Terminator: Dark FateTerminator: Dark Fate
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Terminator: Dark Fate is a 2019 American science fiction action film directed by Tim Miller and written by David Goyer, Justin Rhodes, and Billy Ray from a story by James Cameron, Charles Eglee, Josh Friedman, Goyer, and Rhodes. Cameron also produced the film with David Ellison. It is the sixth installment in the Terminator franchise and a direct sequel to Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), ignoring the events of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009) and Terminator Genisys (2015), following the return of creative control to Cameron.

The film stars Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger as Sarah Connor and the T-800 Terminator, respectively, reuniting the actors after 23 years. It introduces Mackenzie Davis, Natalia Reyes, Gabriel Luna, and Diego Boneta as new characters. Set 25 years after the events of Terminator 2, the film sees the machines sending an advanced Terminator (Luna), designated Rev-9, back in time to 2020 to kill Dani Ramos (Reyes), whose fate is connected to the future. The Resistance also sends Grace (Davis), an augmented soldier, back in time to defend Dani, while they are joined by Sarah Connor and Skynet s T-800 Terminator.

Principal photography took place from June to November 2018 in Hungary, Spain, and the United States. Distributed by Paramount Pictures in North America, Tencent Pictures in China and 20th Century Fox (through Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures) in other territories, the film was released theatrically in the United States on November 1, 2019. Although considered an improvement over recent predecessors by critics, the film only grossed $261 million worldwide and lost $122.6 million, making it one of the biggest box-office bombs of all time. Plans for future films were cancelled after its release.

Plot

In 1998, three years after destroying Cyberdyne Systems, Sarah and John Connor are enjoying life by a beach in Livingston, Guatemala, when they are suddenly ambushed by a T-800 Terminator. One of several sent back through time by Skynet, the Terminator kills John and leaves, despite Sarah s attempts to stop it.

In 2020, an advanced Terminator, the Rev-9, is sent back in time to Mexico City to murder Dani Ramos, while a cybernetically enhanced soldier, Grace, is sent from 2042 to protect her. The Rev-9, disguised as Dani s father, infiltrates the automobile assembly plant where Dani and her brother Diego work, but is thwarted by Grace, who escapes with the siblings. The Rev-9, using its ability to split into two distinct entities (its cybernetic endoskeleton and shape-shifting liquid metal exterior), pursues them, killing Diego and cornering Grace and Dani. However, Sarah arrives and temporarily disables both entities using military-grade weaponry.

Dani, Grace, and Sarah retreat to a motel. Sarah reveals that she found them because in the years since John s death, she has received encrypted messages detailing the locations of arriving Terminators, each ending with For John , allowing her to destroy them before they become threats. Grace notes that Skynet and John do not exist in her future and thus Sarah had succeeded in destroying the former after Cyberdyne went defunct. However, humanity s future is threatened by another AI called Legion, originally developed for cyberwarfare; this system is built in Skynet s place. When Legion became a threat to humans, an attempt was made to neutralize it with nuclear weapons, resulting in a nuclear holocaust and the AI creating a global network of machines to terminate the human survivors. The survivors then organized as the Human Resistance to counter Legion s onslaughts, and Dani s destiny is linked to their war against it.

Grace traces Sarah s messages to Laredo, Texas. Barely evading the Rev-9 and the authorities while crossing the Mexico–United States border, they arrive at their source, where they discover the same T-800 that had murdered John. Having fulfilled its mission and with Skynet no longer existing, the T-800 was left aimless. Through learning, however, it became self-aware. During that time, it learned from humanity and developed a conscience, taking the name Carl and adopting a human family. After learning how its actions affected Sarah and being able to detect the location of temporal displacements, Carl decided to forewarn her of them to give her purpose to make amends. Carl offers to join them against the Rev-9, and they prepare to destroy it, with Sarah begrudgingly agreeing to work together for Dani s sake. Anticipating the Rev-9 s arrival, Carl bids its family farewell and tells them to escape.

They seek out a military-grade electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generator from an acquaintance of Sarah s. The Rev-9 catches up with them, forcing them to steal a plane to escape, though the EMP generators are destroyed in the resulting shootout. During the flight, Grace reveals the Rev-9 s motive that Dani becomes the future founding commander of the Resistance who destroyed Legion. The Rev-9 boards their airplane and temporarily subdues Carl, forcing Grace, Sarah, and Dani to parachute from the plane into a river near a hydroelectric plant, with Carl and the Rev-9 following close behind.

Bludgeoned, the group makes its stand inside the plant. In the ensuing battle, Carl and Grace force the Rev-9 into a spinning turbine, causing an explosion that critically damages the two Terminators, while mortally wounding Grace. The severely damaged Rev-9 endoskeleton incapacitates Sarah, forcing Dani to confront it herself. A dying Grace tells Dani to use her power source to destroy the Rev-9. Dani tries to fight it but is quickly overpowered. Carl reactivates itself and restrains the Rev-9, allowing Dani to stab it with Grace s power source. Carl drags itself and the Rev-9 over a ledge, right before the power core explodes, destroying them both.

Sometime later, Dani and Sarah watch a young Grace at a playground with her family, the former determined to avert Grace s death and Legion s rise. Sarah then tells Dani she needs to get ready, with Grace watching as the pair drives off.

Cast

  • Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor, the mother of John Connor, the former future leader of the Human Resistance in the war against Skynet. Now a battle-hardened senior woman and left alone after John s death, Sarah hunts and kills Skynet s remaining Terminators to prevent Judgment Day and forestall the coming conflict. After learning of Dani s destiny leading a new Resistance against the rogue AI Legion and realizes her own purpose in the new timeline, she prepares Dani as she did John. Maddy Curley serves as a stunt actress and body double for young Sarah Connor, with CGI applied to recreate Hamilton s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Jessi Fisher serves as a stunt actress and body double for present day Sarah Connor.
  • Maddy Curley serves as a stunt actress and body double for young Sarah Connor, with CGI applied to recreate Hamilton s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene.
  • Jessi Fisher serves as a stunt actress and body double for present day Sarah Connor.
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger as the T-800 / Carl: An aging Terminator built by Skynet, and one of several sent back in time to kill John. After completing its mission, it gained autonomy and integrated into human society, becomes benign and later starting an emotional relationship with a woman while raising her son. It lives in Laredo, Texas and owns a drapery business. It later joins forces with Sarah and Grace to help protect Dani from the Rev-9, although Sarah continues to hate Carl for John s death. Dark Fate marks the first film in the series where Schwarzenegger appears as the titular character but does not receive top billing. Brett Azar serves as a body double for the young T-800, with CGI applied to recreate Schwarzenegger s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Azar reprises this role from Terminator Genisys.
  • Brett Azar serves as a body double for the young T-800, with CGI applied to recreate Schwarzenegger s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Azar reprises this role from Terminator Genisys.
  • Mackenzie Davis as Grace, an enhanced super soldier from 2042 who was previously taken in by Dani as a teenager. Grace was subsequently trained and raised by Dani. Grace is later part of a security detail for Dani, and she sustains stab wounds while fighting off a Rev-7 Terminator. Following the attack, she volunteers to be converted into a cyborg. Augmented with technology, she has abilities comparable to those of a Terminator for short periods of time, and requires medication, nourishment, and rest to replenish her strength. Her enhanced senses and abilities allow her to detect machines such as Legion s before normal humans. Grace is sent to protect Dani s younger self from Legion s Rev-9.Stephanie Gil portrays a 10-year-old Grace.
  • Stephanie Gil portrays a 10-year-old Grace.
  • Natalia Reyes as Dani Ramos, a young woman who works with her brother at an automobile assembly plant in Mexico City. Dani is being targeted for termination by the Rev-9. At first, Sarah believes that Dani is the Resistance leader s destined mother (like Sarah). However, it is revealed that Dani is fated to take on a role akin to that of Sarah s deceased son, as the Resistance s founding commander in the war against the machines of Legion, with Sarah as her mentor. In the future, Dani sends Grace back in time to stop the Rev-9, and she instructs Grace to seek the T-800 for aid by tattooing its location s coordinates on her.
  • Gabriel Luna as Gabriel / Rev-9, an advanced Terminator that originated from Legion and was sent back in time to terminate Dani. Featuring a traditional solid endoskeleton covered with liquid metal, the Rev-9 possesses the ability to separate these two components into two separate, fully autonomous units.
  • Diego Boneta as Diego Ramos, Dani s brother.
  • Tristán Ulloa as Felipe Gandal, Dani s uncle and a border coyote.
  • Alicia Borrachero as Alicia, Carl s wife.
  • Manuel Pacific as Mateo, Carl s step-son.
  • Enrique Arce as Vicente, Dani s and Diego s father.
  • Fraser James as Major Dean, a United States Air Force intelligence officer and Sarah s acquaintance.
  • Tom Hopper as William Hardell, Grace s commanding officer in the Resistance.
  • Stuart McQuarrie as Craig, Dani and Diego s work supervisor.
  • Steven Cree as Rigby, a United States Border Patrol agent
  • Georgia Simon, the film s ADR voice casting director, provided the voice of Grace s mother.
  • Edward Furlong as John Connor reference , a young version of John Connor created using CGI and motion capture.Aaron Kunitz provided the voice of young John Connor. Jude Collie served as a body double for young John Connor, onto which Furlong s facial likeness from the 1990s was applied.
  • Aaron Kunitz provided the voice of young John Connor.
  • Jude Collie served as a body double for young John Connor, onto which Furlong s facial likeness from the 1990s was applied.
  • Earl Boen appears as Dr. Silberman via uncredited archival footage from Terminator 2: Judgment Day.

