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词条 Super 8 (2011 film)
释义

  1. Plot

  2. Cast

  3. Production

     Development  Filming  Soundtrack  Viral marketing campaign 

  4. Release

     Home media 

  5. Reception

     Box office  Critical response  Accolades 

  6. References

  7. External links

{{About|the 2011 film|the home movie film format|Super 8 film|the 1999 film|8mm (film)|the hotel chain|Super 8 Motels}}{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2014}}{{Infobox film
| name = Super 8
| image = Super 8 Poster.jpg
| alt =
| caption = Theatrical release poster
| director = J. J. Abrams
| producer = {{Plainlist|
  • J. J. Abrams
  • Bryan Burk
  • Steven Spielberg }}

| writer = J. J. Abrams
| starring = {{Plainlist|
  • Kyle Chandler
  • Elle Fanning
  • Joel Courtney
  • Gabriel Basso
  • Noah Emmerich
  • Ron Eldard
  • Riley Griffiths
  • Ryan Lee
  • Zach Mills

}}
| music = Michael Giacchino
| cinematography = Larry Fong
| editing = {{Plainlist|
  • Maryann Brandon
  • Mary Jo Markey }}

| studio = {{Plainlist|
  • Bad Robot Productions
  • Amblin Entertainment }}

| distributor = Paramount Pictures
| released = {{Film date|2011|6|9|Australia|2011|6|10|United States}}
| runtime = 112 minutes
| country = United States
| language = English
| budget = $50 million[1]
| gross = $260.1 million[2]
}}

Super 8 is a 2011 American science fiction monster thriller film written, co-produced, and directed by J. J. Abrams and produced by Steven Spielberg. The film stars Joel Courtney, Elle Fanning, and Kyle Chandler and tells the story of a group of young teenagers who are filming their own Super 8 movie when a train derails, releasing a dangerous presence into their town. The film was shot in Weirton, West Virginia and surrounding areas, masquerading as the fictional town of Lillian, Ohio.

Super 8 was released on June 10, 2011,[2] in conventional and IMAX theaters in the United States. The film was well received, with critics praising the film for its nostalgic elements, visual effects, musical score, and for the performances of the cast, in particular, both Fanning and newcomer Courtney's acting was cited, while also being compared to such thematically similar films as E.T., Stand by Me, and The Goonies. Super 8 was also a commercial success, grossing over $260 million against a $50 million budget. The film received several awards and nominations, primarily in technical and special effects categories, Giacchino's musical score, as well as for Courtney and Fanning's performances.

Plot

In 1979, Deputy Sheriff Jack Lamb of Lillian, Ohio, and his 14-year-old son Joe, mourn the death of his mother Elizabeth, who was killed in a workplace accident. Jack blames her co-worker, Louis Dainard, as she was covering his shift because he had a hangover. All Joe has left is a locket that belonged to her.

Four months after Elizabeth's funeral, Joe's best friend Charles Kaznyk decides to make a low-budget zombie movie for a film competition. Charles enlists the help of Preston Scott, Martin Read, and Cary McCarthy, as well as Dainard's daughter, Alice. Though their fathers would be furious, Joe and Alice become close to each other.

Charles has them film a scene at a train depot at midnight. During a rehearsal, a train approaches and Charles has them start filming as the train passes to add 'production value'. While filming, Joe witnesses a pickup truck drive onto the tracks and ram the train, causing a massive derailment that destroys the train, the depot and the surrounding area, and separates the children from each other amidst the chaos. Joe finds himself near one container, the loading door of which is violently thrown off by an unseen force. Eventually the kids regroup and wander amid the wreckage, finding crates full of strange white cubes, then discover the truck's driver is Dr. Woodward, their biology teacher. Woodward, barely alive, warns them at gunpoint to forget what they have all seen, or they and their families will be killed. The children flee the scene when a convoy from the local Air Force base, led by Col. Nelec, arrives at the scene. Nelec discovers an empty super 8 film box, and assumes the event was purposely captured on camera.

While Joe and Charles wait for their film to be developed, the town experiences strange events: All the dogs run away, several townspeople go missing, the electrical power fluctuates and electronic items from all over are stolen. Overhearing military communications, Jack approaches Nelec to figure out what they are up to, but Nelec instead orders him arrested. Nelec orders the use of flamethrowers to start a wildfire outside the town as an excuse to evacuate people to the base. As soldiers sweep into the town to begin the evacuation, Joe and Charles watch the derailment footage and discover that a large creature escaped from the train.

