Goosebumps (film)

Goosebumps is a 2015 American live-action/computer-animated comedy horror film written by Darren Lemke and directed by Rob Letterman. Based on R. L. Stine's children's horror book series of the same name, it follows a teenager who tries to save his town with Stine's help after all the monsters from the Goosebumps franchise begin to escape from their books, wreaking havoc in the real world. The film stars Jack Black, Dylan Minnette, Odeya Rush, Amy Ryan, Ryan Lee, and Jillian Bell.

Goosebumps
Theatrical release poster
Directed byRob Letterman
Produced by
Screenplay byDarren Lemke
Story byScott Alexander
Larry Karaszewski
Based onGoosebumps
by R. L. Stine
Starring
Music byDanny Elfman
CinematographyJavier Aguirresarobe
Edited byJim May
Production
companies
Distributed bySony Pictures Releasing
Release date
  • June 24, 2015 (2015-06-24) (CineEurope)[2]
  • October 16, 2015 (2015-10-16) (United States)
Running time
103 minutes[3]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$58–84 million[4][5]
Box office$158.3 million[5]

The development of a Goosebumps feature film adaptation began in 1998, with Tim Burton attached to direct. After failing to find a script to determine which book to adapt, the project was halted. In early 2008, Columbia Pictures acquired the rights to create a Goosebumps-based film, and the project reentered development. Principal photography lasted from April to July 2014 in Candler Park, Atlanta.

Goosebumps was theatrically released in the United States on October 16, 2015, by Columbia Pictures. The film was a commercial and critical success, with praise for its humor, usage of the Goosebumps characters, and performances (particularly that of Black and Minnette)[6] and grossed $158 million against its $84 million budget.[7] A sequel, Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween, was released on October 12, 2018.

Plot

After his father's recent death, Zach Cooper and his mother Gale move from New York City to the peaceful town of Madison, Delaware. While settling in the neighborhood, Zach meets his neighbor Hannah, but her overprotective father warns him to avoid contact with them. The next morning, at Madison High School, where Gale works as vice-principal, Zach befriends Champ, a clumsy student. That night, Hannah invites Zach to an abandoned amusement park where they start to befriend. However, when they return home, Hannah's father warns again that Zach stay away or something bad will happen.

The following night, Gale leaves to supervise a dance at the school, leaving Zach with his aunt Lorraine Conyers. Fearing that Hannah is in danger, Zach tricks her father into going to the local police station while he and Champ enter in his home. While investigating, both find a bookshelf with numerous books from the Goosebumps franchise, each mysteriously locked. In response to Champ's curiosity, Zach opens The Abominable Snowman of Pasadena, releasing the book's titular monster. With Hannah's help, they chase the creature to a local ice rink where Hannah's father appears and encloses the monster again the book.

Hannah's father unwittingly reveals that he is Goosebumps creator, R. L. Stine. Back home, the group encounters Slappy the Dummy from the Night of the Living Dummy books. As revenge for being locked up for years, Slappy burns his book and flees with all the others. Stine and the kids are attacked by the lawn gnomes from Revenge of the Lawn Gnomes, being forced to escape. Slappy begins releasing several other monsters from their books, causing panic and destruction around Madison. Meanwhile, Lorraine is attacked by Fifi the Vampire Poodle from Please Don't Feed the Vampire!.

Zach implores Stine to write a new book that can lock all the monsters back, but it can only be done with a supernatural typewriter in the school. Along the way, the group is attacked by Brent Green from My Best Friend Is Invisible and the giant praying mantis from A Shocker on Shock Street, forcing them to hide in the local supermarket. Will Blake from The Werewolf of Fever Swamp chases them to the parking lot where he is run over by Lorraine, who survived Fifi's attack.

Stine and the kids go through a cemetery, where Zach realizes that Hannah shines in the moonlight before being attacked by ghouls from Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls. When they arrive at the school, Zach confronts Stine in private; he reveals that his "daughter" is Hannah Fairchild from The Ghost Next Door, and that he created her to face his loneliness, although Hannah is unaware of this. Stine finds the typewriter and begins writing a book based on the events around them, while Zach and Champ try to warn everyone, but nobody believes them until the mantis attacks the building. Slappy releases the rest of the monsters from the books and they storm the school. Despite the students and school staff's efforts to keep the monsters out, they break in nonetheless. Slappy finds Stine and breaks his fingers with the typewriter's case before he can finish the book.

