READY PLAYER ONE TV Spot Unlocks Secret Featurette With Awesome New Footage & Plenty Of Spielberg Easter Eggs

READY PLAYER ONE TV Spot Unlocks Secret Featurette With Awesome New Footage & Plenty Of Spielberg Easter Eggs READY PLAYER ONE TV Spot Unlocks Secret Featurette With Awesome New Footage & Plenty Of Spielberg Easter Eggs

Warner Bros. has released a brand new TV spot for Steven Spielberg's Ready Player One, which features a hidden Easter Egg that unlocks an awesome featurette with even more never-before-seen footage!

By RohanPatel - Jan 21, 2018 02:01 PM EST
Filed Under: Sci-Fi
As Tom Brady and the 5x World Champion New England Patriots attempt to secure another trip to the Super Bowl, Warner Bros. has released a spectacular new TV spot for Steven Spielberg's highly-anticipated Ready Player One, which features one very special Easter Egg that actually unlocks even more new footage. 

The film stars Tye Sheridan and Olivia Cooke as Parzival and Art3mis, respectively, with a supporting cast that features Ben Mendelsohn, Simon Pegg, Mark Rylance, T.J. Miller, Hannah John-Kamen, and Lena Waithe, amongst others. 

Watch the new TV spot below:

Plus, in case you couldn't spot the hidden QR code, here's the exclusive featurette that features never-before-seen footage and narration from the legendary Steven Spielberg:


The film is set in 2045, with the world on the brink of chaos and collapse. But the people have found salvation in the OASIS, an expansive virtual reality universe created by the brilliant and eccentric James Halliday (Mark Rylance). When Halliday dies, he leaves his immense fortune to the first person to find a digital Easter egg he has hidden somewhere in the OASIS, sparking a contest that grips the entire world. When an unlikely young hero named Wade Watts (Tye Sheridan) decides to join the contest, he is hurled into a breakneck, reality-bending treasure hunt through a fantastical universe of mystery, discovery and danger.

Ready Player One features:
Director: Steven Spielberg
Tye Sheridan as Wade Owen Watts/Parzival
Olivia Cooke as Art3mis
Ben Mendelsohn as Nolan Sorrento
Simon Pegg as Ogden "Og" Morrow
Mark Rylance as James Donovan Halliday/Anorak
T.J. Miller as i-R0k
Hannah John-Kamen in an undisclosed role
Lena Waithe as Aech

Win Morisaki as Toshiro Yoshiaki/Daito
Philip Zhao as Akihide Karatsu/Shoto
Ralph Ineson as Rick
Letitia Wright as Reb
Mckenna Grace in an undisclosed role


Ready Player One logs into the OASIS on March 30

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L0RDbuckethead
L0RDbuckethead - 1/21/2018, 2:06 PM
This was the first TV spot that intrigued me. This game is pretty damn good too. 15 yards = No Gronk.
HeavyMetal4Life
HeavyMetal4Life - 1/21/2018, 2:11 PM
Really liked that Steven Spieldberg video; hard to believe all the great, groundbreaking films he has created. One of the greatest directors of all time.
Antithesis
Antithesis - 1/21/2018, 2:16 PM
@HeavyMetal4Life - * single greatest director of all time.
TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/21/2018, 2:20 PM
I am so not excited for this movie. It's going to be a two hour long version of this:



The book was one of the worst I've read in years, and the movie looks just as bad.
TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/21/2018, 2:38 PM
"I made a big entrance when I arrived in my flying DeLorean, which I’d obtained by completing a Back to the Future quest on the planet Zemeckis. The DeLorean came outfitted with a (nonfunctioning) flux capacitor, but I’d made several additions to its equipment and appearance. First, I’d installed an artificially intelligent onboard computer named KITT (purchased in an online auction) into the dashboard, along with a matching red Knight Rider scanner just above the DeLorean’s grill. Then I’d outfitted the car with an oscillation overthruster, a device that allowed it to travel through solid matter. Finally, to complete my ’80s super-vehicle theme, I’d slapped a Ghostbusters logo on each of the DeLorean’s gull-wing doors, then added personalized plates that read ECTO-88."

"Dagorath was a word in Sindarin, the Elvish language J. R. R. Tolkien had created for The Lord of the Rings. The word dagorath meant “battle,” but Tolkien had spelled the word with just one “g,” not two. “Daggorath” (with two “g”s) could refer only to one thing: an incredibly obscure computer game called Dungeons of Daggorath released in 1982. The game had been made for just one platform, the TRS-80 Color Computer.”

