For over 30 years, Alan Jones was the principal reviewer for STARBURST. He pioneered a no-holds-barred critical stance with an authentic fanboy voice filtered through his punk attitude and a keen genre sensibility. Jones built a reputation as a critic of heft who often ruffled industry feathers but gained a legion of fans whilst expanding the language of fantasy film analysis. Finally, Jones has collated his entire body of STARBURST reviews into one extraordinary volume without editing the original texts that shone like a beacon during some of the darkest of times for the British genre lover.
STARBURST: The Complete Alan Jones Film Reviews 1977-2008 is a record of many of the most influential fantasy and horror movies ever. It also documents how the genre grew in stature from lowly poor relation to box office powerhouse. With his signature STARBURST house style – considered a brand novelty at the time – Jones was at the forefront of every new trend with his enlightening reviews covering every UK fantasy release in his eagerly-anticipated monthly column.
Being a key genre commentator meant Jones played an unexpectedly gratifying role in firing the creative imaginations of many of today’s top film industry names. Here, directors Edgar Wright (Shaun of the Dead), Neil Marshall (Dog Soldiers), Andy Nyman (Ghost Stories) and writer Jeremy Dyson (The League of Gentlemen) share their life-changing memories of the magazine, and how Jones’ beloved reviews engendered their own devotion to the horror fantasy genre.
Together with a history of the magazine’s genesis and Jones’ role within it, this mighty tome is not only a genre reference bible about the most significant movies ever made, but also a glorious time machine taking readers back to an unforgettable era, fuelling the early days of fantasy fandom.
What can you expect? Well, there are 1,250 films reviewed, 660,000 words, 2,000 illustrations over 648 large-format pages!
The most significant single-authored genre film encyclopaedia of the 21st Century, this unique publication is a month-by-month record of the development and progression of science fiction, fantasy, and horror films, all told in the compelling words of someone who was there every step of the way, recording it all for posterity. A lucid, controversial and always entertaining read that will have fans everywhere adding copious movies to their ‘Must-See’ lists!
Special Features UNIQUE to the signed and numbered Collector’s Edition of STARBURST, only available direct from FAB Press:
Stunning SILVER page edges
Individually numbered limited edition – each Collector’s Edition book will have its own unique-numbered Alan Jones signature plate on the title page.
The STARBURST book launch will take place at this year’s FrightFest, with the silver page edge numbered edition available for sale. Two sessions with Alan Jones in attendance are scheduled, first on Friday, August 23rd, and then on Saturday, August 24th. The precise times of each one-hour slot will be decided shortly before the festival.
This is the first of two FAB Press books by Alan Jones to be released this year. Alan’s autobiography, DISCOMANIA, is currently in production and will be issued later in the year.
The BFI has revealed the line-up for its upcoming season of films that celebrate the opposite of the regular ‘comfort movie’. Taking place throughout July, Discomfort Movies is packed with challenging films that push our boundaries. They can cause stress, anxiety, and even despair. That being said, many of the titles are among our favourites of all time!
The season kicks off on July 1st with David Lynch’s debut Eraserhead (1977), a film that truly deserves to be seen on the big screen! Other movies being shown across the month include Billy Wilder’s alcoholic nightmare The Lost Weekend (1945), Andrzej Zulawski’s Possession (1981), Michael Haneke’s original version of Funny Games (1997), Takashi Miike’s Audition (1999), David Cronenberg’s Crash (1996) and Julia Ducournau’s Titane (2022). There’s also a screening of the disturbing TV movie Threads (1984), which still built up a cult following and still has the power to terrify.
Kimberley Sheehan, BFI events programmer and curator of the season, commented: “The films included in this season represent some of my most extreme experiences in cinema. I am fascinated by their power, and although the programme I have curated is personal to me, I’m curious about the feeling of discomfort in cinema and what might unsettle others. There seems to be a craving for darker material at this moment and a need to feel extreme emotion. Some may find these films shocking and upsetting, while others will find them oddly comforting. Either way, I hope audiences will allow themselves to be confronted, to tap into those strong visceral emotions and take away some ideas about the more challenging aspects of the human experience. There may even be some catharsis, too.”
Tickets for all screenings are available now from the BFI website and box office.