Production

Development

By December 2013, Skydance Productions was planning for Terminator Genisys to be the start of a new trilogy of films. The Genisys sequels were scheduled for release on May 19, 2017, and June 29, 2018. For the second film in the planned trilogy, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger was to reprise his role as the T-800. Terminator Genisys was produced by Skydance founder David Ellison, and was released in 2015, but its disappointing box-office performance stalled the development of the planned trilogy. Dana Goldberg, the chief creative officer for Skydance, said in October 2015 that she wouldn t say on hold, so much as re-adjusting . According to Goldberg, despite Genisys disappointing domestic performance, the company was happy with its worldwide numbers and still intended to make new films. Production of a sequel would begin no earlier than 2016 because the company planned market research to determine its direction after Genisys. The Genisys sequels were ultimately cancelled.

Tim Miller and Ellison talked about Miller eventually directing a new Terminator film after completing Deadpool 2. When Miller left the Deadpool 2 project in October 2016, he took on the Terminator film as his next project instead. At the request of Miller, franchise creator James Cameron subsequently joined the project. Cameron had directed and co-written the first two Terminator films, and Miller, through his company Blur Studio, had previously worked with Cameron. Ellison felt that Genisys could have been better, so he recruited Cameron as a fellow producer in hopes of creating a better film. Cameron was intrigued by Ellison s proposal to make a direct sequel to Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), ignoring the events of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009), and Terminator Genisys. Cameron said we re pretending the other films were a bad dream. Or an alternate timeline, which is permissible in our multi-verse. Other filmmakers on the project had suggested making the film without Schwarzenegger, but Cameron disliked the idea as he and Schwarzenegger were friends. Cameron agreed to produce the film on the condition that Schwarzenegger be involved. As producer, Cameron was involved in pre-production and script work, and also provided his input on the project. Miller felt that audiences had lost hope in the franchise following the last three films. He believed that Cameron s involvement would serve as a seal of quality which would convince fans that the franchise was going to be handled at least in a way that the original filmmaker would want .

Cameron was involved with the film as of January 2017, and Ellison was searching for a writer among science fiction authors with the intention that Miller direct. Later in the month, Ellison said there would be an announcement regarding the future of the franchise before the end of the year, adding that it was going to be in a direction that would provide the continuation of what the fans really wanted since T2 . In July 2017, Cameron said that he was working with Ellison to set up a trilogy of films and supervise them. The intention was for Schwarzenegger to be involved, but also to introduce new characters and pass the baton .

Pre-production

On September 12, 2017, Skydance Media confirmed that Miller would direct the new Terminator film, which was initially scheduled for release on July 26, 2019. The film s budget was approximately $185–$196 million, split roughly three ways between Skydance, Paramount Pictures, and 20th Century Fox, all of which were production companies for the film. China-based Tencent Pictures joined the project as a co-financier in April 2018, ultimately financing ten percent of the budget. Tencent was a production company on the project, and also handled the film s distribution, marketing, and merchandising in China. TSG Entertainment and Cameron s Lightstorm Entertainment were also involved in the production.

Writing

Before screenwriters were hired, Miller had asked that a group of novelists be consulted on how to reinvent the franchise. Among the novelists were Joe Abercrombie, Neal Asher, Greg Bear, Warren Ellis, and Neal Stephenson. Abercrombie suggested the idea of a female character who is half human and half machine, forming the origins of the character Grace. A human-machine character, Marcus Wright, was previously featured in Terminator Salvation, portrayed by Sam Worthington.

The film s story was conceived by Miller, Cameron, and Ellison, and a team of writers was hired to write the script. They included Charles H. Eglee, David S. Goyer and his writing partner Justin Rhodes, and Josh Friedman, creator of the television series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Cameron and the writers watched the Terminator sequels that came after his initial films. They determined that the storylines of the later films were too complex when it came to time travel. Weeks were spent working on the story which was eventually envisioned as a new Terminator film trilogy. Goyer wrote a draft for the first film in the trilogy that would ultimately become Terminator: Dark Fate.

Goyer moved on to other projects. By November 2017, Billy Ray was brought in to polish the script. Ray rewrote much of Goyer s draft. Miller wrote the film s action scenes, while Ray handled the characters. Cameron had a list of action scenes, for no particular film, that he had wanted to shoot over the years. He gave this list to Miller, so he could work them into Terminator: Dark Fate. The list formed the basis for scenes involving a dam and a Humvee underwater. As the start of filming approached, Cameron felt that the script needed improvement and made the changes himself. The film s story credits were given to James Cameron, Charles Eglee, Josh Friedman, David Goyer, and Justin Rhodes; screenplay by David Goyer, Justin Rhodes, and Billy Ray. Cameron said that he and Miller ultimately had many disagreements about the film, but he described it as being part of the creative process. Among their disagreements was whether the human resistance would be winning or losing to Legion in the future. Miller wanted the humans to be losing, while Cameron felt differently. Miller said, Legion is so powerful, the only way to beat it is going back in time and strangle it in the crib. Jim says, What s dramatic about the humans losing? And I say, Well, What s dramatic about the humans winning and they just need to keep on winning? I like a last stand. It s not his thing. Miller also had disagreements with Ellison.

Miller said that the destruction of Cyberdyne at the end of Terminator 2: Judgment Day is an event which would change the future but no one knew how. And I don t think the movies that came after it really explored that in a clean way like I believe we are, with true consequences, and it makes perfect sense for Sarah to be the one to face those consequences since they were her choices to begin with. One consequence would be the death of John Connor, who was initially meant to become the future leader of the human resistance against machines. The decision to kill the John Connor character came from Cameron, who wanted to surprise audiences who had become invested in the character s mythology: It s like, Let s just get that right off the table. Let s just pull the carpet out from underneath all of our assumptions of what a Terminator movie is going to be about. Let s just put a bullet in his head at a pizzeria in the first 45 seconds. Cameron said that John s death serves as a springboard for the story to show Sarah s ultimate trauma from which she only begins to recover right at the end of the new film. She s driven by hatred, by revenge. (…) Her badassery comes from a place of deep hurt and deep pain.

Miller said that he and the other filmmakers did not find the decision to kill John controversial. Miller felt that Sarah Connor was best portrayed as an unhappy character, and he said that John s death provided a reason for her to be that way. Miller said of Sarah Connor: Grief has made her want to be an emotionless killing machine. And at the end of the movie, she s allowing herself to care again, she comes back to humanity. Her shriveled heart has blossomed again. That was the journey . However, Miller did not want Sarah Connor to be an unpleasant and unwatchable character and said, I think Sarah is tough, but it s not uncomfortable to watch.

