Snakes on a Plane
Snakes on a Plane | |
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File:Movieposter 5262.jpg | |
Directed by | David R. Ellis |
Written by | Sheldon Turner Sebastian Gutierrez John Heffernan David Loucka |
Produced by | Craig Berenson Stokely Chaffin Toby Emmerich Penny Finkelman Cox Don Granger Justis Greene Jeff Katz Gary Levinsohn Sandra Rabins George Waud David J. Taylor |
Starring | Samuel L. Jackson Nathan Phillips Mark Houghton |
Cinematography | Adam Greenberg |
Edited by | Howard E. Smith |
Distributed by | New Line Cinema |
Release dates | August 18, 2006 (US) |
Language | English |
Budget | $30,000,000 |
Snakes on a Plane is an action/horror film scheduled to be released by New Line Cinema on August 18, 2006. The David R. Ellis-helmed film was written by John Heffernan and Sheldon Turner and stars Samuel L. Jackson. Although it is now in post-production, and the film wrapped up principal photography in August of 2005, five days of additional re-shooting have been done to bring the movie from a PG-13 rating to an R rating.
Plot
Template:Spoiler Neville Flynn (Samuel L. Jackson) and Sean Jones (Nathan Phillips), FBI agents, escort John Saunders (Mark Houghton), a former Mafia member, to testify in a highly publicized case. In the course of a flight between Hawaii and California, an assassin pays airport security to sneak a time-release crate of 400 snakes of various sizes on board in the hope of killing the witness.[1] Template:Endspoilers
Early publicity
The film generated much pre-release interest on the Internet due to its title and premise. Much of the publicity Snakes on a Plane has received is due to a blog entry made by screenwriter Josh Friedman, who had been offered a chance to work on the script.[2] The casting of popular actor Samuel L. Jackson further increased anticipation. Ronny Yu was originally slated to direct and spoke enthusiastically about the project before leaving due to budget disputes and "creative differences." He was replaced by David R. Ellis.
At one point, the film's working title was altered to Pacific Air Flight 121. In August 2005, a perturbed Samuel L. Jackson told an interviewer, "We're totally changing that back. That's the only reason I took the job: I read the title."[3] In another interview in early 2006, Jackson claimed that once he learned about the movie title being changed he said: "What are you doing here? It's not Gone with the Wind. It's not On the Waterfront. It's Snakes on a Plane!"[4] The film was soon reverted to the working title of Snakes on a Plane on March 2 2006.
The film was featured in Wired Magazine as "The best worst film of 2006," despite being given the "award" in January 2006, based only on the title and concept of the movie.
On March 16, 2006, New Line Cinema publicly announced a contest on TagWorld[5] and a website promoting the film.[6]
The contest allowed artists on TagWorld to have their music featured on the movie, whose release date was set for August 18, 2006.
In recognition of the unprecedented Internet buzz for what had been a minor movie in their 2006 line-up, New Line Cinema ordered five days of additional shooting in early March 2006[7] (principal photography had wrapped in September 2005). While re-shoots normally imply problems with a film, the producers opted to add new scenes to the film to take the movie from PG-13 into R-rated territory and bring the movie in line with the growing fan expectation. Among the reported additions is a line that originated as an Internet parody of Samuel L. Jackson's traditional movie persona: "That's IT! I've had it with these motherfucking snakes on this motherfucking plane!".
The May 16, 2006 episode of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart contained a reference to Snakes on a Plane under the guise of the topic of Bush's immigration speech.
Internet meme
Snakes on a Plane quickly became an Internet meme soon after Josh Friedman's blog entry [2] and mentions on several Internet portals. The title inspired bloggers to create songs, apparel, poster art, pages of fan fiction, parody films, mock movie trailers, and even a poker game.