A special memorial to the young local actor Rob Knox will be unveiled at the Picturehouse Cinema in Bromley at 3pm on Saturday, June 8th. The free event is open to the public, and there is a small reception afterwards. His parents, Colin Knox and Sally Holder, will be attending with other close friends and film colleagues. Aaron Truss and Alice Amata, the co-directors of the Rob Knox London Film Festival, are also set to announce exciting new plans for the festival’s future.
Rising star Rob Knox found his breakthrough role in Harry Potter and the Half Prince, playing Marcus Belby in 2008, but shortly after filming, he was stabbed to death in Sidcup trying to protect his brother. The tragic event made headlines news and highlighted the continued concerns about knife crimes. This led to his father, Colin Knox, forming the Rob Knox Foundation in his honour and the Rob Knox London Film Festival, sponsored by Project Vision and Q Cumber Films.
The commemorations to celebrate Rob’s life and legacy are highlighted further in the autumn when the Picturehouse will host a special Q&A screening of the documentary (K)nox: The Rob Knox Story on October 12th with BAFTA-nominated actor Ray Winstone, who is a patron of the Rob Knox Foundation, in attendance alongside the film’s director Aaron Truss and Colin Knox. The event is chaired by Paul McEvoy, founder of FrightFest and host of the Stark Raving Cinemapodcast. Tickets go on sale on June 8th.
Director and close friend of Rob, Aaron Truss (Pareidolia), had filmed one of his last appearances, a student horror spoof short, Employee of The Dead, which is now available to view below.
Aaron says, “The Rob Knox Foundation and the Rob Knox London Film Festival are growing, and we need to stay ahead of the current climate. Knife crime is a scourge on our country, and I am honoured to help keep flying Rob’s flag to raise awareness and tackle this disease that’s senselessly killing young people. I hope Rob’s story can shed light on this issue. His story is crucial more than ever. Rob is a Bromley boy, and it’s time he came home; this is what June 8th is all about”.
Do your kids want to go to a comic con, but you don’t want to pay the extortionate entry fees? If you’re in the North West, then Sale Comic Con is the answer! Based in various venues in the town centre, it’s a great, FREE way to have the comic con experience. There will be comic creators, cosplay, and traders, with plenty of things to do for all the family. This includes a chance to meet TV star and ‘innocent men’ viral clip sensation Hacker T. Dog (with his handler Phil Fletcher), actors George Coppen (The School for Good and Evil) and Willie Coppen (Return of the Jedi), as well as legendary comic artists Lew Stringer (Viz, Beano, etc.) and Laura Howell (Beano).
Phil Fletcher and Hacker T Dog
Sale Comic Con takes place this Saturday, June 8th and here’s what to expect and where:
STANLEY SQUARE AND MARKET WAY
From 10.30am
EVENTS
Daleks, Cybermen, Tardis, and Doctor Who Props
Everything 4 Superhero Disco (Ticketed event)
GUESTS
Colin Mathieson, Noel K. Hannan, Dan Whitehead, Neil Roche,
Marc Jackson, Barry Renshaw, and Rick Eades.
TRADERS
Oddz n Sodz, Vince Gabrielides, The Art of Fish, Jenn Bee (with others to be confirmed)
STANLEY SQUARE/SCHOOL ROAD
From 10.30am
EVENTS
A-Team Van and props
Sarah Jane Adventures Car
EMPORIUM M33
From 10am
The Hulk
Various Traders
SALE LIBRARY
From 10.30
EVENTS
University Of Bolton Creature Shop and Movie Make up display
Daleks and other movie props
Cosplay Competitions from 3pm
GUESTS
Phil Fletcher and Hacker T Dog, Rachael Smith, Willie Coppen, George Coppen, Brian M Clarke, John Jackson, Laura Howell, Lew Stringer, Victoria Bates and Fox Hat
Lew StringerLaura Howell George Coppen
TRADERS
Wow Comix, Mark Swallow and Stranded Birds, Craig Samples, Stewart Tarpey, and Funkey Figurs
BRIDGEWATER CANAL/WATERSIDE PLAZA
From 2pm (part of Sale Festival)
Trafford Mayor’s Canal Boat Parade
WATERSIDE ROBERT BOLT THEATRE
11.00am (part of Sale Festival)
Artful Playground presents Minifest – A gig for kids
(This is a ticketed event)
7.30pm (part of Sale Festival)
Amy Webber and Hootin’ Annies “Up close and personal” From Standards to Stand up.