To ensure everyone's safety, Stine and the kids trick them into following a school bus rigged with explosives while they board another bus to the abandoned amusement park. After realizing the group's ruse, Slappy tracks down and confronts them, he then releases the Blob from The Blob That Ate Everyone as the other monsters arrive at the park. Stine confronts the creature but is devoured while Zach, Hannah and Champ climb a ferris wheel to finish the book. However, the mantis causes it to collapse and roll towards the forest. Zach refuses to open the book, because Hannah will also be sucked in, but she reveals that she knew the truth about herself all along. Hannah opens the book, sucking Slappy and all the monsters inside, saying goodbye to Zach with a kiss before accepting her fate.

Some time later, Stine starts working as a new teacher at Madison High School while starting to date Lorraine. After school, Stine reveals to Zach that he re-wrote Hannah back into reality with a new book. When Zach and Hannah leave school together, Stine burns Hannah's book, making her permanently real. However, when Stine is about to leave school, he looks at his typewriter writing by itself. To his horror, Brent Green was omitted in imprisonment, beginning to write a new Goosebumps book entitled The Invisible Boy's Revenge.

Cast

Jack Black, Dylan Minnette, and Odeya Rush starred in the film as R. L. Stine, Zach, and Hannah.
  • Jack Black as R. L. Stine, a single father with a secret past,[8] whom Hannah lives with.
    • Black also voices Slappy the Dummy, a living ventriloquist dummy from the Night of the Living Dummy books,[9] (while Avery Lee Jones and Jake McKinnon provided the puppeteer work) and Brent Green from My Best Friend is Invisible.
    • R. L. Stine makes a cameo appearance as Mr. Black, the new drama teacher at Madison High School that Black's Stine encounters in the hallway. He was credited as "Hallway Player".[10]
  • Dylan Minnette as Zachary "Zach" Cooper,[11] R. L. Stine's new neighbor.
  • Odeya Rush as Hannah Stine,[12] Stine's adopted daughter, Zach's new neighbor and love interest, secretly Hannah Fairchild from The Ghost Next Door.[13]
  • Amy Ryan as Gale Cooper, Zach's mother who becomes the vice-principal at Madison High School.[14]
  • Ryan Lee as Champ, Zach's new friend.[15]
  • Jillian Bell as Lorraine Conyers, Zach's aunt and Gale's sister.[14]
  • Halston Sage as Taylor, a popular student at Madison High School whom Champ has a crush on and will become his love interest.[16]
  • Ken Marino as Coach Carr, the gym teacher at Madison High School who hits on Gale.[17]
  • Timothy Simons as Officer Stevens, a police officer that works for the Madison Police Department.[18]
  • Amanda Lund as Officer Brooks, a police officer trainee that works for the Madison Police Department and is partnered with Officer Stevens.[18]
  • Steven Krueger as Davidson, a popular student at Madison High School.[19]
  • Keith Arthur Bolden as Principal Garrison, the principal of Madison High School.
  • Karan Soni as Mr. Rooney
  • Kumail Nanjiani as Foreman

Production

Development

The popularity of the Fox Kids' Goosebumps TV series generated an interest among fans for a full-feature film based upon the show. In 1998, Tim Burton was attached to direct a Goosebumps film for 20th Century Fox. Chris Meledandri, the president of Fox Family Films at the time, said, "I think you'll see us tackling a scale of story that would be prohibitive to do on the small screen".[20] However, the film did not materialize since they could not find a script they liked or determine which book or monster to adapt.[21] In 2008, Columbia Pictures acquired rights to create a Goosebumps film.[22] Neal Moritz and Deborah Forte, the latter of whom had previously worked on the Goosebumps television series in the 1990s, were chosen to produce the film.[23] Screenwriting team Scott Alexander and Larry Karaszewski were hired as screenwriters,[24] and wrote the original script for the film. The duo decided against adapting any one book in the series, feeling the individual books in the series were too short. Thinking of ways to create a universe where all the creatures in the books could live together, they elected to do a fake biographical film where R. L. Stine writes a book and the monsters within it become real.[25] In 2010, Carl Ellsworth was chosen to write the screenplay.[26] On January 14, 2012, it was reported that a new draft of the screenplay would be written by Darren Lemke; Lemke co-wrote the screenplays for Shrek Forever After and Bryan Singer's Jack the Giant Slayer.[27] In November 2012, Stine expressed pessimism about the prospect of the film, saying that he would believe that a film can be based on his Goosebumps series when he sees it. He mentioned Where the Wild Things Are being adapted into a film almost 50 years after publication.[28]

Casting

Jack Black "fighting" Slappy and his fellow monsters at the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con International.
The film marks the third collaboration between Jack Black and director Rob Letterman, who previously worked together on Shark Tale and Gulliver's Travels

