Caplan seems to remember the production with fondness, including the unorthodox audition process devised by producer J.J. Abrams to maintain secrecy.
Cloverfield's Lizzy Caplan Had No Idea What She Was Getting Herself Into
Caplan had her breakthrough role a few years earlier in the hugely successful "Mean Girls," and her part in "Cloverfield" doesn't come up that often in interviews. When she does get the chance to speak about it, she seems to remember the production with fondness, including the unorthodox audition process devised by producer J.J. Abrams to maintain secrecy.
Much like the Muppets, when Clover takes Manhattan, it's with all the elegance and finesse of a panicked cat whose human owners have only just caught them snooping in their kitchen pantry.
Cloverfield prompted reports of motion sickness among audience members at the film's screenings. But the retching and misery had — and has — a pretty straightforward scientific explanation.
When someone mentions "Cloverfield," what do you think of first — the movie or the viral marketing campaign?
As the "Cloverfield" franchise looks toward the future, let's revisit the end of "The Cloverfield Paradox" — just what did that monster mean, anyway?