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Wed 19 Nov 2008 | 19h45 GMT+1
Info: www.channel4.com

First official footage revealed to press

Terminator footage seen... still to be shown to us :(

On the 19th of November, select members of the press and other agencies were invited to a pre-release press party of some footage of the Terminator: Salvation movie, where McG himself presented some ruff-cut material and answered some hard needed questions.

With the speed of the internet these days, the following sites have had the luck to post the first info that was spread in the session, each with their own view on the footage and what not more. Check out the following links that our forum-members were so happy to share (soo, if you want to know news the instance it appears, be sure to register ;).

Blogs and sites reporting on the session:

- channel4.com
- guardian.co.uk
- indielondon.co.uk
- www.littlewhitelies.co.uk
- movies.ign.com
- news.bbc.co.uk
- thisisbristol.co.uk
- timeout.com
- totalfilm.com

We took the liberty to copy one of the articles, and repost it on our site. Check out some interesting details below, and special stuff bolded that clearifies some stuff that was previously just rumoured, or gossiped about.

Don't read on... if you do not want to be spoiled (you brat ;).


Terminator Salvation Advance Screening Report

Source: www.channel4.com

We watched some exclusive early footage from McG's Terminator sequel, due out in June 2009, and heard what the director had to say about man, machines and making the franchise dark 'n' dirty.

Film4 was among the select few invited on 19 November to the world premiere of footage from director McG's upcoming Terminator Salvation, due for general release next June. The footage we saw took the form of a hectic, seven-minute montage, like a slightly ramshackle, beefed-up trailer with unfinished shots (wires, green screen etc) and very little in the way of spoilers. Yep, the real meat of Terminator Salvation remains a closely guarded secret.

McG is very much the handsome Hollywood showman, a ringmaster who strutted across the front of the auditorium at London's Vue Leicester Square's bigging up the film, yet he told us very little we hadn't heard before. He's an entertaining chap though. "I realised how ridiculous my name sounds when I hear other people say it," he said, before explaining that he's been going by that moniker (his full name is Joseph McGinty Nichol) since he was a child. "It's a terrible cross to bear."

The director, whose previous credits include videos for Cypress Hill, Charlie's Angels and its sequel Full Throttle and the pilot for TV series 'Chuck', very much talks the talk. When he was first offered the Terminator gig, he said, "I thought, why flog a dead horse?" Franchise creator James Cameron did after all say that he told the story with Terminator 2: Judgment Day.

McG's well-honed anecdote about how he was drawn into Terminator Salvation is designed to satisfy fanboys and girls. We've always wanted to see the post-Judgment Day world. So be it. McG says, "Cameron didn't give us his blessing, but he didn't shit all over this movie". He says the cerebral Jonathan Nolan (brother of Christopher) really cracked it when he proposed a "becoming story" for John Connor. He says their early drafts of the screenplay had to be good enough to "read cold on a stage" to win over Christian Bale, who previously encountered the post-apocalypse in Reign Of Fire. McG likened this back-to-basics "becoming story" to what we've seen recently in the Batman and Bond franchises.

Before we got to see those seven minutes of Terminator footage, we watched a short film about the production design work of Martin Laing. Laing, who worked on Titanic and Ghosts Of The Abyss and is now working on Battle Angel, provides a direct link with Cameron but his work here very much expands what the franchise creator originally gave us.

We're promised 10 new Terminator models, including the vast Harvesters, which collect humans, Moto-Terminators, which are basically AI motorbikes, and Hydrobots, whose element is water. As if T-800s weren't formidable enough. Looks like humanity hasn't got a hope. Talking of T-800s, the film also introduces the earlier model, first mentioned by Kyle Reese in the original film, the bigger, cruder T-600 ("The 600 series had rubber skin. We spotted them easy").


Special make-up effects supervisor John Rosengrant, who is stepping up after the death of his mentor and Terminator designer Stan Winston, was also present and he says the reverse-engineered T-600s have a "gritty, nasty Soviet kinda look". One model was present at the event - he's a big bugger and no mistake. Between Rosengrant and McG we learned that these elements of the film are being realised with a combination of practical effects and CGI, and before he's stripped of his faux-flesh, the T-600 is even played an actor - Brian Steele, the six foot seven chap who appeared under layers of latex as the formidable Mr Wink in Hellboy II: The Golden Army.

"I don't want to cheerlead the film," McG said. "I don't want to be hyperbolic - I want the film to speak for itself." And so we got to see those seven minutes. After all that talk of a character-led film with the emphasis on practical effects rather than something reliant on explosions and CGI, it was ironic that the footage we saw featured one set-piece involving a Harvester smashing up a petrol station in the desert, then giving chase to Sam Worthington's mysterious Marcus Wright and Anton Yelchin's young Kyle Reese in a sequence full of explosions and fairly standard Hollywood action.

It felt pretty much like Mad Max 2 meets Transformers. Transformers was mentioned by McG, who said he was a fan (of course) but was aiming for something a lot more sombre. He and his colleagues kept coming back to their film world's "patina". McG calls it "a dirty, difficult, grimy, Giger world."

Beyond the snippets of action sequences, we did get some sense of the drama. The story involves Connor trying to step into the role of leader of the resistance, the role he'd been brought up to believe in. However, there are other, more experienced military figures (Michael Ironside among them) who can't let this young, non-soldier take over.

That conflict forms a strong strain of drama. There's also the Connor/Wright duality. Although McG and the Sony team are avoiding revealing too much, there's some conjecture out there about just what Wright is. McG says that alongside the "becoming story", the film is also about "where does humanity end and machine begin". In Salvation, Connor learns that the T-800, which is the first of the Terminator models to be able to blend in thanks to its human tissue, is coming online 10 years earlier than expected. This appears to be a key motor for the plot, and McG said, "the T800's a big character in the film."

The film also seems to be doing some interesting things with John Connor. A key quote is: "This isn't the future that my mother told me about." To which resistance pilot Blair Williams (Moon Bloodgood) replies, "If you saved us in another future, you can save us in this one." Which gives things a nice tension but also gives the film a parallel worlds justification for any differences it might have to the post-Judgment Day worlds we've glimpsed in earlier Terminator films or in the 'Sarah Connor Chronicles'.

In the discussion that followed the screening of the footage montage, McG talked more about the film, and plans for the franchise. It was all pretty guarded, though he did confirm they had "arced out" stories for two more films. In his least guarded moment, he was even critical of some important work special effects company ILM is currently doing for the film.

"I think it's the responsibility of a Terminator film to push the visual effects envelope," he said, and here he hopes to give us a character where the actor and the CGI version are indistinguishable. His tone implied ILM haven't quite achieved this yet. But then it's still early days for the post-production team. Despite the claim of not relying on CGI too much, principle photography wrapped back in September, so the production has eight-or-so months to twiddle the digital visuals. Fingers crossed they pull it all together and Salvation lives up to ringmaster McG's enthusiastic spiel.



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Last modified: Nov 19 2008