While STARBURST’s invite must have got lost in the mail (ahem), we nonetheless enjoyed watching from afar (i.e. on social media) as the stars of the feverishly anticipated new series STAR WARS: THE ACOLYTE came out in Force for the UK premiere recently, and last night even saw the show’s Jedi Knight Kelnacca the Wookiee pay a visit to the London Eye! Check out a selection of pics and read all about it below, and if you’re clamouring for more info before THE ACOLYTE’s June 5th dual-episode debut, then be sure to pick up STARBURST MAGAZINE #486, in shops from May 31st and through our store: www.starburstmagazine.store. The Force is strong with this one!
From the Press Release:
To honour the release of Star Wars: The Acolyte, the London Eye lit up to welcome our live-action Jedi Wookiee, Kelnacca to London. Joining Kelnacca at the London Eye was a host of fans in Jedi costumes holding their lightsabers aloft. The iconic London landmark shone bright green to reflect Kelnacca’s lightsaber. Star Wars: The Acolyte will be exclusively streaming on Disney+ from June 5th. In “The Acolyte,” an investigation into a shocking crime spree pits a respected Jedi Master (Lee Jung-jae) against a dangerous warrior from his past (Amandla Stenberg). As more clues emerge, they travel down a dark path where sinister forces reveal all is not what it seems….
The series stars Amandla Stenberg, Lee Jung-jae, Manny Jacinto, Dafne Keen, Charlie Barnett, Jodie Turner-Smith, Rebecca Henderson, Dean-Charles Chapman, Joonas Suotamo, and Carrie-Anne Moss.
Leslye Headland created the series, based on Star Wars by George Lucas, and serves as an executive producer along with Kathleen Kennedy, Simon Emanuel, Jeff F. King and Jason Micallef. Charmaine DeGraté and Kor Adana are the co-executive producers. Rayne Roberts, Damian Anderson, Eileen Shim and Rob Bredow are the producers.
Headland also directed the premiere episodes (Eps. 101 & 102). Directors Kogonada (Eps. 103 & 107), Alex Garcia Lopez (Eps. 104 & 105) and Hanelle Culpepper (Eps. 106 & 108) round out the directing duties on the series.
Award-winning composer Michael Abels, known for his work on “Get Out” and “Us,” scored “The Acolyte.”
The worlds of horror cinema and rock and metal music collide, as Hammer Films has announced its first-ever partnership with the iconic Liquid Death Presents Download Festival at Donington Park. Some of Hammer Films’ classic films will be screened alongside the studio’s latest, Doctor Jekyll. An exclusive, limited-edition T-shirt will be available for festival attendees to commemorate the unholy collaboration.
Hammer Films is also teaming up with Old Sarum Tattoo, marking Old Sarum’s 11th year at Download Festival. This collaboration will offer exclusive Hammer horror flash tattoo designs, created specifically for the festival. Each person who gets tattooed will receive a co-branded Hammer Films and Old Sarum Tattoo sticker, celebrating this unique experience.
Liquid Death Presents Download Festival, known for the biggest names in rock and metal, will take place at Donington Park from June 12th – 16th, 2024. The films being screened for attendees are:
Jonathan Lack, COO at Hammer Films said: “We are absolutely thrilled to partner with Liquid Death Presents Download Festival for the first time and bring our iconic horror films to a legion of devoted fans. Celebrating our upcoming 90th anniversary with a presence at Liquid Death Presents Download Festival allows us to connect with fans who share a passion for the dark and dramatic, much like our films. As the torchbearers of horror, we can’t wait to offer a unique blend of horror and metal with our exclusive screenings and limited-edition merchandise. Prepare to be immersed in the sinister world of Hammer horror as we bring the chills and thrills to the heart of the festival.”
Hard-rocking horror fans can learn more about Liquid Death Presents Download Festival and purchase limited tickets by visiting https://downloadfestival.co.uk/tickets.
