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Does the Daughter Ellie Die in Pet Sematary?

The New Pet Sematary Trailer Reveals a Startling Change to Stephen King's Original Story

Warning: BIG spoilers for both the original and new versions of Pet Sematary ahead!

After watching the new trailer for the Pet Sematary reboot, you might find yourself shocked to discover that the studio decided to give away a major twist that explains both of the horror flicks' chilling taglines: "Sometimes dead is better" and "They don't come back the same."

In this new adaptation of Stephen King's 1983 novel, it seems directors Kevin Kölsch and Dennis Widmyer have decided to change a major component of the original story. This time around, the young son of the Creed family isn't the one who dies — it's his older sister.

To give you some background, the film follows Louis Creed (Jason Clarke), who moves into a sprawling rural home with his wife, Rachel (Amy Seimetz), and their two young children, 8-year-old Ellie (Jeté Laurence) and toddler Gage (twins Hugo Lavoie and Lucas Lavoie). Not long after they arrive, their neighbour Jud Crandall (John Lithgow) informs them about the eerie pet cemetery located in the woods bordering their home, which isn't your average burial place for beloved cats and dogs (the new trailer reveals the cemetery seems to be on land previously owned by Native Americans). Instead, when dead pets are buried there, sometimes they come back, albeit in an altered, zombie-like state. All of this is in line with King's original story.

Here's where things diverge: the Creeds' home happens to be directly next to a busy road where trucks fly by at dangerous speeds, and one day, Ellie is tragically hit while running out to grab the family's cat, Church. Despite Jud's warnings, a grief-stricken Louis decides to bury Ellie in the cemetery. A very creepy and very murderous version of their daughter returns, as we see in the trailer. In the book and 1989 film adaptation, Gage is the one who dies and comes back, playing psychological games with his family members and ultimately killing multiple people. (It's not actually him, however — a spirit from the burial grounds possesses his body.)

So, what's the deal with this new twist? The film's creators sat down with EW to explain their big decision.

"Trust me, we were nervous about it," producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura said. "I feel this way about anything that you remake or update. If we gave you what you had before, we didn't do the subject matter much good. I'm very protective of movies too, but I want a new experience each time, and feel like filmmakers have really thought about the choice. That was one, we thought, 'All right, let's make this choice.'"

Kölsch and Widmyer also said they felt the change to Jeff Buhler's screenplay was necessary due to the physical realities of their young stars. "Much of how they shot the first [movie] was a doll," Widmyer said of the original 3-year-old Gage character. "It's creepy and it's effective. But we've now seen Child's Play and we've seen the little kid trying to kill, and it's effective when done right." He went on to note that they wanted to try something new instead.

"There was something about an 8-year-old and the psychology that she would have," he added. "She would understand what happened to her on the road. She would understand that she's dead. She would know how to not only physically kill a person, but psychologically destroy them as well. It just gave another layer to it."

Pet Sematary hits theatres on April 5.

Image Source: Paramount Pictures
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