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The Terminator Movies: Terminator Salvation, The Future Begins |

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The Terminator Movies: Terminator Salvation, The Future Begins - Terminator: Sarah Connor Chronicles
Countdown to Movie (movie facts/rumors below)

“Becoming Self-Aware Memorial Day 2009”

STATUS: IN PRODUCTION



McG's Termination Salvation blog at
http://rss.warnerbros.com/terminatorsalvation/.



T-4 Concept Art (LA area after Judgment Day)
T4 Concept Art

Production Updates

DateComment
6/29/08Actress Helena Bonham Carter is in talks to join the cast of the new 'Terminator' movie: 'Terminator Salvation'.
The Hollywood Reporter says the star's role would be "small but pivotal". The English actress would join a cast which includes Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Anton Yelchin, Bryce Dallas Howard, Moon Bloodgood, Common and Jadagrace.


6/16/08Stan Winston, the Oscar-winning special-effects maestro responsible for bringing the dinosaurs of "Jurrasic Park" and other iconic movie creatures to life, has died. He was 62. Winston died at his home in Malibu surrounded by family on Sunday evening after a seven-year struggle with multiple myeloma, according to a representative from Stan Winston Studio. Stan was also leading the F/X for Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins. He will be missed.
6/3/08T4 is in the middle of week 5. The New Mexico wind is kicking the grap out of the crew but providing a perfect backdrop for our post-apocalyptic world.

McG has started filming the T-600's, which are bigger, grimier, nastier Terminator versions that preceded the T-800. Stan Winston, Production Designer Martin Laing and ILM came up with the designs and the T-600is on Kyle Reese's ass throughout the entire picture. McG wanted to achieve that bummer, rubbery skin, prosthetic look that cloaks an unrelenting machine with a singular focus of killing (target: Kyle).

  • Sam Worthington (Marcus) tore a muscle on the left side of his ribs in a fight sequence. Neither McG nor Sam wants to use a stunt double.
  • This movie takes place several years after Judgment Day (2018-2019 according to sources), but prior to 2029. Just like it took a long time to get an HD plasma screen in our world, it took Skynet a lot of research and development to get to the T-800, and this movie explores that "space between."
  • In this film, there are Hydrobots that patrol the water, Transports that move human prisoners around, Harvesters that collect human beings as lab rats for Skynet, and Aerostats that survey all that is going on with the resistance the world over.
  • There are only three people who know the ending.




Below are videos showing filming in progress.



This are some aerial shots in New Mexico. The Video is described as Albuquerque, NM (June 2). First preview of the new Terminator 4 film, Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins.

It’s for real so please don’t give this vid a deep six.

If you look at the background you can see where they’re camping out.




















Terminator Salvation: First Look (from Tao News)


























Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins (amateur trailer)


















Terminator Salvation : The Future Begins Fan Made Trailer
Made By nmrx105 (railrunneradrian105)










Teaser photos released on June 10, 2008:


T4 Teaser Photo







The tagline on the bottom reads Becoming Self-Aware Memorial Day 2009






T4 Teaser Poster




This teaser poster was on display at the License Show in New York the week of June 16, 2008.

The teaser poster next to it is from "The Day The Earth Stood Still" movie starring Keanu Reeves. This is a remake of a 1950's sci-fi classic and will be shown in theaters in December, 2008.







Movie Facts/Rumors

The Terminator Movies: Terminator Salvation, The Future Begins - Terminator: Sarah Connor ChroniclesRelease Date: May 22, 2009

Pre-production movie title:
"Project Angel"

Production Dates: Shooting is expected to start on May 5. 2008 in Albuquerque, New Mexico and surrounding Areas, also CGI (Computer Generated Images) work will be done Albuquerque Studios.

Production Budget: $185,000,000 (
Source: Screen International, 9/7/2007)

Franchises: Terminator

Distributed by: Warner Bros. (USA), Sony Corp (everywhere else)

Source: Not a sequel to T3; set in the year 2019

Major Genre: Sci-Fi

Country: United States

Production Method: Live Action

Director: Joseph McGinty Nichol ("McG" for short)

Writers: John Brancato (T3), Michael Ferris (T3), David Campbell Wilson (Supernova), and Paul Haggis (CRASH) will "polish" the screenplay

Special Effects: Stan Winston (T1, T2, Aliens, Edward Scissorhands, Predator, Predator 2, Alien Nation, Iron Man, and more) Unknown whether Stan Winston's company will carry on due his sudden death.