You can sign up for the Hammer Films newsletter to keep updated with the latest news here.
Free streaming channel NYX UK will debut a new, exclusive documentary about the controversial former video nasty Cannibal Holocaust in June, followed by a screening of Ruggero Deodato’s film.
Cannibal Holocaust: Exposed is hosted by renowned author and critic Kim Newman and FrightFest co-director (and former STARBURST writer) Alan Jones. The pair take a look at the notorious movie and its impact on horror cinema. The documentary and film screen on June 6th from 9pm.
Other titles heading our way in June are the classic Paul Naschy gorefest Horror Rises From the Tomb, another former video nasty, House on Straw Hill, the superb rural nightmare Jugface, the cult-star-filled anthology The Theatre Bizarre, werewolf thriller Wild Country, horror comedy Dead Dicks, and Ti West’s Trigger Man.
The Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgment Day had a huge impact on the world of sci-fi from the second they were released, and at this point, there probably isn’t a single person who doesn’t associate Arnold Schwarzenegger with being the Terminator. What he did with the character went on to become northing short of iconic. Surrounded by groundbreaking special effects and a stomping cast (Edward Furlong, Linda Hamilton, Robert Patrick, Joe Morton, Michael Biehn, to name just a few…) the films were so perfect that for a moment, no one dared to further the franchise, until, the idea for Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines came along that is…
Like Arnold Schwarzenegger slicing through time in any Terminator movie, STARBURST is travelling back to the year 2003 with Rise of the Machines director Jonathan Mostow to revisit the third instalment. We discuss John Connor, special effects, presidential visits to the set, that hard-hitting ending, the initial scepticism about creating a third outing, and MUCH more! What better way to celebrate its 20th anniversary?
STARBURST: How did you get involved with Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines?
Jonathan Mostow:I got a call saying, “Are you interested in doing Terminator 3?” My first thought was “Oh, wow! They’re making a Terminator 3? I didn’t know!” So that was my first question, and then it was sort of like “Are you interested in doing it?” My initial reaction was just surprise that there was even going to be a third one.
What do you remember the most from reading the script for the first time?
What happened was, they sent the script, and I was busy with a lot of stuff, and I didn’t read it. Then, a couple of weeks went by, and then someone says “Are you going to read that script?” and I was like “Oh, OK, I’ll read it!” I was a little sceptical to read it. I was sceptical because I felt the first two were so great, and obviously if you’re talking to me, then it means James Cameron isn’t doing it. So, my Spidey sense said, “It sounds like the only reason someone wants to make this movie is because someone wants to make some money.”
I finally read the script. I had two takeaways; the first was, “You know what? There actually is more of this story that could be told” My other was, “But, I don’t want to do this script.” So, I met with the producers, and I said “Yeah, I’d be interested in doing another Terminator movie, because this is a great universe that James Cameron created, and I think there’s more story to be told, I’m a humongous Arnold Schwarzenegger fan, but I’d want to do it differently”, and they said, “OK, we’ll give you the creative freedom to do what you want on one condition, you agree that the enemy Terminator is a woman because that idea we’re attached to.” I said, “OK, I’m happy with that understanding.” Then we basically sat down and tried to figure out the story that we really wanted to tell.
John Connor is obviously such a legendary character; he is at the centre of every Terminator movie. Could tell us about how you ended up casting Nick Stahl as John, and also, can you tell us what he was like to work with?
Yeah, we knew that it felt like the right time to set the story, would be significantly after the previous one. A lot of sequels these days, pick up five seconds after the previous one ended. The governing factor here was figuring out “What’s the right time to re-engage with this narrative.” As I recall, it felt like ten years later, after this kid had grown up. We were interested in the idea of “OK, what is it like for this kid, who is literally carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders? If he tried to explain to anybody what his situation is, nobody would believe it, because it sounds insane.” So, for an actor, we felt that we needed somebody who could project the gravitas of a character like that and also capture the private suffering. I had seen Nick’s work in some other films, and it felt like he was very much that guy. He was the opposite of a bubble gum pop star. We actually did a screen test, kind of confirmed it with on-screen, and then we went for it that way.
