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Super 8 Super 8
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Super 8 ist ein mittlerweile aus der Mode gekommenes Filmformat, dass vormals häufig im Heimbereich Verwendung fand. Privatleute filmten bis in neuziger Jahre hinein ihre Familienfeiern. However, in order to enjoy their shot footage, customers also needed to own, or at the very least have access to, film projectors capable of playing the Super 8 film reels, or simply put, having to have to operate a miniature cinema of their own. Nevertheless, it was the first time these opportunities to record ones personal life in motion pictures became affordable for a general populace at large, and it was adopted by them with a fervor. For two decades the format reigned supreme, until Video 8 made its appearance in 1985, turning out to be the ultimate downfall of the format. "Video 8" should not be confused with "Super 8", as the latter was a bonafide film medium, whereas the Video 8 was, like its larger VHS/Betamax siblings, a magnetic video tape. Super 8 is a 2011 science fiction film written and directed by J.J. Abrams and produced by Steven Spielberg. It is an homage to classic "adventurous children" movies, particularly those made/produced by Spielberg like ET the Extraterrestrial, The Goonies and especially Close Encounters of the Third Kind. The Super 8 utilized an NES-on-a-chip (NOAC) integrate circuit to duplicate the functionality of the original NES hardware, and connected to the SNES's own cartridge port. The device itself featured three cartridge ports. Two of these ports connected to the onboard NOAC, and were designed to fit NES and Famicom cartridges, respectively: despite otherwise featuring exactly the same hardware, North American and European NES game cartridges used a 72-pin design, resulting in slightly larger cartridges than the Famicom, which used a 60-pin design. The third port was designed to fit standard SNES cartridges, and merely connected with the SNES's native hardware, so that the user would not have to remove the Super 8 in order to play SNES games. In spite of this, some issues would occasionally ari Super 8 is a 1973 Italian science-fiction art film written and directed by Tinto Brass. The film tells a sexual coming-of-age story about three teenagers who make a pornographic movie using a Super 8 camera. All hell breaks loose when supernatural events begin occurring in their town. Eventually, the protagonists discover that an alien being is causing the events. The alien being is never shown directly, but its presence is implied by surreal special effects. Super 8 was released on June 10, 2011, in conventional and IMAX theaters in the US. The film was well-received with critics praising the film for its nostalgia, visual effects, musical score, and for the performances of its young actors, particularly those of Fanning and newcomer Courtney. It was also a commercial success, grossing some $260 million against a $50 million budget. The film received several awards and nominations; primarily in technical and special effects categories, as well as for Courtney and Fanning's performances as the film's two young leads. When a group of kids tries to make a homemade Zombie film for a film festival, their filming is interrupted by a massive train derailing. A chain of strange events follow, and it soon becomes apparent that the train was destroyed from within by an escaping gigantic alien.
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Super 8 ist ein mittlerweile aus der Mode gekommenes Filmformat, dass vormals häufig im Heimbereich Verwendung fand. Privatleute filmten bis in neuziger Jahre hinein ihre Familienfeiern. Super 8 was released on June 10, 2011, in conventional and IMAX theaters in the US. The film was well-received with critics praising the film for its nostalgia, visual effects, musical score, and for the performances of its young actors, particularly those of Fanning and newcomer Courtney. It was also a commercial success, grossing some $260 million against a $50 million budget. The film received several awards and nominations; primarily in technical and special effects categories, as well as for Courtney and Fanning's performances as the film's two young leads. Super 8 is a 1973 Italian science-fiction art film written and directed by Tinto Brass. The film tells a sexual coming-of-age story about three teenagers who make a pornographic movie using a Super 8 camera. All hell breaks loose when supernatural events begin occurring in their town. Eventually, the protagonists discover that an alien being is causing the events. The alien being is never shown directly, but its presence is implied by surreal special effects. Super 8 is a 2011 science fiction film written and directed by J.J. Abrams and produced by Steven Spielberg. It is an homage to classic "adventurous children" movies, particularly those made/produced by Spielberg like ET the Extraterrestrial, The Goonies and especially Close Encounters of the Third Kind. A group of pre-teens in a small Ohio town in 1979 are dedicated to making a zombie movie to enroll in an upcoming film festival, with Charles as script-writer and director, his best friend Joe as the make-up artist and other cast and crew members like Martin (lead actor), Cary (pyrotechnic/pyromaniac) and Preston (misc crew/extras). Charles manages to convince a girl and classmate, Alice, to