TERMINATOR: GENISYS Debuts On Blu-ray Combo Pack November 10; Digital HD October 20

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The thrilling new chapter in the iconic franchise TERMINATOR GENISYS explodes onto Blu-ray Combo Pack, Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack, DVD, and On Demand November 10, 2015 from Paramount Home Media Distribution. The film arrives three weeks early on Digital HD October 20.

“Arnold is back and better than ever” (Shawn Edwards, WDAP-TV, FOX) in the movie hailed as “the best Terminator since T2: Judgment Day” (Mark Hughes, Forbes).

In the war of man against machine, Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney, The Divergent Series) is sent back to 1984 by resistance leader John Connor (Jason Clarke, Everest) to protect his young mother, Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke, “Game of Thrones”). However, this time unexpected events have altered the past and threaten the future for all mankind. Now Reese must join forces with Sarah and her “Guardian” (Arnold Schwarzenegger) to save the world and stop the next evolution of Terminators.

The TERMINATOR GENISYS Blu-ray 3D and Blu-ray Combo Packs with Digital HD include nearly an hour of bonus content, featuring behind-the-scenes interviews with the cast and filmmakers, including the director of the first two films, James Cameron. Plus, take an in-depth look at the stunning visual effects and jaw-dropping action sequences, the recreation of iconic scenes from the original film, and more.

TERMINATOR GENISYS Blu-ray Combo Pack

The TERMINATOR GENISYS Blu-ray is presented in 1080p high definition with English Dolby Atmos* (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 compatible), French 5.1 Dolby Digital, Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital, Portuguese 5.1 Dolby Digital and English Audio Description and English, English SDH, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles. The DVD in the combo pack is presented in widescreen enhanced for 16:9 TVs with English 5.1 Dolby Digital, French 5.1 Dolby Digital, Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital and English Audio Description and English, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles. The combo pack includes access to a Digital HD copy of the film as well as the following:

Blu-ray

  • Feature film in high definition
  • Bonus Content:
    • Family Dynamics – Casting Terminator Genisys and how the actors filled some of the most iconic roles in cinematic history
    • Infiltration and Termination – Go behind-the-scenes to San Francisco and New Orleans in a first-hand look at filming locations
    • Upgrades: VFX of Terminator Genisys – Delve into the revolutionary visual effects behind the movie’s incredible action sequences

DVD

  • Feature film in standard definition

TERMINATOR GENISYS Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack

The Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack includes all of the above, as well as a Blu-ray 3D presented in 1080p high definition with English Dolby Atmos* (Dolby TrueHD 7.1 compatible), French 5.1 Dolby Digital, Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital, Portuguese 5.1 Dolby Digital and English Audio Description and English, English SDH, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles.

The Blu-ray 3D Combo Pack and Blu-ray Combo Pack available for purchase include a Digital HD Version of the film that can be accessed through UltraViolet™, a way to collect, access and enjoy movies. With UltraViolet, consumers can add movies to their digital collection in the cloud, and then stream or download them—reliably and securely—to a variety of devices.

TERMINATOR GENISYS Single-Disc DVD

The single-disc DVD is presented in widescreen enhanced for 16:9 TVs with English 5.1 Dolby Digital, French 5.1 Dolby Digital, Spanish 5.1 Dolby Digital and English Audio Description and English, French, Spanish and Portuguese subtitles. The disc includes the feature film in standard definition.

*To experience Dolby Atmos at home, Dolby Atmos enabled AV receivers and additional speakers are required; however, Dolby Atmos soundtracks are fully backward compatible with traditional audio configurations and legacy home entertainment equipment.

http://www.TerminatorGenisys.com/

Pre-order Now: gwi.io/BuyTerminatorGenisys

#TerminatorGenisys

Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions present a Skydance Production “Terminator Genisys.” Executive producers Bill Carraro, Laeta Kalogridis, Patrick Lussier, Megan Ellison, and Robert Cort. Produced by David Ellison, p.g.a. and Dana Goldberg, p.g.a. Written by Laeta Kalogridis & Patrick Lussier. Directed by Alan Taylor.

Left to right: Emilia Clarke plays Sarah Connor, Arnold Schwarzenegger plays the Terminator, and Jai Courtney plays Kyle Reese in Terminator Genisys from Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions.

STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON No. 1 Again At Weekend Box Office

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There’s no stopping STRAIGHT OUTTA COMPTON at the box office. Moviegoers put Universal Pictures’ film at the number one spot again with an estimated $26.8 million. After two weeks, F. Gary Gray’s N.W.A. biopic now stands at $111.5 million worldwide.

The top 12 domestic weekend box office estimates below from Rentrak.

1. Straight Outta Compton – Universal – $26.8M
2. Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation – Paramount – $11.7M
3. Sinister 2 – Focus Features – $10.6M
4. Hitman: Agent 47 – 20th Century Fox – $8.2M
5. Man From U.N.C.L.E. – Warner Bros. – $7.4M
6. American Ultra – Lionsgate – $5.5M
7. The Gift – STX Entertainment – $4.3M
8. Ant-Man – Disney – $4.1M
9. Minions – Universal – $3.7M
10. Fantastic Four – 20th Century Fox – $3.6M
11. Vacation – Warner Bros. – $3.1M
12. Ricki And The Flash – Sony – $3.0M

From AP:

Of the weekend’s new releases, the low-budget horror sequel “Sinister 2” fared best, opening with an estimated $10.6 million for the Blumhouse production — well below the $18 million the 2012 original debuted with. The result was good enough for third place, behind Paramount’s “Mission: Impossible — Rogue Nation,” which made $11.7 million in its fourth weekend of release.

Fox’s assassin thriller “Hitman: Agent 47,” the second attempt in eight years to adapt the popular video game, disappointed with $8.2 million. It will hope to do better abroad, where the 2007 original made $60.3 million. It began with $8.5 million over the weekend internationally.

Lionsgate’s stoner action-comedy “American Ultra,” starring Kristen Stewart and Jesse Eisenberg, also failed to spark much interest, opening with $5.5 million.

The three new releases — all violent, R-rated, poorly reviewed options — divided up a similar audience. The box office was down 7.5 percent from the same weekend last year, according to box-office data firm Rentrak.

