Cocoon
Brief Synopsis
A group of elderly people are rejuvenated by aliens after swimming in a pool.
Cast & Crew
Read More
Ron Howard
Director
Don Ameche
Steve Guttenberg
Hume Cronyn
Gwen Verdon
Wilford Brimley
Film Details
Also Known As
Cocoon - Djupets hemlighet
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Adventure
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
1985
Production Company
Dennis Modes
Distribution Company
20th Century Fox Distribution
Location
Chicago, Illinois, USA; Nassau, Bahamas; Pinellas County, Florida, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 57m
Synopsis
A group of Florida retirees become mysteriously rejuvented when their retirement home swimming pool turns into a fountain of youth. But, the magical powers stem from some cocoons left by good-natured, human-appearing aliens who have come back to retrieve them.
Director
Ron Howard
Director
Cast
Don Ameche
Steve Guttenberg
Hume Cronyn
Gwen Verdon
Wilford Brimley
Jessica Tandy
Maureen Stapleton
Brian Dennehy
Barret Oliver
Tahnee Welch
Jack Gilford
Herta Ware
Clint Howard
Pamela Prescott
Dinah Sue Rowley
Gabriella Sinclair
Charles Lampkin
Mike Nomad
Jorge Gil
Frederick R Newman
Voice
Linda Harrison
Wendy Cooke
Michael Sembello
Performer
Tyrone Power
Rance Howard
James Ritz
Eric Hulett
Lead Person
Crew
Clint Althouse
Boom Operator
Stuart Artingstall
Special Effects
Rick Baker
Consultant
Bill Beck
Visual Effects
Hans Beimler
Assistant Director
Tom Benedek
Screenplay
Barbara Brennan
Rotoscope Animator
Marty Brenneis
Visual Effects
David Brown
Producer
Jerry Brutsche
Stunts
Greg Cannom
Special Effects
Sean Casey
Special Effects Technician
Denise Cheshire
Stunts
Richard Church
Sound Mixer
James Steven Claridge
Other
Donald Clark
Camera Operator
Janis Clark
Hair
Robert Clark
Special Effects
Princess Cleare
Transportation Coordinator
Jack T. Collis
Production Designer
Mike Connelly
Transportation Coordinator
Susan Cornell
Consultant
Thane Cornell
Consultant
Larry Dean Davis
Camera Assistant
Cariline Davis-dyer
Script Supervisor
Robert Doudell
Unit Production Manager
Robert Doudell
Associate Producer
Richard Dow
Grip
Irvin E Jim Duffy
Set Decorator
Scott Farrar
Camera Operator
Bob Finley
Other
Mike Fulmer
Visual Effects
Pamela Ghaleb
Apprentice
Ray Gilberti
Camera Assistant
Alex Gilles
Special Effects
Ralph Gordon
Other
Caroleen Green
Matte Painter
Kingsley Griffin
Animal Trainer
Ted Grossman
Stunt Coordinator
Jay Gruska
Music Arranger
Jay Gruska
Music Producer
Kevin Haney
Makeup
Dan Hanley
Editor
Barbara Harris
Casting
William Hartman
Sound Editor
Camilla Henneman
Special Effects
Linda Henrikson
Costumes
Tom Hester
Special Effects
Michael Hill
Editor
Robert Hill
Camera Assistant
Ed Hirsh
Stage Manager
James Horner
Music
Peg Hunter
Other
Paul Huston
Photography
Carol Ann Jackson
Assistant Editor
Randy Johnson
Camera Assistant
Eddie Jones
Other
Ira Keeler
Visual Effects
Bill Kimberlin
Editor
Jordan Klein
Camera Operator
Jordan Klein Jr.