Going on from that, what did you want to see from the dynamic between Nick and Arnold? Arnold is a different Terminator in this movie, but that classic back-and-forth between their two characters really brought Terminator 2 to life!
These are tricky movies because they’re so outlandish in a sense. It’s like the joke I always have about time travel movies is every time travel movie has a scene in it where one character tries to explain to the other the time travel paradox because every time travel movie ultimately has a time travel paradox. So you’ll have the one character saying to the other, “No, you don’t understand because when I came back in time, it changed this thing and that thing” and then the other character goes “Stop, I can’t take it any more” the audience is also going “Oh, thank god because I can’t keep track of it” and then you sort of move on. The reason you’re doing the time travel thing is because it affords you the opportunity to have a story that you couldn’t otherwise have. Everybody wants to get on the ride for that story, and just enjoy it. So to bring it back to your question, for me, the way to do this kind of film, and the way that I enjoy them is that you play things for real. We live in a world now where there’s a lot of, I’ll just call them superhero movies, where things aren’t played for real. Things happen where physics isn’t obeyed, the laws of a lot of human inter-person relations aren’t really obeyed, or they’re done in a jokey way. What I loved about the Terminator movies was, again, a totally outlandish premise, where, by the way, at the time, it seemed outlandish to cast Arnold. It seemed like an outlandish casting choice. Jim cast Arnold in the first one when Arnold was essentially famous as a bodybuilder and in the Conan movies. Yet, everything is played for real. With the understanding that there is a lot of humour along the way because some of the situations are outlandish.
To go directly to your question, I wanted to make sure that the interpersonal dynamic between John Connor and the Arnold Terminator was based in some kind of reality. Like it felt credible, right? Even though crazy things were happening. Even though we did use a lot of humour, and we used a lot of humour intentionally. In subsequent years, some of the core fans have criticised the movie for having too much humour. Our approach going into it was that it had been twelve years since the last Terminator movie, and a lot of the audience was approaching it similarly to how I approached it when I was first sent the script. With scepticism. Like, “Wait a second, someone is just trying to get our money because there’s no good reason to make a Terminator movie.” So we knew that there was a little bit of resistance, or scepticism, from a part of the audience. We made a conscious attempt to try to use humour to break that down. Most of the humour in the movie is really front-loaded in the first half an hour, and then it kind of settles in. But we really used that to sort of, break down those audience defences. If you went to the theatre, and watched the movie with an audience, there was a lot of laughter in that first hour. We were trying to win over the audience; keep in mind that it’s very difficult; when you make a movie, you make a movie forever. The eye of the needle when we were making that movie, was the first thing we had to do was have the theatrical hit. There was no such thing as a streaming movie, so we had to have a movie that we knew would work in front of audiences, and we knew that, because of the nature of the franchise, those would be crowded theatres, the first few weeks, and there would be a certain kind of energy level, so the movie was geared to play to that dynamic of when you have a full house, and there’s this electricity in the air, and how you play that audience. So, that plays very differently when you look at it years later on home video. It has a different tenure to it. But that was our thinking at the time.
Talking of Arnold. He was originally a bit sceptical about working on the movie. What was it like to work with him and how did your relationship develop/progress over filming Terminator 3?
When I look back on doing Terminator, the indisputable highlight of the experience was getting to work with Arnold. I’ve had the good fortune to work with a number of different movie stars, and by the way, generally speaking, I’ve had great experiences. Almost all of the time. But Arnold is in a class by himself. Especially when he is wearing that Terminator outfit. That’s arguably the most famous character in the history of motion pictures. I don’t think there’s anywhere you can go on the planet and show him in those sunglasses and that black leather jacket and not have people recognise him. You can go to the most far places, where they don’t even have electricity, and people will go “That’s The Terminator!”
