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Cocoon

 
Movies:

Cocoon

  • Director: Ron Howard
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Science Fiction
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Comedy
  • Themes: Benign Aliens, Immortality, Golden Years
  • Main Cast: Don Ameche, Wilford Brimley, Hume Cronyn, Brian Dennehy, Jack Gilford, Steve Guttenberg, Maureen Stapleton, Jessica Tandy, Gwen Verdon
  • Release Year: 1985
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 117 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG13

Plot

Cocoon is a warm-hearted science-fiction fable that avoids becoming overly corny thanks to the performances of its mostly senior cast. Wilford Brimley, Don Ameche, and Hume Cronyn are three old-timers who sneak out of their retirement home a few days a week to swim in the large pool on an abandoned estate next door. When the threesome begins to feel curiously younger, they discover strange pods on the floor of the pool. These pods are alien cocoons, which are being pulled from the ocean by a team of extra-terrestrials in human form led by Walter (Brian Dennehy), who has hired a local charter operator (Steve Guttenberg) to assist him. Walter explains to the seniors that energy from the cocoons is restoring youth and vigor to the older men every time they go for a dip. The aliens agree to let the men continue to swim in secret, but of course they can't keep their discovery to themselves. Soon the pool is swarming with retirees, with the notable exception of Bernie (Jack Gilford), who has no interest in prolonging life any longer than necessary. The aliens ultimately prepare to return home and offer the retirees eternal life if they leave Earth behind as well. Director Ron Howard treats his old-timers with care and dignity, and they respond with deeply sympathetic performances (Ameche won the Best Supporting Actor Oscar); the film's science-fiction trappings ably sustain the story's all-too-human ruminations on youth, aging, life, and death. ~ Don Kaye, All Movie Guide

Review

After making a directorial name for himself with Disney's Splash in 1984, Ron Howard came back a year later with this uplifting extraterrestrial/fountain of youth picture. With a very talented (and mostly geriatric) cast that included Hume Cronin, Don Ameche and Wilford Brimley, the film presents a positive outlook on the eternal questions posed by life and death. Cocoon seamlessly combines playful and sorrowful elements as it ponders the puzzling dilemmas of the aged. The supporting cast members, most notably Steve Guttenberg and Brian Denehy, are stronly glued to the spirit of the film. The expansive scope and focus of the film is hammered home by the insightful performances of Cronin, Ameche and Brimley. Although peaceful aliens fell out of vogue in 1990s cinema, Cocoon's E.T.-esque qualities still resonate. ~ Mike DiBella, All Movie Guide

Cast

Herta Ware - Rose Lefkowitz; Tahnee Welch - Kitty; Barret Oliver - David; Linda Harrison - Susan; Tyrone Power, Jr. - Pillsbury; Clint Howard - John Dexter; Charles Lampkin - Pops; Mike Nomad - Doc; Rance Howard; Wendy J. Cooke - Alien; Jorge Gil - Lou Pine; Jean Speegle Howard - Woman; James Ritz - DMV Clerk; Mark Simpson - Coast Guard; Russ Wheeler - Doctor; Clarence Thomas - Policeman; Harold Bergman - Reverend; Fred Broderson - Dock Master; Mark Cheresnick - Salvatore; Irving Krone - Jasper; Pamela Prescott - Alien; Charles Rainsbury - Smiley; Dinah Sue Rowley - Alien; Ted Science - Policeman; Bette Shoor - Realtor; Gabriella Sinclair - Alien; Robert Slacum, Jr. - Coast Guard; Cindi Vicino - Teller; Charles Voelker - Band Leader; Ivy Thayer - Waitress

Credit

Robert Doudell - Associate Producer, Penny Perry - Casting, Rick Baker - Consultant/advisor, Aggie Guerard Rodgers - Costume Designer, Mort Schwartz - Costume Designer, Ron Howard - Director, Daniel Hanley - Editor, Michael Hill - Editor, James Horner - Composer (Music Score), Cruz Sembello - Songwriter, Kevin Haney - Makeup, Robert Norin - Makeup, Bob Norin - Makeup, Jack T. Collis - Production Designer, Jordan Klein - Cinematographer, Donald Peterman - Cinematographer, David Brown - Producer, Lili Fini Zanuck - Producer, Richard D. Zanuck - Producer, Jim Duffy - Set Designer, Linda Henrikson - Set Designer, Rick Baker - Special Effects, Greg Cannon - Special Effects, Ken Ralston - Special Effects, Richard S. Church - Sound/Sound Designer, Ted Grossman - Stunts, Tom Benedek - Screenwriter, Dennis Klein - Screenwriter, David Saperstein - Book Author

Similar Movies

*batteries not included; Close Encounters of the Third Kind; E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial; Starman; Contact
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Wikipedia: Cocoon (film)
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Cocoon

