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Paul (film)

Paul is a 2011 comic science fiction road


Paul
film[4] directed by Greg Mottola from a
screenplay by Simon Pegg and Nick Frost.
Starring Pegg and Frost, with the voice and
motion capture of Seth Rogen as the titular
character, the film follows two science
fiction geeks who come across an alien.
Together, they help the alien escape from
the Secret Service agents who are pursuing
him so that he can return to his home
world. The film is a parody of other
science-fiction films, especially those of
Steven Spielberg, as well as of science
fiction fandom in general.

It is a British-American venture produced


by Working Title Films, StudioCanal, Big
Talk Pictures and Relativity Media and
distributed by Universal Pictures. Paul was UK theatrical release poster
released on 14 February 2011 in the United
Directed by Greg Mottola
Kingdom and on 18 March 2011 in the
United States to generally positive reviews Written by Simon Pegg
from critics and grossed $98 million Nick Frost
worldwide on a $40 million budget.
Produced by Nira Park
Plot Tim Bevan
Eric Fellner
Best friends Graeme Willy and Clive
Gollings are British comic book and sci-fi Starring Simon Pegg
enthusiasts who travel to the United States Nick Frost
to attend the annual San Diego Comic-Con. Jason Bateman
They embark on a road trip through the
Kristen Wiig
Southwestern U.S. to visit UFO sites on a
remote desert highway at night. Bill Hader
Blythe Danner
After a brush with homophobic rednecks at
John Carroll
a diner, they watch a car driving erratically
Lynch
and crashing. Stopping to offer assistance
Sigourney
:
to the driver, he is revealed to be Paul, an Weaver
alien. Graeme agrees to give him a ride, Seth Rogen
despite Clive fainting and wetting his pants
upon seeing him. Cinematography Lawrence Sher
Edited by Chris Dickens
Later, Special Agent Zoil of the Secret
Service arrives at the car-crash site, Music by David Arnold
informing his unseen female superior, "the Production Relativity Media
Big Guy", that he is closing in on Paul. She companies Working Title
sends rookies Haggard and O'Reilly to
assist. Clive remains paranoid over Paul's Films
intentions, considering his appearance as Big Talk Pictures
evidence of a conspiracy. Then Paul StudioCanal
explains the government fed his image to
the public to keep them from panicking if Distributed by Universal
anyone encounters his race. Pictures

They later camp at an RV park run by Release dates 7 February 2011


Christian fundamentalists, one-eyed Ruth (London)
Buggs and her father Moses. The next day, 14 February 2011
when Ruth sees Paul, she faints, so they (United Kingdom)
take her with them. During an argument, 18 March 2011
Paul convinces Ruth to question her beliefs (United States)
and uses his healing power to cure her
blind eye. Running time 104 minutes
Countries United Kingdom
Stopping at a bar, Ruth calls her father, but
Zoil intercepts the call. She is accosted by United States
the rednecks and a bar fight ensues. They Language English
escape when Paul terrifies them into
Budget $40 million[1][2]
fainting. Later, at another RV park, Ruth is
questioned by Agent Zoil, but plays dumb Box office $98 million[3]
and escapes. Meanwhile, Haggard and
O'Reilly have figured out about Paul. Confronting Zoil, he orders them to return to
base, but they go behind his back and try to catch the alien on their own.

The group soon arrives at Tara's, who rescued Paul when he crashed on Earth 60
years ago, accidentally killing her dog (hence Paul's name) in the crash (opening
scene). As no-one believed her story, she has spent her life as a pariah. Although
angry at first, she forgives Paul and prepares to make tea for her visitors. Haggard,
O'Reilly and Zoil arrive and surround the house. The group flee but O'Reilly shoots
at them, igniting gas from Tara's stove and destroying her house with him inside.
Haggard pursues and catches up to the RV but loses control and drives off a cliff.
Zoil reassures the Big Guy that he will have Paul within the hour but tired of waiting,
she orders a "military response".
:
Paul, Graeme, Clive, Ruth and Tara arrive at Devils Tower National Monument,
where they set off fireworks to signal Paul's mothership. A helicopter suddenly
arrives with agents and the Big Guy. Zoil appears and initiates a stand-off,
unexpectedly shooting the agents, before being wounded. He is revealed to be Paul's
friend, attempting to aid his escape under the guise of capturing him. During the
fight, Tara knocks out the Big Guy. Moses arrives unexpectedly and fires at Paul, but
hits Graeme instead. Paul once again uses his healing powers, reviving Graeme in
spite of the danger to himself, causing Moses to believe Paul to be a messiah.