As a movie fan, that was just a kick for me, to get to have that experience. I remember the experience of seeing The Terminator movie for the first time, I remember going to the theatre to see Terminator 2, and if you had told me when I was going to watch Terminator 2, someday I’d be directing Arnold as the Terminator, in a Terminator movie, I would not have believed you. From the geeky, film buff inside me, in terms of having an outer body film fan experience, it was fantastic. In terms of his professionalism, there is a reason this guy became the most successful body builder of all time, there’s a reason he became the most successful movie star of all time, there’s a reason he became governor of the biggest state in the United States. When he sets his mind to something, he is like the Terminator, he is like a machine, he is just all about, let’s get the results, what do we have to do. I remember once we were doing a rather complicated shot, and we were doing our twelfth or thirteenth take of it, which is more than we would normally do. And I said “Oh, sorry, we’ve got to do another take!” and he was like “Don’t apologise! Relax, we’ll do as many as we need to, to get it right.” There was never any movie star attitude with him. He is 100% professional and just a delight to work with. He is super funny. He is a great guy. He is like everything you would hope he would be, like if you got to meet one of your movie idols. It’s everything you would hope and more. So, that was a great experience. And, look, obviously he knew how to play this character, so it was just really great.
How did Kristanna Loken end up becoming T-X, and what did you want to see from this villain? Following Robert Patrick’s work as the T-1000 is a big task…
Robert Patrick did such an amazing job. People forgot what a great actor Robert Patrick was. I was fortunate enough to become friendly with him along the way. If you ever want to see a great actor doing great work, go back to that show The Sopranos, he did a whole season-long arc where he is a sporting goods store owner, and the mob comes in, I think he had some gambling debts or something, and they use that to worm their way into his sporting goods store, and destroy his life. It was like a six or eight episode arc, it was one of the most amazing performances I had seen in a long time. The problem is, Robert did such an amazing job playing that Terminator that he almost got shackled by that performance because the world sort of saw him as that and mistakenly thought, “How hard can it be to play a robot? Because it’s the opposite of acting, there’s no emotions, you’re just impassive.” The fact is, as it turns out and as I learnt first-hand, it’s really hard to play a robot because when you erase so many of the things that make us human, it’s actually super difficult.
In terms of your question and how we found Kristanna, we knew that we wanted an unknown. Because it would be too distracting to have somebody who was a known actress. So we did like an international casting search, we had casting people looking, our team went through thousands. I personally looked at a couple of hundred videotape auditions, and we kept whittling down until we were doing in-person auditions, and I looked at dozens and dozens. Then, we finally narrowed it down to our top ten. We brought them in for one or two days of this gruelling audition, where they had to do all of these different things, videotaping it, so we could analyse and study, and ultimately, Kristanna emerged victorious through that process. And it was a question of, you had to believe she was a robot, again it’s about movement, about behaviour, performance, and doing it in a way that’s captivating to watch.
I remember being with her on the press tour in Europe, and I think we were in Madrid, and we passed by their big soccer stadium. There was a giant hundred-foot-tall face of hers on the side of their biggest soccer stadium, and I could see it sinking in in that moment, of like, “Oh! This is how I’m going to be known for a long time.” But she was great, and also just a total delight to work with. Because that’s the scary thing, she’d been in a few TV shows, but basically, she was an unknown. So to be thrown into that situation where you’re suddenly in what was, at the time, the biggest budgeted movie of all time, in something so iconic as The Terminator franchise. And sort of filling the shoes of a predecessor that had been carved by Robert Patrick, who did such a mould shattering role himself, that’s so intimidating for a young actress. She was a total pro during the whole thing.
The Terminator franchise is known for its special effects, what did you want to bring on that front with Terminator 3?
That was the toughest part, and the most daunting task. Which is that, I think you can make a case that there have only been two movies in the modern era, in the last forty years, that revolutionised visual effects for audiences, and those two movies were Terminator 2, and I would say Jurassic Park. Terminator 2 blew people’s minds because no one had ever really seen CG before. The liquid metal effect was jaw-dropping. You were seeing something unbelievable happen before your eyes that looked entirely realistic. I mentioned Jurassic Park also in that category because it took the same technology that Industrial Light and Magic [ILM] developed, and Steven Spielberg used it to render recognisable objects, dinosaurs, which is, again, impossible, because we know that they don’t exist in modern days, but as kids, we all had little toy dinosaurs, we had seen pictures, we had been to museums. We know what they’re supposed to look like. Whereas with liquid metal, what the hell does liquid metal look like, nobody knows. No one in the audience is going, “Liquid metal wouldn’t do that!” but with the dinosaurs, everybody in the audience knows what looks real and what doesn’t look real because they already have in their consciousness some pre-formed idea, and obviously, it succeeded at that. Those two movies were revolutionary.
