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Chronicle (film)

2012 American film by Josh Trank From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chronicle (film)
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Chronicle is a 2012 American film directed by Josh Trank (in his directorial debut) and written by Max Landis based on a story conceived by the two. Often described as a found footage film, blending with superhero,[4][5] science fiction, and psychological thriller genres,[6] it follows three Seattle high school seniors, bullied Andrew (Dane DeHaan), his cousin Matt (Alex Russell), and more popular Steve (Michael B. Jordan), who form a bond after gaining telekinetic powers from an unknown object and using them for fun, until Andrew begins going down a darker path.

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Chronicle premiered at the Gérardmer Film Festival on January 28, 2012, and released in the United States on February 3, 2012, by 20th Century Fox. The film grossed $126.6 million at the international box office, against a budget of $15 million. The film received generally positive reviews with praise for the premise, and received a nomination for Best Science Fiction Film at the 39th Saturn Awards.

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Plot

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In Seattle, teenager Andrew Detmer is bullied in school and abused by his alcoholic father Richard, and his mother Karen has cancer. The family struggles with medical debt after Richard loses his firefighter job due to an injury. His only friend is his cousin Matt Garetty, and inspired by Matt's girlfriend Casey, Andrew buys a camera to make a video diary of his life.

Matt invites Andrew to a party to help him mingle, but he leaves after his filming causes an altercation with another attendee. Popular student Steve Montgomery asks Andrew to record a large hole he and Matt found in the woods. They go down the hole and find a glowing crystalline object. The object suddenly reacts violently, and the camera shorts out.

A few days later, Andrew, Matt, and Steve develop telekinetic abilities, suffering nosebleeds when overexerting. Unable to revisit the hole after the police close it, they use their powers for pranks, but it goes too far when Andrew accidentally pushes a rude motorist into a lake. Steve saves the man, but Matt insists they limit their powers, especially against living beings.

After Steve discovers they can fly, they agree to travel around the world together after graduation, with Andrew especially eager to visit Tibet. Steve persuades Andrew to use his powers for a magic act at the school talent show, impressing their classmates. Andrew enjoys his new popularity at a house party, but the night ends badly when he drunkenly vomits on a classmate he intended to have sex with, and Steve accidentally offends him while trying to lighten the mood.

Richard confronts Andrew after finding his camera and footage, believing Andrew spent money intended for school and Karen's medicines on a trip with friends. During an argument, Richard attacks Andrew, who retaliates with his powers before fleeing. Andrew flies into a lightning storm, and Steve follows to comfort him after a nosebleed, telepathically hearing Andrew retaliate. Frustrated when Steve refuses to leave, Andrew unintentionally strikes Steve with lightning. At Steve's funeral, Matt questions Andrew, who denies responsibility but later privately asks for forgiveness at Steve's grave.

Andrew is once again ostracized after the party. After telekinetically ripping teeth from a bully, he considers himself an apex predator, feeling he's stronger and justified in hurting the weaker. Matt then confronts Andrew, warning him to consider the consequences of his actions, but Andrew ignores them.

Desperate to pay for his mother's treatment, Andrew disguises himself in his father's firefighter gear and uses his powers to rob a gang and a gas station, inadvertently causing an explosion that sends him to the hospital in police custody. At his bedside, a distraught Richard tells an unconscious Andrew that Karen has died after Richard spent the day searching for him. Blaming Andrew for her death, Richard berates him, demanding an apology and even preparing to strike him if necessary. Andrew, having reached his breaking point, suddenly wakes up and violently blows out the room's wall.

Matt suffers a severe nosebleed telepathically hearing Andrew in trouble. After seeing a news alert about a mysterious explosion at a hospital downtown, Matt and Casey rush to the hospital, only to find Andrew flying in public and dropping his injured father to kill him, but Matt saves him. Matt confronts Andrew at the Space Needle and tries to reason with him, but he refuses and they battle each other. Recognizing that Andrew is beyond help, Matt kills him by impaling him with a statue spear and escapes before the police can catch him.

Sometime later, Matt arrives in Tibet with Andrew's camera. He records one last video where he apologizes to Andrew, who he says wasn't a bad person to begin with, vows to use his powers for good, and promises to uncover the truth about what happened to them. He points the camera at a Tibetan monastery in the distance before flying away, leaving the camera behind.

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Cast

Production

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Development

Josh Trank had conceived the idea for Chronicle in high school and spent the following years generating ideas for the film. Up-and-coming screenwriter Jeremy Slater had collaborated with Trank while working on an unmade spec script. By 2010, Slater had moved on, leading to Trank contacting Max Landis, who agreed to co-write the film. The first draft of the script was written in three weeks after Landis had pitched the film behind Trank's back. Trank's original draft had the character of Steve being hit by a plane and dying in the middle of the second act. Landis removed this from his revisions, which "solved the entire second act". 20th Century Fox bought the rights to the project and greenlit the film with Trank serving as director in January 2011.[7] Miles Teller auditioned for a role but was turned down as he had appeared in another found footage film, Project X.[8]