play the part of the wife and she and Joe start to form an affection for each other. Unfortunately, there are some lingering emotions surrounding the death of Joe's mom several months prior, as well problems with his distant father, a deputy in the local sheriff's office. While filming a scene late at night, they happen upon a freak train crash and barely escape before the authorities show up. Shaken up by the experience, they find that they accidentally filmed something on their Super 8-mm film camera in the aftermath of the crash, and soon they're caught up in strange happenings and a secret military operation. An interactive version of the teaser trailer is bundled with Portal 2, found in the game's Extras section. There's also a prequel comic book that was bundled into the second issue of the Batman: Arkham City comic book tie-in. It details the 1958 events referred to in the film and how Col. Nelec got involved with the situation. It can be read here (SPOILERS ALERT). * Adorkable: Joe, when it comes to his hobby of making train models or his obvious crush on Alice. * Alcoholic Parent: Alice's father. He was drinking the morning of the factory accident, which led to Joe's mother taking his shift and her untimely death. * Aliens Somewhere West of Dayton: Area 51 stuff happening in a small Ohio town, possibly tying into the rumors that the nearby Wright-Patterson AFB was the storage place of the alien bodies and wreckage from the Roswell crash. * Alternate Reality Game: * Naturally there'd be one. It involves a site about Ice Cream Lollipop called Rocket Poppeteers. There's Scariest Thing I Ever Saw, Hook, Line and Minker and S8 Editing Room. * The editing room is especially good as you have to unlock clips and put them together forming one big video (which features the Truck Guy who apparently was involved in some experiments relating to the monster). Clips can be unlocked from looking through Super 8 standees in theaters and watching the title card after the trailer and using the Super 8 app. * Always Save the Girl * An Aesop: * Misunderstandings can ruin lives and relationships, but they can be healed with understanding and talk. * "Drugs are so bad!", Charles moans after their driver stones himself to sleep. Played for Laughs. * Area 51: That's where the train's cargo comes from. So, obviously, it's trouble. * Armies Are Evil: Not entirely so, but army men are not pleasant guys to deal with, and one of them tortured the alien and turned him evil. * Though one could argue that they evacuated the town so that they could protect the civilians. * Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: After the train derailment when the kids are all driving away, they're freaking out over Woodward's warnings. Charles is just as distressed, but not about entirely the same things. * "You will die; your parents will die... this is not good information!" "I've never had a teacher aim a gun at me!" "That train could've killed us!" "Oh shit, the focus ring fell off my camera! The lens is totally cracked!" * Artistic License Physics: A whole train was pulled off the tracks by just a truck, whose driver survived. * * Actually it really isn't. Although in that case the driver of the car was very dead indeed. * As You Know: A few times with the kids, who usually respond with a huffy, "I know that!" * The Atoner: * Dr. Woodward, due to his guilt over being one of the scientists that kept the alien imprisoned, and finding out from a mental link that it's just scared and wants to go home. * Alice's father turns out to be this as well, as he was indirectly responsible for Joe's mother's death and sought out forgiveness. * Avoid the Dreaded G Rating: Donny saying "fuck" (amongst other curses from the children) and Nelec's unusually gory death were probably put in to ensure a PG-13 rating. * Badass: The alien itself. * Badass Teacher: Dr. Woodward -- the biology teacher at the main characters' school -- is revealed to be the infamous "Truck Guy" seen crashing into Groom Lake One in the trailers. The best part is that he survives the crash. Turns out he's also one of the scientists who studied the monster. * Bad Bad Acting: Averted. Most of the acting in the movie the kids are working on is believably bad. Joe himself was called upon to play a soldier and was particularly stiff. Martin seems to be alright, but Alice slowly started getting so emotional and into character as the wife that she stunned everyone. * Amusingly, the poor editing of Charles' movie (seen over the ending credits) conceals this, so that she looks just as bad as the other kids. * It was her rehearsal performance that blew everyone away. During the actual take, she had to yell over the sound of the train, which gave her less emotional nuance to work with. * Bare Your Midriff: Charles has an older sister whose wardrobe choices consists entirely of this trope. * Being Tortured Makes You Evil: Upon being tortured and experimented on by the military, the alien came to believe all humans were a potential threat and lashed out at them, taking civilians for his food supply and kidnapping anyone who sees him. In this case, he's not so much evil as he is dangerously paranoid. * Big Bad: Colonel Nelec. While the creature gets its sinister musical motif, the Colonel gets his own, which sounds somewhat like a certain March. * Big Eater: Charles (the fat kid, duh!). Lampshaded. * The alien also, to judge by