So, the problem I faced was doing a film that is now associated with groundbreaking visual effects. There was an unspoken expectation amongst the audience that if they were going to see a Terminator film, then it better blow their mind in the visual effects category like the second one did. That is not possible because I would argue, even though there have been films with amazing visual effects since those two movies, they had essentially been just really well-done visual effects. Both of those films broke through barriers that no one else could break through any more because they had been broken through.
So, we knew that the best we could do was execution because we weren’t going to work with people to get new groundbreaking special effects because it didn’t exist. For example, we put the big chase sequence in the film. I knew that, obviously, people expected it to be a great chase sequence, so I knew that whatever chase sequence we had had to be bigger, louder, and more extravagant than anything that had preceded it. So I think we did check that box, but it was frustrating not being able to check the visual effects box because we are using the most state-of-the-art visual effects available to us, we were using all of the best people at ILM, but again, it wasn’t something sort of new to be done.
Credit to James Cameron, I guess I’ll also have to put Avatar as doing something, obviously new, but that was operating in 3D.
The action doesn’t stop in Terminator 3, so I was curious to know what the huge car chase sequence in the first half of the movie was like to work on, and how it came together?
The fun thing about making movies is whether you’re the writer, or you’re not the writer, or whatever. But somebody dreams up some sequence where you go “Yes! We are going to do that!” with no regard as to how to do it, it’s just here’s something we’ve imagined that we’d like to see, and then you have to sit down. Sometimes you’re the person that came up with those ideas, and then you take off that hat, the creative hat, and then you have to put on your engineer hat and figure out, “Well, how do you do that?” It’s always the same, you always break what seems to be an insurmountable giant problem into all of its component parts. First, you break it up into all of the beats of the chase sequence, maybe the 150 beats of the chase sequence, and you think, “How are we going to execute each one of these?! Where are we using practical effects? Where are we using visual effects? Where are we using pyrotechnics? Where is it an actor? Where is it a stunt double?” Then you go deeply into all of these things, and it starts to be little trees in a forest because you’re deeply in it.
I also remember this one moment when we were filming it, and Bill Clinton came to the set to visit. The Secret Service pulls up and everything. He had been out of office for two years but still had all of the Secret Service and everything. He was wearing a suit, with a presidential tie, the whole thing, and he came to visit the set. I remember standing next to him, the former leader of the free world, we were shooting the chase sequence, and he was looking at everything, we built entire blocks of down town Los Angeles, we completely re-created it, because we were destroying them all. He was looking around us, and he goes “Now this is amazing! I’ve never seen anything like this” so you think “OK! If the leader of the free world is sitting there telling me that he is seeing something that is blowing his mind, then I think it is probably pretty impressive looking!” By that point, it was just my workplace; it was a place I was going to every day with my lunch box and my tools, and just doing my job. I’d lost all sense of “Oh yeah, this is pretty crazy, isn’t it!” so that’s definitely a memory that sticks with me.
The ending, to this day, haunts the audience, as they can’t actually stop Skynet. How did that moment/idea come together, and how did you go about keeping it a secret?
I don’t remember when we decided that would be the end of the film, but it sort of had to be. Inevitably, everybody is talking about this event that they are all trying to prevent. We just realised, “You know what, that is the best ending the movie can have” to actually have the event happen. I can’t remember the specifics of how it came up, but the moment we realised that that was the end of the movie, we realised we had to keep it a secret. It will come as a surprise only if we can keep it a secret. The question is “How do you do that in the Internet age?” I’m a big believer in doing test screenings for movies because I think you really learn a lot when you put it in front of an audience, but we knew that we weren’t going to be able to do the regular test screenings because it would leak out on to the Internet. So we had to screen, only in front of people that we knew and trusted, with close friends of friends, because if it were just friends, you wouldn’t get an honest response. We had to find like, somebody’s uncle’s auto-mechanic who they totally trusted. People that we felt we’d get an impartial reaction with, but they had some sense of responsibility where they wouldn’t go write about it on the internet. It also presented a challenge for the studio because we said to them that we don’t want them to do any advance press screenings because, again, it’s going to leak out. On a plus side, that was a big win for us, because it really did surprise audiences, nobody really saw that coming, and I think it really amplified the impact it had. The downside is, we probably ultimately so tied the studio’s hands in terms of the marketing that, in retrospect, if I had to do it all over again, I probably would have let the studio show it more in advance of the thing. Hopefully the individual journalist wouldn’t have leaked the specifics of it, and if they built up like “Oh wow, you won’t believe the big surprise” that might have helped us out eventually with more people showing up to the box office. It was tough, on a giant movie to keep something of that size totally secret.