Camera Assistant
Kathy Krieger
Animal Trainer
Laurel Ladevich
Sound Design
Tony Laudati
Other
John Leblanc
Camera Operator
Steven M Levine
Property Master
Ellen Lichtwardt
Rotoscope Animator
James Lim
Camera Operator
Jan R Lloyd
Assistant Director
Michael Mackenzie
Engineering Supervisor
Robert Maharis
Location Manager
Louisa Marie
Assistant
Eddie Marks
Costume Supervisor
Godfrey Marks
Dialogue Editor
Dean Mason
Transportation Coordinator
Beverly Mcdermott
Casting
Shawn Mcenroe
Special Effects
Mary Mcglone
Assistant Editor
Gavin Mckinney
Other
Ralph Mcquarrie
Art Department
Dennis Modes
Cable Operator
Jack Mongovan
Rotoscope Animator
Michael S Moore
Assistant Editor
Charles Mullen
Animation Supervisor
Mike Nomad
Consultant
Kerry Nordquist
Photography
Robert Norin
Makeup
Phill Norwood
Art Director
Michael O'corrigan
Sound Editor
Candice Orsini
Stunts
Richard Overton
Sound
Terry Peck
Effects Assistant
Donald Pennington
Construction
Penny Perry
Casting
Don Peterman
Other
Don Peterman
Director Of Photography
Keith Peterman
Camera Operator
Margot Phillips
Other
Giedra Rackauskas
Auditor
Ken Ralston
Visual Effects Supervisor
Calmar K Roberts Jr.
Camera Assistant
Aggie Guerard Rodgers
Costume Designer
Zade Rosenthal
Photography
Caprice Rothe
Choreographer
Richard Rudolph
Music Producer
Gary Rydstrom
Sound Design
David Saperstein
Story By
David Saperstein
Source Material (From Novel)
David Saperstein
From Story
Mort Schwartz
Costumes
Michael Sembello
Music Producer
Kenneth Smith
Camera Operator
Waverly Smothers
Grip
Theodore Soderberg
Sound
Tom St Amand
Other
Armin Steiner
Music
Calvin Sterry
Key Grip
Teresa Stokovic
Production Coordinator
Gary Summers
Sound Design
Mitch Suskin
Production Supervisor
Ken M Suzuki
Gaffer
Lydia Telo
Assistant
Frank Tobin
Electrician
Joe Unsinn
Special Effects Coordinator
Gwen Verdon
Music
Laurie Vermont
Production Coordinator
Paul Wells
Sound
Jerry Whittington
Adr Editor
John Whittle
Assistant Director
Clay Wilson
Grip
Mickey Woods
Construction Coordinator
Kevin Yagher
Special Effects
Lili Fini Zanuck
Producer
Richard D. Zanuck
Producer
Manfred Zendar
Other
Videos
Movie Clip
Trailer
Hosted Intro
Film Details
Also Known As
Cocoon - Djupets hemlighet
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror/Science-Fiction
Adventure
Comedy
Drama
Release Date
1985
Production Company
Dennis Modes
Distribution Company
20th Century Fox Distribution
Location
Chicago, Illinois, USA; Nassau, Bahamas; Pinellas County, Florida, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 57m
Award Wins
Best Supporting Actor
1985
Don Ameche
Best Visual Effects
1985
Articles
Cocoon (1985) - Cocoon
The story concerns members of a Florida retirement home who discover a fountain of youth thanks to a swimming pool, some strange pods (cocoons) therein, and the efforts of extraterrestrial aliens in the form of neatly dressed tourists. The aliens have been collecting the cocoons and storing them in a swimming pool used by three elderly men from the retirement home for their daily swims. The cocoons cause the water to have a rejuvenating effect, and the men suddenly find their youthful strength, vigor, and passion flowing back into their bodies. Naturally, their fellow retirees and spouses soon want the same, and questions of life, death and even departing Earth eventually come into play.
Tom Benedek's screenplay was based on David Saperstein's unpublished novel, which had been floating around the Fox studio since 1980, stymied by continual changes in studio administration. Originally Robert Zemeckis was to direct, but when his Romancing the Stone (1984) ran into delays, he had to pull out, and Ron Howard, fresh off Splash (1984), replaced him. The film was shot in St. Petersburg, Fla., over three months on an $18 million budget; it earned $76 million in domestic box-office receipts alone.
And chief among the reasons for the success was Don Ameche, beloved leading man of 1930s and '40s classics like Midnight (1939) and Heaven Can Wait (1943). Though Ameche had never really stopped working, his career had fallen into the doldrums in recent decades, until his inspired casting in the Eddie Murphy comedy Trading Places (1983). That film ushered Ameche into a remarkable final act of his career, a resuscitation that once again made him a bankable movie star as he reached age 80 and beyond. Cocoon cemented this comeback, although, remarkably, Ameche wasn't even the first choice for the part -- he replaced Buddy Ebsen. Still, Ameche made such an impression in Cocoon that Playboy Magazine named him, in 1985, one of America's ten sexiest men.