Cameron believed that removing John Connor would prevent the film from feeling like a retread of previous films. Discarding John Connor allowed for new characters to be worked into the story. Miller said, You can t have John be a 36-year-old accountant somewhere. And really, when you think about it, he could be sort of a pathetic figure as a man who had missed his moment in history and was relegated to this banal, ordinary existence . Describing the opening scene, Miller said, You want to slap the audience in the face and say, Wake up. This is going to be different. I feel like that accomplished that. I hate the violence of it. I hate the idea of a kid being shot, but the dramatic fuel that it gives the story is kind of undeniable. In the early stages of development, there was consideration given to the idea that Dani Ramos could be portrayed as John s daughter, or that she could have some other connection to the Connors. However, Miller disliked the idea that she would be related to them. There were never plans to feature John Connor in any other scenes besides the opening. Linda Hamilton was somewhat shocked by the decision to kill John Connor, which she believed would upset a lot of fans, but she also said she wanted the film series and its characters to evolve. She was pleased with the film s characters, feeling that earlier sequels to Terminator 2 lacked characters the audience would care about.

Miller was dissatisfied with the final film s idea that Dani would send Grace to the past, saying, We set up this whole where Grace is kind of Dani s surrogate child and a mother sending her child to die for her is just…yeah, I had a different scene in mind. Additionally, several endings were considered, including one where Sarah and Dani would bury Grace, and another where Grace s body would be burned and sent down a river. Eventually, Miller suggested the idea that Dani would go to see the younger Grace. The ending playground scene was a late addition to the film.

Cameron devised the idea of a T-800 Terminator that is just out there in this kind of limbo for more than 20 years after carrying out an order, becoming more human in the sense that he s evaluating the moral consequences of things that he did, that he was ordered to do back in his early days, and really kind of developing a consciousness and a conscience . Cameron considered this iteration of the character to be more interesting than those featured in his first two films, saying, We ve seen the Terminator that was programmed to be bad; you ve seen the one that was programmed to be good, to be a protector. But in both cases, neither one of them have free will. Schwarzenegger enjoys interior decorating, so Cameron suggested that his T-800 character in the film have a drapery business. Miller arranged the script s structure to have Schwarzenegger s character appear later in the story, to allow time for the three female lead characters to develop.

Casting

By April 2017, Schwarzenegger had joined the project to reprise his role. That September, it was announced Hamilton would reprise her role as Sarah Connor, who she previously portrayed in the first two films. Hamilton had also briefly reprised the role for the 1996 theme park attraction T2-3D: Battle Across Time, and provided her voice in an uncredited role for Terminator Salvation. Because previous Terminator films did not do well with audiences, Miller felt it was necessary to have Hamilton reprise the role. Cameron, Ellison and Miller only wanted to bring back the Sarah Connor character if Hamilton would reprise the role. The film s storyline was devised first so the trio would have an idea to pitch to Hamilton. Cameron said that he sent Hamilton a long rambling email with a lot of reasons why she should do it and a lot of reasons why she shouldn t . Cameron s main reason why Hamilton should return was that people liked her in the role. There was never a version of the film that excluded Hamilton, and Miller said there was no backup plan in the event that she declined the role.

After approximately six weeks, Hamilton chose to sign on to the film, which did not yet have a completed script for her to read; that was still being refined. Initially, Hamilton was unsure if she wanted to reprise the role. She had been semi-retired from acting, and said, I didn t want it to look like a shameless money grab. I am living this quiet, lovely life that doesn t involve being a celebrity, and you really have to think, do I really want to trade that in again for another 15 minutes? Because so much time had passed since her last appearance as Sarah Connor, Hamilton had assumed that she would never reprise the role, and she was surprised by the offer to do so. Of her decision to return Hamilton said, I was very pleased that all of the years had passed, because I could fill the years up with so much backstory and inner life that could power the character.

Hamilton spent more than a year working with a fitness trainer to get into physical shape for the role. Hamilton said she put 10 times more effort into her physique than she did for Terminator 2. This included a regimen of supplements and bioidentical hormones, as well as training with Green Berets. She also took weapons training. Commenting on Hamilton s role, Cameron said he liked the idea of an action film starring a 62-year-old actress. Hamilton chose to dye her hair gray for the film, as she wanted viewers to see her character as an old woman. Hamilton disliked the physical training, and she had suggested that her character be portrayed as a fat person so she would not have to train for the film, although the idea was rejected.

In March 2018, it was announced that Mackenzie Davis had been cast in the film. Miller said of Davis, I didn t just want a woman who could physically fit the role but emotionally as well. Mackenzie really wanted to do it; she came after the role. She worked harder than anybody. After Davis was cast, she undertook physical training for the film s fight scenes. Schwarzenegger and Gabriel Luna also underwent physical training for the film. Luna was first considered for a role in December 2017, when a four-month casting process began for him.

The production team wanted to cast an 18-to-20-year-old woman as the new centerpiece of the story. Hamilton rehearsed lines with several actresses who were auditioning for the role of Dani, and she immediately felt that Natalia Reyes was the right choice. When Reyes sent in an audition tape, all she knew about the project was that it was a big American movie. She soon had a meeting with Miller through Skype, before coming to Los Angeles to audition with Hamilton. For her next audition, Reyes was flown to Dublin to audition with Davis, who was there shooting another film. The casting process lasted a month and a half for Reyes before she was finally cast. Afterwards, she went through physical training to prepare for the role.

Because the film is partially set in Mexico City, the cast includes several Latino actors, including Reyes, Luna, and Diego Boneta, who were cast as primary characters in April 2018. Reyes said, This movie is a reflection of Hollywood now. We are just changing these stereotypes and the ideas and the cliches of what a Latino should be. Cameron watched all the audition tapes and gave his approval to the casting choices. By June 2018, Jude Collie had been cast as the double for a young John Connor, with Brett Azar reprising his role from Genisys as the body double for a younger T-800.

Cameron announced in July 2019 that Edward Furlong would reprise his role as John Connor from Terminator 2: Judgment Day. Furlong later maintained that his role in the film was small, and Miller regretted that Cameron had made such an announcement. Furlong s likeness was used to recreate his younger face digitally using CGI. He also gave a performance through facial motion capture footage that was added into the film. For his performance, Furlong simultaneously watched footage of Collie during the film s opening scene and had to match his own performance with Collie s precisely. Furlong is credited as John Connor reference . Furlong was disappointed by his small role, which was limited to one day of work.

Filming

Production was intended to start initially in March 2018, but was delayed due to casting. It was then expected to start during May and end during November with filming taking place in Hungary, the United Kingdom, Spain, and Mexico. In April 2018, the film s release date was delayed until November 2019. Filming began in Spain on June 4, 2018, under the working title Terminator 6: Phoenix. Filming subsequently moved to Hungary and the United States, before concluding in November 2018.

The film, like Cameron s initial Terminator films, is rated R, whereas the previous two films were rated PG-13. Miller said the film is rated R because the fans kind of demanded it, in a way , saying that the DNA of Terminator is an R-rated movie and that to not do it R feels disingenuous to the source material . Initially, certain scenes were filmed in two ways—with and without R-rated violence and language. This gave the filmmakers an alternative in the event that the film s intended R rating should be reconsidered. The filmmakers eventually abandoned this method after deciding definitively on an R-rated film.

During filming, Cameron made further changes to the script to perfect the characters. In some cases, his script changes were submitted to Miller only a day prior to filming the scene. Hamilton rejected certain actions and lines of dialogue that she felt were uncharacteristic for Sarah Connor. Schwarzenegger also added and changed some of his own lines during filming. Cameron did not visit the set, as he was busy filming his Avatar sequels. He also did not want to interfere with Miller s directorial work.

Spain

The first day of filming took place in Isleta del Moro, Almería, Spain. It involved the pivotal opening scene featuring the characters of the T-800, Sarah Connor, and John Connor. The three characters were portrayed in the scene by body doubles, and digital de-aging was later applied to give them a youthful appearance. The doubles wore special hoods that tracked their head movements, allowing their facial features to be replaced later by new motion capture facial footage recorded by Schwarzenegger, Hamilton, and Furlong.