At the base, Joe learns from Alice's father that she is missing, abducted by the creature. Joe, Charles, Martin, and Cary convince Jen, Charles' older sister, to pretend to hit on Donny, a worker from the town camera store, in order to get into town to rescue Alice. They break into Dr. Woodward's storage trailer and discover films and documents from his time as a government researcher.

They play the film, which reveals the Air Force captured an alien when it crash-landed in 1958, and ran experiments on it while keeping it from its ship, composed of the strange white cubes, allowing it to shape-shift. Woodward was one of the scientists experimenting on the alien. At one point, the alien grabbed Woodward, apparently establishing a psychic connection with him. Now understanding the alien, he was compelled to rescue it and help it escape from Earth. He found out about the train, years later, and sought the opportunity to help the creature. The boys are caught by Nelec, but as they are taken back to base the alien attacks their bus, tipping it over. The boys escape as the alien focuses on killing the airmen. Meanwhile, Jack escapes from the base's stockade and makes his way to the shelter housing the townsfolk. He learns from Preston about Joe's plan to rescue Alice. Jack and Dainard then agree to put aside their differences to save their kids.

In town, the military attempts to kill the alien but find their hardware goes haywire in its presence, resulting in significant collateral damage. Martin is injured, so Charles stays behind with him while Joe and Cary head to the cemetery garage, where Joe had earlier seen something there that made him suspicious. They find a massive underground cavern in which the alien is creating a device from the town's stolen electronics, attached to the base of the tower. The alien also has captured several people, including Alice, hanging unconscious from the ceiling, that it uses for food. Using Cary's firecrackers as a distraction, Joe frees Alice and the others, but the three kids are trapped. Understanding' the creature's condition, Joe steps forward. The alien grabs Joe, who quietly speaks to the alien, telling that "bad things happen" but that the alien "can still live". The alien releases him and departs, allowing the three to return to the surface.

As Joe and Alice reunite with their fathers, people watch as various metal objects are pulled from all over town to the top of the water tower by an unknown force. The white cubes are also pulled in to assemble into the alien's spaceship, using the water tower as its base. The alien enters the spaceship and the locket is then drawn from Joe's pocket towards the tower. After a moment, he decides to let it go, completing the ship. As the ship rockets into space, Joe takes Alice's hand.

The final Super 8 zombie film the children were making runs at the end of the movie beside the credit roll.

Cast

{{div col}}
  • Joel Courtney as Joe Lamb
  • Elle Fanning as Alice Dainard
  • Riley Griffiths as Charles Kaznyk
  • Ryan Lee as Cary McCarthy
  • Gabriel Basso as Martin Read
  • Zach Mills as Preston Scott
  • Kyle Chandler as Deputy Jackson Lamb
  • Ron Eldard as Louis Dainard
  • AJ Michalka as Jen Kaznyk
  • Joel McKinnon Miller as Sal Kaznyk
  • Jessica Tuck as Mrs. Kaznyk
  • Brett Rice as Sheriff Pruitt
  • Michael Giacchino as Deputy Crawford
  • Michael Hitchcock as Deputy Rosko
  • Jay Scully as Deputy Skadden
  • Noah Emmerich as Colonel Nelec
  • Richard T. Jones as Overmyer
  • Bruce Greenwood as Cooper
  • David Gallagher as Donny
  • Glynn Turman as Dr. Thomas Woodward
  • Beau Knapp as Breen
  • Dan Castellaneta as Izzy
  • Dale Dickey as Edie
{{div col end}}

Production

Development

J.J. Abrams had the idea to start a film by showing a factory's "Accident-Free" sign long before he came up with the rest of the ideas for the film. Super 8 was actually the combination of two ideas; one for a film about kids making their own movie during the 1970s, and another for a blockbuster alien invasion film. Abrams combined the ideas, worried that the former would not attract enough attendance.

Abrams and Spielberg collaborated in a storytelling committee to come up with the story for the film.[3] The film was initially reported to be either a sequel or prequel to the 2008 film Cloverfield,[4] but this was quickly denied by Abrams.[5] Primary photography began in fall (September/October) 2010. The teaser itself was filmed separately in April.[6] Super 8 is the first original J. J. Abrams film project produced by Amblin Entertainment, Bad Robot Productions, and Paramount Pictures.[7]

Abrams wanted to find new faces to play the parts in his movie. He conducted a national talent search in order to find the child actors to play each of the leading roles. Courtney (who was hoping to land a part in a commercial) was picked out of many boys because Abrams found something "different" in him. Riley Griffiths sent Abrams a tape of himself in order to land the part of Charles.

