,799
31 July 2011 USA USD 124,973,831
24 July 2011 USA USD 124,235,102
17 July 2011 USA USD 122,287,359
10 July 2011 USA USD 118,069,546
3 July 2011 USA USD 108,036,000
26 June 2011 USA USD 95,114,324
12 June 2011 USA USD 36,451,168
USA USD 127,004,179
29 September 2011 Worldwide USD 259,713,319
28 August 2011 Worldwide USD 244,000,000
Worldwide USD 260,095,986
Non-USA USD 133,091,807
2 October 2011 Italy EUR 3,262,024
25 September 2011 Italy EUR 2,980,232
18 September 2011 Italy EUR 2,266,515
11 September 2011 Italy EUR 950,939
26 June 2011 Philippines PHP 40,980,182
19 June 2011 Philippines PHP 34,017,514
12 June 2011 Philippines PHP 18,027,484
2 October 2011 Spain EUR 10,080,897
25 September 2011 Spain EUR 9,923,175
4 September 2011 Spain EUR 8,231,430
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
12 June 2011 USA USD 35,451,168 3,379
12 June 2011 Philippines PHP 18,027,484 123
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
25 September 2011 USA USD 73,350 117
18 September 2011 USA USD 92,421 159
11 September 2011 USA USD 141,685 203
4 September 2011 USA USD 275,581 240
28 August 2011 USA USD 305,078 242
21 August 2011 USA USD 101,857 86
14 August 2011 USA USD 108,276 108
7 August 2011 USA USD 170,049 174
31 July 2011 USA USD 303,794 325
24 July 2011 USA USD 760,042 658
17 July 2011 USA USD 1,970,377 1,459
10 July 2011 USA USD 4,838,205 2,292
3 July 2011 USA USD 7,500,000 3,088
26 June 2011 USA USD 12,028,092 3,424
12 June 2011 USA USD 35,451,168 3,379
26 June 2011 Philippines PHP 3,816,061 52
19 June 2011 Philippines PHP 10,402,852 120
12 June 2011 Philippines PHP 18,027,484 123

Comentarios

I'm a true hater of Jar Jar Abrams way of film making and i tell you why:Everything Abrams writes is a patchwork of allusions clued together by some light weighted side plots, mainly of inter human structure, to distract the audience from the illogicality and sloppiness of the 'main' plot which typically fits on a coaster. Thereby Abrams pits on the superficiality of curiosity and laziness of the audience, which is a zeitgeist phenomena of modern multimedia times.

What if E.T.

This movie is noteworthy because it's not a franchise movie or an adaptation, the cast are completely or mostly unknowns and the alien wasn't shown in the marketing.It takes place in the '70s in a small Ohio town.

I really like Steven Spielbergs work, but when I saw Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull I really was a little bit disappointed. This whole alien-mother-ship-soaring-up-in-the-air at the end of the movie nearly threw me off the seat at the cinema.

It would be wrong to call Super 8 a bad film it is certainly not. However it is a film of inconsistently quality, perhaps the perfect example of a film of 'two halves'.

I'm not adding anything to the discussion by noting that Super 8 is deliberately and professionally a throwback to those family-friendly sci-fi films of the 80's. Explorers comes to mind, as does Flight of the Navigator and The Goonies.

The more I think about "Super 8," the more disappointed with the movie I get. By no means was it a terrible film but it did try to pass itself off as a homage to Spielberg classics we all grew up with and still enjoy.

Well i don't even know where to begin. What you must know is that i created an IMDb account only to be able to review this movie.

"Super 8" is a 2011 mystery thriller directed by J.J.

Comentarios