Overseas, MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: ROGUE NATION and TERMINATOR: GENISYS are doing well with audiences.

Rentrak’s Senior Media Analyst Paul Dergarabedian commented, “Tom Cruise and Arnold Schwarzenegger lead a star powered global weekend with a Paramount Pictures one-two punch as ‘Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation’ keeps moving toward the $500 million worldwide mark and ‘Terminator: Genisys’ takes the number one spot internationally as it opened in China this Sunday with a staggering $27.4 million at 25,000 locations.”

The top 12 worldwide weekend box office estimates below.

1. Mission: Impossible Rogue Nation – Paramount Pictures – $36.9M
2. Terminator Genisys – Paramount Pictures – $27.6M
3. Straight Outta Compton – Universal – $26.9M
4. Bride Wars – 20th Century Fox – $23.6M
5. Fantastic Four – 20th Century Fox – $19.9M
6. Hitman: Agent 47 – 20th Century Fox – $16.7M
7. Man From U.N.C.L.E. – Warner Bros. – $15.4M
8. Sinister 2 – Multiple – $13.6M
9. Go Away Mr. Tumor – Multiple – $13.0M
10. Minions – Universal – $12.5M
11. Inside Out – Disney – $12.4M
12. Veteran – CJ Entertainment – $10.5M

WAMG At The TERMINATOR GENISYS Press Day

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The Terminator is back! In case you’ve been living under a rock, TERMINATOR: GENISYS opened in theaters this weekend. Last week, WAMG had the chance to sit down with franchise star, and former Governor of California Arnold Schwarzeneggger about being “back”, time travel, and his positivity for the Supreme Court ruling on gay marriage. Joining him were stars Emilia Clarke (Sarah Connor), Jai Courtney (Kyle Reese), Alan Taylor (Director), David Ellison (Producer), Dana Goldberg (Producer), Laeta Kalogridis (Writer), and Patrick Lussier (Writer). Check out some of the highlights from the press conference below.

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Mr. Schwarzenegger, one of the great things about this movie is how we get to see different versions of your character. How has your approach to the character changed over all these years, especially since in the first one it started off kind of like a sci-fi horror movie?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, in Terminator 1, it was very clear that they are just a machine that destroys human beings, and anything that was in the way, you know, I will wipe out, in the most brutal way without, you know, any feelings or any kind of remorse, because my mission was to protect the machines, and to find Sarah Connor and to basically be successful with my mission. In this movie, it becomes a little bit more colorful, because now I am again back to destroy Sarah Connor, I’m still this vicious cold machine that is programmed to destroy Sarah Connor and nothing will get in my way, except in this story something does get in my way, which is another Terminator, one that has been around for a longer period of time. It’s also the T-800 model but he was programmed to protect Sarah Connor and the human race, so there’s obviously a major conflict between the two when they meet, and that’s what creates then this huge epic battle. And then of course the Terminators, depending on how long they have been around, some of them are just straight Terminator, as the one from 1984, but then the one that has been around longer, he has already adopted certain human behaviors, subtle. And so from a acting point of view, you have to be really be, you know, very wise the way you use that, and how you, you know, get that across, that he has human behaviors and he does have certain feelings and stuff like that, but also creates great comic relief when the Terminator tries very hard to be like a human and he fails miserably. You know, so you see also that in the movie.

 

This is for Emilia and Jai. How helpful was Mr. Schwarzenegger with the weaponry and stunt work involved with the movie?

EMILIA CLARKE: He was very helpful. I definitely needed like a lot of help. So yeah, yeah, he was very helpful. I know that I spent most of my training just hoping that he would be, uh, impressed. Getting a good response from him was kind of yeah, the most helpful thing, to give me the confidence to continue on.

JAI COURTNEY: He’s the only man I’ve ever come across who can fire six rounds, six shotgun shells off without blinking. [LAUGHTER] It’s really hard to achieve.

I have two questions, and one for Arnold. If you could really go back in time to 1984, what would you like to relive over and over again, and what would you like to change before it happens?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, I don’t know if I would be that interested in 1984. I think that if I have a chance to go back, [Yeah.] why not just go back all the way in history, you know, to the times of the pyramids, or to the Roman days? I think there are so many great historic times until now, that I would like to get a little peek of those periods, rather than just 1984. Why limit yourself? If I have the chance to time travel, might as well go all out. [LAUGHTER] What’s your second question?

Is there anything in your past that you would like to change before it happens?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: I’m perfectly fine with my life. I’m very happy. [LAUGHTER] I want to keep it that way.

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Sort of playing off of an earlier question for Emilia and Jai, doing the stunt work, naked, was that a little more freeing and did Governor Schwarzenegger show you the perfect way to pose when you land?

JAI COURTNEY: Freeing, yeah, no, that’s the word. It’s totally liberating doing stunts naked.

EMILIA CLARKE: Yeah. Yeah, definitely. Naked in a harness was fun, doing stunts, that was good. That was interesting.

JAI COURTNEY: I don’t know, Arnold, did we get into naked talk? We can now.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: I think they’re fun, because they’re embarrassing, they’re fun, and it leads to funny conversations and funny dialogue and great humor and everything like that, so you know, it’s inevitable. You have to do it because that’s what the movie shows, and there’s at certain times you can cover things up and there’s certain times you don’t and you can’t, and so what? You know, I don’t think there’s anyone here that anything to hide.

JAI COURTNEY: Didn’t have a choice.

EMILIA CLARKE: Had a couple – had a few things I tried to hide.

ALAN TAYLOR: You have to shoot it carefully. We had a wonderful AD named Phil Patterson who would always get half naked whenever there was a nude scene.

ALAN TAYLOR: He was very supportive.

ALAN TAYLOR: Yeah, so Emilia was wandering around looking beautiful and then there was Phil, not looking quite so beautiful, but a team player.

EMILIA CLARKE: Solidarity.

ALAN TAYLOR: Yeah.