Filming

Filming took place in Weirton, West Virginia, from September to October 2010.[8] To promote the film, Valve Corporation created a short video game segment and released it alongside the Windows and Mac versions of Portal 2.[9]

Abrams' original plan was to film all of the sequences for the film-within-a-film, "The Case", in Super-8 using Pro8mm stock and cameras. However, this approach proved unsuccessful, as visual effects house Industrial Light and Magic found it impossible to integrate CGI into the footage due to the format's graininess. For sequences involving CGI, cinematographer Larry Fong used Super-16 instead.[10]

Soundtrack

{{Infobox album
| name = Super 8
| type = Film score
| artist = Michael Giacchino
| cover =
| alt =
| released = August 2, 2011
| recorded = 2011
| venue =
| studio =
| genre = Orchestral
| length = 77:19
| label = Varèse Sarabande
| producer =
| chronology = Michael Giacchino
| prev_title = Cars 2
| prev_year = 2011
| next_title = Monte Carlo
| next_year = 2011
}}{{Album ratings
|rev1=AllMusic
|rev1Score={{Rating|3.5|5}}[11]
|noprose=yes}}

The score for the film was composed by Michael Giacchino, Abrams' long-time collaborator. The soundtrack was released on August 2, 2011, by Varèse Sarabande. It won the 2012 Saturn Award for Best Music.

During the ending credits, the songs "Don't Bring Me Down" by Electric Light Orchestra and "My Sharona" by The Knack are featured. The Blondie song "Heart of Glass" and The Cars song "Bye Bye Love" are also featured in the film.

{{Track listing
|headline=Track listing
|all_music=Michael Giacchino (although track 33, "The Case", is credited on the liner notes to the film character Charles Kaznyk)
|total_length=77:19
|title1=Super 8
|length1=1:44
|title2=Family Matters
|length2=0:29
|title3=Model Painting
|length3=0:41
|title4=Acting Chops
|length4=0:40
|title5=Aftermath Class
|length5=5:54
|title6=Thoughts of Cubism
|length6=0:48
|title7=We'll Fix It in Post-Haste
|length7=0:44
|title8=Production Woes
|length8=0:34
|title9=Train of Thought
|length9=0:35
|title10=Circle Gets the Cube
|length10=1:06
|title11=Breen There, Ate That
|length11=1:12
|title12=Dead Over Heels
|length12=0:48
|title13=Gas and Go
|length13=1:34
|title14=Looking for Lucy
|length14=0:49
|title15=Radio Haze
|length15=1:08
|title16=Mom's Necklace
|length16=1:33
|title17=Shootus Interuptus
|length17=2:35
|title18=Thoughts of Mom
|length18=1:41
|title19=Woodward Bites It
|length19=1:54
|title20=Alice Projects on Joe
|length20=2:29
|title21=Neighborhood Watch — Fail
|length21=4:45
|title22=The Evacuation of Lillian
|length22=3:40
|title23=A Truckload of Trouble
|length23=0:57
|title24=Lambs on the Lam
|length24=2:40
|title25=Woodward's Home Movies
|length25=2:40
|title26=Spotted Lambs
|length26=1:37
|title27=Air Force HQ or Bust
|length27=1:04
|title28=World's Worst Field Trip
|length28=3:36
|title29=The Siege of Lillian
|length29=2:57
|title30=Creature Comforts
|length30=10:10
|title31=Letting Go
|length31=5:18
|title32=Super 8 Suite
|length32=5:54
|title33=The Case
|length33=3:28}}

Viral marketing campaign

Like Cloverfield, an earlier J. J. Abrams-produced film, Super 8 was promoted through an extensive viral marketing campaign. The first trailer for the movie was attached to Iron Man 2, released in May 2010. The trailer gave the premise of a section of Area 51 being closed down in 1979 and its contents being transported by freight train to Ohio. A pickup truck drives into the oncoming train, derailing it, and one of the carriages is smashed open while a Super 8 camera films. Fans analyzing the trailer found a hidden message, "Scariest Thing I Ever Saw", contained in the final frames of the trailer. This led to a website, www.scariestthingieversaw.com, which simulated the interface of a PDP-11 and contained various clues to the film's story-line; the computer was eventually revealed to belong to Josh Woodward, the son of Dr. Woodward, who is trying to find out what happened to his father. Another viral website, www.rocketpoppeteers.com, was also found, which like Slusho from Cloverfield plays no direct part in the film but is indirectly related. The official Super 8 website also contained an "editing room" section, which asked users to find various clips from around the web and piece them together. When completed, the reel makes up the film found by the kids in Dr. Woodward's trailer, showing the ship disintegrating into individual white cubes, and the alien reaching through the window of its cage and snatching Dr. Woodward. The video game Portal 2 contains an interactive trailer placing the player on board the train before it derails, and showing the carriage being smashed open and the roar of the alien within.[9]