the massive hunk of beef being provided to it in an old video clip. * Birds of a Feather: Joe and Alice both have neglectful fathers and missing mothers. * Bizarre Alien Biology: The alien is thoroughly weird-looking. It has four arms, feet that end with digging "chisels," and a body with multiple gaps or negative spaces that do not exist in Earth vertebrates. Its face looks surprisingly humanoid at first glance, but the lipped mouth can split horribly into a fanged set of mandibles, and the human-like eyes are normally covered by a reflective membrane. * Black Dude Dies First: Somehow, both averted and played straight. The first violent scene in the movie involves a train crash, in which Dr. Woodward -- a black guy -- is apparently killed when his truck gets hit by the train. However, despite appearing dead at first sight, he is actually alive and scares the crap out of the kids who come to investigate. Many people in the town die, but the first of the soldiers on the bus to die is the black guy, who appropriately gives the Colonel an indignant look when asked to go outside and shoot the alien with a tracking dart. Though it is notable that three black characters -- Dr. Woodward and two soldiers -- die, with the former getting euthanized by one of the latter. * Bratty Teenage Daughter: Charles' sister, Jennifer, who is constantly complaining to their mother about wanting to go to a girl's party, but can't, due to babysitting duties. Used as a plot point, it's the only way Charles is able to get them places during the events of the film by promising to babysit instead. * Brick Joke: * A woman at the police department is looking for someone with brown hair and "rollers." She's one of the people taken by the alien. * The Electronic Football. When the kids break into the "Dungeon" where all the confiscated items and Woodward's items were, the next scene has the kid it was confiscated from playing it in the background. * California Doubling: West Virginia covered for Ohio. * Calling the Old Man Out: Joe attempts to when his father forbids him from spending time with Alice. * The Cameo: Dan Castellaneta as the car dealer and composer Michael Giacchino as one of the deputies. * Captured Super Entity: The alien since The Fifties, under less-than-humane circumstances. * Car Skiing: Happens when the creature slams into the military bus transporting the gang. Of note is that while the driver does succeed in getting the car back on the ground, the raised tires are totally destroyed on impact, forcing him to stop. * Catch Phrase: Charles has "That was mint!", "Shut up!", and "Production value!" * Character Development: Joe. He starts off as a bit of a pushover, constantly helping Charles with his film and initially letting him blow up his model train. After bonding with Alice, Joe starts standing up for himself, eventually directing the kids to help Charles and taking Donny with him to save Alice. As noted by Donny, "When did he get so bossy?" * Chekhov's Gun: * The "dungeon," Dr. Woodward's container in the school parking lot, is mentioned briefly after the train accident before it turns out that is where Dr. Woodward's research is located. * Donny has a crush on Charles' sister Jennifer, who wants to go to Wendy's party next week, but their mother makes her babysit the twins. This comes in handy when Charles convinces her to flirt with Donny so that the gang can be driven back to town to rescue Alice in exchange for Charles doing the babysitting for her so she can go to the party. * The film used during the train accident is later given to Joe's father by Preston, bringing him up to speed on the alien situation. * The water tower is shown a few times in the background before it is given any relevance. * The strange metallic cubes that the train was also carrying. * Chekhov's Hobby: Cary's obsession with fireworks comes in handy later on when they need a diversion. * Chekhov's Skill: A double one. The alien's ability to bond, and Joe's passion for train models, come in handy when it is time to build a new spaceship. * Cliché Storm: In-Universe, "The Case" is all Night of the Living Mooks cliches rolled into one. A case of Reality Ensues, because it's hard to expect Andrei Tarkovsky material from a bunch of 13-year-olds who've been watching too many zombie movies. * Cluster S Bomb: As summarized by none other than James Rolfe, "Coming from a guy that says shit a lot, these kids say shit all the time." * Colonel Badass: The Colonel spends his last few moments of life shooting the monster in the face -- despite knowing it won't work -- and staring it down before it eats him. * Coming of Age Story: With, you know, an angry alien on the loose. * Cool Car: If you like old-school 70's cars, almost all of them. * Creative Closing Credits: The credits show the entire film the gang was working on. * Cute Monster Girl: Alice, after Joe applies the zombie make-up. * The Danza: Well, one consonant away from it. * Deconstruction: Of a sort. The plot shows a grittier realization of an E.T.