Edward Scissorhands Cadilac
Winona Ryder and Timothée Chalamet in the Cadillac Super Bowl commercial.
Cadillac
  • Timothée Chalamet played Edgar, the son of Edward Scissorhands, in Cadillac’s Super Bowl ad.
  • His thin, pale frame perfectly matches the Johnny Depp character in the 1990s movie.
  • Fans took to Twitter during the Super Bowl saying there should be a reboot starring Chalamet.
  • Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

One of the hit commercials during Super Bowl Sunday featured actor Timothée Chalamet as the son of Edward Scissorhands, the character from the 1990 Tim Burton classic.

Edward Scissorhands
Johnny Depp in "Edward Scissorhands."
20th Century Fox

In the commercial for Cadillac, we watch as Edgar Scissorhands navigates the world, just like his father did (played by Johnny Depp in the movie), with scissors for hands. His mother, played by Winona Ryder, reprises the role of Kim in the movie, Edward’s love interest. At the end of the commercial, Edgar finally finds peace in the world when Kim lets him drive their Cadillac, which has a hands free function.

Chalamet’s thin and pale look mirrors Depp’s in the movie, all the way down to his all-black leather outfit. It’s so spot-on that the loyal Chalamet fanbase took to Twitter Sunday night calling for the “Little Women” star to be the face of an “Edward Scissorhands” reboot.

If we were ever to see a “Scissorhands” reboot it wouldn’t be anytime soon as Chalamet’s schedule is pretty full these days.

He’s currently shooting the Netflix comedy “Don’t Look Up” opposite Jennifer Lawrence and Leonardo DiCaprio. He’s in talks to play Bob Dylan in a movie about the music legend. And is also planning to team with his “Call Me By Your Name” director Luca Gudagnino to make a coming-of-age cannibalism horror movie.

Read more: "Edward Scissorhands" screenwriter said she cried when she realized the movie's importance to people with disabilities

But in an interview with Vogue for the commercial, Chalamet said the goal of the ad was to celebrate Burton's movie.

"This was a wonderful opportunity to hopefully make the original material relatable to a modern audience without sacrificing the originality of the 1990 version, he said. "Instead, we wanted to create a character that didn't make you blink in terms of a present-day setting, but was a total homage to the character Johnny Depp created."

Read the original article on Insider