T4 CAST (Photos are at bottom of page)
Christian Bale as John Connor
Sam Worthington as Marcus Wright
Bryce Dallas Howard as Kate Connor
Josh Brolin as a Terminator (unconfirmed)
Vin Diesel as a Terminator (unconfirmed)
Anton Yelchin as Kyle Reese
Moon Bloodgood as Blair Williams
Common as Barnes
Jadagrace as Star (
Jadagrace seems to be a mystery; one source reports that she is a very young actress whose full name is Jadagrace Gordon)
Chris Ashworth as Richter
Chris Browning as Morrison
Helena Bonham Carter as ???



T4 BACKGROUND
Terminator Salvation: The Future Begins (T4 for short) is the upcoming fourth installment in the Terminator franchise film series, It is currently in production and is scheduled to be released on May 22, 2009. It is being written by David Campbell Wilson, John Brancato, Michael Ferris, and Paul Haggis who will "tweak" the final draft script. T4 is being directed by Joseph "McG" McGinty Nichol.

Sam Worthington was personally recommended to McG by Terminator creator James Cameron. Josh Brolin has been rumored to play the The Terminator. Moon Bloodgood will play a hardened resistance fighter pilot. Bryce Dallas Howard (daughter of Ron Howard) will play Kate Connor.

While the Terminator franchise is closely aligned with Arnold, don't expect him to appear in T4. However, a cameo of some sort is not out of the question. It's difficult to keep up with the rumor mill.

It has been confirmed that there will be three Terminator movies in this new trilogy, and Christian Bale has signed on for the other two movies that will follow T4.


T4 SHOOTING
Shooting of the film started on May 5, 2008 in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Stan Winston will supervise the visual effects.


T4 PLOT (as stated by Warner Bros.)
Set in post-apocalyptic 2018, John Connor (Bale) is the man fated to lead the human resistance against Skynet and its army of Terminators. But the future that Connor was raised to believe in, is altered in part by the appearance of Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington), a stranger whose last memory is of being on death row. Connor must decide whether Marcus has been sent from the future, or rescued from the past.

As Skynet prepares its final onslaught, Connor and Marcus embark on an odyssey that takes them into the heart of Skynet’s operations, where they uncover the terrible secret behind the possible annihilation of mankind.

It's also been reported that the Terminators in general will be a cruder version of the T-800 and possibly the T-600 (rubber skin). They will have a "super-endoskeleton", whatever that means.


T4 BUDGET AND SOURCE
Unconfirmed reports peg the budget for T4 at ~$185,000,000 million dollars (US). It falls short of the estimated budget for Spider-man 3 at $258,000,000 million dollars (US), which ranks #1.


OTHER RELATED LINKS (special thanks to nmrx105 for these)
New Mexico Film Office
Albuquerque Studios
Movie Set Pictures