-style alien arrival and some Goonies-esque meddling kids' entanglement in it. Ultimately, the kids have next to nothing to do with the alien's escape from Earth. Rather, the story is about the humans learning to forgive and move on with their lives. Whether or not the alien learned about human emotions it's likely unable to comprehend is pretty much irrelevant. In fact, the kids' and the alien's paths only briefly intersect a couple of times. There's also a few fatalities, something that wouldn't happen in a kid's movie. * Defictionalization: Rocket Poppeteers are available at 7-11 stores. You wouldn't know they're Super 8 tie ins unless you followed the ARG. * Defrosting Ice Queen: Alice, who is initially cold towards Joe but quickly warms up to him once they spend time together. * Department of Redundancy Department: In the "The Case": "This fell out of the pocket of the attacker's pocket." * Didn't See That Coming: When the kids play one of the rolls of film from Woodward's trailer, Woodward is shown at one of the windows of the alien's prison cell, dangling a hunk of meat near the bars. The guy is just begging to be yanked through the window by an alien tentacle or whatever, and the audience steels itself with anticipation when all of a sudden he's snatched up by the alien's arm, sticking through another window thirty-something feet off the ground. * Director Trademark: Slusho appears again as one of the advertised items at the Kelvin Gasoline store. * Dirty Communists: Invoked when a woman suggests that all the weird stuff going on in town is a prelude to a Soviet invasion. * Disney Death: After the train accident, the gang find blood on some of the train wreckage and think that it's Alice's. Alice appears behind them and is uninjured; the blood is just fake blood from Joe's make-up box. * Distressed Damsel: Alice when she is captured by the alien. * Dogged Nice Guy: Joe towards Alice. It turns out Charles had the same idea too. * Downer Beginning: We start with a funeral for Joe's mom. * Dramatic Alien VTOL: It wouldn't be a proper '80s-style Spielberg movie without one. * Dressing as the Enemy: After being detained by the Air Force, Jackson tricks a guard and knocks him out, stealing his uniform to escape the base. * Esoteric Happy Ending: The kids' film, "The Case," ends with the hero saving his girlfriend from the zombie disease...by wasting the only remaining dosage of the cure on her. * Everyone Can See It: Between Joe and Alice. * Evil-Detecting Dog: All the dogs in the area run away to other towns because they can tell there's a monster running around. * Either that, or the equipment it's assembling makes a noise or smell humans can't detect, but they don't like at all. * Evil Laugh: The noises made by the creature before it crushes the Colonel to paste sound suspiciously like a very nasty chuckle. * Exactly What It Says on the Tin: How Carey explains why talking is bad in the silent reading section. * Exposed Extraterrestrials: The creature. * Face Death with Dignity: The Colonel appears to. * Fantasy-Forbidding Father: Deputy Lamb. * Five-Man Band: The amateur filmmakers. * The Hero: Joe * The Lancer: Martin * The Big Guy: Charles * The Smart Guy: Preston * Tagalong Kid: Cary * The Chick/Sixth Ranger: Alice * Flat What: Cary emits one of these after Joe is able to convince the alien to spare him during the climax. * Fluffy the Terrible: Ok, whose idea was it to name the monster Cooper? * Foreshadowing: * As the kids drive away from the train accident, they pass the gas station that gets prominence a few scenes later. * When the cube picked up from the crash site goes crazy in Joe's room and flies through a wall to the water tower, it notably passes through a poster of the space shuttle. * And when Deputy Lamb is coming out of the press conference or whatever it was, a man comes up to him and tells him about "some kinda sinkhole" in his garage. * Forgiveness: One of the major themes of the film. * The Fourth Wall Will Not Protect You: At the end of "The Case," Charles talks directly to the audience, only to be interrupted by a zombie tearing out his throat. It's a Shout-Out to grindhouse movies that did the exact same thing. * Free-Range Children: The kids do sneak out at night, but they also spend all day on their own. * Freeze-Frame Bonus: The alien is first briefly seen in the reflection of a gasoline puddle. * Friend Versus Lover: Sort of. Alice wants Joe to stand up to Charles and not let him blow up his train model, while Charles is annoyed by Joe's new-found independence (or, as he puts it, "bossiness") due to Alice's encouragement. * Funny Background Event: * Three: When several of Martin's scripts sheets blow away, he is seen chasing them across the screen behind Joe and Alice. A little later, when Joe is putting make-up on and having a conversation with Alice, Charles and Martin have a heated argument over one of his lines being changed slightly just before filming. * In the same scene, watch Preston's mouth as he fakes conversation on the pay phone. * George Lucas Throwback/Reconstruction: The entire film appears to be honoring every late 1970s-1980s film that Steven Spielberg either directed or had a hand in: * Specifically Close Encounters of the Third Kind (the midwest setting, power outages). * ET the Extraterrestrial (the kids on bikes, coping with an alien that only wants to go home, and dealing with uncaring military authority figures). * The Goonies * Even Deputy Lamb trying to find out what's going on with the disappearances in town is reminiscent of Chief Brody's investigations in Jaws. * And arguably lesser-known recent films like The Iron Giant and The Host. * The deputy punching out bad guys to steal their uniforms is a pretty blatant call back to Indiana Jones. * Genre Savvy: The boys collecting their