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To the Governor, I wanted to ask you, first of all, what was it like when you saw yourself fighting yourself, your younger self, on screen? And secondly, do you have any comment on the Supreme Court ruling today on gay marriage?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, first of all, I think that the body builder that they picked for me to fight with was really an extraordinary kind of a champion body builder. He had terrific muscles and so that was a great idea to use that approach. But even after three, four days of doing this fight scene and being thrown around and doing all the crazy stunts and this epic battle, I was always wondering while I was doing, you know, how are they going to do this face replacement, how are going to do this technologically, kind of you know, head replacement, and how do you make the body exactly like my body? You see, because his body was extraordinary but it was not exactly like my body was, right? Everybody’s different. So, you know, always in my mind was that. I mean, how’s this going to work out? And so I really never knew the entire movie. There was various different fight scenes, with John Connor, with others, that were just huge battle scenes, but I mean, it was kind of not clear how this is going to work with the visual effects. And then when we saw it just through weeks ago, the finished movie for the first time, because I made it very clear, I don’t want to see it when just going through stages. I want to see it when it’s finished so we can really see how it works. And so I looked very carefully at the technical aspect, when I watched it the first time. And then after that, I watched it a few more times, just, you know, from another point of view, of how does the story work. But I looked at the technical stuff and I just thought it was seamless, and the technology has advanced so much, that it was really extraordinary to get this kind of entertainment and storytelling, that you can do that today, because in the old days you had to do kind of, you know, split screens and all kinds of things, and you could tell that it was not the same, you know, it was not like two Arnolds fighting, two Terminators fighting, they’re different ages and stuff like that. But in this movie, it totally worked. And so I was really impressed. And I thought it was smart that from a scheduling point of view, they did that scene pretty much on the beginning of the movie, because I did not realize that it would take one year – and maybe the producers, you guys, can answer how many people worked on that scene for one year, from the time we shot it, all the way to the end, because it barely got finished on time.

DAVID ELLISON: Yeah, it was hundreds of visual effects artists, and the entire team at MPC, and you know, our hats are really off to our visual effects supervisor, Yanik Serge and Shari Hanson. Creating a walking, living, breathing synthesbian has always been a holy grail to achieve in visual effects and we absolutely think they’ve achieved it for the first time in this movie. And to give anybody an idea of how down to the wire it was, we had to finish the movie at midnight in color correction to deliver the film on time. And we got the last two shots at 11:30 and finished at 12:03 a.m.

Wow.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: So I mean, that is really amazing when you think about that – one year, you know, that many people working on it, but you know, with the technology that is available now, the CGI and all this, it can be done, and now you have the money for it, obviously, and you have the time, and really pace yourself, and do the prepping in such a way that you start early enough with the scene, so that you do have the time so you can finished the scenes. So that was the extraordinary thing. And when it comes to the Supreme Court, I’m very happy that they made the right decisions on that, because we in California, of course, we’re always a step ahead. We made the decision already a long time ago. Our Supreme Court of California that is unconstitutional to deny people that are gay, or same sex couples, the marriage, everyone has equal rights, so this is the right way to go, and I think it’s a great celebration for America. So sometimes I have to say that the judges, and our judiciary system, makes better decisions than the politicians. Sadly, that they are not really having the balls sometimes to lead, and work together on those issues. [APPLAUSE]

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Emilia? I thought you were such a lovely choice as Sarah Connor.

EMILIA CLARKE: Thank you.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Hallelujah.

Were you intimidated to step into Linda Hamilton’s shoes? How aware were you of her performance going into this? And did your work on Game of Thrones help you in any way with this role?

EMILIA CLARKE: Yes to all of your questions. Yes, I’d grown up watching the Terminators and being continually inspired, especially by Linda’s incredible performance. So I jumped at the chance to be able to take on this role. And then it was kind of after that fact, the daunting realization of the enormity of the part, kind of sunk in. But yes, it’s just been an absolute joy as an actress to be able to take this on. And yeah, there are many elements of my work in Game of Thrones that were incredibly helpful to try and kind of harness the like inner badass. But the difference between the two is that in Game of Thrones I do a lot of delegating, and then here in this movie I really had to get down and dirty and like do a lot of the stunts and the gun work and everything, so yeah, its similarities, but Sarah Connor is a whole other kind of badass.

Hi, my question’s for Arnold Schwarzenegger. I have two questions. Is your character T-800 aged in this film, it’s very interesting point of view. What’s your thought about age? And the other question is: your character is a machine, but how about yourself, the relationship with machines, technologies?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Well, first of all, I thought that, again, the writers came up with really a great way of – an organic way to show the aging of Terminator, because Terminator cannot go into the time travel at a certain point because his hand is exposed, you know, the flesh is gone, the metal is exposed and therefore you cannot time travel, whereas the others can. So all the other characters time travel and within seconds they’re there in the future, and I have to go the old fashioned way, I have to go the slow way. So I age, of course, you know, decades, as time goes on, from 1984 to 2017, you know, my hair turns gray and I age and stuff like that, and so this was a wonderful way of explaining, you know, how the Terminator ages, how the flesh ages, the human, flesh, but the skeleton underneath is still the same, functions the same, is the same size and everything like this. As a matter of fact, Alan asked me to gain 10 pounds in order to have the same size as the skeleton always had in 1984, so I gained that weight, trained twice as hard, trained heavier and stuff, really, to get more muscle size and so on, to keep that same frame and wear the same kind of size clothing and all this stuff. But other than that, I aged. So I thought that that concept and the way it was written was really terrific because this way we don’t pretend that I am kind of the weightlifter 40 year old guy, but I am what I am, which is I have aged. And so that worked really well. I myself don’t feel any older, you know, so I think because I’ve stayed in shape and I exercise every day. So when I started the movie, you know, I did the prepping two months before, I worked with the stunt coordinators, I worked with the director, and with the special effects people and with everybody, and we exercised and trained for it, so that we could do the movie and do all the stunts that were necessarily and then whenever there were stunts that were dangerous, then the stunt people took over, and then did the stunts, you know, for me. So that’s the way it worked and I was delighted to be able to do the movie without getting exhausted or feeling old or tired or anything like this. I felt I was in great shape and I felt really young.

What about your thoughts on technology...

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: I embrace technology, and I just think that in 1984 when James Cameron wrote about the technology, everyone thought it was totally way out there and it was science fiction. But now, you know, we have now become – we got to the time where it is almost reality, of what he talked about. I mean, it’s like the machines have taken over, except they have not become self-aware, like in The Terminator, so this is really one thing that we have to watch out for. But I think technology’s good, it can be abused as everything else, but I think it is good and I hope that we will continue getting smarter and getting more interesting intelligence and, you know, that we are going in the direction of artificial intelligence or hybrid intelligence, where a part of our brain would get from the Cloud the information, and the other half is from you, so all of this stuff will happen in the future.