STAGES OF FILM MAKING

DEVELOPMENT This is the stage where an idea is fleshed out into a viable script. The producer of the movie will find a story, which may come from books, plays, other films, true stories, original ideas, etc. Once the theme, or underlying message, has been identified, a synopsis will be prepared. This is followed by a step outline, which breaks the story down into one-paragraph scenes, concentrating on the dramatic structure. Next, a treatment is prepared. This is a 25 to 30 page description of the story, its mood and characters, with little dialog and stage direction, often containing drawings to help visualize the key points.
The screenplay is then written over a period of several months, and may be rewritten several times to improve the dramatization, clarity, structure, characters, dialogue, and overall style. However, producers often skip the previous steps and develop submitted screenplays which are assessed through a process called script coverage. A film distributor should be contacted at an early stage to assess the likely market and potential financial success of the film. Hollywood distributors will adopt a hard-headed business approach and consider factors such as the film genre, the target audience, the historical success of similar films, the actors who might appear in the film and the potential directors of the film. All these factors imply a certain appeal of the film to a possible audience and hence the number of "bums on seats" during the theatrical release. Not all films make a profit from the theatrical release alone, therefore DVD sales and worldwide distribution rights need to be taken into account.
The movie pitch is then prepared and presented to potential financiers. If the pitch is successful and the movie is given the "green light", then financial backing is offered, typically from a major film studio, film council or independent investors. A deal is negotiated and contracts are signed.
PRE-PRODUCTION In pre-production, the movie is designed and planned. The production company is created and a production office established. The production is storyboarded and visualized with the help of illustrators and concept artists. A production budget will also be drawn up to cost the film.
The producer will hire a crew. The nature of the film, and the budget, determine the size and type of crew used during filmmaking. Many Hollywood blockbusters employ a cast and crew of thousands while a low-budget, independent film may be made by a skeleton crew of eight or nine. Typical crew positions include:
  • The director is primarily responsible for the acting in the movie and managing the creative elements.
  • The assistant director (AD) manages the shooting schedule and logistics of the production, among other tasks.
  • The casting director finds actors for the parts in the script. This normally requires an audition by the actor. Lead actors are carefully chosen and are often based on the actor's reputation or "star power."
  • The location manager finds and manages the film locations. Most pictures are shot in the predictable environment of a studio sound stage but occasionally outdoor sequences will call for filming on location.
  • The production manager manages the production budget and production schedule. He or she also reports on behalf of the production office to the studio executives or financiers of the film.
  • The director of photography (DP or DOP) or cinematographer creates the photography of the film. He or she cooperates with the director, director of audiography (DOA) and AD.
  • The art director manages the art department, which makes production sets
  • The production designer creates the look and feel of the production sets and props, working with the art director to create these elements.
  • The costume designer creates the clothing for the characters in the film working closly with the actors, as well as other departments.
  • The make up and hair designer works closely with the costume designer in addition to create a certain look for a character.
  • The storyboard artist creates visual images to help the director and production designer communicate their ideas to the production team.
  • The production sound mixer manages the audio experience during the production stage of a film. He or she cooperates with the director, DOP, and AD.
  • The sound designer creates new sounds and enhances the aural feel of the film with the help of foley artists.
  • The composer creates new music for the film.
  • The choreographer creates and coordinates the movement and dance - typically for musicals. Some films also credit a fight choreographer.
PRODUCTION In production the movie is created and shot. More crew will be recruited at this stage, such as the property master, script supervisor, assistant directors, stills photographer, picture editor, and sound editors. These are just the most common roles in filmmaking; the production office will be free to create any unique blend of roles to suit a particular film.
A typical day's shooting begins with an assistant director following the shooting schedule for the day. The film set is constructed and the props made ready. The lighting is rigged and the camera and sound recording equipment are set up. At the same time, the actors are wardrobed in their costumes and attend the hair and make-up departments.
The actors rehearse their scripts and blocking with the director. The picture and sound crews then rehearse with the actors. Finally, the action is shot in as many takes as the director wishes.
Each take of a shot follows a slating procedure and is marked on a clapperboard, which helps the editor keep track of the takes in post-production. The clapperboard records the scene, take, director, director of photography, date, and name of the film written on the front, and is displayed for the camera. The clapperboard also serves the necessary function of providing a marker to sync up the film and the sound take. Sound is recorded on a separate apparatus from the film and they must be synched up in post-production.
The director will then decide if the take was acceptable or not. The script supervisor and the sound and camera teams log the take on their respective report sheets. Every report sheet records important technical notes on each take.
When shooting is finished for the scene, the director declares a "wrap." The crew will "strike," or dismantle, the set for that scene. The director approves the next day's shooting schedule and a daily progress report is sent to the production office. This includes the report sheets from continuity, sound, and camera teams. Call sheets are distributed to the cast and crew to tell them when and where to turn up the next shooting day.
For productions using traditional photographic film, the unprocessed negative of the day's takes are sent to the film laboratory for processing overnight. Once processed, they return from the laboratory as dailies or rushes (film positives) and are viewed in the evening by the director, above the line crew, and, sometimes, the cast. For productions using digital technologies, shots are downloaded and organized on a computer for display as dailies.
When the entire film is in the can, or in the completion of the production phase, the production office normally arranges a wrap party to thank all the cast and crew for their efforts.
POST-PRODUCTION Here the film is assembled by the film editor. The modern use of video in the filmmaking process has resulted in two workflow variants: one using entirely film, and the other using a mixture of film and video.
In the film workflow, the original camera film (negative) is developed and copied to a one-light workprint (positive) for editing with a mechanical editing machine. An edge code is recorded onto film to locate the position of picture frames. Since the development of non-linear editing systems such as Avid, Quantel or Final Cut Pro, the film workflow is used by very few productions.
In the video workflow, the original camera negative is developed and telecined to video for editing with computer editing software. A timecode is recorded onto video tape to locate the position of picture frames. Production sound is also synced up to the video picture frames during this process.
The first job of the film editor is to build a rough cut taken from sequences (or scenes) based on individual "takes" (shots). The purpose of the rough cut is to select and order the best shots. The next step is to create a fine cut by getting all the shots to flow smoothly in a seamless story. Trimming, the process of shortening scenes by a few minutes, seconds, or even frames, is done during this phase. After the fine cut has been screened and approved by the director and producer, the picture is "locked," meaning no further changes are made. Next, the editor creates a negative cut list (using edge code) or an edit decision list (using timecode) either manually or automatically. These edit lists identify the source and the picture frame of each shot in the fine cut.
Once the picture is locked, the film passes out of the hands of the editor to the sound department to build up the sound track. The voice recordings are synchronised and the final sound mix is created. The sound mix combines sound effects, background sounds, ADR, dialogue, walla, and music.
The sound track and picture are combined together, resulting in a low quality answer print of the movie. There are now two possible workflows to create the high quality release print depending on the recording medium:
  1. In the film workflow, the cut list that describes the film-based answer print is used to cut the original colour negative (OCN) and create a colour timed copy called the colour master positive or interpositive print. For all subsequent steps this effectively becomes the master copy. The next step is to create a one-light copy called the colour duplicate negative or internegative. It is from this that many copies of the final theatrical release print are made. Copying from the internegative is much simpler than copying from the interpositive directly because it is a one-light process; it also reduces wear-and-tear on the interpositive print.
  2. In the video workflow, the edit decision list that describes the video-based answer print is used to edit the original colour tape (OCT) and create a high quality colour master tape. For all subsequent steps this effectively becomes the master copy. The next step uses a film recorder to read the colour master tape and copy each video frame directly to film to create the final theatrical release print.

