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| Synopsis: After Skynet has destroyed much of humanity in a nuclear holocaust, a group of survivors led by John Connor struggles to keep the machines from finishing the job. MPAA Rating: PG - 13 for language and sci-fi violence and action Runtime: 130 minutes |
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| April 26, 2009 | Preview: Terminator Salvation for IPhone Chris Holt, Macworld.com Due out the first week in May, Terminator Salvation brings the apocalyptic science fiction series to the iPhone. Tying in with the movie released later in the month, Terminator Salvation promises intense third-person shooter action set in the epic war for humanity's survival. Fans of the series can look forward to playing as John Connor, the human resistance leader and future savior of mankind. Also playable is the mysterious character "Marcus," whose allegiance to the human alliance is shrouded in mystery. Through over three hours of gameplay and eight levels, players can guide these two characters through a post-apocalyptic war torn world. Each mission opens with a cut scene and a mission briefing that detail the enemies you'll be encountering and their weaknesses. These enemies include the iconic T-800 Model 101 Terminators and other robotic enemies designed by Skynet-- including tanks, motorcycles, and spider-like attack drones. But don't worry, you'll have plenty of armament to fight the robotic armies of Skynet. During the demo, I put down a variety of T-800 Models with my assault rifle and annihilated several tanks with my anti-tank gun perched from the back of my all-terrain vehicle. Other weapons, including shotguns, grenade launchers, chainguns, and something called the "surge cannon" are also available through the course of the game. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| April 26, 2009 | It's being reported that original Terminator star Linda Hamilton has completed recording her voice-over role in Terminator Salvation. McG has said he wanted to use Hamilton's voice as a lead-in to and end of the movie, based on the tape recordings she was seen making at the end of the original Terminator movie to her as-yet-unborn son John. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 30, 2009 | The action-packed Terminator Salvation game will be released in conjunction with the highly anticipated film, opening nationwide on May 21, 2009. Based on the movie, the game offers players the chance to assume the role of John Connor, a soldier in the resistance, battling for survival against the far superior forces of Skynet. The game features concentrated armed combat against all of the Skynet enemies from the film while encountering new enemies specifically designed for the game. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 26, 2009 | New Six Flags Coaster to Offer Salvation While the theme sounds promising, I still find it odd that Six Flags chose an old-school wooden coaster to tell a new-age sci-fi story. And it's doubly odd that nearby park competitor, Universal Studios Hollywood, has its own attraction tied to the Terminator franchise. Read more about the Terminator coaster coming to Six Flags Magic Mountain. TERMINATOR: THE COASTER will be located in the northwest corner of the park, next to Déjà Vu and is slated for a spring 2009 opening. With the addition of TERMINATOR: THE COASTER, Six Flags Magic Mountain will be home to 16 world class coasters. SPECS Roller Coaster: Terminator Salvation: The Coaster Amusement Park: Six Flags Magic Mountain (Valencia, California 91355 USA) Classification: Roller Coaster Type: Wood - Sit Down Status: Under Construction opening 2009 Builder: Great Coasters International Cost: $10,000,000 USD Length: 2877' Height: 95' Drop: 87' 4" Inversions: 0 Speed: 50.1 mph Duration: 3:00 Trains: 2 trains with 12 cars per train. Riders are arranged 2 across in a single row for a total of 24 riders per train. Riders must be 48" or taller to ride. Built by Great Coasters International Millennium Flyer trains. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 25, 2009 |
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| March 22, 2009 | Source: MovieHole Back in June, the ending of the upcoming "Terminator Salvation" leaked online. Some of you may have heard of it and some of you haven't. Moviehole is reporting that the ending has been completely changed. Warner Bros decided to make the change because of the leak, but they have already tested the new version and they are happy to say that it tested better than the old ending. The source added that the movie has become more believable. SPOILERS AHEAD: It's not much of a spoiler anymore, but in case you're interested, here is the original ending: The main character is Marcus, played by Sam Worthington. Marcus was a criminal who was executed in 2003. He donated his body to Project Angel which was involved with SkyNet. They took his body and made a terminator out of him, giving him a terminator skeleton, but leaving his living muscle/skin and a beating heart. At the end of the movie John Connor (Christian Bale) is fighting a T800 model terminator and loses. He dies and the top resistance people come up with a plan to keep his image alive in order to help resistance keep fighting. They rip off Marcus' skin and put John Connor's on the skeleton so now Marcus is John Connor. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 17, 2009 | It's been reported (but unsubstantiated) that Linda Hamilton has completed her voice over work for the movie. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 11, 2009 | Bryce Dallas Howard says she's "such a geek". The actress - who got her big break in Spider-Man 3 - says she is even more excited about battling killer robots in Terminator Salvation opposite Christian Bale than she was about swinging with Spider-Man. She explains, "The funny thing is before I got the role I was on the Terminator websites checking out the gossip on the new movie because I'm a huge fan. "When I heard Christian was cast I was so excited about the movie, then to be offered a role myself was almost too much. I'm such a geek." | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 10, 2009 | Source: Cinemablend.com Whether you think Terminator Salvation will suck or rock, there’s plenty of licensed material being coupled in with the movie’s release. A major console rendition of the movie is in the works and it has recently been revealed that a mobile game rendition of the movie is also in the works. The game will be based on the first of the three new Terminator movies and will release on May 22nd of this year. We’ll keep you posted on further updates and news regarding the further development of this title (mainly in hopes that it turns out to be better than most games in the genre). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| March 9, 2009 | Source: io9.com Will Sam Worthington (Marcus) be the Next Batman? Sam Worthington's fame is set to explode in the US with May release of Terminator Salvation, and again in December when James Cameron's Avatar is released.Cameron, also the creator of Terminator, is backing him to be the breakout star of both films. Industry gossip now suggests the rising Australian actor could score the part of Batman in the third installment of the successful prequel franchise. That could mean replacing his Terminator co-star and The Dark Knight lead Christian Bale, whose profile was damaged after his infamous "me, me, me" meltdown on the Terminator set, which recently hit the internet. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Marc 7, 2009 | Washington, March 7 (ANI): Moritz Borman has filed lawsuit against his fellow "Terminator: Salvation" producers over fraud and breach allegations. The veteran film producer submitted papers against Derek Anderson and Victor Kubicek and their Halcyon Co. banner in Los Angeles Superior Court claiming more than 160 million dollars in damages. The suit cited eight causes of action including non-payment of balance producing fees amounting to 2.5 million dollars, reports Variety magazine. Borman claimed he had helped Anderson and Kubiceck obtain the "Terminator" rights and that his agreement included approval rights on the film, creative decisions along with a 5-million dollar producing fee and "significant" back-end compensation. He alleged that he would have withdrawn had he been familiar with their "shady" past or that the two had faced court before for "swindling" other motion picture investors. The suit said: "Notwithstanding the fact that defendants obtained the substantial franchise rights and assets through Borman, Anderson and Kubicek failed to honor their assurances, representations and contractual obligations to Borman. "Defendants’ egregious fraud, bad faith conduct and refusal to abide by their contracts has led to the filing of this lawsuit." | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| January 14, 2009 | Salvation is but months away (by Raju Mudhar Entertainment Reporter for Toronto Star). In town to give local media a sneak preview of footage from the upcoming Terminator Salvation, director McG was effusive in his praise for star Christian Bale and the efforts the cast and crew went through to stay true to the spirit of the vaunted sci-fi franchise. Showcasing footage from the unfinished blockbuster, which still had placeholder animation, as well as what looked like a new trailer for the upcoming May release, the director talked about everything from using distressed film stock to give the film a washed-out feel to choosing Danny Elfman to do the soundtrack. He even hinted about a certain governor of California making a guest appearance. "When it first got put on my radar to make a fourth Terminator flick, I said, `That sounds terrible. Jim Cameron told the story as he's always said in two films.' Then I heard the take was a post-apocalyptic story, after the bombs went off. That excited me, because the first three movies, there were only glimpses of the world after Judgment Day. So, right there, I started thinking that it might be worthwhile." The story picks up in 2018, nearly 15 years after Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines leaves off, where John Connor (Christian Bale) is a soldier in the resistance army. McG described the film as a war movie, but also one of "becoming," as the story of how Connor comes to be leader of the resistance. It is also the story of how the T-800 (the human-like Terminator models from the first film) are created by Skynet. McG hopes his addition to the Terminator mythology lives up to the first two helmed by Cameron and reignites the franchise, which was put in doubt after what many fans consider a lesser third instalment. Acting opposite Bale is Sam Worthington as a mysterious Terminator named Marcus Wright, as well as a young Kyle Reese (played by Anton Yelchin), who in the series mythology is sent back to father John Connor. "The first story was about saving Sarah Connor. The second film was about saving John Connor. This film is about saving Kyle Reese," said the director. McG said that Bale, in particular, insisted on an excellent script before signing on – Bale's also committed to two more sequels – and there are supposedly scenes featuring a lot of dialogue and exposition. That said, the footage shown was nothing but incredible action sequences including several shots of never-before-seen Terminator technology, including a 15-metre-tall giant robot called a Harvester, robotic motorcycles, flying hovercraft and menacing underwater eel-like robots called Hydrabots. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| January 2009 | Film Comment reports: First Look at “Terminator:Salvation”“What does it mean to be a quote human being?” director McG asked the crowd. As he spoke, a ten-foot tall automaton scanned the screening room with its glowing red eyes. “If we were graduate students at NYU, we could discuss the philosophy of it for hours.” As compelling as I found the question–might this mechanical toy express more genuine humanity than the unctuously insincere McG?–I have to admit that I felt less inclined to wax ontological than to imagine the endlessly awesome ways that this robot could be dismembered, blown up, or otherwise atomized into a million glittering pieces.Ah, the simple joy of staging physical destruction as cinematic spectacle. From what I glimpsed at last night’s clips preview, T:Siconic sequence in T2 where John Connor zips through a concrete flood-control channel on his moped while the T-1000 pursues him in a Mack truck. Both set pieces are models of analytical clarity: maximum visual legibility yielding maximum visceral impact. But the contemporary version ultimately comes up short. contains at least one really whiz-bang action set piece. It involves a human capturing mega-machine dubbed The Harvester, two deployable motorcycle robots, an eighteen-wheel oil tanker, and an obstacle course-like highway littered with abandoned cars. Of course, this couldn’t help but recall that While it’s hard to fault McG for not matching the plate-spinning complexity of a James Cameron set piece, what’s less forgivable is how he’s seemingly drained the franchise of its playful postmodern irony. McG said he wanted to “reboot” the Terminator films by taking them in a “darker” direction. That he repeatedly referred to The Dark Night as if it were Citizen Kane gives you a pretty good idea of what he’s aiming for. (Note that TDK scribe Jonathan Nolan was brought in for a rewrite.) Though not-so-thinly veiled political allegories were a foundational component of the original Terminator films, Cameron’s self-conscious enjoyment of the sheer absurdity of the sci-fi conceits injected those films with an insinuating sense of humor. Absent that humor, will the franchise devolve into pretentious self-seriousness? Will maddeningly vague references to contemporary political realities lamely attempt to telegraph some sense of moral gravity? Will the whole thing just feel empty without a star turn from that most inhuman of humans, Arnold Schwarzenegger? Mmmaybe. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| November 12, 2008 | James Cameron, director of the first two Terminator films, talks about the upcoming Terminator:Salvation (sort of) and clears up rumors about him thinking the movie was going to be a heaping pile of steaming feces. From Ain’t it Cool News:"There’s been some discussion at AICN and elsewhere of me rescinding my so-called blessing of T4 and that’s not the case. The truth is there never was a blessing to rescind, and there’s been some kind of misunderstanding between me and McG, perfectly innocent I believe. He asked me in a phone call when I was shooting in New Zealand earlier this year if I would be a supporter and creative participant in the new film. I said sure, send me the script and I’ll give you my thoughts. And I warned him that free advice is usually worth what you pay for it. For whatever reason I never got the script and to date I haven’t seen a foot of film other than what everybody’s seen in the trailer, which is not enough to form an opinion. So I have zero basis for supporting or dissing the film. As I said in an interview, for all I know it could be a masterpiece or it could be a big steaming pile. I think all people heard was the steaming pile part and concluded I was against the film, which I’m not. In fact, it might be very good, an opinion based solely on what Sam Worthington has shared with me. He’s nobody’s fool when it comes to material, and has absolutely the lowest bullshit quotient of anyone I know, and he has repeatedly told me that he reckons the film is going to be good. I know him to be very critical (in a healthy way) of his own work, and an actor who always aspires to excellence, so I know he wouldn’t praise the film if he didn’t feel it. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| October 23, 2008 by McG | The Future So Far... We wrapped principal photography. Now we're heavy into post. I've already shown early cuts to Christian and Sam. They seem pleased with where the film is headed. Our focus is on story and character, but it's fun diving into the world of visual effects. It feels like the responsibility of any Terminator film to reinvent the wheel of effects with every outing. The first movie was a stunning achievement in animatronics and practical effects from Stan Winston. The second film brought us liquid metal, which was a true revolution in the effects world. Robert Patrick's (T-1000) head coming apart and putting itself back together again looks as good today as ever. Charlie Gibson is aware of his responsibility as the VFX supervisor and second unit director of this film. He works with ILM and Asylum every day and makes revisions to the finest detail. We want the patina of the machines to be dirty and heavy and perfectly realistic - that's why we built so much practically with Stan Winston. But at some point the effects kick in and like any Terminator fan, Charlie wants his mind blown. There's one sequence in particular where we're trying to achieve something that's never been done before. I don't want to talk about it because we haven't been successful yet... But we're working on it. It's very interesting working with Conrad Buff every day. First of all he was the editor on Terminator 2 so it's very comforting having his steady hand at the Avid. Long before we ever began we talked about what excited us about making this film. It was the notion of the world after judgment day. We set out to create a world that honored the Terminator mythology but was its own new beginning. Every day I learn from Conrad as he makes the elegant choices of a disciplined filmmaker. It feels great to have his confidence in the movie. I take his opinion very seriously, he provides a daily litmus test for what is worthy of a Terminator film. Most importantly, Christian and Sam bring power to the rolls of John Connor and Marcus Wright. This is a story of two destinies colliding. Connor is part of a resistance comprised of the ethnicities that make up the globe. This film is so much more that just Los Angeles. It reflects the global crisis of man, all of man versus machine. McG | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| August 25, 2008 | WENN reported, Helena Bonham Carter has halted filming on the new Terminator movie to fly back to Britain after four members of her family were killed in a horrific car crash in South Africa. Bonham Carter’s relatives were on a safari holiday in the country when a minibus they were traveling in on Wednesday spun out of control and flipped over after a tire burst. The actress’ cousin Fiona Bonham Carter, 51, escaped with a broken shoulder. But Fiona’s son Marcus Egerton-Warburton, 14, her mother Brenda, 74, and stepfather Francis Kirkwood, 75, all died. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| August 7, 2008 | Someone over at www.Pause.com spoke to a representative at Warner Brothers who told him that Linda Hamilton has a role in the upcoming Terminator 4 in a flash back sequence. But it does get sticky quickly. They report that the studio says Linda has a 3 picture deal to do cameos in flashbacks in three upcoming Terminator movies. The problem is Linda Hamilton's reps know nothing about it, and if Linda were offered the role, would gladly accept. The premise of having Linda Hamilton in flash back sequences would be welcomed,but how it would align with T3's time line is anyone's guess (she is long dead in T3). | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| August 5, 2008 | "I kind of play a baddie, definitely a baddie," Bonham Carter told Sci Fi Wire. "I don't know how much I'm allowed to say, but I'm a very bad person."Known for her bonkers female characters of the past (and this being one of the darkest movies Carter's been connected to) this Terminator is shaping out to be an intriguing look at a darker future for humanity. "Tim [Burton] would have killed me if I hadn't done it, because he's such a Terminator fan," Bonham Carter said, referring to her longtime partner and director on such films as Planet of the Apes. "I've been in big movies before, like Apes, and Fight Club was big in a different way, and Charlie [and the Chocolate Factory] and Sweeney Todd were big, but I've never been in this kind of big popcorn action movie, a male one, an action one." Source: http://www.scifi.com/scifiwire/ | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| August 