Development The film was produced by
DreamWorks and
Reliance Entertainment. Film producer and director
Michael Bay brought the manuscript of the young adult novel
I Am Number Four to
Stacey Snider and
Steven Spielberg at DreamWorks. A
bidding war developed for the film rights between DreamWorks and
J. J. Abrams, with DreamWorks winning the rights in June 2009, with the intention of having Bay produce and possibly direct the project. and the potential of establishing a
film franchise, with at least six more installments planned by the book's publisher.
Marti Noxon, writer and producer for the television series
Buffy the Vampire Slayer, also contributed to the screenplay.
D. J. Caruso was brought on to direct in early 2010, after Bay opted to focus on directing the
third film of the
Transformers series. Caruso had been selected by Spielberg to direct
Disturbia and
Eagle Eye for DreamWorks, and had success with both films. Caruso had less than a year to prepare, shoot and edit the film, due to a worldwide release date set for
Presidents Day weekend. Chris Bender, J.C. Spink, and
David Valdes executive produced the film. The film was also the first release for DreamWorks after the studio's financial restructuring in 2008. It was later confirmed that the 21-year-old British actor would play the lead.
Sharlto Copley was going to star as Henri, Number Four's guardian and mentor, but had to drop out due to press obligations with his film
The A-Team. Copley was replaced by
Timothy Olyphant.
Kevin Durand plays the villain of the film, Commander, the Mogadorian who leads the hunt for the Loriens on Earth. DreamWorks went through multiple rounds of tests to find the right actress for the female romantic lead.
Dianna Agron, a star in the
Fox television series
Glee, won the role. She plays Sarah Hart, a girl who used to date a high school football player, but falls for Number Four and keeps his secret.
Jake Abel plays the football player, Mark James, an antagonist in the film.
Teresa Palmer plays the other Loric, Number Six, and 16-year-old Australian actor
Callan McAuliffe plays Sam Goode, Number Four's best friend.
Filming Principal photography began on May 17, 2010, using 20 locations all within the
Pittsburgh metropolitan area. DreamWorks selected the area primarily due to tax incentives from the
Pennsylvania Film Production Tax Credit. Cinematographer
Guillermo Navarro shot the film on
35 mm, using a format known as Super 1:85.
Beaver, the former Conley Inn in
Homewood, and nearby Buttermilk Falls were used as locations in the film; interior and exterior scenes were shot near a boat launch in
Monaca. A spring fair scene was filmed in
Deer Lakes Park in
West Deer;
Port Vue,
North Park,
New Kensington and
Hyde Park were also used as locations. The setting of the film's fictional town of Paradise, Ohio is
Vandergrift, Pennsylvania, where filming took place from June to July 2010. Producers chose Vandergrift as the "hero town" of the film because of its unique look and curved streets, laid out by
Frederick Law Olmsted, the designer of
New York City's
Central Park. Teachers and recent graduates appear in the film, and a set that replicates the school was built in a studio in
Monroeville for filming explosion scenes. In the last few weeks of production, scenes were filmed at the 200-year-old St. John's Lutheran Stone Church in
Lancaster Township. Additional filming took place in the
Florida Keys in the beginning of the film in
Big Pine Key, Florida, as well as the spanning of the drive over the bridge showcases the keys
7 mile bridge.
Post-production I Am Number Four was edited by Jim Page, with
Industrial Light & Magic developing the
visual effects for the alien Pikens. The film was scored by former
Yes guitarist
Trevor Rabin. ==Release==