Production

For budgetary reasons, the film was shot primarily in Cape Town, South Africa, with Film Afrika Worldwide, as well as in Vancouver, Canada.[9][10] Trank cited the films Akira, Carrie and The Fury as influences on Chronicle.[11] Filming started in May 2011 and continued for 18 weeks, ending in August 2011.[12] Cinematographer Matthew Jensen used the Arri Alexa video camera to shoot the film and Angenieux Optimo and Cook s4 lenses.[9] Post-production techniques were used to give it a "found footage" look.[9] A cable cam rig was used for a shot in which the character Andrew levitates his camera 120 feet into the air.[9] The Arri Alexa camera was mounted on a skateboard to simulate Andrew's camera sliding across a floor.[9] Stuntmen were suspended from crane wire rigs for flying scenes, with green screen special effects used for closeups of the actors.[9] Andrew's video camera in the movie is a Canon XL1 MiniDV, and he later switches to an HD camera that resembles a Canon Vixia HF M30.[9] His "Seattle" bedroom is actually a set that was constructed on a film studio stage in Cape Town.[9] Due to vehicles driving on the left side of the road and having steering wheels on the right side in South Africa, American-style vehicles had to be shipped in for the production.[9] DVD dailies were provided to the director and cinematographer by the Cape Town firm HD Hub.[9]

According to Josh Trank, Max Landis was banned from set during production and Trank has not spoken to him since 2012. Trank confirmed this on Twitter in light of Landis' sexual and emotional abuse accusations.[13]

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Release

Chronicle opened in 2,907 theaters in the United States and Canada on February 3, 2012.[14] Box office watchers expected the film to gross $15 million for its opening weekend, the Super Bowl weekend, while Fox projected to receive around $8 million.[15] By its first day the film had earned an estimated $8.65 million[15] and finished the weekend as the top film with $22 million, surpassing The Woman in Black ($21 million) and The Grey ($9.5 million)[14] to become the fourth-highest Super Bowl debut.[14] Chronicle opened as a number one hit internationally, opening in 33 foreign markets such as Australia, China, and the United Kingdom, where it earned the most with $3.5 million.[16] The film grossed $64.6 million in the United States and Canada, and $62 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $126.6 million.[3] Chronicle was released on DVD and Blu-ray Disc on May 15, 2012. The film was released on DVD and a special "Lost Footage" edition for Blu-ray, which contains additional footage that was not shown in theaters.

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Reception

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Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film has an approval rating of 85% based on 184 reviews and an average rating of 7.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Chronicle transcends its found-footage gimmick with a smart script, fast-paced direction, and engaging performances from the young cast."[17] On Metacritic, the film has a weighted average score of 69 out of 100 based on reviews from 31 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[18] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[19]

Chicago Sun-Times film critic Roger Ebert gave the film three and a half stars out of four, saying, "From [the] deceptively ordinary beginning, Josh Trank's Chronicle grows into an uncommonly entertaining movie that involves elements of a superhero origin story, a science-fiction fantasy and a drama about a disturbed teenager.”[20] Empire critic Mark Dinning gave the film four stars out of five, saying that it is "a stunning superhero/sci-fi that has appeared out of nowhere to demand your immediate attention."[21] Total Film gave the film a five-star review (denoting 'outstanding'): "Believable then bad-ass, it isn't wholly original but it does brim with emotion, imagination and modern implication."[22] Peter Travers of Rolling Stone wrote: "Despite a gimmicky premise, Chronicle fuels its action with characters you can laugh with, understand and even take to heart."[23] Peter Debruge of Variety wrote: "Unlike other mock documentaries, which unconvincingly pass themselves off as real, Chronicle cleverly embraces the format as shorthand for a new kind of naturalism, inviting audiences to suspend disbelief and join in the fantasy of being able to do anything with their minds."[24] Todd McCarthy of The Hollywood Reporter called it "A clever twist on superpowers and hand-held filmmaking that stumbles before the ending."[25]

On the negative side, Andrew Schenker of Slant Magazine gave the film two stars out of four, saying that the film, "offers up little more than a tired morality play about the dangers of power, rehashing stale insights about the narcissism of the documentary impulse."[26][27]

Awards

The film was nominated for Best Science Fiction Film at 39th Saturn Awards, but lost to The Avengers.

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Future

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Following its successful release, steps toward production of a sequel were taken. Fox hired Landis to write the script for it, but the involvement of Trank as director was unclear.[28][29] It was reported in October 2012 that Fox was not happy with the script,[30] but in April 2013, Landis said that Fox liked the script—which would be darker in tone—and production was moving along.[31] However, in July 2013, Landis stated that new writers had taken over to write the film,[32] and in March 2014, Fox hired Jack Stanley to write.[33]

Trank commented in 2020 that following the experience of making Chronicle, he was never on board with a sequel. While he thought the sequel script was "fine", he felt that it had "nothing to do with why I wanted to do" the original film, and he did what he could to stall progress on it. "I really didn't ever want to see Chronicle 2 happen. That was my worst nightmare. First of all, I'm not doing it. Second, if somebody else does it, then you know it's gonna be a piece of shit."[34]

In August 2021, a female-led sequel was officially announced by producer John Davis. It will be set 10 years after the events of the first film and deal with topics such as fake news and coverups.[35]

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See also

  • Carrie, the first published novel by Stephen King that follows a telekinetic teenage girl.
  • Akira, a manga series that involves a teen boy gaining telekinesis.
  • Modern Problems, a 1981 dark comedy film where a man is granted the power of telekinesis after being exposed to nuclear waste.

References

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