Exclusive interviews: Duncan Jones (Director of Moon) - Andrew Barker (Director of Straw Man) - Tony Grisoni (Screen Writer of Red Riding Trilogy, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas) - Michael Marshall Smith (author of Spares, Only Forward, The Straw Men etc) - Alejandro Adams (Director of Canary) - Ryan Denmark (Director of Romeo & Juliet vs The Living Dead) - Neal Asher (author of the Cormac series, The Skinner etc) - Marc Robert & Will Stotler (Able) - Kenny Carpenter (Director of Salvaging Outer Space)

Press Conference - Public Enemies - Johnny Depp, Michael Mann, Marion Cotillard

NEWS - REVIEWS - TRAILERS - POSTERS - INTERVIEWS - FORUM - CONTACT


FEATURED REVIEWS - Public Enemies - Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - Moon - The Hurt Locker

LFF is on Facebook - Twitter - Friend Feed

Monday 10 November 2008

John Connor will have to prove he can lead Humanity

IO9 have word on an interview with Terminator Salvation director, McG. Looks as if John Connor won't automatically be the leader of humanity we know he becomes.

"The interesting thing about this movie is that Connor comes to be under suspicion. Command will look at him and say, 'How come you keep coming through these things alive? And you know so much about the machines? What is that all about?' And they point a finger at him while the audience is realizing..." and here McG's voice is raised to an indignant shout: "... that is fucking John Connor! If anybody is on the side of humanity, it is this guy!' One thing I learned from Amy Pascal at Sony," he muses, "is make sure your hero deserves all the credit in the world and gets none. And that is John Connor."

IO9 also say how this reminds them of Dynamite's Terminator: Infinity comic, where Connor is trying to rally the humans after Judgement Day, and he has a Terminator protecting him. Connor can't let the other human survivors realize his "buddy" is a machine, or they'll start mistrusting him.

McG also told Premiere how his movie begins. John Connor runs up and jumps in his helicopter. He thinks there's a pilot in there, but the pilot is dead with a gunshot wound to the head, thanks to a Terminator. Connor takes the controls of the helicopter and takes off, just as the communication outpost explodes below. It implodes before it explodes, like in a 1960s nuclear test film. The shock wave hits the helicopter, which goes into a flat spin. But Connor finally manages to land it.

The camera stays on Connor in his cockpit, and follows him as he crawls out of the crashed bird. "We shift to a steadicam and go with him, arch around until we see the body of the cloud of the explosion behind him, and we register his grief. But before he can do anything about it, he is interrupted by the hand of the Terminator which he landed on on the way in." And then Connor fights the Terminator, in a scene that mirrors his mom's fight against a Terminator at the end of the first movie. He finally destroys the Terminator with a machine gun.

Premiere watched the filming of some action sequences, including John Connor jumping off the edge of a destroyed freeway overpass, complete with mangled steel reinforcement rods and exposed water ducts. In another sequence, Connor is joined on the overpass by his resistance fighters, well-built humans wearing "leather chaps, leggings, kneepads, bulletproof vests, sunglasses or goggles, and all toting heavy-fire guns."

McG's team also created the destroyed landscape and post-apocalyptic scenery. It doesn't sound too reliant on CG or fakery, which should hopefully translate to a more realistic looking film.

The magazine also managed to confirm that Marcus Wright, the character played by Sam Worthington, is a member of the resistance who befriends Connor but turns out to be a "decommissioned Terminator." Wright's last memory is of being on Death Row, and Connor isn't sure whether to trust him. McG also explained why he chose Worthington: "Just wanted a guy who you could hit with a shovel and it would look like he could shake it off. I find that a great many of today's young male actors are pussies. They are waify, and they are all sort of heroin chic."

It's still possible Arnold Schwarzenegger may make a "special appearance" in the film. And Worthington says he wouldn't have done the movie if his main benefactor, James Cameron, hadn't given it his blessing. Also, Worthington says he and the other actors "hound McG all the time" to make the movie's story right, because there's already a Terminator TV show. So why should there be a new movie, unless it's saying something profound?

All in all it is sounding quite promising for the new Terminator movie.

HOME / FORUM.

0 comments: