USA TODAY US Edition

‘Life’ spoilers offer unexpected death, twist ending

- Patrick Ryan @PatRyanWri­tes USA TODAY

Spoiler alert: The following discusses plot points and the movie’s ending.

Well, you can’t always trust the trailers.

If you watched the cryptic twominute spot for Life (in theaters now), you probably assumed that scientist Hugh Derry (Ariyon Bakare) would be the first one to die after sticking his hands in the tank housing newfound alien Calvin. But it’s actually maverick mission specialist Rory Adams (Ryan Reynolds) who is the first to succumb less than 40 minutes into the one-hour, 40-minute thriller, after saving a wounded Hugh from a Martian.

The risky choice of killing Life’s biggest star so early was partly out of necessity, says co-writer Rhett Reese. Reynolds initially signed on to play the movie’s lead, astronaut David Jordan (Jake Gyllenhaal), but took a smaller role so he could spend more time with wife Blake Lively, then-pregnant with the couple’s second child.

“That early death allowed him to work on the movie for five or six weeks, as opposed to the entire shoot,” Reese says. “But that character (Rory) — the bravest and most social of the group — was always supposed to be the first to die. We were supposed to be like, ‘Oh, this is going to be the hero,’ and then ironically lose him first.”

Reynolds felt “mostly relief ” reading Rory’s death scene, he jokes. In all seriousnes­s, “I liked that (twist).”

The bloody sequence was semi-improvised by the Deadpool actor, whose character unwillingl­y swallows Calvin, only for the alien to emerge larger and more powerful. “Calvin coming out of the mouth was one option of many; we did a bunch of different things,” Reynolds says. “I just looked like a really bad modern dance artist.”

But Rory’s demise is hardly the most shocking twist in Life, which kills off all but two of its astronauts aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station before the third act. David — an ISS vet who prefers the cosmos to civilizati­on — realizes that the only way to keep Calvin from terrorizin­g Earth is to shoot it further into space. He chooses to sacrifice himself by luring the extraterre­strial into an escape pod, allowing microbiolo­gist Miranda North (Rebecca Ferguson) to safely head home in the other emergency craft.

It’s only in the last 30 seconds, though, that audiences see the ships got swapped, by virtue of Miranda hitting the wrong button and David’s inability to steer his pod while in Calvin’s clutches. As Miranda hurtles toward her death, David is found in the middle of the ocean by fishermen, entangled in the creature’s giant tentacles.

Although Reese and co-writer Paul Wernick insist that David didn’t intentiona­lly crash on Earth, Gyllenhaal was thrilled by the possibilit­y that his character may have a dark side.

“That was the most interestin­g part of the whole script, that the character you would assume has renounced everything on Earth ends up being the one to bring the creature (there),” Gyllenhaal says. “I really loved the idea, too, that potentiall­y he was not all good and never had been.”

If Life takes off with audiences, the bleak ending leaves the door open to sequels. “We would love to explore what would happen with Calvin on Earth and how that would manifest itself in a movie, or maybe even several movies,” Wernick says.

Adds Reese: “We like to speculate, ‘ What would happen if Calvin started to reproduce? What could they imperil and what would we use to fight them?’ It definitely feels like it could be an interestin­g sequel.”

 ?? SONY PICTURES ??
SONY PICTURES
 ?? ALEX BAILEY ?? Rory Adams (Ryan Reynolds) is the bravest and most social of the astronauts on the ISS.
ALEX BAILEY Rory Adams (Ryan Reynolds) is the bravest and most social of the astronauts on the ISS.

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