Release

The film was released on June 9, 2011, in Australia; June 10, 2011, in the United States; and August 5, 2011, in the United Kingdom.[12] On June 8, Paramount also launched a “Super 8 Sneak Peek” Twitter promotion, offering fans a chance to purchase tickets for an advance screening, taking place on June 9, 2011, in the United States.[13] The film opened at #1 in the U.S. Box Office for that weekend, grossing about $35 million.

Home media

The film was released on Blu-ray and DVD on November 22, 2011.[14] The release was produced as a combo pack with a Digital Copy, including nine bonus features and fourteen deleted scenes.[15]

Reception

Box office

Super 8 had a production budget of $50 million. It was commercially released on {{nowrap|June 10}}, 2011. In the United States and Canada, it opened in {{nowrap|3,379 theaters}} and grossed over $35.4 million on its opening weekend, ranking first at the box office.[16] The film grossed $127 million in North America with a worldwide total of some $260 million.[2]

Critical response

Super 8 received positive reviews from critics. On the film-critics aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film received a score of 82%, based on 276 reviews, and a rating average of 7.4/10, with the consensus that: "it may evoke memories of classic summer blockbusters a little too eagerly for some, but Super 8 has thrills, visual dazzle, and emotional depth to spare."[17] Metacritic, which assigns a weighted average score from 1–100 to reviews from critics, assigned the film a Metascore of 72 based on 41 critics, signifying "generally favorable reviews".[18]

Chris Sosa of Gather gave the film an A rating, calling it, "a gripping and exciting tale of finding one's place in the world amidst tragedy". His review concluded, "While the genre-bending occasionally unsettles, the film's genuine and emotionally gripping nature make its journey believable."[19]

Roger Ebert gave the film 3½ stars out of 4 and said, "Super 8 is a wonderful film, nostalgia not for a time but for a style of film-making, when shell-shocked young audiences were told a story and not pounded over the head with aggressive action. Abrams treats early adolescence with tenderness and affection."[20] Richard Corliss of Time gave it a similarly positive review, calling it "the year's most thrilling, feeling mainstream movie".[21] He then named it one of the Top 10 Best Movies of 2011.[22] Jamie Graham of Total Film gave the film a perfect five-star rating, saying, "like Spielberg, Abrams has an eye for awe, his deft orchestration of indelible images – a tank trundling through a children's playground, a plot-pivotal landmark framed in the distance through a small hole in a bedroom wall – marking him as a born storyteller".[23] Christopher Orr of The Atlantic called it a "love letter to a cinematic era", while Claudia Puig of USA Today praised it as "a summer blockbuster firing on all cylinders".

Critics and audiences alike were polarized on the film's ending. Some found it to be emotional, powerful, and satisfying while others found it rushed and forced. For example, writing for MUBI's Notebook, Fernando F. Croce alleged that "no film this year opens more promisingly and ends more dismally than J.J. Abrams' Super 8."[24] Other critics commented negatively on the film's frequent homages to early works of Spielberg, particularly in its depiction of broken families (a theme Spielberg has explored in nearly all of his films). For example, CNN's Tom Charity felt that "Abrams' imitation [was] a shade too reverent for [his] taste."[25] David Edelstein, of New York magazine, called it a "flagrant crib," adding that "Abrams has probably been fighting not to reproduce Spielberg's signature moves since the day he picked up a camera. Now, with the blessing of the master, he can plagiarize with alacrity."[26]