In September 2013, it was reported that Jack Black was in talks to "play a Stine-like author whose scary characters literally leap off the page, forcing him to hide from his own creepy creations".[29] Black stated that he tried to make the character "more of a sort of curmudgeonly dark, brooding beast master". He also said that he attempted to approach this film the same way he does others, trying to "make it as funny as possible".[30] Black met with R. L. Stine to get his consent for the film, but determined that his character could not be too similar to the real one; Black explained that he needed the character to be more sinister.[31] Rob Letterman was chosen as the director, reuniting him with Black, after working together on Shark Tale and Gulliver's Travels.[29]

It was announced in February 2014 that Dylan Minnette had been cast as Zach Cooper,[32] and Odeya Rush as Stine-like author's daughter, Hannah.[8] On February 26, 2014, it was announced that the film would be released on March 23, 2016.[33][34] On April 4, 2014, it was announced that Amy Ryan and Jillian Bell had joined the cast as Cooper's mother and aunt respectively.[14] On April 10, 2014, Ken Marino joined the cast as Coach Carr.[17] On April 28, 2014, Halston Sage joined the cast.[16] On May 1, 2014, the film's release date was moved up to August 7, 2015.[35] Stine stated on May 20, 2014, that he was going to make a cameo appearance in the film.[10]

The film was promoted at the 2014 San Diego Comic-Con International where Jack Black and Rob Letterstein interacted with Slappy the Dummy. Slappy even brought some of his "friends" out consisting of the Bog Monster from How to Kill a Monster, two Graveyard Ghouls from Attack of the Graveyard Ghouls, Cronby the Troll and a Mulgani from Deep in the Jungle of Doom, the Lord High Executioner from A Night in Terror Tower, Murder the Clown from A Nightmare on Clown Street, the Mummy of Prince Khor-Ru from Return of the Mummy, Captain Long Ben One-Leg from Creep from the Deep, Professor Shock from The Creepy Creations of Professor Shock, Count Nightwing from Vampire Breath, a Creep from Calling All Creeps!, a Body Squeezer from Invasion of the Body Squeezers: Part 1 and Part 2, Carly Beth Caldwell's Haunted Mask form from The Haunted Mask, a Scarecrow from The Scarecrow Walks at Midnight, and a Pumpkin Head from Attack of the Jack-O'-Lanterns. When Jack Black tells Slappy that it is him that Slappy wants, Slappy instructs the Lord High Executioner, Murder the Clown, and Professor Shock to take Jack Black outside to his car. As the monsters leave, Slappy tells Rob some of his pitches causing Rob to leave as well.[36][37]

Some monsters due for an appearance in the film were cut for budgetary reasons, but Letterman stated that the crew tried to choose the monsters most appropriate to the story. Letterman also stated that he tried to combine both humor and horror in the film, commenting that "[t]he books themselves are legitimately scary, but they're legitimately funny, and we try to capture that".[31] In November 2014, the release date was moved back to April 15, 2016.[38] In January 2015, the release date was pushed forward to October 16, 2015.[39][40]

Filming

In mid-April 2014, a crew of six spent three days gathering visual data for the film in downtown Madison, Georgia. The crew used a theodolite to collect points in three-dimensional space to complete a detailed survey of the city. The visual data was used to create a CGI background of the downtown.[41] Neal Moritz and Rob Letterman stated that Madison was their first choice for the film after scouting the city.[42] Principal photography on the film began on April 23, 2014 in Candler Park in Atlanta;[43] they were also set to shoot the film in Conyers and Madison.[8] On May 19, filming was taking place in the streets of Madison,[44] with 480 Goosebumps crew members working in Madison and Morgan County.[42] Principal photography ended on July 16, 2014.[45] A stretch of Dawsonville Highway in Georgia was intermittently closed to film a car travelling up and down multiple bridges for the film.[46]

Music and soundtrack

Goosebumps (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
Soundtrack album / Film score by
ReleasedOctober 9, 2015
Recorded2015
GenreSoundtrack, orchestral
Length64:07
LabelSony Classical Records
ProducerDanny Elfman
Danny Elfman film scores chronology
Avengers: Age of Ultron
(2015)
Goosebumps (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
(2015)
Alice Through the Looking Glass
(2016)
Singles from Goosebumps (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack)
  1. "Racketeer"
    Released: 2015
  2. "Everybody Have Fun Tonight"
    Released: 2015
  3. "Better Than the Rest"
    Released: 2015

The soundtrack for the film, featuring original music composed by Danny Elfman, was released on CD on October 23, 2015, by Sony Classical Records. The digital version was released by Madison Gate Records the week before.[47]