equipment after the train wreck is an example of this; without them picking it up, the Army would have been able to find them pretty quickly. * Giant Spider: The creature sort of resembles one. It has eight limbs, its face can open up to reveal a spider-like maw, it has black, spider-like eyes when hunting, it can produce web (which it uses to tie up its human prey), and it is a carnivore. It's also subterranean, possibly referring to funnel web spiders. The creature can be more accurately described as a giant spider-human hybrid though, considering its humanoid torso, hands, face, and most importantly, its incredibly human eyes whenever it's calm. * Grey and Grey Morality: The conflict between the army and the alien. The army is highly xenophobic, and willing to go to grand lengths to bring the alien down. But they're mostly just doing their jobs, and even the worst of them has his redeeming qualities. Namely, sacrificing his life to let the kids escape the alien. Meanwhile, the alien has no problem with killing or kidnapping innocent people that get in his way, using kidnappees as a food source while he rebuilds his ship. However, he's more interested in leaving Earth than causing harm, and the whole reason he's attacking humans at all is because his terrible and inhumane treatment at the hands of the military has led him to believe that all humans are a potential threat. * Gory Discretion Shot: * Averted. There is an explosion of blood against the bus window as the creature kills the Colonel as well as a shot of the creature feeding on a human leg after he consumes one of the hostages. * Played straight when a bone is said to be poking out of Martin's leg after an explosion in the house and it has to be physically arranged back, but neither the injury nor the process is shown. * The Guards Must Be Crazy: There's a crashed military train with an escaped alien loose, a town that needs to be locked down, people and dogs disappearing all over the place... and nobody seems to notice a group of kids filming all of it? * Eventually Colonel Nelec notices, but by then Joe's dad shows up to take both camera and Joe away. * Hair of Gold: Alice. * Happier Home Movie: Joe and Alice watch a home movie of Joe as a baby with his mother. * Headphones Equal Isolation: A gas station attendant is so busy rocking out to Blondie on his brand new Walkman that he doesn't hear the monster attack, nor feel the shockwaves from a police car being bounced off the ground 50 feet away. * Heel Face Turn: The alien monster, thanks to the Power of Friendship. * His Heart Will Go On: Joe's father eventually comes to terms with his wife's death. * Holding Hands: Joe and Alice at the end of the film. * Humans Are Bastards: Basically, the creature itself has been stranded on Earth since the 1950's, and has been imprisoned and experimented on for the last couple of decades, and has only wanted to return home via its ship. More or less the reason for its aggression is because every human it sees (sans Dr. Woodward, with whom it establishes a mental link) is a potential threat, or expendable for the most part. * Averted with Joe, whose chat with the alien in the tunnel -- "Bad things happen" -- reveals to it that in a way, everybody hurts. And since the alien is holding Joe at the time and establishes a mind link by contact, the alien can see that Joe -- who had by then forgiven Alice's father for what happened -- is right. * From the prequel comic's tagline: "The Soviets sent a dog. The U.S. sent a nuke." This is actually justified: the Soviets' probe was shot down, causing all the worst reactions... * Immune to Bullets: The alien, which is a bit of a problem for Colonel Nelec when he's trapped in a bus by the alien with only an M-16. Even escalating to tanks doesn't help, as it's capable of making them veer off course with magnetism. * I Wished You Were Dead/You Should Have Died Instead: Alice tells Joe that her father wishes he had died instead of Joe's mother on the day of the accident, and sometimes she feels that way about him too. * Averted by Joe, who tells her she should never feel that way about her dad. * And during the finale when the two fathers are together hunting down their missing kids, Alice's father tries to apologize and admit he should have died instead of Joe's mother. Joe's father, after a few moments of soul-searching, finally says, "It was an accident." * Insufferable Genius: Charles can be quite arrogant and bossy when it comes to his film, but he clearly wants to make it more in-depth by adding emotional investment to it, such as giving the detective a wife. Which makes the amusingly awful result all the more funny. * It Will Never Catch On: The sheriff is not impressed by the idea of everyone having their own Walkman. He isn't totally ignorant of its potential, though, and in fact sees how such an innocuous device could inspire an entire new trend. "It's a slippery slope," indeed. * It's All My Fault: It's eventually revealed that Alice's father blames himself for Joe's mother's death, as she took on his shift at the factory on the day of the accident. * Jerkass Facade: Initially, Alice and Louis both treat Joe with anger and resentment. As it turns out, this is merely a front. * Karma Houdini: The alien ultimately gets away with killing random innocent people. On the other hand, it's not really a straight-up villain. * Karmic Death: The Colonel finally meets his