Finally the film is previewed, normally by the target audience, and any feedback may result in further shooting or edits to the film.
DISTRIBUTION This is the final stage, where the movie is released to cinemas or, occasionally, to DVD, VCD or VHS (though VHS tapes are less common now that more people own DVD players). The movie is duplicated as required for theatrical distribution. Press kits, posters, and other advertising materials are published and the movie is advertised.
The movie will usually be launched with a launch party, press releases, interviews with the press, showings of the film at a press preview, and/or at film festivals. It is also common to create a website to accompany the movie. The movie will play at selected cinemas and the DVD is typically released a few months later. The distribution rights for the film and DVD are also usually sold for worldwide distribution. Any profits are divided between the distributor and the production company.





T4 LEGAL STUFF (A history of how T4 came to be)
On May 9, 2007, it was announced that rights to the Terminator series had passed hands from producers Andrew G. Vajna and Mario Kassar to The Halcyon Company and Derek Anderson. In the Variety article detailing the purchase, it states the fourth film will focus on a 30-year old John Connor in what the producers hope will be a new trilogy. Series creator James Cameron is currently not involved with the project; however, he did encourage McG on the project.

On July 19, 2007, the T4 project was in legal limbo due to a lawsuit between MGM and Halcyon subsidiary T Asset. According to the article, MGM has an exclusive window of 30 days to negotiate for distribution of the Terminator films. When negotiating for Terminator 4, Halcyon rejected their initial proposal, and MGM suspended negotiations. After the 30 days were over, MGM claimed that the period during which negotiations were suspended did not count and their exclusive period is still open. Halcyon was asking a court for an injunction allowing them to approach other distributors.However, Warner Bros. Pictures will be handling the North American distribution, while Sony Pictures Entertainment will distribute the film overseas.

Due to transferred rights to Halcyon company, Terminator 4 was in a state of limbo for several months because of litigation between MGM and Halcyon. Not even a month, which is what the court ordered, was enough for the two film studios to agree on the film`s distribution in the USA and abroad.The court passed in favor ofHalcyon, giving it the right to seek other distributors when an agreement with MGM could not be made after the deadline. Warner Bros. was given the distribution rights in the USA, and Sony Pictures abroad. In the end, Halcyon and MGM have agreed on a compensation charge, while preparations for the filming is underway.

Also note that when Halcyon purchased the rights to the Terminator franchise, they also purchased certain aspects of the TV series "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles". What these "aspects" were is unknown. Given the concurrency of these two events, it is not inconceivable that characters from the TV series would appear in the T5 or T6 movies.



CAST AND CHARACTERS

Confirmed in YELLOW
Unconfirmed in RED
Christian Bale
Christian Bale as John Connor

Date of birth: 01/30/1974
Birth Name: Christian Charles Philip Bale
Birth Place: Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales

CLAIM TO FAME
A Screen Actors Guild Award-nominated, Saturn Award-winning Welsh-born actor whose film credits include Empire of the Sun, American Psycho, Equilibrium, The Machinist, Batman Begins and the just released The Dark Knight. Bale is known for his mastery of accents and harsh regimens of shedding and gaining weight (particularly for The Machinist, Batman Begins and, most recently, Rescue Dawn). Before he found success in playing Batman, he was heavily involved in independent films.