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Ron Howard
Produced by David Brown
Richard Zanuck
Written by Novel:
David Saperstein
Screenplay:
Tom Benedek
Starring Don Ameche
Wilford Brimley
Hume Cronyn
Jessica Tandy
Maureen Stapleton
Gwen Verdon
Steve Guttenberg
Brian Dennehy
Jack Gilford
Herta Ware
Barret Oliver
Music by James Horner
Cinematography Donald Peterman
Editing by Daniel P. Hanley
Mike Hill
Distributed by 20th Century Fox
Release date(s) June 21, 1985
Running time 117 minutes
Country USA
Language English
Followed by Cocoon: The Return

Cocoon is a 1985 science fiction film directed by Ron Howard about a group of elderly people who are rejuvenated by aliens. The movie starred Don Ameche, Wilford Brimley, Hume Cronyn, Brian Dennehy, Jack Gilford, Steve Guttenberg, Maureen Stapleton, Jessica Tandy, Gwen Verdon, Herta Ware, Tahnee Welch, and Linda Harrison. The film is loosely based on the novel by David Saperstein.

The movie was filmed in and around St. Petersburg, Florida: locations included the St Petersburg Shuffleboard Club, The Coliseum, and Snell Arcade buildings. The film earned two Academy Awards.

It spawned one sequel, Cocoon: The Return, in which almost all of the original cast reprised their roles.

Contents

Plot

Around 10,000 years ago, a group of peaceful alien lifeforms, from the planet Anterea, formed an outpost on the planet Earth on an island known to mankind as the mythical civilization Atlantis. According to legend, this outpost sank due to an earthquake, and in order for them to leave, twenty members remained behind so that the rest would have enough lifeforce to return to their home planet.

Eventually, a group of four Antereans returns to pick them up. They disguise themselves as humans, rent a house with a swimming pool, and charge this pool with lifeforce, so that the cocooned Antereans can sustain enough energy to survive the trip home.

Meanwhile, Ben, Arthur and Joe, three local residents from a retirement home (played by Wilford Brimley, Don Ameche, and Hume Cronyn respectively) go to swim in the pool secretly and take in some of the lifeforce, which causes them to feel younger, stronger, and happier again. They are caught, but are eventually given permission by the head Anterean, Walter (played by Brian Dennehy), to use the pool. Bernie, one of the other elderly people from the home (played by Jack Gilford) well-known for his extreme pessimism, who also knows of the nature of the aliens, obstinately refuses to use the healing power that he and his dying spouse need, believing it to be unnatural to extend or interfere human life in this manner. He carelessly reveals the secret of the pool's rejuvenating power one day by confronting his "pool" friends out loud about it during a group dinner at the home and Joe in anger tries to attack him putting down two orderlies in the process, but this results in all of the other elderly residents rushing off and breaking in on to the Antereans' property, and barging their way into the pool. Walter, infuriated, ejects the retirement home inhabitants, but as too many people have been in the pool at one time (and some of them carelessly tampered with a few of the cocoons), all the life force has been drained, and the Antereans cannot take along the cocoons anymore; in fact, at least one of the cocoon inhabitants dies as a result of the loss of the pool's nourishing energy.

That night, Bernie's wife dies and he takes her to the pool, tenderly splashing water over her face to try to revive her, but Walter explains that the power of the pool is gone and that there is nothing he can do to bring Bernie's wife back to life. With the help of Ben, Arthur and Joe, the Antereans return the cocoons to the ruins of Atlantis. Because the Antereans are unable to take the cocoons with them to their home planet, they offer the spare places aboard their spaceship to the old people, and, with the exception of Bernie, who chooses to live out his natural life on Earth, most of the main cast return with the Antereans to their homeworld, where they will never grow ill, never age and never die.

In popular culture

  • In the 1989 film, Say Anything, John Cusack's character Lloyd Dobler attempts to show a group of elderly nursing home residents Cocoon.
  • In the episode "My Five Stages" (Season 5, Ep. 13) of the sitcom Scrubs, J.D. describes what death will be like for a patient, to which Dr. Hedrick replies, "That was the ending to...Cocoon."
  • In one episode of the American sitcom The Golden Girls (Season 3, Ep. 21, "Rose's Big Adventure"), the girls hire an elderly Italian named Vincenzo to remodel their garage into a guest room, and Vincenzo employs his own crew of elderly workers (some even with walkers). Dorothy, upon first seeing the crewmen, remarks that the crew looks "like the road company of Cocoon." Cocoon stars Jack Gilford and Herta Ware also made (separate) appearances in later episodes.
  • In the episode "The One Where Joey Moves Out" of the sitcom "Friends", Jack Gellar, when talking about another character Richard having a younger girl (which is his daughter Monica Gellar), says: "He's like a new man. It's like a scene from Cocoon." This is ironic because Courtney Cox Arquette who plays Monica Gellar stars Sara in Cocoon's sequel.

Awards

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