Not self-aware yet.

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Exactly.

This one’s for the writers. How did you guys find the balance of quoting – some of the quotes – you know, the iconic quotes from the first movie and intersecting scenes, versus also pushing forward and sort of creating a new narrative here?

PATRICK LUSSIER: I think it was a combination. You know, when we started the process, the first scene that we came up with was actually the scene where Arnold fights Arnold, and everything sort of branched out from that, forward and back. We knew we wanted these core group of characters. We wanted Sarah Connor, we wanted Kyle Reese, we wanted John Connor, and how they were going to build. We wanted to, you know, the moment that you’ve seen in the trailer is the “I’ll be back” moment. We knew we wanted that but we knew we didn’t want it early in the film. You know, if we were going to use it, we had to earn it, and make it so that it had a real significance and an emotional significance. So everything was, you know, a massive love letter to what James Cameron created, and so out of that was just trying to find the balance of where to slide it in. A lot of it was you felt it, you just felt your way through it. And whenever we sort of fell wrong, the actors and the producers and everybody would lean up, and you know, we made a point of not overdoing it.

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Hi, this is for Emilia. Just continue on, I mean, the legacy of Sarah Connor is so huge. What was really important to you though in bringing that character to life and your take, and also did Lena offer you any advice?

EMILIA CLARKE: Well, I think some of the most important things to me in reprising this role is that it was such a daunting thing to be taking on. My kind of, yeah, ego probably jumped at the chance to play it, and then the realization kind of crept in. But then getting to read our gorgeous script, the Sarah that we see in this movie is so different. The spirit is definitely still intact and I really hope that that scene, that you can see the essence of what Linda Hamilton created with Sarah Connor is there, but having such a different upbringing, having such a different childhood, really, the result is a girl who is ahead of the game from when we saw Sarah Connor at this age last. She’s there to save this guy, as opposed to the other way around, so there’s a lot of kind of really wonderful differences, and so that’s what was important to me, to kind of show the history of what Sarah’s been though, whilst maintaining the spirit of what we kind of created. No, sadly, I didn’t – I didn’t speak to her, but I can only hope that she was happy with what I managed to make of this.

For Governor Schwarzenegger, can you take us back to the moment when you first became involved in the Terminator franchise, that you’d established yourself with Conan, and this was the thing that really made you a true international superstar. Can you talk about your feelings, before anybody knew what Terminator was, what you were thinking coming into the role and what it’s come to mean to you over the years?

ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER: Yeah, I was approached to play Kyle Reese, by Mike Medavoy. He said, we have this great project with Hamdell and Orion, and it’s a, you know, kind of an action flick, it’s you know, kind of low budget. James Cameron, you probably have not heard of him but he has done one movie before, some little movie, so this is his second movie, and you know, as far as we are concerned that O.J. Simpson is going to play Terminator. And so this was kind of the dialogue. And I said, wow, that’s great. I said, let me get the script. And I got the script, I read it, and it was a really great script. And then I met James Cameron, and during the lunch period with him and with John Daly, you know, I started talking more and more about Terminator and how he has to train and how he has to prepare for this part, and how he has to act like a machine and how he has to deassemble, and put together guns blindfolded and how he has to practice shooting, and you shouldn’t blink, you know, and on and on and on. So the whole lunch went like that. And then in the end James Cameron said, “So why are you wanting to play Reese? You should be the Terminator.” And I said, “No, no, no.” I said, “Look, the Terminator only has 27 lines. [LAUGHER] I don’t want to go backwards with my career here, you know. I like Kyle Reese, and he really says a lot and he’s the hero, you know, and I just started out being kind of like the leading man and being the hero in the Conan movie, so I want to continue on like that.” And he says, “No, but the most memorable character really will be the Terminator. The way I shoot it is this way, and this way,” and he was explaining it, explaining the whole thing. And he says, “You should be the Terminator, and I will make sure that you don’t have to think about, you know, the villain’s aspect, because it’s a machine, so everyone is going to think that he’s a hero anyway because he’s going to do cool things.” And so you know, he talked me into it basically, so I said, “All right, forget about Kyle Reese. I’m going to be the Terminator.” And so that’s how that happened. And so it was, yeah, a small project, with [PH] Andel Hurt being the producer, and we went out and shot it kind of six weeks, seven weeks, and really the cheap way, and Stan Winston was helping us, you know, with the special effects and visual effects and all this, and it ended up, you know, what was supposed to be kind of a little B movie ended up one of the 10 top movies for Time Magazine, and you know, I was called the ultimate villain and then at the same time the ultimate hero. So all this great stuff started happening which no one of us knew would happen. So this was all kind of like exploding. And then there was a demand for a second one, and then we did the second one and that became the highest grossing movie of the year, in 1991, I think it was, or 1992, I’ve forgotten now. But I mean, in any case, so that was really the launch of this franchise and it became bigger, bigger, and bigger.

Hi. Yeah, for Emilia and for Alan, this is a bit of a reunion for the both of you, after working on Game of Thrones, and I’m curious, how did your relationship there sort of inform working on this movie, which as Emilia noted, is a very different role for you.

EMILIA CLARKE: Yeah. Well, I don’t know. I don’t know. Do you know?

ALAN TAYLOR: Let’s talk it over and get back.

EMILIA CLARKE: …exactly, exactly.

ALAN TAYLOR: I went through a kind of a learning curve on this, ‘cause I think going into it I thought it would be an easy transition, it would be sort of a seamless transition. She was this powerful warrior goddess who we knew could accomplish anything.

EMILIA CLARKE: Be fireproof.

ALAN TAYLOR: Be fireproof, be naked.

EMILIA CLARKE: This or that.

ALAN TAYLOR: And it wasn’t until we started doing the work and started, you know, delving into this very specific script that I started to realize just how different the demands were on her, and you really can’t underestimate the transformation she had to go through. You know, one way to put it is that she used to delegate and in this one she’s in the trenches, you know, holding the gun herself. But also the physical training, the guns training, the accent that she had to achieve, it really was a complete makeover. The great thing was that I think we started it with that familiarity that you only get from, you know, standing around in the mud in Croatia for a few weeks.