Graeme and Ruth admit their feelings for each other and kiss, but the Big Guy
regains consciousness and holds the group at gunpoint. Just as she is about to kill
them, she is crushed by the landing transport ship. Paul says goodbye to his friends
and offers Tara a chance to go with him, promising to give her a new life after
ruining her childhood and accidentally killing her dog. The aliens go home as the
remaining humans wave. Two years later, Graeme, Clive and Ruth are at another
Comic-Con, where Graeme and Clive are promoting their new bestselling novel
titled Paul.

Cast
Simon Pegg as Graeme Willy
Nick Frost as Clive Gollings
Seth Rogen as Paul (voice and motion capture)[5]
Jason Bateman as Special Agent Lorenzo Zoil.
Describing his character as an "exaggerated nasty
guy", Bateman based his portrayal of Zoil on
Yaphet Kotto in Midnight Run and Tommy Lee
Jones in The Fugitive.[6] His name is a play-on of
the film, Lorenzo's Oil (1992).
Kristen Wiig as Ruth Buggs
Bill Hader as Agent Haggard
Blythe Danner as Tara Walton Prominent comedic actor
Seth Rogen provided the
Mia Stallard as Young Tara Walton voice work and motion
Joe Lo Truglio as Agent O'Reilly capture for Paul the alien
John Carroll Lynch as Moses Buggs, Ruth's father (pictured in 2013).
Jane Lynch as Pat Stevens
David Koechner as Gus, a redneck whom Graeme and Clive first encounter in a
Nevada gas station.
Jesse Plemons as Jake, Gus's friend.
Sigourney Weaver as "The Big Guy". In an interview with Graham Norton,
:
Weaver stated: "It's a love letter to sci-fi fans. I jumped at the chance to be in it.
To find a comedy that also pays homage to sci-fi is a dream come true."[7]
Syd Masters as himself, singing cowboy on stage
Jeffrey Tambor as Adam Shadowchild, a famous science fiction writer
Steven Spielberg as Himself (voice)

In an interview for the DVD release of Paul, Pegg and Frost said they made the film
to demonstrate their love for Steven Spielberg's films Close Encounters of the Third
Kind and E.T. the Extra Terrestrial, as well as their favourite science-fiction
films.[8] After they mentioned the project to Spielberg, he suggested he might make
a cameo appearance, and a scene was added to include him as a voice on a
speakerphone in 1980 discussing ideas with Paul for his soon-to-become box office
hit E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial.[9][10] According to Robert Kirkman, he, along with
Invincible co-creator Cory Walker and Invincible artist Ryan Ottley, had a cameo in
the film as the Big Guy's henchmen.[11]

Production
The idea for Paul came from Pegg and Frost in 2003, while they were filming Shaun
of the Dead.[1] To help with the script, Pegg and Frost went on their own road trip
across America and used ideas from it to add to the script.[12] According to Mottola,
the film was given the green light shortly before the late 2000s recession; if it had
been delayed, "they probably wouldn’t have made the movie."[1] The budget for the
film was around US$40 million.[1] Principal photography, including 50 days in the
New Mexico desert,[1] wrapped on 9 September 2009,[13] with additional scenes
filmed in July 2010 at the Albuquerque Convention Center, which was designed to
look like the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con.[14] During filming, Joe Lo Truglio was a
stand-in for the character Paul, the only character who was created by CGI, although
Seth Rogen, the voice of Paul did some motion capture in preproduction during
postproduction.[15] The cover art for the fictional comic book Encounter Briefs was
drawn by alternative comics artist Daniel Clowes.[16]

Release
A teaser trailer for the film was released on 18 October 2010.[17] The film had its
world premiere in London on 7 February 2011.[18]

Home media
:
The film was released on DVD and Blu-ray in the United Kingdom on 13 June 2011
and was released in North America on 9 August 2011. Three versions of the film
were made.[19] The DVD release features an audio commentary with director Greg
Mottola, stars Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Bill Hader, and producer Nira Park; two
featurettes; "Simon's Silly Faces"; photo galleries; storyboards and posters; and a
blooper reel. The United States Blu-ray release features all the DVD supplements
with nine more featurettes and a digital copy.[20]

Reception

Box office

Paul grossed $37.4 million in the United States and Canada, and $63.6 million in
other territories, for a worldwide total of $98 million.[3]

In North America, Paul opened on March 18, 2011 alongside Limitless and The
Lincoln Lawyer. It went on to debut to $13 million, finishing fifth at the box
office.[21][22]

Critical response

On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 70%
based on 207 reviews, with an average rating of 6.30/10. The website's critical
consensus reads, "It doesn't measure up to Pegg and Frost's best work, but Paul is
an amiably entertaining — albeit uneven — road trip comedy with an intergalactic
twist."[23] On Metacritic, the film received a score of 57 based on 37 reviews,
indicating "mixed or average reviews".[24] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave
the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale.[22][25]