"I watched every episode of The Greatest American Hero, Airwolf, The A-Team, Knight Rider, Misfits of Science, and The Muppet Show. What about The Simpsons, you ask? I knew more about Springfield than I knew about my own city. Star Trek? Oh, I did my homework. TOS, TNG, DS9. Even Voyager and Enterprise. I watched them all in chronological order. The movies, too. Phasers locked on target. I gave myself a crash course in ‘80s Saturday-morning cartoons. I learned the name of every last goddamn Gobot and Transformer. Land of the Lost, Thundarr the Barbarian, He-Man, Schoolhouse Rock!, G.I. Joe—I knew them all. Because knowing is half the battle. Who was my friend, when things got rough? H.R. Pufnstuf. Japan? Did I cover Japan? Yes. Yes indeed. Anime and live-action. Godzilla, Gamera, Star Blazers, The Space Giants, and G-Force. Go, Speed Racer, Go. I also watched every single film he referenced in the Almanac. If it was one of Halliday’s favorites, like WarGames, Ghostbusters, Real Genius, Better Off Dead, or Revenge of the Nerds, I rewatched it until I knew every scene by heart. I devoured each of what Halliday referred to as “The Holy Trilogies”: Star Wars (original and prequel trilogies, in that order), Lord of the Rings, The Matrix, Mad Max, Back to the Future, and Indiana Jones... I also absorbed the complete filmographies of each of his favorite directors. Cameron, Gilliam, Jackson, Fincher, Kubrick, Lucas, Spielberg, Del Toro, Tarantino. And, of course, Kevin Smith. I spent three months studying every John Hughes teen movie and memorizing all the key lines of dialogue. Only the meek get pinched. The bold survive. You could say I covered all the bases. I studied Monty Python. And not just Holy Grail, either. Every single one of their films, albums, and books, and every episode of the original BBC series. (Including those two “lost” episodes they did for German television.) I wasn’t going to cut any corners.”

TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/21/2018, 2:39 PM
Now imagine 300+ pages of this.
Spidey91
Spidey91 - 1/21/2018, 2:58 PM
@TheDayman - it sounds to me that it would translate better to a movie, since you're seeing all that stuff instead of reading someone describe it.
TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/21/2018, 3:17 PM
@Spidey91 - Yeah, but it's still a mindless nostalgia-fest with one-dimensional characters and a generic plot. I'm not sure if even Spielberg can make something good out of such a terrible book.
Spidey91
Spidey91 - 1/21/2018, 3:29 PM
@TheDayman - it' Spielberg. maybe he'll find something a bit deeper buried underneath the piles of nostalgic imagery. he did that with Jurassic Park. that also had one-dimensional chaaracters, at least at first glance, he put a little nuance in them and made them endearing. so, maybe, he can capture that same feel with this, or similar.
Spidey91
Spidey91 - 1/21/2018, 3:31 PM
@TheDayman - and truth to be told, I'm on board mostly because of the giant robot brawl at the end. I'm too much of a sucker for mecha to not care about the movie, specially when there's the freakin' OG Gundam in it.
TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/21/2018, 3:32 PM
@Spidey91 - Maybe. But nothing from the trailer I saw has suggested that so far. My bet is that the only thing going for the movie will be the gimmick of having a whole bunch of easter eggs and references, just like with the book.
Ragnarocknroll
Ragnarocknroll - 1/21/2018, 9:54 PM
@TheDayman - Spielberg has adapted great films from lesser source material time and again. He did so with Jurassic Park, Minority Report and Jaws.
shadowspider9
shadowspider9 - 1/22/2018, 2:27 AM
@TheDayman - Good god! This writer can't be serious. This is like the opposite end of the spectrum from the horrible movie Gamer.
Instead of it reinforcing outdated stereotypes that gamers are perverted degenerate psychotic gore hounds.
It instead reinforces the stereotype that nerds are shut-in losers with no lives outside old cartoons, movies, and anime that they watch over and over and treat like a religion.
It's like if Comicbook Guy from Simpsons wrote a book where he's the main character.
It screams. 'Praise and bow down before me for I am the pinnacle of geek knowledge'
bkmeijer2
bkmeijer2 - 1/22/2018, 5:26 AM
@TheDayman - All I wonder is, how does one with this amount of free time earn money to buy his bread?

That question doesn't need answering, because fictional characters don't need to eat
TheDayman
TheDayman - 1/22/2018, 8:05 AM
@Ragnarocknroll - Those may have been mediocre to bad films, but I'm not exaggerating when I say that the entire book fees like that. With Jurassic Park, Jaws, etc., the basic idea is solid even if the execution in the books isn't, but with Ready Player One, the basic idea is the worst part.
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