EMILIA CLARKE: Yes, exactly. Exactly. We already knew how to get on each other’s nerves, so we got ahead of the game there, which was great. That was really good.

ALAN TAYLOR: Yeah. It took a while for her to irritate everybody else, but I came in with a kind of chip on my shoulder right off the bat.

EMILIA CLARKE: In summation, it was brilliant.

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EXPERIENCE TERMINATOR GENISYS IN REALD 3D & IMAX 3D NOW

http://www.terminatormovie.com/

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Composer Lorne Balfe Talks His Score For TERMINATOR GENISYS

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Paramount Pictures’ and Skydance Productions’ TERMINATOR GENISYS led the worldwide weekend box office race earning a combined total of $102.7 million in 46 countries plus North America.

Directed by Alan Taylor, GENISYS returns to the Oscar winning Terminator franchise to take familiar characters in a new direction. When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: to reset the future.

TERMINATOR GENISYS is written by Laeta Kalogridis & Patrick Lussier and produced by David Ellison and Dana Goldberg. The franchise has two more films scheduled to be released in 2016 and 2017.

Grammy winning composer Lorne Balfe has created an action-packed, emotive score for TERMINATOR GENISYS.

Left to right: Emilia Clarke plays Sarah Connor, Arnold Schwarzenegger plays the Terminator, and Jai Courtney plays Kyle Reese in Terminator Genisys from Paramount Pictures and Skydance Productions.

Lorne Balfe is a Grammy Award winning, Emmy and BAFTA nominated film composer from Inverness, Scotland. His recent credits include Dreamworks Animation’s HOME starring Rihanna, Jim Parsons and Steve Martin, Dreamworks Animation’s THE PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR, and “Manny,” a documentary about the life of boxer Manny Pacquiao which premiered at SXSW. Other composing credits include the animated film MEGAMIND and Ubisoft’s acclaimed game, “Assassin’s Creed III.”

Balfe began his career in Hollywood providing additional music on several major motion pictures including the second and third installments of the “Pirates of the Caribbean” series, “Iron Man,” and “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.”

He provided additional music and was the score producer on 2008′s THE DARK KNIGHT, which earned him a Grammy Award for Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture. In addition to being named Discovery of the Year at the World Soundtrack Awards in 2009, he was also the score producer for Guy Ritchie’s SHERLOCK HOLMES, which earned a 2010 Oscar nomination for Best Original Score. In 2011, he produced the score for Christopher Nolan’s INCEPTION, which also earned an Oscar nomination for Best Original Score.

With the movie building from 1991’s TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY, including shot-for-shot recreations, Lorne Balfe’s score honors the tradition of the past Terminator films by adding bold, new music to fit the action while tapping into the film’s emotional core as it explores themes of freedom and guardianship.

Prior to the film’s release, the composer and I spoke at length about the feelings of TERMINATOR GENISYS and getting the music right for the fans.

WAMG: I’m such a huge fan of the series and I felt this latest chapter was a lot of fun.

Lorne Balfe: It’s not as bad as the reviews, is it?

WAMG: There’s so much to like about it – especially seeing that Arnold Schwarzenegger is having such a good time being back in the role.

LB: I finally saw it again two nights ago and I’d forgotten what a fun film it is.

It’s funny when you read a review and you wonder if they thought they were going into THE KING’S SPEECH.

WAMG: As you were writing the score did you ever stop and think, I am composing for a TERMINATOR film!

LB: No and the weirdest thing is once I started, and it happened so quickly, that if I’d spent any time thinking about that, I probably would have had a heart attack and panicked. I wouldn’t have gotten a single note written.

It’s only now when you get asked these things you then start analyzing it and going, goodness sake! The most important thing about TERMINATOR is that I knew, especially coming from the world of video games and those type of franchises, how important it was to get it right for the fans.

I had to be respectful to that famous theme. It’s almost been forgotten in the previous two movies. It’s not a sequel or a prequel and the music had to be loyal to the franchise. And there has to be new music. When you see Arnold on screen as The Terminator, and he’s kicking ass, I want to hear, “Ba, da, bum, bum, bum.”

That’s the challenge with these things. When the new STAR WARS trailer came out, and you heard John Williams’ theme, you got excited.

WAMG: Fans will appreciate the main theme from Brad Fiedel’s iconic TERMINATOR score.

LB: There’s naturally an industrial world, so I kept with the main theme of the original TERMINATOR. They were very electronic sounds. I used the fantastic sonic sounds from TERMINATOR 2 – at that time, they must have been amazing! I don’t think I fully appreciated that at the time, but now I do.

There’s something about it being organic and manipulating it with the sounds. This is a different kind of TERMINATOR and each film has been different.  It’s not meant to sound strictly like a TERMINATOR score. There are scenes which are identical to the original and musically I did it exactly the same. I scored it as close as I could possibly get it. The storyline moves on and John Connor character is different. That had to now thematically have this heroic, military type theme. There are lots of things that are different.

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WAMG:  I especially like the FATE and HOPE Track. It begins very simply and then explodes into an epic score – I loved the grandness of it, especially the percussion section. Once it again it ties together the emotional story of TERMINATOR.

LB:  To me, the world of TERMINATOR has always been that metallic world. It’s very difficult when writing music like that. You’ve got metal up on the screen so you don’t put as much metal sounding motifs in your score.

The score contains everything but the kitchen sink. It’s a hybrid score, and although there are these massive action cues, there is a hell of a lot of emotion. The score needed to be much more personal to match the progression of the movie’s character development and convey the relationship between Sarah Connor and the Terminator. We spent a lot of time on that father/daughter theme.

Alan (Taylor) and David (Ellison) in a way really wrote that track. The payoff of the sacrifice at the end tied with the “FATE and HOPE” track, it was their point of view regarding the film. I tried to write the theme for that track a few times and I never nailed it. What makes it fun is at music college, they could explain why that piece of music doesn’t work. Whether it’s right or wrong, it doesn’t matter. They’ll analyze it and start going through your harmonic structures and changes.