On location in Florida, Ameche took a four-mile walk on the beach every morning before filming. He later reflected on the modern moviemaking process: "There are no sustained scenes in this picture," he said. "They're all short. Maybe one or two longer scenes in the whole picture. Vignettes everywhere. Which is probably good for today's picture making. They want to keep things moving. It's different from the old days."
In one sequence, Ameche's character breakdances in a nightclub. Ameche later admitted he had "never seen breakdancing prior to this film. I didn't know what it was." He rehearsed with a 19-year-old dancer for four weeks, but most of the final dancing was performed by a stunt double.
Other stunts, like the diving and flipping into pools, were in fact done by Ameche and his fellow veteran actors. Director Ron Howard had been planning to use stuntmen, but the cast insisted on doing it themselves. "They really taught me that you can't generalize about what people can, or cannot, do because of age," Howard recalled.
Howard, too, had to prove to his cast that he could handle the many facets of this movie, and he gained their approval with flying colors. Maureen Stapleton said at the time, "[Ron] seems like he's been doing it for years. He has common sense, and you trust a man with common sense." And Ameche said, "Ron is so professional that I never stopped to consider his age."
Howard has called Cocoon one of his favorites of his own films, and he said that he developed a lot as a director while making it. The actors all had different methods, for instance, forcing Howard to reconcile the performances into a unified whole. "Wilford Brimley," Howard said, "is a brilliant improvisational actor, but subscribes to no film technique at all. As a matter of fact, he sort of militantly refuses to embrace anything remotely like film technique because he thinks it makes his performance phony and false... Don Ameche, on the other hand, is really old school. Hit the marks, say the lines that have been written, and go home. Trust the director and do the day's work. Hume Cronyn is highly disciplined. Jack Gilford was an old song and dance man. Everybody had a different approach. Yet it was important to find cohesiveness. As a young director it was a real challenge."
Howard also learned to "talk to [the special effects artists] like actors, talk to them like creative collaborators, and they could do extraordinary things."
In addition to striking box-office gold, Cocoon got good reviews from critics, with Variety calling it a "mesmerizing tale... perfectly focused," and The New York Times declaring, "Mr. Howard brings a real sweetness to his subject. The older players are the film's greatest asset... The cast functions as a graceful ensemble, with a warmheartedness that seems genuine without getting out of hand."
In early 1986, Cocoon was nominated for two Academy Awards, for Best Supporting Actor (Don Ameche) and Best Visual Effects. It won both. After Ameche won his Oscar®, he received a congratulatory phone call from Irving Berlin, whose association with Ameche dated back to Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), 47 years earlier.
Some final notes on the cast:
This was the sixth of nine movies to feature real-life husband-and-wife actors Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, dating back to The Seventh Cross (1944) and Blonde Fever (1944). They also acted together in numerous television shows.
Tahnee Welch, daughter of Raquel Welch, makes her debut as an alien named Kitty.
And Tyrone Power, Jr., whose father and Ameche were good friends, appears briefly in the role of Pillsbury.
by Jeremy Arnold
SOURCES:
Robert J. Emery, The Directors: Take One
Beverly Gray, Ron Howard: From Mayberry to the Moon...and Beyond
Ben Ohmart, Don Ameche: The Kenosha Comeback Kid
Cocoon (1985) - Cocoon
One of the biggest hits of the summer of 1985 was the gentle fantasy Cocoon, a film that proved a challenge to make because of its mix of so many opposing ingredients. The movie blends genres (comedy, drama and sci-fi); various storytelling methods (equal parts visual effects and ensemble acting, as well as multiple plot threads with no central character); and even wide-ranging ages of its key creative artists. Three of the leading players, for instance, are old pros Don Ameche (age 77), Hume Cronyn (74) and Jessica Tandy (76). Joining them are younger veterans Maureen Stapleton (60), Gwen Verdon (60) and Wilford Brimley (51), and directing them all is Ron Howard, a mere 31.
The story concerns members of a Florida retirement home who discover a fountain of youth thanks to a swimming pool, some strange pods (cocoons) therein, and the efforts of extraterrestrial aliens in the form of neatly dressed tourists. The aliens have been collecting the cocoons and storing them in a swimming pool used by three elderly men from the retirement home for their daily swims. The cocoons cause the water to have a rejuvenating effect, and the men suddenly find their youthful strength, vigor, and passion flowing back into their bodies. Naturally, their fellow retirees and spouses soon want the same, and questions of life, death and even departing Earth eventually come into play.