Anton Yelchin as Kyle Reese?
Anton Yelchin as Kyle Reese

Date of Birth: March 11, 1989
Birth Name: Anton Viktorovich Yelchin (Russian Антон Викторович Ельчин)
Birth City: Leningrad, USSR

CLAIM TO FAME
Anton is an American film and television actor. He began performing in the late 1990s, appearing in several television roles, as well as the Hollywood films Along Came a Spider and Hearts in Atlantis. More recently, Yelchin appeared on the television series Huff and starred in the films House of D, Alpha Dog and Charlie Bartlett. He is set to play young Chekov in the next Star Trek movie.



Bryce Dallas Howard as Kate Connor"
Bryce Dallas Howard as "Kate Connor"

Birth Name: Bryce Dallas Howard
Birth Date: 03/02/1981
Birthplace: Dallas, TX

CLAIM TO FAME
She could be the poster girl for nepotism if only she were a wee bit more famous. Daughter of mega-genius, superlikable Ron Howard, this gal gets acting jobs because of her...translucent skin! M. Night Shyamalan has a thing for her, having cast her in misfire The Village and bomb The Lady in the Water. A role in Terminator Salvation could be just the thing to launch Bryce into Kate Hudson-esque independence, but if that doesn't work, maybe dad could throw her a bone.
Helena Bonham CarterHelena Bonham Carter as " "

Birth Name: Helena Bonham Carter
Birth Name: May 26, 2966
Birth Place: London, England

CLAIM TO FAME
Helena has charmed audiences in dozens of acclaimed films, television features, plays, and radio pieces. Renowned and much loved in England, she has recently achieved American blockbuster status with Fight Club and Planet of the Apes.

Helena Bonham Carter loved getting paid by her boyfriend Tim Burton to lust after Johnny Depp in new movie 'Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street'.
Sam Worthington
Sam Worthington as Marcus Wright.

Date of Birth: 08/02/1976
Birth Name: Samuel Worthington
Birth Place: Perth, Western Australia, Australia

CLAIM TO FAME
He is well known in Australia for his role as Howard in the acclaimed Australian TV series Love My Way, where he played the main love interest of the female lead. Set to star in James Cameron's "Avatar" movie.

Mary BloodgoodMoon Bloodgood as Blair Williams

Birth Name: Korinna Moon Bloodgood
Birth Date: 09/20/1975
Birthplace: Anaheim, CA, USA

CLAIM TO FAME
Moon’s burgeoning fame led to a starring role on the short-lived ABC drama Day Break, which was unceremoniously pulled off the airwaves after just a handful of airings. Moon didn’t let the failure of the program get her down, however, and she was soon acting opposite Karl Urban in the 2007 Viking action flick Pathfinder. Moon starred in the recently canceled NBC drama Journeyman. Moon will appear alongside such legends as Robert De Niro, Sean Penn and Bruce Willis in the Barry Levinson comedy What Just Happened?
Josh Brolin

Josh Brolin as "The Terminator"

Slated to star as Snake Plissken in remake of "Escape from New York".


Vin Diesel

Vin Diesel as "The Terminator"


Will star in "Babylon A.D." in 2008.
Common

Common as "Barnes"

Birth Date: March 13, 1972
Birth Name: Rashid Lynn, Jr.
Birth Place: Chicago, IL

Claim to Fame
A Two time Grammy-Award winning Americanhip hop artist and actor. Common debuted in 1992 with the album Can I Borrow A Dollar? and maintained a significant underground following into the late 90s.
Jadagrace as "Star" (no photo exists for Jadagrace)

Jadagrace as "Star" (no picture exists)

According to one source, someone named Jadagrace Gordy is listed as a former student of Gary Spatz’s The Playground (started in 2005), a conservatory for young actors.
Chris Ashworth
Chris Ashworth as "Richter"

Birth Date: March 13, 1975
Birth Name: Christopher Michael Ashworth
Birth Place: Farmville, VA

Claim to Fame
Trained in MMA (Mixed Martial Arts) especially Muay-thai & Brazilan Jiu-jitsu since 1993. Great ear and natural talent for accents and dialects.

Chris Browning as Morrison"



Chris Browning as "Morrison"