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    Home»Directors»Alan Taylor»Terminator Genisys Made Alan Taylor Lose the Will To Live As A Director
    Alan Taylor

    Terminator Genisys Made Alan Taylor Lose the Will To Live As A Director

    TheTerminatorFans.comBy TheTerminatorFans.com13 August 20213 Mins Read
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    Terminator Genisys Made Alan Taylor Lose the Will to Live as a Director
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    From the offset Terminator Genisys, the fifth movie in the Terminator franchise, was touted as transforming the series into event level entertainment, with Producer and Terminator movie rights holder David Ellison making it very clear by stating the following about Skydance Media (the production company responsible for making Terminator Genisys)…

    “We want to be Marvel,”

    David Ellison

    This also included continuing on the franchise as PG-13, something that fans had made abundantly clear that they didn’t want; believing that it had prevented the previous installment ‘Terminator Salvation’ from living up to its potential.

    Terminator Genisys Behind The Scenes
    Alan Taylor breaks down a scene for Terminator Genisys with Producers Dana Goldberg, David Ellison and Writer Laeta Kalogridis (center)

    Director, Alan Taylor was tasked with doing what could be considered impossible; and a lot of fans were going to rail hard against it and understandably so (though the task of further converting a franchise, which was born in horror into a child friendlier model seemed far more possible in 2015).

    Even Alan Taylor’s partner Jane Wu, also part of the industry and whom Taylor met on the set of Thor: The Dark World told him not to take the Terminator Genisys gig; with Taylor recounting what his partner told him after she read the Terminator Genisys script with a laugh.

    “Well, she read the script, she said, ‘You should be doing something you love right now, something that’s more personal.’”

    Alan Taylor told THR

    Taylor however wanted a shot at redeeming the franchise and fancied working with Arnold Schwarzenegger after meetings for Terminator Genisys went well. Perhaps blindsided by the Austrian Oak‘s charisma, charm and also the past legacy of the franchise with James Cameron leading the charge.

    “All the voices in my head, and all the ones around me, were saying I should do it because who didn’t love the first two films? I thought we would go in and fix the script and everything could be great.”

    Alan Taylor

    However, Taylor and producers had presumed that the fanbase was an open book, and easy to satisfy.

    “I had lost the will to make movies, I lost the will to live as a director. I’m not blaming any person for that. The process was not good for me. So I came out of it having to rediscover the joy of filmmaking.”

    Alan Taylor told THR

    Terminator Genisys did well at the box office thanks to Asia, largely in part due to what could be attributed to curiosity, a curiosity that was not present for the sixth entry (Terminator: Dark Fate), resulting in a box office blunder and not the sure fire hit in Asia that the studios thought they were sitting on.

    Alan Taylor Terminator Genisys Premiere
    Photo by Jim Smeal – Alan Taylor ‘Terminator Genisys’ film premiere, Los Angeles, America – 28 Jun 2015

    Had Alan Taylor been given more freedom, been allowed to make a Hard R Terminator and been given a lower budget; we may have seen him shine more within the property. We don’t consider Terminator Genisys to be the worst entry in the franchise but (we feel) it stands on the same level as Terminator: Dark Fate.

    We wish Alan Taylor great success with his new Sopranos prequel film, The Many Saints of Newark.

    Alan Taylor Arnold Schwarzenegger articles Cast Crew Directors james cameron Movies news Paramount Pictures Production Company reports Skydance Studio Terminator Terminator Fans Terminator Genisys Terminator: Dark Fate Thor: The Dark World
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    View 7 Comments

    7 Comments

    1. Avatar
      Kevin Wales on 14 August 2021 7:34 am

      It was more like a film for kids.

      Reply
    2. Avatar
      Andrea Moss on 20 August 2021 4:16 pm

      “I had lost the will to make movies, I lost the will to live as a director.”

      I almost lost the will to live after watching your movie, Alan. So we’re even, I suppose.

      Reply
    3. Avatar
      Mike45 on 21 August 2021 12:54 am

      Mr. Alan if you had any brains you would have turned away and walked away after reading that piece of shit script.

      Reply
    4. Avatar
      Da5id on 21 August 2021 9:01 am

      The only thing worse than Terminator Genisys is Terminator Dark Fate, both produced by David “Studio Notes” Ellison. Look at this spoiled rich brat watching over the shoulder of Alan Taylor, like one of the Winklevoss twins…

      Reply
    5. Avatar
      Mike45 on 26 August 2021 8:20 am

      If it makes it any better Mr.Taylor, the first 20 or so minutes of the film are actually pretty good.

      the movie falls apart when the forward time-travel device is introduced and now we suddenly have to deal with the evil nano-terminator (made out of John Connor’s corpse) in the 2017.

      you should have fought tooth and nail with the producers to shelve the whole 2017’s Killer-App/Evil JC plot-line for the later follow-up sequel and instead focused on the potential storylines established in the first 20+ minutes of the film.

      Reply
    6. Avatar
      Mike45 on 26 August 2021 11:34 am

      Also the whole PG-13 rating limitations didn’t help either.

      it sure as hell didn’t work for Salvation, why did you thought it was gonna work in 2015 ? because of Marvel ?

      Reply
    7. Avatar
      DAN on 3 September 2021 5:22 pm

      I think that TERMINATOR GENESYS was better than DARK FATE in terms of effects, it was not badly done, Arnold’s powers at the end of the story is how a true terminator hero should be. They should have continued the story from GENESYS. The Spider Bots at the beginning of the film were very well done. Dark Fate isn’t too bad either, but it should have been a continuation of Genesys.

      Reply

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