1, 2008 | Speaking in a news conference at Comic-Con International in San Diego over the weekend, Howard added that the Terminator reboot film is set in a post-nuclear world that we can easily imagine, sadly. “In the imagining of a post-apocalyptic world, you do have, unfortunately, a lot of references that we can go to today,” Howard (Spider-Man 3) said. “War-torn countries and Third World countries where people don’t have access to … basic clean food and water and necessities and medical provisions. And that’s something to kind of examine, I think, for us, to say, ‘OK, yes, we’re making a picture about totally devastating circumstances, but the fact that it does reflect things that are going on currently in this privileged world that we’re living in–where there hasn’t been an apocalypse and robots haven’t taken over the world–I mean, I think that’s something definitely for us to re-investigate and to continue to make choices for our own future.” In Terminator Salvation, Howard’s Kate and Bale’s John are part of a resistance against the robots, who are engaged in a program to exterminate humanity, while also rounding some of them up for a nefarious purpose. “For my character, because she is a physician, you really are trying to just do the best that you can given circumstances, and, I mean, I assume she’s just finding books, and she’s just talking to as many people who have survived at the hospital to learn techniques so she can continue to save lives,” Howard said. “So that’s been a really fascinating journey for me, personally.” Terminator Salvation opens May 22, 2009. Source: SCIFI Wire | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| 7/30/08 | IDW Publishing is planning a 4-issue comic book series that will serve as a prequel to events in McG’s upcoming Terminator Salvation. The events of in the comic book series will take place in the year 2017, which is one year prior to the scene of the fourth Terminator film. The first issue will be release in January 2009, with the final issue coming out right as the movie hits theaters in May 2009. The series, written by Dara Naraghi with art by Alan Robinson, will show what life was like once the machines took over, but before John Conner becomes the leader of the resistance. Conner is just a normal soldier who does a radio show every night to communicate with surviving humans. It’s becoming noticeable that Connor is a presence and will be great, but he’s not sure whether he wants the responsibility. Naraghi said that his story will involve time travel and introduce new characters that won | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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| Wild-Kat | Post Your Terminator Salvation Reviews Here (page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... last page) | 512 | Tuesday, 10:31 AM EST by The1Russter | ||
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Thread started: May 20 2009, 2:20 PM EDT
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We're just hours away from the first showings of Terminator Salvation...see the big flick and then post your review here!
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| rref | The OFFICAL "Terminator: Salvation" T4 discussion thread. (page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... last page) | 808 | Jul 9 2009, 3:15 AM EDT by LukeT-101 | ||
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Thread started: May 20 2009, 12:13 PM EDT
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It's not a new episode, but at least it's Terminator.
Please discuss... >>>>>>>>> SPOILER WARNING <<<<<<<<<<< |
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| steel1x1 | T4 Tickets for TSCC (page: 1 2 3 4 5 ... last page) | 142 | Jun 13 2009, 9:29 PM EDT by RobbyStellarSeed | ||
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Thread started: May 18 2009, 11:14 PM EDT
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Why dont we all buy Terminator Salvation tickets and send them to Warner Bros telling them the reason we saw the movie was because of TSCC.
From SavetheSCC.com When you go to see Terminator: Salvation, keep your ticket stub (heck, collect the ticket stubs from the people around you) and mail it to the WB with a letter expressing your support for the show. We're still here and we're not going anywhere. Peter Roth President, Warner Bros. Television Group 4000 Warner Blvd Burbank, CA 91522 Keep your tickets http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCuAy4R2Agc |
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| Krazykaleb | What do you think of Danny Elfman's Music to the Movie? | 14 | Jun 8 2009, 3:44 AM EDT by jht53 | ||
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Thread started: May 25 2009, 11:56 PM EDT
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Danny Elfman composed the music to Terminator Salvation. What do you think of the music he created for the movie, such as the new theme and the use of Brad Fiedel's Terminator Theme? (Thoughts opinions)
Anybody? Good or Bads? |
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