Screenwriter Christopher McQuarrie was one of several credited
writers on the screenplay for the recent Tom Cruise/Emily Blunt and Doug Liman-directed sci-fi epic
"Edge Of Tomorrow".
Chatting with Film School Rejects,
McQuarrie discussed some of the script changes that happened-
specifically that the film was originally much darker.
Apparently, Cruise was the one to stress the importance of the
story's inherent dark humor - something even McQuarrie initially didn't
see. Once that was incorporated, the film's current controversial and
more "upbeat" ending:
"I was always arguing it has to end on the helicopter.
You have to be thrown back to wondering, 'Did the movie even happen? Did
any of this really happen?' To that end, there were a million things
you had to do with the writing and visually, to serve that ending. That
presented a lot of challenges and debate for us. We really struggled to
deliver what the movie needed to be emotionally. I know the ending was somewhat controversial, with some people who
didn't like it. I think the only way to make those people happy would to
end the movie in a way that wasn't happy. We weren't interested in
doing that. It needed to end in a way that wasn't harsh."
McQuarrie also revealed that an early version of the script had an
even more trippy third act, but it was too exposition heavy and
exhausting to use:
"When Tom loses the power, and they go to Paris, and Tom
is preparing the team as they go into Paris where he's telling them the
rules of the movie, he tells the team everything the audience knows.
Basically, he told them: 'Kill as many Mimics as you want, but do not
kill an Alpha. If you kill an alpha we'll be right back here having this
conversation, and we won't even know it. The enemy will know we're
coming and they'll kill us all.' When they get to Paris there's the classic horror movie scene where
one of them gets separated from the group, and he gets attacked by an
Alpha and kills it. As he kills it, you see the Omega reset the day and
you see the point-of-view of the villain. We cut to the plane and hear
the same speech all over again. This time when he gets to the line, 'You
can bet they'll have a plan to kill us all,' the ship gets hit. As the
audience, you realize the enemy knows they're coming. The problem was
you were so exhausted by the time you got to that point."
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