During filming of the opening scene, Hamilton expressed dissatisfaction with the body double s portrayal, feeling that it did not accurately reflect the character. Hamilton advised the body double on how to portray the character for a more fierce response to the T-800 character. Hamilton was disappointed that she had no onscreen part in the scene and later said, It wasn t me and it really hurt. I cried my eyes out when I got home. The film used more stuntwomen for Sarah Connor than Terminator 2. Hamilton said she really got a little crazy trying to micromanage them to ensure that they moved the way her character should. For this reason, Hamilton performed some of her own stunts.

Scenes that were set in Mexico were shot entirely in Spain, where filming lasted approximately 30 days. Spain was chosen for budgetary reasons and because of safety concerns over drug cartel violence in Mexico. Filming locations included the Madrid neighborhoods of Pueblo Nuevo and Lavapiés, which stood in as Mexican towns. For these scenes, the film crew repainted cars to resemble taxis and also left old vehicles on the streets to suggest they were abandoned. An artist was also hired to paint graffiti art to further give the location a Mexican appearance. Boneta, who was born and raised in Mexico City, was asked to meet with the film s art department leaders to ensure that the filming locations in Spain had an authentic Mexican look. While filming in Spain, Luna coached several actors on how to speak Spanish with a Mexican accent.

In July 2018, filming took place for two weeks in Catral, including the San Juan industrial estate. Filming also took place in Cartagena, and at the Aldeadávila Dam. A combination of practical effects and CGI were used for a highway chase sequence in which the Rev-9 pursues Grace, Dani, and Diego. Sarah Connor s present-day introduction also takes place on the highway, and Hamilton rehearsed the scene extensively before it was filmed. Approximately seven freeway locations in Spain had been considered before settling on the final choice, consisting of new roads leading to the then-unopened Región de Murcia International Airport.

The highway chase sequence required a crew of approximately 300 people, with many different film departments involved. A custom-built pod car, similar to a dune buggy, was built to haul a pickup truck during filming. This allowed Davis, Reyes and Boneta to act out their scenes in the truck while the driving was handled by a professional driver in the pod car. Cameras were attached to the pickup truck to film the actors while the vehicle was in motion. One shot filmed at the San Juan industrial estate depicts the Rev-9 driving its plow truck through a wall, which was built specifically for the shot. The highway chase was initially planned to be twice as long. The Rev-9 was to have killed a cop and stolen a motorcycle to continue its pursuit, and the motorcycle would be shot at and destroyed. The Rev-9 would subsequently leap onto a truck and then onto Dani s vehicle. The extended sequence was previsualized, but Miller chose not to film it as the sequence was considered crazy enough already. Previously, Miller had wanted to film the motorcycle sequence for his 2016 film Deadpool.

Hungary and U.S.

Filming moved to Hungary on July 19, 2018. Filming locations there included Origo Film Studios in Budapest. Part of the film s C-5 plane sequence involves the characters floating in the fuselage in zero gravity. Miller spoke with pilots to do research into gravity and the plane s action scenes, which were difficult to choreograph because of the constant gravity changes depicted. Hamilton said the film s script was the first one that she did not fully understand, because of the large amount of action. Animated previsualization aided the cast during such scenes. In Budapest, special effects supervisor Neil Corbould created the film s largest set piece: the fuselage of the C-5. The set was constructed on an 85-ton gimbal, the largest ever built. The set was capable of rotating 360 degrees, and could tilt backwards and forwards at 10 degrees. It was powered by five 200-liter-per-minute hydraulic pumps, as well as more than a mile and a half of hydraulic hoses. A pit had to be dug in the concrete floor of the sound stage to accommodate the large set, which took approximately five months to design and another five months to build. The set was 60 feet long, half the length of a real C-5 fuselage, and it contained a bluescreen at one end for post-production effects to be added in later. The rotating set helped to achieve the sense of gravity needed for the scene, and the set also allowed the camera crew members to strap themselves inside. The plane set was padded for actors who shot scenes inside it. Foam replicas of military vehicles were also situated inside the plane with the actors.

Davis said shooting the film was the hardest thing she had ever done because of the physical requirements. One scene depicts a Humvee falling out of the C-5 plane, with Grace having to open the vehicle s parachutes to land it safely. Davis was suspended with wires to perform the scene, which was filmed in Budapest. An underwater action scene took weeks to shoot and involved immersing Hamilton and Reyes in a water tank. The scene depicts Sarah and Dani inside the Humvee after it falls over the dam and into water. The scene was shot in a tank surrounded by a large bluescreen stage which depicted the exterior environment. For the scene, each day of shooting took place over 12-hour periods from the evening to the morning. Another scene depicts the T-800 and Rev-9 fighting underwater.

The film includes a scene where the characters are held in a detention center on the Mexico–United States border. Miller said it was not meant as a social commentary or political statement on immigrant issues related to the border, stating that the scene was just a natural evolution of the story . He noted: I tried to walk a line there because it s a terrible situation, but I didn t want to vilify border guards. They re people doing a job. The system is the problem. And even the choice to do it really wasn t a statement. It really was a function of us putting the story s beginning in central Mexico and then traveling. Miller was emotional while filming the scene because of its depiction of immigrants being held in a detention center. Luna said, We don t make any overt political stances; we just show you what s happening in the world and you receive it however as you may. Scenes at the detention center were filmed in July 2018, at an old Nokia factory in the Hungarian city of Komárom.

In late July 2018, Schwarzenegger began filming scenes in Budapest. In September 2018, filming took place at a Mercedes-Benz factory in Kecskemét. Filming in the United States was scheduled to begin in mid-October. Carl s cabin was built from scratch. While the filmmakers liked the surrounding scenery, they rejected a previous house that was built on the property for another production, so it was torn down to construct the new home. Schwarzenegger completed filming on October 28, 2018. Filming wrapped in early November 2018.

Post-production

Cameron, who also works as a film editor, was heavily involved in the editing of Terminator: Dark Fate. He saw a rough cut of the film in early 2019 and provided Miller with notes on how to improve it feeling it needed to be perfected. He said the film transformed quite a bit from the rough cut. The initial cut of the film, known as an assembly cut, was two hours and 50 minutes. Miller s director s cut was closer to the film s final runtime. Three or four minutes were removed from the director s cut, including a few scenes. Some scenes were also trimmed, including the underwater fight and those on board the C-5 airplane. In his director s cut, Miller said he removed a lot of stuff that Cameron thought was important. Miller also said that he and Cameron had many disagreements about lines of dialogue which Miller thought were poetic and beautiful , while Cameron thought they were unimportant. Because of the lack of full control throughout the project, Miller said he would likely not work with Cameron again, although the two maintained a good relationship. The final cut of the film runs for 128 minutes.

At one point late in production, Miller considered placing the opening scene later in the film, when Sarah is in the motel room explaining John s death to Grace and Dani. However, Miller said this structure really changed a whole lot of stuff in a negative way , and he ultimately decided to keep it as an opening scene, in order to start the film off by shocking the audience. The opening scene was originally longer as it featured dialogue between Sarah and John. This was cut from the final film as Cameron and Miller believed that the visual effects did not hold up well when the characters spoke. Another deleted scene went into more detail on how Carl knew about other Terminators arriving from the future. The scene, written by Cameron, explained that Carl created a cell phone app to track the arrivals, which disrupt cell phone signals. The scene was removed because it was considered too humorous compared to the rest of the sequence, which has a serious tone as it involves Sarah meeting her son s killer. A shot was deleted from Carl s final fight with the Rev-9 that depicted it ripping flesh off of Carl s arm. Miller said, We had to walk the line between gross and horrific , and he described the arm skin as hanging like a big piece of jerky , saying, That s where we drew the line.