Accolades

List of awards and nominations
AwardCategoryRecipient(s) and nominee(s)Result
4th Annual Coming of Age Awards[27]Best NewcomerJoel Courtney{{Won}}
Best CinematographyLarry Fong{{Won}}
Special Soundtrack{{Won}}
Central Ohio Film Critics AssociationBest Picture{{Nom}}
SFX AwardsBest Film{{Nom}}
Best DirectorJ. J. Abrams{{Nom}}
10th Annual TSR Awards[28]Actress of the Year (Multiple Roles)Elle Fanning{{Nom}}
Best Visuals: Special Effects{{Nom}}
38th Saturn Awards[29]Best Science Fiction Film{{Nom}}
Best Performance by a Younger ActorJoel Courtney{{Won}}
Best Performance by a Younger ActorElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Best DirectorJ. J. Abrams{{Won}}
Best WritingJ. J. Abrams{{Nom}}
Best MusicMichael Giacchino{{Won}}
Best EditingMaryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey{{Nom}}
Best Special Effects{{Nom}}
48th Annual CAS Awards[30]Best Sound Mixing{{Nom}}
2011 BAM Awards[31]Best Picture{{Nom}}
Best DirectorJ. J. Abrams{{Nom}}
Best CinematographyLarry Fong{{Nom}}
Best Makeup{{Nom}}
Best Original ScreenplayJ. J. Abrams{{Won}}
Best EditingMaryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey{{Nom}}
Best ScoreMichael Giacchino{{Won}}
Best Sound Editing/Mixing{{Won}}
Best Visual Effects{{Nom}}
Best Costumes{{Nom}}
Best Cast{{Nom}}
Best Youth Ensemble{{Nom}}
Best Performance by a Child Actress in a Leading RoleElle Fanning{{Won}}
Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Leading RoleJoel Courtney{{Won}}
Best Performance by a Child Actor in a Supporting RoleRyan Lee{{Won}}
Best Young Actor/ActressElle Fanning{{Nom}}
17th Empire AwardsBest Sci-Fi/Fantasy{{Nom}}
Best Female NewcomerElle Fanning{{Nom}}
2011 St. Louis Film Critics Association AwardsBest Visual Effects{{Nom}}
2011 Phoenix Film Critics Society Awards[32]Best EditingMaryann Brandon and Mary Jo Markey{{Nom}}
Best Ensemble Acting{{Won}}
Best Film{{Nom}}
Best Original ScoreMichael Giacchino{{Nom}}
Best Youth Performance — MaleJoel Courtney{{Nom}}
Best Youth Performance — FemaleElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Breakthrough Performance — On CameraElle Fanning{{Nom}}
2011 Satellite Awards[33]Best Supporting ActressElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Best Original ScoreMichael Giacchino{{Nom}}
Best Visual EffectsDennis Muren, Kim Libreri, Paul Kavanagh, Russell Earl{{Nom}}
Best Sound (Editing & Mixing)Andy Nelson, Anna Behlmer, Ben Burtt, Mark Ulano, Matthew Wood, and Tom Johnson{{Nom}}
2011 Scream Awards[34]
The Ultimate Scream{{Nom}}
Best Science Fiction Movie{{Won}}
Best DirectorJ. J. Abrams{{Nom}}
Best Scream-PlayJ. J. Abrams{{Won}}
Breakout Performance — FemaleElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Holy Sh!t Scene Of The YearThe Train Crash{{Nom}}
2011 Teen Choice Awards[35]
Choice Movie: Sci-Fi/Fantasy{{Nom}}
Choice Movie Actress: Sci-Fi/FantasyElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Choice Male Breakout StarJoel Courtney{{Nom}}
Choice Movie: Male Scene StealerRiley Griffiths{{Nom}}
Choice Movie: ChemistryGabriel Basso, Joel Courtney, Elle Fanning, Riley Griffiths, Ryan Lee, Zach Mills{{Nom}}
Choice Hissy FitBruce Greenwood{{Nom}}
2012 Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards[36]
Best Action Movie{{Nom}}
Best Sound{{Nom}}
Best Visual Effects{{Nom}}
Best Young Actor/ActressElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Golden Reel Awards[37]Music in a Feature Film{{Nom}}
Dialogue and ADR in a Feature Film{{Won}}
Sound Effects and Foley in a Feature Film{{Nom}}
Hollywood Film FestivalSpotlight AwardElle Fanning{{Won}}
YouReviewer Awards[38]Best Supporting ActressElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Best Visual Effects{{Nom}}
Breakthrough ActorJoel Courtney{{Nom}}
33rd Young Artist Awards[39]Best Performance in a Feature Film - Leading Young ActorJoel Courtney{{Nom}}
Best Performance in a Feature Film - Leading Young ActressElle Fanning{{Nom}}
Best Performance in a Feature Film — Supporting Young ActorZach Mills{{Nom}}
Best Performance in a Feature Film — Young Ensemble CastJoel Courtney, Elle Fanning, Ryan Lee, Zach Mills, Riley Griffiths, Gabriel Basso and Britt Flatmo{{Nom}}
2012 MTV Movie AwardsBreakthrough Performance[40]Elle Fanning{{Nom}}