Tom Benedek's screenplay was based on David Saperstein's unpublished novel, which had been floating around the Fox studio since 1980, stymied by continual changes in studio administration. Originally Robert Zemeckis was to direct, but when his Romancing the Stone (1984) ran into delays, he had to pull out, and Ron Howard, fresh off Splash (1984), replaced him. The film was shot in St. Petersburg, Fla., over three months on an $18 million budget; it earned $76 million in domestic box-office receipts alone.
And chief among the reasons for the success was Don Ameche, beloved leading man of 1930s and '40s classics like Midnight (1939) and Heaven Can Wait (1943). Though Ameche had never really stopped working, his career had fallen into the doldrums in recent decades, until his inspired casting in the Eddie Murphy comedy Trading Places (1983). That film ushered Ameche into a remarkable final act of his career, a resuscitation that once again made him a bankable movie star as he reached age 80 and beyond. Cocoon cemented this comeback, although, remarkably, Ameche wasn't even the first choice for the part -- he replaced Buddy Ebsen. Still, Ameche made such an impression in Cocoon that Playboy Magazine named him, in 1985, one of America's ten sexiest men.
On location in Florida, Ameche took a four-mile walk on the beach every morning before filming. He later reflected on the modern moviemaking process: "There are no sustained scenes in this picture," he said. "They're all short. Maybe one or two longer scenes in the whole picture. Vignettes everywhere. Which is probably good for today's picture making. They want to keep things moving. It's different from the old days."
In one sequence, Ameche's character breakdances in a nightclub. Ameche later admitted he had "never seen breakdancing prior to this film. I didn't know what it was." He rehearsed with a 19-year-old dancer for four weeks, but most of the final dancing was performed by a stunt double.
Other stunts, like the diving and flipping into pools, were in fact done by Ameche and his fellow veteran actors. Director Ron Howard had been planning to use stuntmen, but the cast insisted on doing it themselves. "They really taught me that you can't generalize about what people can, or cannot, do because of age," Howard recalled.
Howard, too, had to prove to his cast that he could handle the many facets of this movie, and he gained their approval with flying colors. Maureen Stapleton said at the time, "[Ron] seems like he's been doing it for years. He has common sense, and you trust a man with common sense." And Ameche said, "Ron is so professional that I never stopped to consider his age."
Howard has called Cocoon one of his favorites of his own films, and he said that he developed a lot as a director while making it. The actors all had different methods, for instance, forcing Howard to reconcile the performances into a unified whole. "Wilford Brimley," Howard said, "is a brilliant improvisational actor, but subscribes to no film technique at all. As a matter of fact, he sort of militantly refuses to embrace anything remotely like film technique because he thinks it makes his performance phony and false... Don Ameche, on the other hand, is really old school. Hit the marks, say the lines that have been written, and go home. Trust the director and do the day's work. Hume Cronyn is highly disciplined. Jack Gilford was an old song and dance man. Everybody had a different approach. Yet it was important to find cohesiveness. As a young director it was a real challenge."
Howard also learned to "talk to [the special effects artists] like actors, talk to them like creative collaborators, and they could do extraordinary things."
In addition to striking box-office gold, Cocoon got good reviews from critics, with Variety calling it a "mesmerizing tale... perfectly focused," and The New York Times declaring, "Mr. Howard brings a real sweetness to his subject. The older players are the film's greatest asset... The cast functions as a graceful ensemble, with a warmheartedness that seems genuine without getting out of hand."
In early 1986, Cocoon was nominated for two Academy Awards, for Best Supporting Actor (Don Ameche) and Best Visual Effects. It won both. After Ameche won his Oscar®, he received a congratulatory phone call from Irving Berlin, whose association with Ameche dated back to Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), 47 years earlier.
Some final notes on the cast:
This was the sixth of nine movies to feature real-life husband-and-wife actors Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, dating back to The Seventh Cross (1944) and Blonde Fever (1944). They also acted together in numerous television shows.
Tahnee Welch, daughter of Raquel Welch, makes her debut as an alien named Kitty.
And Tyrone Power, Jr., whose father and Ameche were good friends, appears briefly in the role of Pillsbury.
by Jeremy Arnold
SOURCES:
Robert J. Emery, The Directors: Take One
Beverly Gray, Ron Howard: From Mayberry to the Moon...and Beyond
Ben Ohmart, Don Ameche: The Kenosha Comeback Kid
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer June 21, 1985
Feature film debut for producer Lili Fini Zanuck.
Released in USA on video.
Released in United States Summer June 21, 1985