The film contains 2,600 visual effects shots and was edited using Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe After Effects. The visual effects were provided by Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Scanline VFX, supervised by Alex Wang, David Seager, Arek Komorowski. Eric Barba was the production supervisor with help from Blur Studio, Digital Domain, Method Studios, Unit Image, Rebellion VFX, Mammal Studios, Universal Production Partners (UPP), Weta Digital, Les Androïds Associés, The Third Floor, Inc. and Cantina Creative. ILM was initially going to be the sole company working on visual effects, but others were brought on due to the amount of work that had to be done on the film. The Third Floor handled some of the previsualization. Method Studios created visual effects for scenes involving the C-5 airplane and a helicopter crash. The company also created an establishing shot of a military base, and several shots set during the border crossing. Blur Studio handled scenes that depict Grace s future as a soldier.

ILM handled the de-aging in the opening scene. ILM s visual effects supervisor, Jeff White, said a lot of work went into the scene to ensure that the characters faces looked realistic and had the same likenesses as Terminator 2. After seeing the digital head shots, Schwarzenegger provided guidance to the ILM team, which made subtle adjustments to perfect his character s facial movements. The ILM team also created the liquid metal effects of the Rev-9. The team studied time-lapse photography which depicted the growth of algae and fungus, and this inspired the liquid metal movements.

According to Cameron in February 2019, the film s working title was Terminator: Dark Fate. This was confirmed as the film s official title the following month.

Music

Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
Film score by

Tom Holkenborg
Released November 1, 2019
Genre Soundtrack
Length 58:00
Label Paramount Music
Terminator soundtrack chronology
Terminator Genisys
(2015)
Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
(2019)

Tom Holkenborg composed the film s score, reuniting with director Tim Miller after their collaboration in Deadpool. Holkenborg recreated Brad Fiedel s original Terminator theme while also introducing Latino elements to reflect the ethnicity of Dani Ramos. Holkenborg used approximately 15 instruments while composing the score, and also used the sound of an anvil and the banging of a washing machine. Holkenborg described his score as being way more aggressive than Fiedel s. The soundtrack was released digitally on November 1, 2019, by Paramount Music.

Soundtrack

All music composed by Tom Holkenborg except where otherwise noted.

Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
No. Title Length
1. Terminated () 1:28
2. My Name Is Dani 3:39
3. REV 9 3:10
4. Iron Spike 2:52
5. Enter Sarah 0:59
6. Grace 4:24
7. Drones Coming 1:46
8. The Wall 4:12
9. Terminator () 2:57
10. Coyote 2:18
11. The Picture on the Fridge 0:42
12. C5 4:10
13. HUMV 1:59
14. You Saved Me 5:41
15. Screaming Turbines 4:13
16. For John 7:59
17. Epilogue 1:10
18. Dark Fate () 4:19
Total length: 58:00

Marketing

A first-look promotional image showing Hamilton, Davis and Reyes was released in August 2018. It was the subject of comments which criticized the absence of the Terminator and John Connor and received backlash for its focus on the female cast members. A teaser trailer for the film was released on May 23, 2019, that features a cover version of Björk s Hunter performed by John Mark McMillan. The film s theatrical and international trailers were released on August 29, 2019. The trailers release date marked the anniversary of the original Judgment Day date given in the second film. Initially, the marketing campaign highlighted the return of Cameron and Hamilton. In the final months, the campaign focused more on the film s action and special effects. Promotional partners included Adobe Inc. and Ruffles. In September 2019, Adobe and Paramount Pictures launched a contest for people to create their own remix version of the trailer using Adobe software and assets from the film.

In early October 2019, brief footage of the film was shown during IMAX screenings of Joker. Miller and the cast went on a global press tour to promote the film, and Hamilton attended a premiere event in Seoul on October 21, 2019.

In the film, Schwarzenegger s character has a van which advertises Carl s Draperies 888-512-1984 on the side of it. The number is an actual phone number which, when dialed, plays a recording of Schwarzenegger as Carl. The number references May 12, 1984, the date that Kyle Reese time-travels to in the first film.

Merchandise

The 2019 video game Gears 5 allows the player to play as either Sarah Connor with Hamilton voicing her character, Grace or a T-800 Terminator model. The game was released on September 6, 2019. The T-800 model was later a downloadable playable character in Mortal Kombat 11, using Schwarzenegger s likeness, but without the actor voicing the character; he was voiced by Chris Cox instead of Schwarzenegger. The downloadable content was released on October 8, 2019. A mobile game, titled Terminator: Dark Fate – The Game, was released in October 2019. National Entertainment Collectibles Association released action figures based on the film, and Chronicle Collectibles released an 18-inch T-800 statue.

Release

Terminator: Dark Fate was released in the UK on October 23, 2019, and was released on November 1, 2019, by Paramount Pictures in North America, Tencent Pictures in China, and 20th Century Fox (through Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures) outside of North America and China. On October 19, 2019, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema hosted surprise screenings of the film in 15 theaters, disguised as screenings of Terminator 2: Judgment Day. The film s premiere event in the U.S. was to be held on October 28, 2019, at TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, but it was cancelled because of nearby wildfires.

Terminator: Dark Fate was released digitally on January 14, 2020, before its home video releases on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on January 28. Several deleted scenes were included with the home video release, including one in which Sarah learns that Carl has informed Alicia of his past and his true nature as a killing machine. In another scene, Sarah hijacks a man s vehicle on the highway after Grace and Dani steal hers. Another scene depicts the characters being attacked by guards as they journey towards the border. One deleted scene depicts Grace volunteering herself to an older Dani to send her to the past.

Reception

Box office

Terminator: Dark Fate grossed $62.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $198.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $261.1 million. With a production budget between $185–196 million and an additional $80–100 million spent on marketing and distribution, early estimates stated the film needed to earn over $450 million worldwide to break even. The film ended up losing Paramount, Skydance, and other studios $122.6 million. It was labeled a box-office bomb after its dismal opening weekend, and it finished as the second biggest bomb of 2019. As a result of the losses, sources close to Skydance said shortly after the release that there were no plans to continue the franchise.

In the United States and Canada, Dark Fate was released at the same time as Harriet, Arctic Dogs, and Motherless Brooklyn, and was initially projected to gross $40–47 million from 4,086 theaters in its opening weekend. The film made $2.35 million from Thursday night previews, on a par with the $2.3 million that Genisys made from its Tuesday night previews in 2015. But after making just $10.6 million on its first day, weekend estimates were lowered to $27 million. It went on to debut to $29 million. Although it finished first at the box office, it was the lowest opening in the series since the original film (when accounting for inflation), which was blamed on the lukewarm critical reception, as well as the audience s disinterest in another Terminator film. The film made $10.8 million in its second weekend, dropping 63% and finishing fifth, and then $4.3 million in its third weekend, falling to 11th.

In Germany, the film started out with 132,500 viewers, placing it third on that week s charts. In the weekend following its international debut, the film grossed $12.8 million from countries in Europe and Asia, considered a low start. The film was projected to gross $125 million globally during the first weekend of November 2019. Instead, it only made $101.9 million (18% below projections), including $72.9 million overseas. As it did in the U.S., the film under-performed in China, where it opened to just $28.2 million, far below the $40–50 million estimates.

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 70% of 349 critics reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The website s consensus reads, Terminator: Dark Fate represents a significant upgrade over its immediate predecessors, even if it lacks the thrilling firepower of the franchise s best installments. Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 54 out of 100, based on 51 critics, indicating mixed or average reviews . Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B+ on an A+ to F scale, the same score as its three immediate predecessors, while those at PostTrak gave it an overall positive score of 78%, with 51% saying they would definitely recommend it.

The Hollywood Reporter wrote that critics overall seemed cautiously excited about Dark Fate, although there s a certain awkwardness about seeing repeated recommendations that it is easily the third-best movie in the series . William Bibbiani of TheWrap wrote that, Whether Terminator: Dark Fate is the last chapter in this story or the first in an all-new franchise is, for now, irrelevant. The film works either way, bringing the tale of the first two films to a satisfying conclusion while reintroducing the classic storyline, in exciting new ways, to an excited new audience. It s a breathtaking blockbuster, and a welcome return to form. Variety s Owen Gleiberman called the film the first vital Terminator sequel since Terminator 2 and wrote that Terminator: Dark Fate is a movie designed to impress you with its scale and visual effects, but it s also a film that returns, in good and gratifying ways, to the smartly packaged low-down genre-thriller classicism that gave the original Terminator its kick.

Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal gave the film a negative review, describing it as cobbled together by dunces in a last-ditch effort to wring revenue from a moribund concept. The plot makes no sense—time travel as multiverse Dada. Worse still, it renders meaningless the struggles that gave the first two films of the franchise an epic dimension. Jefferey M. Anderson of Common Sense Media gave the movie two out of five stars: This sixth Terminator movie erases the events of the previous three (dud) sequels but winds up feeling half-erased itself. It s like a dull, pale, irrelevant carbon copy of a once glorious hit. Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com gave Dark Fate two out of four stars, arguing that it suffered from empty fanservice and that Hamilton deserves better as does her supporting female cast. David Ehrlich of IndieWire praised Hamilton s performance and the movie s digital recreations of her, Furlong s, and Schwarzenegger s younger likenesses, but concluded that this painfully generic action movie proves that the Terminator franchise is obsolete . Tasha Robinson of The Verge stated that some combat sequences are staged clearly and cleanly , while others are packed with CGI blurs and muddy action and are hard to follow in even the most basic who s where, and are they dead? kind of way. And when Dark Fate does deign to explain what s going on, it delivers its exposition in a self-important, hushed, clumsy way, as if audiences should be astonished by the most basic plot revelations.

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian awarded it two stars out of five, stating The Terminator franchise has come clanking robotically into view once again with its sixth film – it absolutely will not stop – not merely repeating itself but somehow repeating the repetitions. While he wrote that it was good to see Hamilton getting a robust role , he added that sadly, she has to concede badass superiority to Davis. He concluded by writing, This sixth Terminator surely has to be the last. Yet the very nature of the Terminator story means that going round and round in existential circles comes with the territory. Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film two stars out of four, calling it a boring retread and so derivative of Judgment Day , although he welcomed the return of Linda Hamilton, praised an impressively effective Mackenzie Davis, and the winning screen presence of Natalia Reyes. Angie Han of Mashable found the film underwhelming and its title to be quite apt: Dark Fate is too thinly sketched to be anything but pastiche. It feels like a Terminator movie spit out by a machine designed to make Terminator movies. A dark fate for the franchise, indeed.

Miller said the film was never meant to be better than Terminator 2. As to the mixed reception, Miller believed that some audiences were predisposed to dislike the film after being disappointed by the last three films. He also believed that some audiences hate it because it s the sixth movie, and Hollywood should be making original movies and not repeating franchises .

Miller gave a more blunt assessment in a 2022 interview with Collider’s journalist, Steve Weinstraub: “Terminator’s an interesting movie to explore, but maybe we’ve explored it enough. I went in with the rock hard nerd belief that if I made a good movie that I wanted to see, it would do well. And I was wrong. It was one of those f**king Eureka moments in a bad way because the movie tanked.”

Fate of John Connor

The death of John Connor early in the film was criticized by critics and fans. Fred Hawson of ABS-CBNnews.com wrote that deciding to lose John Connor early on in this one made the emotional heart of the first two classic Terminator films stop beating as well. Richard Roeper argued that killing John Connor ruined what the previous two films established: Even though Dark Fate tosses aside the third, fourth and fifth entries in the series like a Terminator disposing of a hapless cop, it also undercuts the impact of the first film and the follow-up (which is one of the two or three greatest sequels of all time). First, they get rid of the John Connor character in almost casual fashion.

Corey Plante of Inverse, who was critical of Furlong s portrayal of the character in Terminator 2, nonetheless found his character s death off-putting: The character at the focus of every previous Terminator movie—the same young boy I irrationally hated since I was a young boy myself—was dead. Needless to say, it rattled me. He also found that replacing him with new heroes undermined the Connors importance established in the previous films: The future that made important died with John, and now there s a new Terminator story with a new set of heroes that makes it seem like no matter how many times Skynet or its next iteration sends a murder robot back in time to kill someone, there will always be a new hero waiting to rise up. Robert Yaniz Jr. of CheatSheet described the twist as unthinkable: In an instant, the entire crux of the franchise—the human resistance led by John—is torn away.

Matt Goldberg of Collider felt the opening did irreparable damage to the legacy of Terminator 2 by rendering it pointless: Every sequel since has diminished the ending of Judgment Day because the story needs to continue (because studios like money and can t leave well enough alone). But Terminator: Dark Fate may be the worst offender thus far as its prologue directly follows T2 and goes for shock value rather than considering what it means to continue the narrative. Richard Trenholm of CNET felt the opening twist summed up everything wrong with Dark Fate: The joy instantly becomes cringeworthy, as this prologue undermines Terminator 2 by killing a major character in such a cursory fashion it just feels silly. Ian Sandwell of Digital Spy suggested that the twist was not particularly important, given that in the other films, John Connor only exists to motivate the other characters and sets the plot in motion , and that John s role as a future leader had already been rendered moot through the elimination of Skynet.

About the controversial scene, Furlong also expressed his displeasure, and hoped to reprise the role in full in a future film. Linda Hamilton also voiced her opinion that the scene would upset fans, as she considered John to be the true main protagonist of the franchise. Nick Stahl, who portrayed John in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, also expressed interest in reprising the role in a possible seventh film.

Cathal Gunning of Screen Rant noted the similarity between the decision to kill off John Connor in the opening scene to the deaths of Newt and Corporal Dwayne Hicks in Alien 3, which was criticized by Cameron, who had directed the preceding film, Aliens.

Accolades

The film was nominated for an award from the Visual Effects Society. Neil Corbould, David Brighton, Ray Ferguson, and Keith Dawson, were nominated in the category of Outstanding Special (Practical) Effects in a Photoreal or Animated Project. The film was nominated for three Saturn Awards for Best Science Fiction Film, Best Supporting Actress (for Linda Hamilton), and Best Special Effects in 2021.

Future

Cancelled sequels

Plans for a new Terminator film trilogy were announced in July 2017. While working on the story for Terminator: Dark Fate that year, Cameron and the writers envisioned the film as the first in the new trilogy. They also worked out the basic storylines for each planned film.

By October 2019, Gale Anne Hurd had filed to terminate a copyright grant made 35 years earlier. Under this move, Hurd would again become a 50–50 owner of the rights with Cameron, and Skydance Media could lose the rights to make any additional Terminator films beginning in November 2020, unless a new deal is worked out. Skydance responded that it had a deal in place with Cameron and that it controls the rights to the Terminator franchise for the foreseeable future . In October 2019, Cameron said that sequels to Terminator: Dark Fate would further explore the relationship between humans and artificial intelligence, while stating that a resolution between the two feuding sides would be the ultimate outcome. That month, Schwarzenegger said that Cameron would write the Terminator: Dark Fate sequels, and that Cameron would begin work on the next film in early 2020, for release in 2022.

Although the events of Terminator: Dark Fate erase Schwarzenegger s T-800 character from existence, Cameron did not rule out the possibility of Schwarzenegger reprising the character, saying, Look, if we make a ton of money with this film and the cards say that they like Arnold, I think Arnold can come back. I m a writer. I can think of scenarios. We don t have a plan for that right now, let me put it that way. Hamilton said in October 2019 that she would probably reprise her role for a sequel, although she joked that she would fake her own death to avoid appearing in it, saying that making Terminator: Dark Fate really was hard because of the physical training she had to undergo. Hamilton later gave an interview the following year in January on her future with the franchise in which she said that I would be quite happy to never return. So no, I am not hopeful, because I would really love to be done. But if there were something new that really spoke to me, I am a logical person, and I will always consider viable changes.

Following the film s performance at the box office, sources close to Skydance told The Hollywood Reporter that there are no plans for further films. In June 2020, star Mackenzie Davis expressed: I really loved the movie and I m so proud of what we did, but there wasn t a demand for it and to think that there d be a demand for a seventh film is quite insane. You should just pay attention to what audiences want . Later in December, Davis went on to reveal that the seventh film would not have been a direct sequel to Dark Fate, but a spin-off focusing on an alternate timeline version of Grace set in the future war similar to Terminator Salvation, and would not have featured Schwarzenegger.

Anime series

In February 2021, Netflix announced that they were developing a Terminator anime series in collaboration with Skydance and Production I.G; Mattson Tomlin will serve as the series showrunner.

