With ‘Super 8,’ J.J. Abrams & Co. give ‘Spielberg Kids’ their comeback

From the Orlando Sentinel:

In the early 1980s, Steven Spielberg — as a director and producer — served up gangs of daring, resourceful, fun-loving moppets who came to define their generation. He became a Norman Rockwell of the big screen, presenting American suburbia as Americana redefined – fresh-faced kids of every stripe, working together to find the treasure, fend off poltergeists, stand up to bullies or save the alien.

Mention “Spielberg kids” and “I think of the young people in ‘E.T. The Extra Terrestrial,” says the critic and film scholar Leonard Maltin, “suburban kids who have a wide-eyed curiosity about life and a willingness to explore.”

Director J.J. Abrams says that phrase conjures up “the idea that anything was possible, life was limitless. Those were things Spielberg films demonstrated again and again and I loved that.”

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Spielberg’s kids are back on screens next weekend. “Super 8,” the new film from J.J. “Star Trek” Abrams, was inspired by Spielberg and produced by Spielberg. It is Abrams’ homage to the master of making exciting, edgy entertainment for and about kids.

“J.J. was a Spielberg kid, inspired by Steven,” says Elle Fanning, 13, one of the child actors in “Super 8.” “He looks up to him so much, and when Steven was on the set, he was like his mentor.”

“J.J. got advice from Steven and from Rob Reiner (“Stand by Me”) on how to choose the kids and how to handle the kids,” says Joel Courtney, 15, Fanning’s co-star. Abrams, Courtney says, took Spielberg’s advice on directing kids to heart. “He knew when to crack jokes and what jokes to crack. There were six kids on set—Elle and us six guys. J.J. was like the seventh kid.”

Joel Courtney
“Harry Potter” & “Twilight” expected to invade this weekend’s MTV Movie Awards

From The Examiner:

It also wouldn’t be a “MTV Movie Awards” event without star power and this year will have two of the industry’s most sought-after directors on hand; J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg. It also helps that the pair have a movie coming out next Friday. The duo will take the stage along with “Super 8’s” young stars Elle Fanning and Joel Courtney to show off an exclusive look at the movie that’s been kept very much under wraps (as usual with Abrams).

Joel Courtney
Flickering Myth Movie Review

From Flickering Myth Movie Review:

Joe Lamb (Joel Courtney) and his father Jackson (Kyle Chandler) are in a traumatic state in the wake of an accident at the town steel mill that killed Mrs Lamb, mother and wife of the family. This trauma heightens the contrast between Jackson, one of the town deputy’s and Joe the young artist whose relationship is left in the void made by the death in the family. Joel Courtney’s performance as Joe is soulful and heartbreaking but terrifically sweet. His look infuses the baby face of Sean Astin in The Goonies and the great wisdom conveyed in the eyes of Henry Thomas as Elliot in E.T. Since the passing of his mother Joe carries her locket around and he turns to holding it as the only form of comfort in the varying extreme situations that he and the group face. Joel’s acting in the scene after the wreck was so affective that it nearly had me weeping.

Joel Courtney