Steven Spielberg He knew lightning would not strike twice within its frame outside the Earth.
“I wasn't I would love to make a sequel.” Hollywood Observer.
“I toyed with it a little bit — just a little bit to see if (I could) think of a story — and the only thing I could think of was a book written by someone who wrote the book in whose name The Green Planet, which was all going to take place in E.T.’s house,” she said, referring to To William Kotzwinkle's 1985 publication, which continued the ET story from 1982.
“We were all going to be able to go to ET's house and see how she lived. But it was better as a novel than I think it was as a movie.”
Spielberg, who made the Oscar-winning film, “And others outside the Earth,” Early in his career, he said when sequel discussions began, he didn't have much traction in the industry. “This was a real victory. It's hard, because I didn't have any rights. Before 'E.T.,' I had some rights, but I didn't have a lot of rights,” he explained.
“I didn't have kind of what we call a 'freeze,' where you can prevent a studio from making a sequel because you control the freeze on sequels, remakes and other ancillary uses of the IP. I didn't have that. I got it after 'E.T.' Because of its success.”
Barrymore, who filmed the film when she was 6 and 7 years old, told Spielberg that she remembered him being against a follow-up film from the beginning.
“I remember you saying, 'We're not making a sequel to 'E.T.' I think I was eight. I remember being like, 'Okay, that's a bummer, but I totally get it,'” Barrymore recalled. “I thought it was a smart choice. I get it very much. Where do we go from here? They'll compare it to the First States and leave something perfect alone in isolation open to scrutiny.”
“I have no intention of seeing ET anywhere outside this proscenium,” Spielberg said from the concert hall at 92.
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Although the film was previously the highest grossing film of all time, in the more than four decades since the film premiered, Spielberg has spoken at length about one of his regrets with the feature.
“When ET was re-released (in 2002), I actually numbered 5 shots as ET went from being a doll to a digital doll, also replaced the gun when the FBI runs up on the truck, and now they are walkie-gone.star wars“And all the digital enhancements to 'A New Hope' that George (Lucas) put in place, moving forward, because marketing at Universal thought we needed something to get the audience back, watching the movie so I didn't touch a few(s) in the movie,” he said. Screen rant years ago.
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“Social media wasn't as deep as it is today, but what was just starting out was, you know, a loud negative voice broke out, 'How can you ruin our favorite childhood movie by taking guns away and putting communications devices in their hands among other things? . So, I learned a big lesson and this is the last time I decided to mess with the past. Or changes. “