Terminator: Dark Fate is a 2019 American science fiction action film directed by Tim Miller and written by David Goyer, Justin Rhodes, and Billy Ray from a story by James Cameron, Charles Eglee, Josh Friedman, Goyer, and Rhodes. Cameron also produced the film with David Ellison. It is the sixth installment in the Terminator franchise and a direct sequel to Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), ignoring the events of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009) and Terminator Genisys (2015), following the return of creative control to Cameron.

The film stars Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger as Sarah Connor and the T-800 Terminator, respectively, reuniting the actors after 23 years. It introduces Mackenzie Davis, Natalia Reyes, Gabriel Luna, and Diego Boneta as new characters. Set 25 years after the events of Terminator 2, the film sees the machines sending an advanced Terminator (Luna), designated Rev-9, back in time to 2020 to kill Dani Ramos (Reyes), whose fate is connected to the future. The Resistance also sends Grace (Davis), an augmented soldier, back in time to defend Dani, while they are joined by Sarah Connor and Skynet s T-800 Terminator.

Principal photography took place from June to November 2018 in Hungary, Spain, and the United States. Distributed by Paramount Pictures in North America, Tencent Pictures in China and 20th Century Fox (through Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures) in other territories, the film was released theatrically in the United States on November 1, 2019. Although considered an improvement over recent predecessors by critics, the film only grossed $261 million worldwide and lost $122.6 million, making it one of the biggest box-office bombs of all time. Plans for future films were cancelled after its release.

Plot

In 1998, three years after destroying Cyberdyne Systems, Sarah and John Connor are enjoying life by a beach in Livingston, Guatemala, when they are suddenly ambushed by a T-800 Terminator. One of several sent back through time by Skynet, the Terminator kills John and leaves, despite Sarah s attempts to stop it.

In 2020, an advanced Terminator, the Rev-9, is sent back in time to Mexico City to murder Dani Ramos, while a cybernetically enhanced soldier, Grace, is sent from 2042 to protect her. The Rev-9, disguised as Dani s father, infiltrates the automobile assembly plant where Dani and her brother Diego work, but is thwarted by Grace, who escapes with the siblings. The Rev-9, using its ability to split into two distinct entities (its cybernetic endoskeleton and shape-shifting liquid metal exterior), pursues them, killing Diego and cornering Grace and Dani. However, Sarah arrives and temporarily disables both entities using military-grade weaponry.

Dani, Grace, and Sarah retreat to a motel. Sarah reveals that she found them because in the years since John s death, she has received encrypted messages detailing the locations of arriving Terminators, each ending with For John , allowing her to destroy them before they become threats. Grace notes that Skynet and John do not exist in her future and thus Sarah had succeeded in destroying the former after Cyberdyne went defunct. However, humanity s future is threatened by another AI called Legion, originally developed for cyberwarfare; this system is built in Skynet s place. When Legion became a threat to humans, an attempt was made to neutralize it with nuclear weapons, resulting in a nuclear holocaust and the AI creating a global network of machines to terminate the human survivors. The survivors then organized as the Human Resistance to counter Legion s onslaughts, and Dani s destiny is linked to their war against it.

Grace traces Sarah s messages to Laredo, Texas. Barely evading the Rev-9 and the authorities while crossing the Mexico–United States border, they arrive at their source, where they discover the same T-800 that had murdered John. Having fulfilled its mission and with Skynet no longer existing, the T-800 was left aimless. Through learning, however, it became self-aware. During that time, it learned from humanity and developed a conscience, taking the name Carl and adopting a human family. After learning how its actions affected Sarah and being able to detect the location of temporal displacements, Carl decided to forewarn her of them to give her purpose to make amends. Carl offers to join them against the Rev-9, and they prepare to destroy it, with Sarah begrudgingly agreeing to work together for Dani s sake. Anticipating the Rev-9 s arrival, Carl bids its family farewell and tells them to escape.

They seek out a military-grade electromagnetic pulse (EMP) generator from an acquaintance of Sarah s. The Rev-9 catches up with them, forcing them to steal a plane to escape, though the EMP generators are destroyed in the resulting shootout. During the flight, Grace reveals the Rev-9 s motive that Dani becomes the future founding commander of the Resistance who destroyed Legion. The Rev-9 boards their airplane and temporarily subdues Carl, forcing Grace, Sarah, and Dani to parachute from the plane into a river near a hydroelectric plant, with Carl and the Rev-9 following close behind.

Bludgeoned, the group makes its stand inside the plant. In the ensuing battle, Carl and Grace force the Rev-9 into a spinning turbine, causing an explosion that critically damages the two Terminators, while mortally wounding Grace. The severely damaged Rev-9 endoskeleton incapacitates Sarah, forcing Dani to confront it herself. A dying Grace tells Dani to use her power source to destroy the Rev-9. Dani tries to fight it but is quickly overpowered. Carl reactivates itself and restrains the Rev-9, allowing Dani to stab it with Grace s power source. Carl drags itself and the Rev-9 over a ledge, right before the power core explodes, destroying them both.

Sometime later, Dani and Sarah watch a young Grace at a playground with her family, the former determined to avert Grace s death and Legion s rise. Sarah then tells Dani she needs to get ready, with Grace watching as the pair drives off.

Cast

  • Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor, the mother of John Connor, the former future leader of the Human Resistance in the war against Skynet. Now a battle-hardened senior woman and left alone after John s death, Sarah hunts and kills Skynet s remaining Terminators to prevent Judgment Day and forestall the coming conflict. After learning of Dani s destiny leading a new Resistance against the rogue AI Legion and realizes her own purpose in the new timeline, she prepares Dani as she did John. Maddy Curley serves as a stunt actress and body double for young Sarah Connor, with CGI applied to recreate Hamilton s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Jessi Fisher serves as a stunt actress and body double for present day Sarah Connor.
  • Maddy Curley serves as a stunt actress and body double for young Sarah Connor, with CGI applied to recreate Hamilton s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene.
  • Jessi Fisher serves as a stunt actress and body double for present day Sarah Connor.
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger as the T-800 / Carl: An aging Terminator built by Skynet, and one of several sent back in time to kill John. After completing its mission, it gained autonomy and integrated into human society, becomes benign and later starting an emotional relationship with a woman while raising her son. It lives in Laredo, Texas and owns a drapery business. It later joins forces with Sarah and Grace to help protect Dani from the Rev-9, although Sarah continues to hate Carl for John s death. Dark Fate marks the first film in the series where Schwarzenegger appears as the titular character but does not receive top billing. Brett Azar serves as a body double for the young T-800, with CGI applied to recreate Schwarzenegger s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Azar reprises this role from Terminator Genisys.
  • Brett Azar serves as a body double for the young T-800, with CGI applied to recreate Schwarzenegger s facial likeness from the 1990s opening scene. Azar reprises this role from Terminator Genisys.
  • Mackenzie Davis as Grace, an enhanced super soldier from 2042 who was previously taken in by Dani as a teenager. Grace was subsequently trained and raised by Dani. Grace is later part of a security detail for Dani, and she sustains stab wounds while fighting off a Rev-7 Terminator. Following the attack, she volunteers to be converted into a cyborg. Augmented with technology, she has abilities comparable to those of a Terminator for short periods of time, and requires medication, nourishment, and rest to replenish her strength. Her enhanced senses and abilities allow her to detect machines such as Legion s before normal humans. Grace is sent to protect Dani s younger self from Legion s Rev-9.Stephanie Gil portrays a 10-year-old Grace.
  • Stephanie Gil portrays a 10-year-old Grace.
  • Natalia Reyes as Dani Ramos, a young woman who works with her brother at an automobile assembly plant in Mexico City. Dani is being targeted for termination by the Rev-9. At first, Sarah believes that Dani is the Resistance leader s destined mother (like Sarah). However, it is revealed that Dani is fated to take on a role akin to that of Sarah s deceased son, as the Resistance s founding commander in the war against the machines of Legion, with Sarah as her mentor. In the future, Dani sends Grace back in time to stop the Rev-9, and she instructs Grace to seek the T-800 for aid by tattooing its location s coordinates on her.
  • Gabriel Luna as Gabriel / Rev-9, an advanced Terminator that originated from Legion and was sent back in time to terminate Dani. Featuring a traditional solid endoskeleton covered with liquid metal, the Rev-9 possesses the ability to separate these two components into two separate, fully autonomous units.
  • Diego Boneta as Diego Ramos, Dani s brother.
  • Tristán Ulloa as Felipe Gandal, Dani s uncle and a border coyote.
  • Alicia Borrachero as Alicia, Carl s wife.
  • Manuel Pacific as Mateo, Carl s step-son.
  • Enrique Arce as Vicente, Dani s and Diego s father.
  • Fraser James as Major Dean, a United States Air Force intelligence officer and Sarah s acquaintance.
  • Tom Hopper as William Hardell, Grace s commanding officer in the Resistance.
  • Stuart McQuarrie as Craig, Dani and Diego s work supervisor.
  • Steven Cree as Rigby, a United States Border Patrol agent
  • Georgia Simon, the film s ADR voice casting director, provided the voice of Grace s mother.
  • Edward Furlong as John Connor reference , a young version of John Connor created using CGI and motion capture.Aaron Kunitz provided the voice of young John Connor. Jude Collie served as a body double for young John Connor, onto which Furlong s facial likeness from the 1990s was applied.
  • Aaron Kunitz provided the voice of young John Connor.
  • Jude Collie served as a body double for young John Connor, onto which Furlong s facial likeness from the 1990s was applied.
  • Earl Boen appears as Dr. Silberman via uncredited archival footage from Terminator 2: Judgment Day.