Empire rated the film "excellent" (four stars out of five), stating, "Broader and more
accessible than either Shaun of the Dead or Hot Fuzz, Paul is pure Pegg and Frost —
clever, cheeky, and very, very funny. You'll never look at E.T. in the same way
again."[26] SFX also gives the film four stars out of five, saying, "the film veers
dangerously close to alienating (no pun intended) all but its geek core audience,
[though] the more obvious concessions to a mainstream crowd [are] never enough
to derail the film's laugh-a-minute ride"; SFX also calls it a "triumph of visual
effects, convincing characterisation and bad taste humour."[27] Peter Bradshaw
gave the film two stars out of five and called it a "goofy, amiable piece of silliness"
exhibiting "self-indulgence" and possessing a "distinct shortage of real gags".[28] On
the same scale Nigel Andrews gave the film only one star, calling it a "faltering
extraterrestrial knockabout".[18] The Independent grades the film two stars out of
five, saying, "Pegg is likeable as usual, Frost more doltish than usual, and Kristen
:
Wiig an appealing convert from Bible thumper to ladette", and notes that "from time
to time, clever ideas rear their heads – like the idea that 'Paul' has been the brains
behind all science-fiction and UFO initiatives for the last 30 years, including Close
Encounters and The X-Files – but they soon return to the film's default setting of
laddish japes and a conviction that the word 'cocksucker' will always get a
laugh."[29]

IGN provided Paul with three reviews. The first gave the film three stars, stating,
"Simon Pegg and Nick Frost send up everything from Star Wars to E.T. in this sci-fi
comedy ... As with Pegg and Frost's previous films together, it's derivative stuff, the
plot similar to countless sci-fi flicks of the past; paying homage to the good and
gently ribbing the bad."[30] Less excited was their review for the British Blu-ray
version, which said, "But unlike previous Pegg and Frost collaborations – Shaun of
the Dead and Hot Fuzz – Paul does not generously reward repeat viewing. That's
not to say it's a bad film at all; it has a strong central premise, which carries much of
the film, loveable central characters, the odd neat idea (it turns out that Paul
inspired all major works of SF post-1950, from Close Encounters to The X-Files, and
has a direct line to Steven Spielberg), and a couple of genuine laughs, but it never
feels more than a rough sketch of a bigger, much funnier movie."[31] In a second
review for the American Blu-ray version, IGN compared the movie with Galaxy
Quest and wrote that it is "richly layered with clever homage, a refreshingly original
alien hero, delightfully entertaining characters and great performances from our
leads and their supporting players."[19]

Upon its release in the United States, Roger Ebert gave Paul a mixed review of two
and a half stars out of four, saying it is a "movie that teeters on the edge of being
really pretty good and loses its way. I'm not sure quite what goes wrong, but you can
see that it might have gone right."[32] Manohla Dargis of The New York Times
wrote: "As genial, foolish and demographically engineered as it sounds (hailing all
fan boys and girls), Paul is at once a buddy flick and a classic American road movie
of self (and other) discovery, interspersed with buckets of expletives and some
startling (especially for a big-studio release) pokes at Christian fundamentalism ...
The movie has its attractions, notably Mr. Pegg and Mr. Frost (and of course Mr.
Bateman), whose ductile, (noncomputer) animated and open faces were made for
comedy ... Paul proves the weak link. One problem is that Mr. Rogen, however
comically inclined, has become overexposed, and there’s just something too familiar
and predictable about this voice coming out of that body. Yet while Paul seems great
conceptually, he's not particularly interesting or surprising, despite a funny recap of
what he’s been doing on his time on Earth. With his vibe and vocabulary, shorts and
weed, juvenilia and sentimentality, Paul turns out to be not much different from a
lot of guys who have wreaked comedy havoc on American screens lately, even if this
one only wants to beam up, not knock up."[33]

Accolades
:
Year Award Category Nominee Result

National
2011 Movie Best Comedy Won
Award

Annie Character Animation in a Michael Hull


2012 Nominated
Award Live Action Production David Lowry

Visual Outstanding Animated Anders Beer,


Effects Character in a Live Julian Foddy, Jody
2012 Nominated
Society Action Feature Motion Johnson, David
Award Picture Lowry

Soundtrack
Paul: Music from the Original Motion Picture was released on 21 February 2011 by
Universal Music.[34] It intersperses David Arnold's score with the rock songs
appearing in the film.

All tracks are written by David Arnold, except as noted.