In addition to these awards, the film was short-listed for the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects[41] and Best Original Score, and the BAFTA Award for Best Original Screenplay, Best Sound, and Best Special Visual Effects. Paramount submitted it for several considerations for the BAFTAs including Best Film, Best Director (J. J. Abrams), Best Original Screenplay, Leading Actor (Kyle Chandler), Supporting Actress (Elle Fanning), Supporting Actor (Joel Courtney, Gabriel Basso, Noah Emmerich), Cinematography, Production Design, Editing, Costume Design, Original Music, Sound, Makeup and Hair, and Special Visual Effects.

References

1. ^{{Cite news|url=http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2011/06/movie-projector-super-8-judy-moody-and-the-bummer-summer.html|title=Movie Projector: 'Super 8' faces off against 'X-Men'; both will destroy 'Judy Moody'|last=Kaufman|first=Amy|work=Los Angeles Times|publisher=Tribune Company|date=June 9, 2011|accessdate=June 11, 2011}}
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27. ^4th Annual Coming-of-Age Movie Awards Recipients Named, theskykid.com.
28. ^10th Annual TSR Movie Awards – The Results – 2011, thescorecardreview.com, February 26, 2012.
29. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.saturnawards.org/nominations.html|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130122100457/http://www.saturnawards.org/nominations.html|title=Nominations for the 38th Annual Saturn Awards|website=saturnawards.org|accessdate=February 29, 2012|archivedate=January 22, 2013 }}
30. ^{{cite web|url=http://cinemaaudiosociety.org/index.php/2012/02/19/press-release-48th-cas-award-winners/|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120704044603/http://cinemaaudiosociety.org/index.php/2012/02/19/press-release-48th-cas-award-winners|title=CAS Press Release|website=cinemaaudiosociety.org|accessdate=February 18, 2012|archivedate=July 4, 2012}}
31. ^2011 BAM Award Winners, themovierat.com, January 11, 2012.
32. ^Phoenix Film Critics Applaud The Artist, Awards Daily, December 27, 2011.
33. ^2011 International Press Academy, December 2011.
34. ^{{cite web|url=http://movies.about.com/od/awards/a/2011-Scream-Awards.htm|title=2011 SCREAM Awards Nominees and Winners|publisher=about Entertainment|accessdate=February 26, 2013}}
35. ^{{Cite web|url=http://teenchoiceawards.com/voteMovies.aspx|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20120103164556/http://teenchoiceawards.com/voteMovies.aspx|title=2011 Teen Choice Awards|archivedate=January 3, 2012}}
36. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.criticschoice.com/movie-awards/17th-annual-critics-choice-movie-awards-2012/|title=17th Annual Critics’ Choice Movie Awards (2012) – Best Picture: The Artist|accessdate=February 26, 2015|publisher=Critic's Choice}}
37. ^2012 Golden Reel Award Nominees: Feature Films, mpse.org.
38. ^{{Cite web|url=http://movieline.com/2012/02/14/tune-in-tomorrow-for-the-2nd-annual-youreviewer-awards/|title=Tune in Tomorrow for the 2nd Annual YouReviewer Awards!}}
39. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.youngartistawards.org/noms33.html|title=33rd Annual Young Artist Awards|accessdate=March 31, 2012|work=YoungArtistAwards.org}}
40. ^{{cite web|last=Prinzivalli|first=Fallon|title=2012 MTV Movie Awards Winners: The Full List|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/1686434/mtv-movie-awards-winners-list/|publisher=MTV|accessdate=December 5, 2014}}
41. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.movieweb.com/news/15-finalists-set-for-visual-effects-oscar|title=15 Finalists Set for Visual Effects Oscar}}

External links

{{wikiquote}}
  • {{IMDb title|1650062}}
  • {{AllMovie title|516781}}
  • {{Mojo title|super8}}
  • {{Rotten Tomatoes|super_8}}
  • Super 8 on Letterboxd.com
{{J. J. Abrams}}{{Steven Spielberg}}

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