end at the hands of the creature he ordered experimentation on. * Kick the Dog: One of the soldiers takes Joe's mother's locket. Joe gets it back later from the guy's corpse. * Lens Flare: A drinking game based on them would end very badly for all involved. * Let No Crisis Go to Waste: The kids take advantage of a train crash and the soldiers in town in order to increase the "production values" of their film. * Love Triangle: Joe and Charles both have crushes on Alice. * Mad Bomber: Carey, to the concern of the kids' parents and sometimes his friends. But boy, does it pay it off. * Meaningful Background Event: The definition of the alien monster and its antics; the story is about Joe and his father. * Memento MacGuffin/Tragic Keepsake: The locket that belonged to Joe's mother. It ends up being the last piece of metal needed for the alien's ship. * Missing Mom: Joe's mother is dead, and Alice's mother has left her family. * Mood Whiplash: Several: * Joe's mother's funeral, which starts out very somber and then switches to the kids all arguing about the grisly manner in which she died. * The climax, when Joe talks down the alien from killing him and his friends immediately followed by Cary's indignant reaction to the fact that it actually worked. * After the moment where Joe lets go of the locket, followed by the ship leaving, the credits continue the sad music... only to cut to show the hilarious movie of the kids, "The Case". * Mook Lieutenant: Overmeyer, Nelec's loyal subordinate. * Mugged for Disguise: Joe's father has to punch out the soldier guarding him and steal his uniform to pull off Dressing as the Enemy. * Night of the Living Mooks: The zombie movie the kids are trying to film. * Noodle Incident: A more grim version: It's never revealed how Joe's mother died, only that it was rather nasty and involved i-beams. * No Plans, No Prototype, No Backup: The cure for the zombie virus in "The Case." * Nostalgia Filter: Anybody who was a pre-teen between 1975 to 1985 is gonna get misty-eyed watching this movie. * Nothing but Hits: "Don't Bring Me Down," "Easy", "My Sharona," "Heart of Glass," and "Silly Love Songs" all show up. * Nothing Is Scarier: The classic version is used repeatedly when the monster abducts someone. The third version as well: when Joe and Cary are in the monster's lair, the sheriff's body is right next to them, though you might not spot it until they do, and when Alice is abducted, there appears to be something blurry in the background. Which starts moving. * Not Quite Dead: Dr. Woodward after a head-on collision with a train. * Not Using the Zed Word: Almost no one says "alien". * Operation Walking Distance * Overprotective Dad: Joe's and Alice's fathers when they forbid their respective children from spending time with the other. * Paper-Thin Disguise: Jackson's stolen Air Force uniform. Everyone from town knows that it's him when he uses it to infiltrate the evacuee center run by the Air Force. It works for the soldiers, since the military is, obviously, a very big organization. * Parental Abandonment: Joe's mother is dead, and his father attempts to send him away to a six week baseball camp over the summer, arguably so he doesn't have to deal with raising Joe by himself. * Parental Neglect: Both Joe's and Alice's fathers share neglect towards their respective child, Joe's father due to his work and emotional baggage carried from Joe's mother's death, and Alice's father due to his resentment over Alice's mother leaving him and his guilt over Joe's mother's death, which he is indirectly responsible for. * Pet the Dog: What does the Colonel do in his last few minutes of life? Buy time for the kids to escape from the creature. * Precision F-Strike: Other characters swear plenty of times, but "fuck" is specifically saved for the perfect moment towards the end: * Police Brutality: Mild case. Joe's police officer dad strongarms Mr. Dainard into the back of his police car and drives him away, apparently for the crime of... showing up at a wake. Subsequent events explain his motive, though. * Posthumous Character: Joe's mother. * Post Hug Catatonia: Averted with Joe and Alice. He looks astonished for a split second, but then hugs her right back. * Prequel: The comic bundled into the second issue of the Batman: Arkham City comic. Long story short, it's revealed that the alien's ship had been monitoring Earth for quite some time and humans only discovered it with Sputnik; the Russians were scared shitless and so were the Americans, through OSS intelligence. The Russians sent Sputnik 2 (with Laika on-board) to investigate, while the Americans sent a probe of their own, which the alien ship promptly atomized. The U.S. response? A nuclear warhead. * Product Placement: Budweiser, 7-Eleven, and Kodak are all over the place. * Psychic Link: Humans develop this link with the alien if they are touched by it. * Punch Clock Villain: All of the U.S. military personnel under the Colonel's direction. * Reassigned to Antarctica: At one time, Dr. Woodward was a military research scientist with a top-level security clearance. After he spoke out, he wound up teaching Middle School science classes in a steel-mill town in Ohio. * Pyromaniac: Carey constantly totes a satchel of fireworks, blows things up at random intervals, and builds his own M80s. Lampshaded when Charles chews him out about his extreme obsession with fireworks. * Recycled Trailer Music: If the music from the recent trailer sounds familiar, that's because it was from the movie Cocoon. It can also be heard in this trailer for Cocoon: The Return. * The Reveal: Eventually, the kids find the footage and the recordings that explain what the creature is -- an alien who crash-landed years ago who only wanted to rebuild his ship and go home, but government officials got a hold of him first and kept him in captivity for experimentation. The alien did not take this treatment well and therefore was not shy about killing people as he gathered the equipment necessary to rebuild his ship, though it is clear that he eats human beings for sustenance despite being less than fond of them. * A bit ruined if you happened across the prequel comic. * Rule of Three: The three male zombies in "The Case" are all played by Carey, who looks exactly the same in all three roles except with a change of clothes. * Scenery Gorn: The train crash. Explosions, scraping metal, flying train cars, and frightened kids are all captured in full detail to show the massive amount of destruction that takes place. * Selective Magnetism: The magnetic field at the ends attracts guns, appliances, and even cars, but the military vehicles remain on the ground. Justified in the case of tanks and armored cars, which clearly weigh a lot more than civilian vehicles; done wince-inducingly straight with the metal chain Alice's dad wears around his neck and Carey's braces, which both remain firmly in place while Joe's locket goes floating off into the air. * The Seventies: Takes place in 1979, and does a fabulous job of capturing the look of the time. * Seventies Hair: Farrah Fawcett hairdos and long sideburns all over the place. However, most of the male kids' hair isn't all that different from 2011 fashions. * Shaggy Dog Story: * The events of the movie would have turned out exactly the same if the kids didn't get involved. The train crashes, the monster escapes, the military occupies the area, evacuates the town, and then hunts for the monster. Then the monster finishes its ship and flies away. * Of course, that's if you think the main plot is about the alien. Alternatively, the events of the movie would have turned out exactly the same if the biology teacher didn't crash the train and let the alien escape. The kids make the movie, Joe and Alice grow close, the friendship between Joe and Charles gets strained, Joe and Alice have to confront their respective fathers about the tragedy, and we end with a nice Coming of Age Story. * No, the kids did actually manage to change things. In the climactic scene, the alien makes a mental contact with Joe, and Joe makes it realize it's okay to forgive past misdeeds and move on with your life. Before that, the alien was bent on revenge against humanity, so without the contact with Joe, it might've killed a whole lot more people. Who knows what that ship was capable of when finished? * Or worse, what the rest of the creature's species would be capable of once the creature gets back and tells them what the humans did to it. * Shown Their Work: The alien is being transported to Ohio, as seen on the map. Wright-Patterson AFB, the home of the Air Force's Project Bluebook is in Ohio. * In fact, if you look closely enough at the two maps that appear in the film, you find that the [fictional] town of Lillian is about twenty miles west of Dayton — the home of the aformentioned Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Woodward's map makes it clear that the train was indeed headed for Wright-Patterson before he intervened. * Furthermore, Lillian (a fictional town) is said to be in Montgomery County. Given where it appears on the map, that is exactly right. * In-universe example: For their age, the kids seem to be pretty well-versed in the process of film-making. Which in the end makes their final product all the more ironic. * Show Within a Show: "The Case." * The Smurfette Principle: Alice. * Spiritual Successor: To the Spielberg movies of the 80's. * Spoof Aesop: A drive-by line when the kids' driver is too stoned to get out of the car while the town is being blown to smithereens. Charles exclaims, "Drugs are SO bad!" before running away. * The Stoner: Donny. * Strictly Formula: The fact that the monster is really just trying to get home and was something which the Air Force found but couldn't understand or control. The point-by-point recreation of The Hero's Journey for Joe. * Stylistic Suck: "The Case," the zombie movie that the kids are filming, is shown during the credits. It is So Bad It's Good. Joe in particular is a horrendous actor during his one scene in "The Case." * Survivor Guilt: The reason that Alice's father, Louis, initially acted like a Jerkass to Joe was because he felt indirectly responsible for Joe's mother's death. Alice even tells Joe that he wished he had died instead of her. * Technology Marches On: * The film has Walkman cassette players just hitting the market. And because it's 1979, none of the kids have cell phones or computers to keep in touch with each other. They do have two-way radios, though. * Super 8 film and cameras, however, still exist and are still popular with amateur film-makers (and some professionals). * Title Drop: It is the name of the film and camera the gang uses and it is the name of the film festival that Charles wants to enter. * Totally Radical: Justified, as the movie is set in the 1970's, but who