That sounds like it was a huge decision…
Yeah, it was very ballsy. I really credit all of the people involved in financing the movie that they were willing to let us kind of go there because the criticism with a lot of Hollywood movies is that they get watered down and death by committee. Maybe it’s because we made Terminator as an independent production, so even though it was distributed by the studios, it was actually made independently. As were, by the way, the previous two as well. So, it didn’t go through that normal studio notes process that most studio movies go through. Maybe that’s why we got away with it. I don’t know.
Finally, with the rise of AI, how relevant do you personally think Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines still is?
The scary thing is I think it’s completely relevant. I was just having a conversation with somebody who is working a lot in AI, and they were saying to me, “Where we are at with AI now, is that the IQ is about 160, which is smarter than Einstein, and we are very close to being at 260.” You look at the world, you look at global warming, and all of the bad stuff that’s happening, from a machine intelligence perspective, you can say to it “What’s wrong with this picture?” it’ll say, “You know what’s wrong with this picture, humans! Humans are screwing up the planet, the best thing we can do for the planet is to just get rid of those humans, because they are the problem!” That’s really scary. The other thing to think about, is, in the history of mankind, every weapon that’s ever been invented has been used. Even if we put in safeguards and ethical AI, and all this kind of stuff, who knows what’s happening? Who knows what some hacker with AI capability is doing in their mother’s basement? So I think it is, sadly, even though Terminator movies are designed to be mass entertainment, they do sadly have that resonance. So let’s hope it stays in that realm of the make-believe.
TERMINATOR 3: RISE OF THE MACHINES is available to stream on Prime, so why not celebrate its 20th anniversary today?
It’s always a bit of an event when a season of Doctor Who ends, and the BBC have teamed up with CinemaLive to bring the last two episodes of Ncuti Gatwa’s first season to the cinema, making this a proper night out.
The two-part finale screening will start at 11 pm (UK time) on June 21st , with the penultimate episode, The Legend of Ruby Sunday (which will have already aired the previous week), followed by the final episode, Empire of Death, will play on the big screen.
Showrunner Russell T Davies said: “This is a great big rip-roaring finale with the Doctor, Ruby and friends old and new fighting the greatest enemy of their lives. I can’t wait for everyone to see it!”
This is not the first time Doctor Who has been on at the cinema. Back in the 1960s, two feature films, Dr Who and the Daleks and Daleks – Invasion Earth: 2150 AD, wowed cinema-going audiences. More recently, a 75-minute episode called Day of The Doctor was shown as part of the Doctor Who 50th celebrations. That showing also had a short message from The Doctor.
Players of Magic: The Gathering need all the luck they can get. Skill will only get you so far when it comes to Magic: The Gathering; you’ll always need a little bit of luck.
Fortunately, those fine folk at Wizkids have announced four plush key-ring charms to help amateur planeswalkers on their path to victory.
First up is the mouse-like Mabel from the Bloomburrow set. In the game, this Legendary Mouse Soldier can easily lead a legion of mice to tiny victory, so we can see why you’d want them as a key ring charm. Then we have the one-eyed Homunculus FBLTHP, which, honestly, we can’t even pronounce, so it must be lucky. Next up is the plague-doctor-esque creature called The Fisherman, which is both fuzzy and sinister. Finally, we have Rainbow Kaoi, a sparkly magical fish – presumably to give The Fisherman something to catch.
What’s more, each of these new charms comes with a unique code for Magic The Gathering Arena. This code not only adds a card sleeve to the game but also activates a companion animation for each character. This way, when you play Magic online, your opponents will know what key-rings you have, adding a fun and personalized touch to your gaming experience.