E.T. THE EXTRA-TERRESTRIAL was released 42 years ago this week. One of the biggest box office hits of all time and among the most popular family films ever made, the behind the scenes story is out of this world…
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The biggest filmmaker in the world in 1981, Steven Spielberg wanted his next film to be a more personal story. He had an idea for a film – Growing Up. Inspired by his parents divorce, it was about the alienation Spielberg felt as a child.
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Columbia Pictures demanded a sequel to Close Encounters. Spielberg wasn’t interested, though he did commission John Sayles to write a script called Night Skies, about a family terrorized by a group of aliens. There were even alien designs…
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Spielberg and writer Melissa Mathison then combined Growing Up and Night Skies. They came up with a story of a benevolent alien befriending a boy on Earth. They called it E.T. This is Mathison talking about working with Spielberg…
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Melissa Mathison wrote the screenplay. Her first draft was so good that Spielberg used it as his shooting script. To maintain secrecy while shooting, the production name was called A Boy’s Life.
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Spielberg held hundreds of auditions looking for lead character Eliot. Henry Thomas auditioned and blew Spielberg away. He was able to drum up tears by thinking about his recently passed dog.
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During her audition for Spielberg’s other 1982 production Poltergeist, 6-year-old Drew Barrymore told him she wasn’t really an actress but rather the drummer of a punk band called the Purple People Eaters.
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Spielberg said Barrymore wasn’t right for Poltergeist. But loving her imagination, he cast her as Eliot’s sister, Gertie, in E.T.
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The first time Gertie sees E.T. she says "I don't like his feet." This was Drew Barrymore’s genuine reaction. Spielberg loved it and kept it in.
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At one point, Drew Barrymore forgot her lines and Spielberg yelled at her. He found out she had came in with a fever. Feeling guilty, he hugged her and apologized as she cried. He then sent her home - with a note from her director.
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To capture authentic emotions from the child actors, Spielberg filmed the movie in chronological order.
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Dee Wallace played Elliott and Gertie’s mother, Mary. She was a scream queen having starred in The Hills Have Eyes and The Howling.
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When Elliott insults Michael, the script just said to say something insulting. Dee Wallace was supposed to yell at Elliott to sit down but when she heard what Thomas said (“penis breath”) she couldn’t help laughing.
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Spielberg wanted authenticity so requested real doctors and nurses be cast in the film. So the dialogue was genuine, he told them to treat E.T. like they would a normal human patient.
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Harrison Ford (who was dating Melissa Mathison) had a cameo in the film as Elliott's principal. However, his scene was left on the cutting room floor.
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Hollywood legend John Williams wrote the music. Spielberg loved the music so much, instead of Williams editing to the film, Spielberg edited the film to match the music. Williams won an Oscar for his work. This is them working on the famous theme…
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The iconic shot of the bike flying across the full moon was mostly a real shot. It was shot by effects team ILM. Elliott and E.T. are puppets that were added with special effects in post-production. The image went on to be the logo for Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment.
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E.T.'s ship was designed by concept artist Ralph McQuarrie (who also designed the mothership for Close Encounters). McQuarrie gave the ship a Victorian, Jules Verne-like appearance. He also did some designs for E.T.
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Most of the full-body puppetry was performed by a 2' 10 tall stuntman, but the scenes in the kitchen were done using Matthew DeMeritt - a 10-year old boy who was born without legs but was an expert on walking on his hands.
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Spielberg approached Rick Baker (American Werewolf), Rob Bottin (The Thing) and Chris Walas (Gremlins) about doing the designs for E.T. before going to Carlo Rambaldi, whom Spielberg worked with on Close Encounters Of The Third Kind.
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E.T. was designed by special effects artist Carlo Rambaldi. The look of E.T.’s face was inspired by people including the poet Carl Sandburg, Ernest Hemingway, and Albert Einstein.
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The film had a production budget of $10.5 million and 10% went to alien creature puppets and related animatronics.
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The voice of E.T. was provided by Pat Walsh. She smoked two packs of cigarettes a day and was discovered in a store by sound designer Ben Burtt. She was paid $380 for the gig.
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Drew Barrymore was upset when production came to an end and was sorry to say goodbye to E.T. Her tears during E.T. final farewell are genuine and heartfelt.
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Spielberg and Mathison wrote a treatment for a sequel called E.T. 2: Nocturnal Fears Elliott was kidnapped by aliens. We would find out E.T.’s name is Zrek and he is 10,000,000 years old.