When you work with a producer and a director, they don’t necessarily know how to describe things in a musical sense – they describe feelings. When somebody writes a piece of music for scene, it hits you or it doesn’t. There’s no point holding onto if it doesn’t – it doesn’t matter. At the end of the day, you’ve got to move on. More time was spent talking about the theme for “FATE and HOPE.” I regard more as an emotion, than a theme. That’s when we found we were able to bring back the TERMINATOR theme in a very simple manner with the piano and just the three notes.

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WAMG: How did you get involved and what was Hans Zimmer input as executive producer?

LB: I worked for Hans for about 10 or 11 years and now I work with him. We’ve done the TV shows “A.D” and “The Bible.” I got involved after someone heard my music and Hans’ studio is right next to mine.

WAMG: That’s convenient.

LB: Yes, when its two o’clock in the morning and you’re stuck on a cue, people walk in and out of rooms. You get advice and that’s the interesting thing about working in that kind of studio complex. As composers, we spend so much time alone, locked in a room, and when you have a building with lots of composers, you kind of wander around and talk because everyone is going through the same kind of problems – even if it’s a different film.

I’m working on HOME, which is animation, and Junkie XL is next door to me working on MAD MAX: FURY ROAD, it is all the same problems everybody is trying to figure out. But you realize you have to get your game up when you do listen to everyone else’s scores.

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WAMG: Producer David Ellison has said, “This is the largest scale Terminator movie that’s ever been made.”

With that 800 lb Terminator sitting in the room, how did you go about scoring for the big action sequences in GENISYS?

LB: When you start writing for a scene, especially for a film of this size, things aren’t finished and as a composer, you have to have a really good imagination.

A lot of the visual effects aren’t necessarily finished, so there’s time to imagine what’s going on and of course, there’s a guideline. When the visuals change, the score changes because the color is different. That especially happens with animation. On HOME and PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR, I was on it for over a year and a half, and during that time it slowly evolved, you find that you don’t need to write as much because it will change.

With the action music, you never sit there and think, gosh, I’ve got to do big music because this is a big film. With TERMINATOR there was so much emotion and personally, I felt it was quite small and intimate.

You’re not supposed to notice the music all the time. Michael Kamen explained it best. He called it “underscoring.” I think that is such an important word – underscoring the action or the storyline.

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WAMG: Do you find it easy to switch gears between animated films, such as HOME and PENGUINS OF MADAGASCAR to a sci-fi movie like TERMINATOR GENISYS?

LB: Strangely enough, I find no difference at all. It’s the same gig. You’re trying to create something new. When you first sit down to try to figure out the sound and the melody of the film, you go through the same puzzles. Same as when I score for a game. There’s no difference.

A few months ago I did this commercial for FIJI Water. A 15 second commercial and it was just as hard as writing an hour of music for a film. With all the challenges, that’s what makes it fun.

WAMG: Did you make a set visit or have a look at the CGI beforehand?

LB: They wanted me to come down and be a body-double for Arnold. (laughs) Unfortunately, I didn’t actually get to go and I got brought on after they had started filming.

WAMG: I have no doubt when Arnold shows up in the film it will leave audiences grinning.

LB: When we saw it, and 1984 Arnold appeared, followed by the older Arnold, the whole place started cheering. It was fantastic. That one was a hard scene to score because you’ve got two Arnold’s fighting and it’s bigger than life with what you’re seeing.

Balfe is currently scoring the Paramount Pictures’ thriller CAPTIVE starring David Oyelowo and Kate Mara, releasing September 18, 2015. (Trailer)

CAPTIVE, based on a miraculous true story that drew the attention of the entire nation, is the dramatic, thrilling, and spiritual journey of Ashley Smith and Brian Nichols. After being taken hostage by Brian in her own apartment, Ashley turns to Rick Warren’s inspirational book, The Purpose Driven Life, for guidance. In reading from the book, Ashley not only finds purpose in her own life, but helps Brian find a more peaceful resolution to a harrowing situation.

WAMG: Have you finished the score?

LB: I have. It’s a great film and working on subject matter that’s a true story is always interesting. I’ve spent a lot of time on documentaries because they are real and with those score you can’t be too dramatic.

Working on CAPTIVE was fantastic.

Order the TERMINATOR GENISYS soundtrack here:

iTunes: http://apple.co/1LLqI5Q
Amazon: http://amzn.to/1NkzWGF

The film is rated PG 13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and gunplay throughout, partial nudity and brief strong language.

EXPERIENCE TERMINATOR GENISYS IN REALD 3D & IMAX 3D NOW

http://www.terminatormovie.com/

Images © 2015 Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

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4th of July 2015 Holiday Weekend Box Office Numbers – TERMINATOR GENISYS No. 1 Worldwide

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BBQ’s, parades, fireworks and movies!

U.S. film goers took some time out from celebrating Independence Day by heading to their local cinemas this first weekend of July 2015.

Rentrak’s Senior Media Analyst Paul Dergarabedian commented,

“Paramount’s ‘Terminator: Genisys’ led the worldwide weekend box office derby earning a combined total of $102.7 million in 46 international territories plus North America.

Universal had a banner weekend with their monster-sized ‘Jurassic World’ adding another $72.9 million globally this weekend, thus bringing its global tally to a whopping $1.385 billion, while their diminutive “Minions” earned a not so small $54.3 million in 26 international territories in advance of its North American release later this week.”

The top 12 worldwide weekend box office estimates are below.

  1. Terminator Genisys – Paramount Pictures – $102.7M
  2. Jurassic World – Universal – $72.9M
  3. Minions – Universal – $54.3M
  4. Inside Out – Disney – $48.7M
  5. Monk Comes Down The Mountain, A – Multiple – $28.0M
  6. Ted 2 – Universal – $19.8M
  7. Magic Mike XXL – Warner Bros. – $18.2M
  8. Spy – 20th Century Fox – $8.9M
  9. NLL – Battle of Yeonpyeong – Next Entertainment – $8.0M
  10. Avengers: Age Of Ultron – Disney – $7.4M
  11. Max – Warner Bros. – $7.0M
  12. Profs 2, Les – UGC Distribution – $6.8M

The top 12 domestic weekend box office estimates are below.