No. Title Writer(s) Performer(s) Length


1. "Paul Opening Title" David Arnold 1:56
2. "Another Girl, Another Peter Perrett The Only Ones 3:00
Planet" (from The Only
Ones, 1978)
3. "Road Trip Number 1" David Arnold 0:57
4. "Just the Two of Us" Withers, Ralph Bill Withers and 3:57
MacDonald, Grover Washington,
William Salter Jr.
5. "Passport" David Arnold 1:18
6. "Road Trip Number 2" David Arnold 1:34
7. "Flying Saucers Rock 'N' Harold Ray Scott Billy Lee Riley 2:02
Roll" (single, 1957)
8. "Window Shopping" David Arnold 0:51
9. "Hello It's Me" (from Rundgren Todd Rundgren 4:20
Something/Anything?, 1972)
10. "End of the Road Trip" David Arnold 1:38
11. "Dancing in the Moonlight" Sherman Kelly King Harvest 2:56
(from Dancing In The
Moonlight, 1973)
:
12. "Campfire Confession" David Arnold 1:24
13. "Got to Give It Up" (from Gaye Marvin Gaye 6:01
Live at the London
Palladium, 1977)
14. "A Little Talk with Paul" David Arnold 1:21
15. "I Chase the Devil" (from Lee Perry, Romeo Max Romeo 3:22
War Ina Babylon, 1976)
16. "Chase" David Arnold 1:18
17. "Cantina Band" John Williams Syd Masters & The 3:42
Swing Riders
18. "You Gotta Try" David Arnold 2:51
19. "1st Contact" David Arnold 1:17
20. "Planet Claire" (from The B- Fred Schneider, The B-52's 4:33
52's, 1979) Keith Strickland
21. "Goodbye (It's a Little David Arnold 4:42
Awkward)"
22. "All Over the World" (from Jeff Lynne Electric Light 4:05
Xanadu, 1980) Orchestra

Future
Pegg has stated that he would like to do a sequel to Paul, titled Pauls,[35] but that
the time and expense it would take means it is unlikely to happen unless costs
decrease.[36] On August 13, 2021 during a live stream on Instagram, Pegg stated
that there was 'no chance' of a sequel.

See also
List of British films of 2011
List of American films of 2011
List of media set in San Diego

References
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2. Kaufman, Amy (17 March 2011). "Movie Projector: Matthew McConaughey,
Bradley Cooper and an alien battle for No. 1" (http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/en
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55314-sigourney-weaver-paul-role-is-dream-come-true). 11 February 2011.
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10. Sweeney, Ken (11 February 2011). "Stars invade for alien film 'Paul' – and reveal
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13. Lance Bangs (9 September 2009). Principal Photography Wraps! (https://web.arc
hive.org/web/20100720023203/http://blog.whatispaul.com/2009/09/09/principal-photo
graphy-wraps/). What Is Paul? – The Paul Production Blogs. Archived from the
original (http://blog.whatispaul.com/2009/09/09/principal-photography-wraps/) on
20 July 2010. Retrieved 25 July 2010. Paul – Principal Photography Wrap-up
Blog (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bn0QRDYbJNQ) on YouTube
14. George 'El Guapo' Roush (15 July 2010). "Paul Set Visit Report. The New Simon
Pegg/Nick Frost Comedy!" (http://www.latinoreview.com/news/paul-set-visit-repo
rt-the-new-simon-pegg-nick-frost-comedy-10495). LatinoReview.com. Retrieved
25 July 2010.
15. "Paul – Joe Lo Truglio interview" (http://www.indielondon.co.uk/Film-Review/paul
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//archive.today/20120907195504/http://www.hypergeek.ca/2011/04/the-cover-to-
:
//archive.today/20120907195504/http://www.hypergeek.ca/2011/04/the-cover-to-
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33. Dargis, Manohla (17 March 2011). "Calm Down, People; He Comes in Peace" (h
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34. "Paul: Music from the Motion Picture" (http://www.prescriptionmusicpruk.com/pre
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35. "Paul The Movie - Pegg and Frost" (https://web.archive.org/web/2011100210244
2/http://www.absoluteradio.co.uk/podcasts/Paul-The-Movie---Pegg-and-Frost/).
AbsoluteRadio.co.uk (Podcast). Archived from the original (http://www.absoluter
adio.co.uk/podcasts/Paul-The-Movie---Pegg-and-Frost/) on 2 October 2011.
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36. Helen Earnshaw (15 June 2011). "Simon Pegg Says Paul Sequel Is Unlikely" (htt
p://www.femalefirst.co.uk/movies/movie-news/Simon+Pegg-95499.html).
Femalefirst.co.uk.

External links
Paul (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1092026/) at IMDb
Paul (https://www.allmovie.com/movie/v475294) at AllMovie

Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?


title=Paul_(film)&oldid=1126541411"
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