Several independent T-shirt manufacturers have made T-shirts with graphics illustrating various humorous representations of "Snakes on a plane". One depicts a frontal exterior view of a plane cockpit. The pilot and copilot, viewed through the windows, are depicted to be snakes. Another uses vintage road signs to formulate "Snakes + Plane = Snakes on a Plane". A third, with a cartoon representation of Samuel L. Jackson's character Mace Windu from the Star Wars series cutting down snakes with a lightsaber, was pulled, presumably for copyright reasons.
The phrase "Snakes on a Plane" has been used on Internet forums to indicate that a given topic is nonsensical. With creative uses of capital letters, bold or italic text, and punctuation the title has been manipulated to reflect surprise, horror, or absurdity, among other things. The meme is often interspersed with images of Samuel L. Jackson reprising his role as Mace Windu and quoting lines from both the Star Wars series and Pulp Fiction (both starring or prominently featuring Jackson). The slang form "SoaP" is used in place of "Shit happens" or "Oh well, what'cha gonna do?" A flood of S.O.A.P themed songs are now available because of the contest at TagWorld, further feeding the frenzy.
Cast
- Samuel L. Jackson as Neville Flynn
- Nathan Phillips as Sean Jones
- Mark Houghton as John Saunders
- Sunny Mabrey as Tiffany
- Todd Louiso as Price
- Kenan Thompson as Troy
- Bruce James as Ken
- David Koechner as Rick
Trailers
- The first official footage from the film debuted on March 17, 2006. [6] Studio sources have confirmed that this is not the official teaser, merely footage intended to benefit a songwriting contest. [8]
- The official teaser trailer debuted in the previews preceding X-Men 3: The Last Stand
Trivia
- The title image is a reference to the Caduceus, a staff belonging to Hermes in Greek mythology.
- As a non-native species, snakes are illegal to import or to possess in Hawaii, with fines starting at $5,000 and jail time.
- The phrase "Snakes in the cockpit" is used by pilots and refers to the high number of complex tasks they have to accomplish.
References
- ^ Snakes On a Plane, Entertainment Weekly, April 28, 2006
- ^ a b Friedman, Josh (2005). "I find your lack of faith disturbing: Snakes on a Motherfucking Plane". Retrieved 2006-03-18.
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ignored (help) - ^ Mr. Beaks (2005). "Collider Exclusive: 'Snakes' Back on the Plane!". Retrieved 2006-03-17.
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ignored (help) - ^ Wloszczyna, Susan (2006). "'Snakes on a Plane' sssssssays it all". Retrieved 2006-04-18.
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ignored (help) - ^ "TAGWORLD AND NEW LINE CINEMA TEAM FOR SNAKES ON A PLANE SOUNDTRACK CONTEST" (PDF). Retrieved 2006-03-18.
- ^ a b "TagWorld :: snakesonaplane's - Home". Retrieved 2006-03-18.
- ^ Borys Kit (2006). "The Hollywood Reporter.com: Fan frenzy for 'Snakes' is on a different plane". Retrieved 2006-03-24.
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ignored (help) - ^ "Snakes on an Official Trailer (UPDATED)". Retrieved 2006-03-24.
External links
- Official Site
- Snakes on a Blog
- Snakes fan film at The Doomed Planet
- Template:Ymovies title
- Snakes on a Plane at IMDb
- New Line Cinema/TagWorld SoaP Music Contest and Press Release
- Dude -- Snakes on a Plane! from Defamer
- Snakes on a Plane at Overcompensating by Jeffrey Rowland
- Mention in January 2006 issue of Wired magazine
- Interview with Dylan Innes, Production Assistant on Snakes On A Plane
- NPR Story About "Snakes on a Plane"
- NPR Followup Report including a short a musical interlude by the Reverend Jody Hicks.
- USAToday Tech_Space by Angela Gunn
- Previews, Trailers, Posters, Photos at WorstPreviews.com
- CBC Radio story from "The Current" radio program (scroll down to Part 2)
- Snakes on a Plane at Rottentomatoes.com