  1. Jurassic World – Universal – $30.9M
  2. Inside Out – Disney – $30.1M
  3. Terminator Genisys – Paramount – $28.7M
  4. Magic Mike XXL – Warner Bros. – $12.0M
  5. Ted 2 – Universal – $11.0M
  6. Max – Warner Bros. – $7.0M
  7. Spy – 20th Century Fox – $5.5M
  8. San Andreas – Warner Bros. – $3.0M
  9. Me And Earl And The Dying Girl – Fox Searchlight – $1.3M
  10. Dope – Open Road – $1.1M
  11. Mad Max: Fury Road – Warner Bros. – $1.0M
  12. Avengers: Age Of Ultron – Disney – $0.9M

July 10 openings include MINIONS, the horror film THE GALLOWS from Warner Bros. Pictures and SELF/LESS starring Ryan Reynolds.

Win Run-Of-Engagement Passes To TERMINATOR GENISYS In St. Louis

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TERMINATOR GENISYS is in theaters now and WAMG has your free Run-Of-Engagement passes to see the movie for the first time or again!

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We’ve hidden the photo above somewhere on the site.

  • You will need to locate the Skynet logo photo on WAMG.
  • Tell us where you found it and what monument it is on.

*HINT: Do we Geeks like to talk a lot!

The pass is for St. Louis AMC Theaters and is valid beginning July 7.

TO ENTER, ADD YOUR NAME ANSWER AND EMAIL IN OUR COMMENTS SECTION BELOW.

No purchase necessary.

When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline.

Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: To reset the future…

From director Alan Taylor, TERMINATOR GENISYS also stars  Matt Smith, Byung-Hun Lee and JK Simmons.

TERMINATOR GENISYS

The film is rated PG 13 for intense sequences of sci-fi violence and gunplay throughout, partial nudity and brief strong language.

EXPERIENCE TERMINATOR GENISYS IN REALD 3D & IMAX 3D

http://www.terminatormovie.com/

TERMINATOR GENISYS – The Review

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TERMINATOR GENISYS is an ambitious attempt at revitalizing a series that many critics say has gone steadily downhill since the third film. Now five films and two television seasons deep, an argument could be made to whether there is enough story to carry a series of films. But buried within the fifth film is a clever concept of looking at the original two films in a new light while planting the seed for future sequels. How that initial idea evolved into this overworked and stupidly complex story shows that writers Laeta Kalogridis and Patrick Lussier either got in way over their heads or have not a clue as to why the first two films work so well in the way that they do. Sure, the film is about humans fighting robots and that alone should be “cool,” but TERMINATOR was once more than that. GENISYS can’t understand that, but even at a pure summer movie level, it can’t make an entertaining human vs. robot popcorn flick.

Even though the series technically exists in the science fiction genre, I’d argue that what these films are really about is anything but. Time travel and Judgment Day have always been background noise to universal themes, but given the direction of the fifth film and what I can assume of the already announced upcoming sequels, is now clearly the driving force for the series. The first TERMINATOR film is a stalk-and-slash horror film with a genuine love story that proves love is so strong that it can travel across time. TERMINATOR 2: JUDGEMENT DAY shows a lost and out of control boy looking for direction and ends up finding it in the form of a machine that becomes a father figure – it’s a father and son bonding film. Considering director Alan Taylor and the studios behind GENISYS are ignoring TERMINATOR 3: RISE OF THE MACHINE and TERMINATOR SALVATION, I’m not even going to address those films. The fifth film struggles to find a reason to exist compared to previous entries other than just to keep the franchise alive so that studio executives can make money off fan nostalgia.

GENISYS rides the coattails of famous scenes from the series for most of the beginning. After an initial voice-over by Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) bringing new viewers up to speed abut how a renegade computer program turned against the humans, we flash forward to the year 2029 and see Reese serve as a soldier under the guidance of John Connor (Jason Clarke). The humans successfully take down Skynet, but not before the machines send a killing machine into the past through the use of a time machine to kill the mother of resistance leader John Connor. Reese voluntaries to go back to 1984 to stop the T-800 (yes, this should sound familiar), but when he encounters Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) she isn’t what he expected. In fact, all of the events of the “original” timeline are disrupted due to some sort of loose particles or some reason or another that is casually thrown out in a quick manner that is just as quickly forgotten.

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In the new timeline Sarah is not alone. She’s accompanied by a guardian T-800 that she nicknames “Pops” (Arnold Schwarzenegger). Just as what happened in T-2: JUDGEMENT DAY, a T-1000 attempts to stop Reese from keeping Connor alive but new changes rear their head. The trio soon realizes that due to the changes in the timeline that they now have to travel to 2017 to stop an Apple-esque computer program called Genisys from being uploaded to a Cloud-like system over the world – a program that will eventually trigger Judgment Day.

Once you get past all of the fan service that is piled on at the onset of GENISYS, what’s left is a couple of miscast actors struggling to work with an overly dense screenplay. Jai Courtney and Emilia Clarke pale in comparison to their character’s original cinematic counterpoints. Emilia Clarke tends to exaggerate her macho persona in a way that becomes quickly aggravating. Her attempt at capturing the rebel spirit of Linda Hamilton in T-2 feels completely forced. Courtney on the other hand lacks any hint of charisma. How he has infiltrated Hollywood as a leading man is beyond me given how robotic and emotionless he comes across.

The only actor that seems right at home is Ahhnold! Sure, some of his jokes don’t entirely work, but he’s clearly having fun in the role that recalls his robot with a heart of gold turn in T-2. Even Arnold’s overly cheeky lines that many of the trailers have advertised work much better in the context of the film. GENISYS proves that Arnold still has it. As the one recurring joke reminds us, “He’s old, but not obsolete.”

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TERMINATOR 2 ushered in a new era of technological achievement seen on film. It was the first film to use an actor to motion capture a computer generated character – the results continue to inspire film special effects to this day. Seeing the T-1000 get shot by bullet after bullet and revitalize himself right in front of your eyes is something we hadn’t seen before. TERMINATOR GENISYS takes that iconic special effect and replays it over and over again through cheap CGI with not just a new version of the T-1000 but with a new Terminator hybrid as well (whose powers and technology are never fully explained but look like the material used in the kid’s toy where you add magnetic mustaches to faces). The idea of him being an unstoppable killing machine is still the motivating factor here, but its presence is overstated which causes the threatening aspect to dissipate. Instead it just adds to the overuse of cheap CGI effects that director Alan Taylor relies on way too often (including a horribly ugly and preposterous helicopter chase that leads up to the finale). One could play a drinking game to how many times you see a bullet hole slowly heal itself in slow-motion on the new machines and will most likely cry “Judgment Day!” and give-up before the film even ends.