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Elliott has E.T. follow him home by laying a trail of Reese's Pieces. Spielberg wanted M&Ms but the Mars Co said no because they thought E.T. was ugly and would scare kids. Sales of Reese's more than tripled in the weeks following the movie's release.
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Atari rushed an E.T. video game into production in just 5 weeks. It was a flop and considered a part of the video game industry’s 1983 crash. bunch of the game cartridges were buried in a landfill in New Mexico.
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E.T. released on June 11 1982 and was in cinemas over a year — one of the longest runs in history. It grossed $792m worldwide and toppled Star Wars as the highest grossing movie ever. It held the title for 11 years until Spielberg’s Jurassic Park in 1993.
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To finish, one of the most famous shots in movies: Elliott, E.T. and the flying bicycles.
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If you like our making of story of E.T. please share the opening post 😀
BATMAN BEGINS was released 19 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of the great superhero origin movies and the film that catapulted the career of Christopher Nolan, the making of story is mysterious as The League of Shadows…
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Warner Bros had been looking to reboot Batman since the flop of Batman & Robin in 1997. Daren Aronofsky was attached to direct and was interested in casting Clint Eastwood as an older Batman. WB rejected his pitch though.
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After seeing 2002’s Insomnia, WB were impressed with the film as a dark psychological thriller and approached its young director, Christopher Nolan, about Batman.
THE BOURNE IDENTITY was released 22 years ago today. A reinvention of the spy genre and the film that launched Matt Damon as an action star, the behind the scenes story might have your doubting your identity…
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In 1983, Universal planned for their next big movie to be an adaptation of Robert Ludlum’s The Bourne Identity. They wanted Burt Reynolds as Bourne and Jack Clayton to direct. Reynolds schedule was so busy that the idea never got off the ground.
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A TV adaptation came in 1988. It starred Richard Chamberlain as Bourne and, though it followed the novel very closely, wasn’t a big hit and pretty quickly forgotten.
RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK was released 43 years ago today. The first Indiana Jones movie and one of Steven Spielberg’s most beloved films, the behind the scenes story is an adventure all of its own…
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In summer 1977, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas were on holiday together in Hawaii. Spielberg was keen on directing a James Bond movie but Lucas said “I’ve got something better than Bond…” and told him about his idea for a whip-cracking, globe-trotting archaeologist…
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Lucas had originally thought of Philip Kaufman directing but he was busy with The Outlaw Josey Wales. Kaufman came up with the idea of using the Ark of the Covenant, which is why he has a ‘Story By’ credit.
JURASSIC PARK was released 31 years ago today. One of the most successful blockbusters ever made and a landmark in digital effects, the production of the film was as huge and spectacular as the T. Rex…
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Jurassic Park is based on a novel written by Michael Crichton. Crichton’s concept was deemed so strong by Hollywood that studios were bidding on the rights to the book before it was even published.
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Crichton’s first idea was about a Pterodactyl being cloned and befriending a child. He changed it to be about a college student who accidentally creates a dinosaur. He rewrote it again to be like his own movie Westworld – a theme park where everything goes wrong.
SPEED was released 30 years ago today. Acclaimed as one of the great action movies of the ‘90s, and among the most popular of Keanu Reeves and Sandra Bullock, the story of how it came to the screen never drops below 50…
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A young screenwriter looking for inspiration, Graham Yost was recommended by his father to watch Runaway Train, a 1985 action flick starring Jon Voight about an out-of-control train. Yost loved it, but thought it would be better if the train had a bomb on board.
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Yost swapped train for bus and wrote a script called Speed. The script was optioned by Paramount Pictures, who saw it as a vehicle for Jeff Speakman, who they had a three-picture deal with, and wanted Die Hard director, John McTiernan, to helm it.
THE TRUMAN SHOW was released 26 years ago this week. Jim Carrey’s first foray onto a dramatic role, and acclaimed as one of the decade’s great satires, the story of how it came to be will give you the feeling you’re being watched…
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In 1991, New Zealand screenwriter Andrew Niccol wrote a script for an original film. Based on an idea of a reality TV show following the life of an unsuspecting person, it was a science fiction thriller in tone, and called The Malcolm Show.
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Scott Rudin Productions bought the screenplay for $1m, Niccol stating that he wanted to direct the film himself. However, when Paramount Pictures agreed to distribute and came on board, they said the estimated $80m budget was too high for an inexperienced director.