Nightmare
"Kill Them All"
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nooooooooo, please make another terminator!!! just change the director, and make the humans win @ the end.
Yess, pleeeeeeease!
nooooooooo, please make another terminator!!! just change the director, and make the humans win @ the end.
Both films are flawed, but for me, T3 stuck much closer to the mythos of the previous than TS did and seemed to match with the other movies more than TS did.
Plus, not one scene in TS was as powerful as the ending of T3 for me.
Cartoonish tone? Huh...
Never heard that about TS before. How so?![]()
Lions Gate's $15-million-plus offer for 'Terminator' is now the bid to beat
January 13, 2010 | 1:33 pm
Lions Gate Entertainment had bid $15 million plus a percentage of future revenue to buy the rights to the troubled "Terminator" franchise out of bankruptcy and has been officially named the top bidder.
In a federal bankruptcy court filing today, Halcyon Group, the company owned by producers Derek Anderson and Victor Kubicek, named Lions Gate the "stalking horse" bidder for the "Terminator" rights. The duo put the franchise up for sale in September to raise cash to work their way out of Chapter 11 reorganization.
Lions Gate bid $15 million in cash plus 5% of gross receipts from any future "Terminator" movies it makes. Its bid would give the Santa Monica-based studio behind the Tyler Perry and "Saw" movies full rights to exploit the 25-year-old science-fiction franchise in the future. However, Halcyon will keep all revenue generated by last year's release, "Terminator Salvation," which sold $372 million of tickets worldwide and was issued on DVD last month.
The designation of stalking horse means any other company that wants to bid against Lions Gate has to offer at least $500,000 more. The deadline for competitive bids is coming up. [Updated at 2:05 p.m.: Bids are due Feb. 5. 5:40 p.m.: An earlier version of this post incorrectly said competing bids had to be at least $750,000 higher] A new owner of the "Terminator" rights will be determined by the bankruptcy court at a hearing on Feb. 10.
Sony Pictures and Warner Bros., which distributed "Salvation" overseas and in the U.S., respectively, were interested in acquiring the rights, according to people close to the two companies. Halcyon in its filing didn't disclose whether they submitted bids.
Landing the rights to make new "Terminator" movies could be a natural fit for Lions Gate, which has home video distribution rights to 1990's "Terminator 2: Judgment Day." The independent film studio's most popular franchise aimed at young males, the core audience for most of its pictures, is "Saw." The most recent installment, "Saw 6," was a box-office disappointment. (Update, 5:25 p.m.: An earlier version of this post inaccurately said that Lions Gate has home video distribution rights to the original "Terminator" and that last year's installment was "Saw 7.")
Lions Gate would most likely look to make "Terminator" sequels, but at a significantly lower cost than the $200 million that Halcyon spent to produce "Salvation."
Selling the rights could help end Halcyon's dispute with Pacificor, the private equity firm that lent it the $25 million it spent to acquire the "Terminator" rights in 2007. It would also continue the long-running drama behind the franchise, which has changed hands four times since the first movie came out in 1984.
-- Ben Fritz
'Terminator' bidding: Sony, Warner, Summit, Legendary may soon vie with Lions Gate
January 14, 2010 | 8:09 am
Lions Gate Entertainment's position as the lead bidder to buy the rights to make future "Terminator" movies may not last long.
Sony Pictures, which distributed last year's Terminator: Salvation overseas, Warner Bros., which distributed the movie domestically, Summit Entertainment, the independent studio behind the Twilight movies, and film financing and production company Legendary Pictures are all considering making bids, according to people close to the companies.
Another possible bidder is private equity firm Pacificor, which loaned Halcyon Co. the $25 million it used to buy the "Terminator" rights in 2007. Chief executive Andy Mitchell said that Pacificor may make an offer if it feels that the debts owed to it by Halcyon are not sufficiently covered by any other bids.
Halcyon put the "Terminator" rights up for sale in September, one month after it filed for Chapter 11 reorganization, in order to raise cash to pay off Pacificor and other debtors.
--Ben Fritz
I'd like for Summit to get the rights. They can cast Robert Pattinson as John Connor and Taylor Lautner as a the Terminator. Then maybe the Terminator fans, who can't let this series go, will be shocked into realizing that this movie series ended in 1991 and it will always be down here from there.'Terminator' bidding: Sony, Warner, Summit, Legendary may soon vie with Lions Gate
January 14, 2010 | 8:09 am
Lions Gate Entertainment's position as the lead bidder to buy the rights to make future "Terminator" movies may not last long.
Sony Pictures, which distributed last year's Terminator: Salvation overseas, Warner Bros., which distributed the movie domestically, Summit Entertainment, the independent studio behind the Twilight movies, and film financing and production company Legendary Pictures are all considering making bids, according to people close to the companies.
Another possible bidder is private equity firm Pacificor, which loaned Halcyon Co. the $25 million it used to buy the "Terminator" rights in 2007. Chief executive Andy Mitchell said that Pacificor may make an offer if it feels that the debts owed to it by Halcyon are not sufficiently covered by any other bids.
Halcyon put the "Terminator" rights up for sale in September, one month after it filed for Chapter 11 reorganization, in order to raise cash to pay off Pacificor and other debtors.
--Ben Fritz
I'd like for Summit to get the rights. They can cast Robert Pattinson as John Connor and Taylor Lautner as a the Terminator. Then maybe the Terminator fans, who can't let this series go, will be shocked into realizing that this movie series ended in 1991 and it will always be down here from there.![]()
Then I will have to create a time machine. Go back in time. And stop Cameron from ever making Terminator.![]()
Thats not saying much because 2009 really sucked.Well, I liked TS and will see it again. No its not as good as the first three, and the third is not as good as the first two. But TS was alot better than most of the other stuff in 2009 IMO.
Thats not saying much because 2009 really sucked.
I watched the DC of this earlier today (first time seeing it since the theaters) and I still like the film although my initial rating of 9/10 has been lowered to an 8 upon a rewatch. I still find that it's an enjoyable film despite some obvious flaws and I enjoy the insight into the backstory of SkyNet and the Terminator designs.
If I had to pick my biggest gripe, it's some blatant inconsistancies with the portrayal of the T-800. Why is it so fast and agile? Why isn't it melted instantly by the molten metal? Why doesn't the explosive shell immediately destroy it? Granted, this may be due to the technology SkyNet actually employed during that part of the timeframe (ie. maybe the molten metal was concocted so it wouldn't be strong enough to melt the T-800, given that SkyNet may have been aware of the T-800's sacrifice in T2, and the T-800 in T1 was destroyed by the pipebomb lodged inside rather than being struck from the outside), but I couldn't help but notice the drastic changes in performance from this T-800 to the ones of the first two movies. Still loved seeing the evil T-800 back though, and especially as aggressive as it was.
I checked out the two featurettes on the Blu-ray, I enjoyed them both. I'll try to check out the Maximum Movie Mode soon.
Shiet!Sony has submitted a bid for the Terminator rights on Thursday and Terminator will now be sent to auction on Monday
http://www.slashfilm.com/2010/02/05/sony-submits-last-minute-bid-for-terminator-franchise/
Warner Bros. is not bidding.
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/ent...rminator-rights-but-fate-still-uncertain.html
If Warner Bros isn't bidding, I probably might as well officially stop caring about the Terminator franchise.