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August 1991 |
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(outside U.S. - add $5.00 each for postage) |
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Seven years ago, writer-director
James
Cameron was an unknown entity with only an ultra-low-budget
horror picture to his credit, Arnold Schwarzenegger was a world-class
bodybuilder with a few less-than-world-class movies under his belt
and Linda Hamilton was a young actress with a number of nondescript teen
roles on her brief resume. The Terminator changed all that.
A landmark science fiction film whose nonstop techno-action was punctuated
with rare humor and an affecting love story,
The Terminator
was the impetus for major career breaks across the board. In
the next half-dozen years, Cameron would become one of the hottest directors
in Hollywood, Schwarzenegger would become the world's biggest boxoffice
star and Hamilton would become the celebrated beauty
of a cult television series. Though a sequel seemed inevitable,
prospects for launching one were snarled in a spider's web of proprietary
interests and legal entanglements
until early 1990 when Carolco Pictures stepped in and cleared
the way. Eighteen months later, after a grueling six-month
shoot and an intense postproduction schedule, one of the biggest films
in history was ready for release. Bringing magic to Terminator
2: Judgment Day was an army of effects people - most of them veterans
of earlier Cameron productions. Stan Winston and company were responsible
for Terminator makeups and animatronic puppetry.
Dennis
Muren supervised the creation of an advanced shape-shifting terminator
at Industrial
Light & Magic. Gene Warren of Fantasy II provided a major truck
crash and a future war in miniature while
Robert
and
Dennis
Skotak of 4-Ward
Productions wreaked nuclear havoc on Los Angeles. Video Image
supplied 'Termovision' point-of-view material and Pacific
Data Images performed some digital rescue work. The result was
an epic foray into science fiction filmmaking. Article by Jody Duncan |
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