Critics and fans will be quick to point out that the trailers and poster ruin a critical plot point that happens about two-thirds the way through the film. Yes, it’s a shame that that reveal has to be ruined by marketing in order to get people excited about a cool new twist in the TERMINATOR mythology. This is especially true because some of the earlier scenes lose some of their meaningful impact due to the knowledge of this reveal, but that’s hardly the main issue with the film. Even if we could travel through time and change the studio’s decision to market this major spoiler, fixing that won’t help the fact that the main problem lies within the very point of the film.

Going back into time and looking at existing events or in this case existing films isn’t enough to get by these days. Nostalgia can carry a film only so far before it becomes too weak to stand on its own. GENISYS has no strong Endoskeleton at its core. Hearing familiar names like John Connor, Sarah Connor, and Kyle Reese, but seeing them with new faces isn’t enough to hold my interest. Convoluting an already ridiculous time travel plot point from the original film is exactly what the film builds its entire foundation on. Then, in ways I didn’t even think was possible, they convolute and lay even more cinematic paradoxes upon it to the point that you have to just throw your hands in the air and give up. The problem is though, once you stop trying to connect the dots and the different timelines, there isn’t much left to care about. You’re stuck with two severely miscast actors running through time, trying to stop the future from killer robots. What bizarre future-world do we live in that a seemingly cool premise like this should be so tedious? Sadly it’s not the future… it’s the present.

 

 

Overall rating: 1.5 out of 5

 

TERMINATOR GENISYS is now playing in theaters everywhere.

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This Week’s WAMG Podcast – Schwarzenegger, ME & EARL & THE DYING GIRL, and More!

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This week’s episode of our podcast WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is up! Hear WAMG’s  Jim Batts, Michael Haffner and Tom Stockman discuss the weekend box office, and next weekend’s releases. We’ll review MAX, MAGIC MIKE XXL, TED 2, discuss at length the career of actor Arnold Schwarzenegger in advance of this week’s TERMINATOR GENISYS, and debate the merits of ME AND EARL AND THE DYING GIRL.  WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show is a weekly podcast and we will soon be streaming at ONStl.com Online Radio.

Here’s this week’s show. Have a listen:

 

Visit our WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS The Show Facebook page HERE

https://www.facebook.com/pages/WE-ARE-MOVIE-GEEKS-the-SHOW-Podcast/1687717491451801

See TERMINATOR GENISYS in RealD 3D At Participating Theatres And Receive Free Collectible Poster

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AMC Theatres Collectible Poster

RealD, Paramount Pictures and Skydance have created a special series of limited edition collectible TERMINATOR GENISYS posters and movie tickets exclusively for moviegoers who see the film in RealD 3D beginning opening night, June 30. The items are available at participating RealD 3D showings at AMC Theatres, Carmike Cinemas, Cinemark Theatres, Marcus Theatres and Regal Cinemas across the U.S. while supplies last.

Each of the five limited edition collectible items was specifically created for the theater circuits and can be viewed online in advance of the film’s release at Facebook.com/RealD3D.

TERMINATOR GENISYS opens in theaters and RealD 3D on July 1st, 2015. Early showings begin June 30. Tickets are on sale now. To reserve tickets in RealD 3D, please visit www.Fandango.com and www.MovieTickets.com.

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Marcus Theatres Collectible Poster

Paramount Pictures and Skydance present TERMINATOR GENISYS.

When John Connor (Jason Clarke), leader of the human resistance, sends Sgt. Kyle Reese (Jai Courtney) back to 1984 to protect Sarah Connor (Emilia Clarke) and safeguard the future, an unexpected turn of events creates a fractured timeline. Now, Sgt. Reese finds himself in a new and unfamiliar version of the past, where he is faced with unlikely allies, including the Guardian (Arnold Schwarzenegger), dangerous new enemies, and an unexpected new mission: to reset the future.

Starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jason Clarke, Emilia Clarke, Jai Courtney, J. K. Simmons, Dayo Okeniyi, Matthew Smith, Courtney B. Vance and Byung-Hun Lee.

Produced by David Ellison and Dana Goldberg. Written by Laeta Kalogridis & Patrick Lussier. Directed by Alan Taylor.

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See 5 Minutes of MISSION IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION in IMAX Theaters With TERMINATOR GENISYS

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Paramount Pictures and Skydance today announced that five minutes of MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION will debut exclusively in IMAX theatres one month prior to its theatrical release. This sneak peek at the highly anticipated summer film will play on 363 IMAX screens in front of TERMINATOR GENISYS in North America.

Fans can experience the sneak peek and TERMINATOR GENISYS beginning at 7:00 p.m. on June 30th. Tickets are on sale now. To reserve tickets at IMAX theatres, visit www.IMAX.com/Terminator

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Paramount Pictures and Skydance present a Tom Cruise / Bad Robot Production, MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION.

With the IMF disbanded and Ethan (Tom Cruise) out in the cold, the team now faces off against a network of highly skilled special agents, the Syndicate. These highly trained operatives are hellbent on creating a new world order through an escalating series of terrorist attacks. Ethan gathers his team and joins forces with disavowed British agent Ilsa Faust (Rebecca Ferguson), who may or may not be a member of this rogue nation, as the group faces its most impossible mission yet. Starring Tom Cruise, Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Rebecca Ferguson, Ving Rhames, Sean Harris, Simon McBurney, Zhang Jingchu and Alec Baldwin.

The film is directed by Christopher McQuarrie, with a screenplay by Christopher McQuarrie and story by Christopher McQuarrie and Drew Pearce. Based on the television series created by Bruce Geller. Produced by Tom Cruise, J.J. Abrams, Bryan Burk, David Ellison, Dana Goldberg and Don Granger. Executive produced by Jake Myers.

Paramount Pictures will distribute MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE – ROGUE NATION on July 31st, 2015.

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