really says stuff like "That was mint!" anymore? * Too Good for This Sinful Earth: Subverted. Alice is pure compared to her troubled father, and she winds up being taken by the alien. In the end, Cary distracts the alien just seconds before she's due to become an item on its menu, and she lives to see the end of the film and to reconcile with her father, who had reconciled with the Lamb family shortly beforehand. * Toy Ship: Joe and Alice. * Twice Shy: Joe and Alice again. * Tunnel King: The creature is this. * The Un-Reveal: The alien's home planet or anything about its race. Then again, it is a J.J. Abrams film. * Villainous Valor: Nelec's last stand against the alien. * Vomit Indiscretion Shot: A few, courtesy of Martin. In the special features, cinematographer Larry Fong notes that this may the first instance of computer-generated vomit in a movie. * We Need a Distraction: One implied, one stated. Joe's dad blows up a tanker truck to provide cover for his escape from custody, and Joe asks Cary to set off some fireworks so they can get out. * What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous?: "You can't drink that! It doesn't belong to you!" * What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Before the end, the creature, when seen, had predatory-looking black eyes, killed people, and for the most part seemed utterly monstrous. When it picks up Joe, after he makes it clear that he understands what happened to it and just wants the creature to leave in peace, the black lids slide back, revealing startlingly intelligent and human-like eyes. It then proceeds to put the boy gently down, lets him and his friends leave, and makes its own exit. * Would Hit a Girl: Joe, but hesitantly and only because it was the only way to wake her up so that they could run for their lives. * X Days Since...: Used at the very start of the film to (fleetingly) cryptic effect. Joe's Mom broke the streak. It was an accident. May be the first example of this trope used for dramatic effect. * X Meets Y: The movie is ET the Extraterrestrial, Cloverfield, The Goonies, Close Encounters of the Third Kind, and a few dashes of The Blair Witch Project, Star Trek (2009) and Independence Day. Shake well. The Super 8 utilized an NES-on-a-chip (NOAC) integrate circuit to duplicate the functionality of the original NES hardware, and connected to the SNES's own cartridge port. The device itself featured three cartridge ports. Two of these ports connected to the onboard NOAC, and were designed to fit NES and Famicom cartridges, respectively: despite otherwise featuring exactly the same hardware, North American and European NES game cartridges used a 72-pin design, resulting in slightly larger cartridges than the Famicom, which used a 60-pin design. The third port was designed to fit standard SNES cartridges, and merely connected with the SNES's native hardware, so that the user would not have to remove the Super 8 in order to play SNES games. In spite of this, some issues would occasionally arise, and it was common for some games to not function correctly; for example, in the compilation cartridge Super Mario All-Stars + World there are many occasions in which the screen rolls, rendering gameplay practically impossible. A similar idea was later employed for the Tristar 64, an accessory for the Nintendo 64 console with the ability to play both NES and SNES cartridges. The Super 8 also plays Super Famicom games, as there are no tabs to block the insertion of the flat back cartridges. Nonetheless, European model SNES users were still only able to play European SNES games. The Super 8 does not act as a SNES converter in any way, the European model is, however, effectively a multi-region NES, and will play most NES/Famicom games regardless of what territory they were intended for. Still, some games, like Battletoads, do not function correctly on a Super 8/Tristar[citation needed]. When a group of kids tries to make a homemade Zombie film for a film festival, their filming is interrupted by a massive train derailing. A chain of strange events follow, and it soon becomes apparent that the train was destroyed from within by an escaping gigantic alien. However, in order to enjoy their shot footage, customers also needed to own, or at the very least have access to, film projectors capable of playing the Super 8 film reels, or simply put, having to have to operate a miniature cinema of their own. Nevertheless, it was the first time these opportunities to record ones personal life in motion pictures became affordable for a general populace at large, and it was adopted by them with a fervor. For two decades the format reigned supreme, until Video 8 made its appearance in 1985, turning out to be the ultimate downfall of the format. "Video 8" should not be confused with "Super 8", as the latter was a bonafide film medium, whereas the Video 8 was, like its larger VHS/Betamax siblings, a magnetic video tape. Hollywood studios recognized the potential of a bourgeoning emergence of a home media format market, and did release titles from their backlog catalogs, though it had always remained a fringe event. While available, retail prices were for most far too high for individual ownership, meaning that the vast majority of the Super 8 releases ended up in the film festival or rental outlet circuit, the latter a very modest affair itself, compared to the later video tape rental outlet juggernaut.