Songs featured in the film

Release

Premiere

Goosebumps had its world premiere screening on June 24, 2015, at the CineEurope film distributors' trade fair in Barcelona, Spain, where the film was presented by Black on stage.[2]

Home media

Goosebumps was released on Blu-ray (2D and 3D) and DVD on January 26, 2016, and includes deleted scenes, a blooper reel, interviews with the cast and crew, an alternate opening, an alternate ending, and a featurette about Slappy.[48]

Reception

Box office

Goosebumps grossed $80.1 million in North America and $70.1 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $150.2 million, against a budget of $58 million.[5]

In the United States and Canada, pre-release trackings indicated the film would open to between $20–31 million at 3,501 theaters. However, Sony was more conservative, and projected the film to take between $12–15 million.[49][50][51] The film opened on October 16, 2015 alongside Bridge of Spies, Crimson Peak, and Woodlawn, however box office pundits noted that it did not face serious competition except for The Martian, which was entering its third week.[7] It made $600,000 from its early Thursday night screenings at 2,567 theaters, and $7.4 million on its opening day.[52][53] In its opening weekend the film grossed $23.5 million, beating studio projections and finishing first at the box office. It marked the fourth Sony film to reign at the top of the box office during the fall. Previously the studio scored No. 1 spots over the last seven weeks with War Room, The Perfect Guy and Hotel Transylvania 2.[54][55] Families represented the largest demographics with 60%, followed by under 25 with 59% and male/female ratio was split evenly at 50/50.[54]

Outside North America, Goosebumps was released in a total of 66 countries.[56] Mexico has so far represented its largest opening as well as the biggest market in terms of total earnings with $7.1 million followed by Australia ($6.3 million) and the United Kingdom and Ireland ($6 million).[56][57] It opened at No. 1 in the United Kingdom and Ireland ($3.9 million). In the United Kingdom, preview takings helped Goosebumps top the box office ahead of the more heavily hyped Dad's Army.[58] In Russia, it opened at No. 2 behind In the Heart of the Sea with $1.27 million.[59] Furthermore, it opened in France with $1 million.[57]

Critical reception

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 78% based on 161 reviews, with an average rating of 6.38/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Goosebumps boasts more than enough of its spooky source material's kid-friendly charm to make up for some slightly scattershot humor and a hurried pace."[60] On Metacritic, the film has a score of 60 out of 100 based on 29 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[61] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[62]

Kevin P. Sullivan of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a B rating, citing at the end of his review: "Nothing about Goosebumps is revolutionary—at a certain point you may realize that it's as if Nickelodeon produced Cabin in the Woods—but it's a never-boring trip to a world, where stories and imagination are powerful tools, that just might inspire kids to do the scariest thing of all: pick up a book".[63]

Accolades

Award Category Recipient Result
Las Vegas Film Critics Society[64] Best Family Film Nominated
Visual Effects Society Outstanding Visual Effects in a Special Venue Project Jason Schugardt, Mike Wigart, Alex Harding, Daniel Mars Nominated
Saturn Awards[65] Best Fantasy Film Nominated

Sequel

On September 2, 2015, it was reported that a sequel was in the planning stages, with Sony looking for a screenwriter.[66] On January 17, 2017, a January 26, 2018, release date was set and Rob Letterman confirmed that he is to return as director for the sequel.[67] On February 6, 2017, it was announced that the film's release date has been delayed to September 21, 2018, taking the place of the release date previously held by Hotel Transylvania 3: Summer Vacation.[68] In May 2017, the title was revealed to be Goosebumps: Horror Land.[69] It was confirmed that Jack Black will reprise his role as R.L. Stine. It was also confirmed that Odeya Rush would return as Hannah Fairchild, R.L Stine's daughter from the first film.[70] However, it was confirmed that the sequel will not feature any of the original cast. In November 2017, Rob Lieber was tapped to pen the script.[71] Shortly after Ari Sandel was announced as Letterman's replacement as director. Variety reported that two scripts have been written. One script has Black reprising his role, while the other has Black cut out entirely.[72] In December 2017, the sequel's release date was pushed to October 12, 2018.[73] Production began on February 25, 2018,[74] Jack Black will return in the sequel, making his characters the only one from the previous film to return.[75] New cast members include Madison Iseman, Ben O'Brien, Caleel Harris, and Jeremy Ray Taylor.[76] Ken Jeong, Chris Parnell, and Wendi McLendon-Covey joined the following month.[77] Filming officially began on March 7, 2018, and in April 2018 the new title was announced as Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween.[78]

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