Production

Development

By December 2013, Skydance Productions was planning for Terminator Genisys to be the start of a new trilogy of films. The Genisys sequels were scheduled for release on May 19, 2017, and June 29, 2018. For the second film in the planned trilogy, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger was to reprise his role as the T-800. Terminator Genisys was produced by Skydance founder David Ellison, and was released in 2015, but its disappointing box-office performance stalled the development of the planned trilogy. Dana Goldberg, the chief creative officer for Skydance, said in October 2015 that she wouldn t say on hold, so much as re-adjusting . According to Goldberg, despite Genisys disappointing domestic performance, the company was happy with its worldwide numbers and still intended to make new films. Production of a sequel would begin no earlier than 2016 because the company planned market research to determine its direction after Genisys. The Genisys sequels were ultimately cancelled.

Tim Miller and Ellison talked about Miller eventually directing a new Terminator film after completing Deadpool 2. When Miller left the Deadpool 2 project in October 2016, he took on the Terminator film as his next project instead. At the request of Miller, franchise creator James Cameron subsequently joined the project. Cameron had directed and co-written the first two Terminator films, and Miller, through his company Blur Studio, had previously worked with Cameron. Ellison felt that Genisys could have been better, so he recruited Cameron as a fellow producer in hopes of creating a better film. Cameron was intrigued by Ellison s proposal to make a direct sequel to Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), ignoring the events of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003), Terminator Salvation (2009), and Terminator Genisys. Cameron said we re pretending the other films were a bad dream. Or an alternate timeline, which is permissible in our multi-verse. Other filmmakers on the project had suggested making the film without Schwarzenegger, but Cameron disliked the idea as he and Schwarzenegger were friends. Cameron agreed to produce the film on the condition that Schwarzenegger be involved. As producer, Cameron was involved in pre-production and script work, and also provided his input on the project. Miller felt that audiences had lost hope in the franchise following the last three films. He believed that Cameron s involvement would serve as a seal of quality which would convince fans that the franchise was going to be handled at least in a way that the original filmmaker would want .

Cameron was involved with the film as of January 2017, and Ellison was searching for a writer among science fiction authors with the intention that Miller direct. Later in the month, Ellison said there would be an announcement regarding the future of the franchise before the end of the year, adding that it was going to be in a direction that would provide the continuation of what the fans really wanted since T2 . In July 2017, Cameron said that he was working with Ellison to set up a trilogy of films and supervise them. The intention was for Schwarzenegger to be involved, but also to introduce new characters and pass the baton .

Pre-production

On September 12, 2017, Skydance Media confirmed that Miller would direct the new Terminator film, which was initially scheduled for release on July 26, 2019. The film s budget was approximately $185–$196 million, split roughly three ways between Skydance, Paramount Pictures, and 20th Century Fox, all of which were production companies for the film. China-based Tencent Pictures joined the project as a co-financier in April 2018, ultimately financing ten percent of the budget. Tencent was a production company on the project, and also handled the film s distribution, marketing, and merchandising in China. TSG Entertainment and Cameron s Lightstorm Entertainment were also involved in the production.

Writing

Before screenwriters were hired, Miller had asked that a group of novelists be consulted on how to reinvent the franchise. Among the novelists were Joe Abercrombie, Neal Asher, Greg Bear, Warren Ellis, and Neal Stephenson. Abercrombie suggested the idea of a female character who is half human and half machine, forming the origins of the character Grace. A human-machine character, Marcus Wright, was previously featured in Terminator Salvation, portrayed by Sam Worthington.

The film s story was conceived by Miller, Cameron, and Ellison, and a team of writers was hired to write the script. They included Charles H. Eglee, David S. Goyer and his writing partner Justin Rhodes, and Josh Friedman, creator of the television series Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles. Cameron and the writers watched the Terminator sequels that came after his initial films. They determined that the storylines of the later films were too complex when it came to time travel. Weeks were spent working on the story which was eventually envisioned as a new Terminator film trilogy. Goyer wrote a draft for the first film in the trilogy that would ultimately become Terminator: Dark Fate.

Goyer moved on to other projects. By November 2017, Billy Ray was brought in to polish the script. Ray rewrote much of Goyer s draft. Miller wrote the film s action scenes, while Ray handled the characters. Cameron had a list of action scenes, for no particular film, that he had wanted to shoot over the years. He gave this list to Miller, so he could work them into Terminator: Dark Fate. The list formed the basis for scenes involving a dam and a Humvee underwater. As the start of filming approached, Cameron felt that the script needed improvement and made the changes himself. The film s story credits were given to James Cameron, Charles Eglee, Josh Friedman, David Goyer, and Justin Rhodes; screenplay by David Goyer, Justin Rhodes, and Billy Ray. Cameron said that he and Miller ultimately had many disagreements about the film, but he described it as being part of the creative process. Among their disagreements was whether the human resistance would be winning or losing to Legion in the future. Miller wanted the humans to be losing, while Cameron felt differently. Miller said, Legion is so powerful, the only way to beat it is going back in time and strangle it in the crib. Jim says, What s dramatic about the humans losing? And I say, Well, What s dramatic about the humans winning and they just need to keep on winning? I like a last stand. It s not his thing. Miller also had disagreements with Ellison.

Miller said that the destruction of Cyberdyne at the end of Terminator 2: Judgment Day is an event which would change the future but no one knew how. And I don t think the movies that came after it really explored that in a clean way like I believe we are, with true consequences, and it makes perfect sense for Sarah to be the one to face those consequences since they were her choices to begin with. One consequence would be the death of John Connor, who was initially meant to become the future leader of the human resistance against machines. The decision to kill the John Connor character came from Cameron, who wanted to surprise audiences who had become invested in the character s mythology: It s like, Let s just get that right off the table. Let s just pull the carpet out from underneath all of our assumptions of what a Terminator movie is going to be about. Let s just put a bullet in his head at a pizzeria in the first 45 seconds. Cameron said that John s death serves as a springboard for the story to show Sarah s ultimate trauma from which she only begins to recover right at the end of the new film. She s driven by hatred, by revenge. (…) Her badassery comes from a place of deep hurt and deep pain.

Miller said that he and the other filmmakers did not find the decision to kill John controversial. Miller felt that Sarah Connor was best portrayed as an unhappy character, and he said that John s death provided a reason for her to be that way. Miller said of Sarah Connor: Grief has made her want to be an emotionless killing machine. And at the end of the movie, she s allowing herself to care again, she comes back to humanity. Her shriveled heart has blossomed again. That was the journey . However, Miller did not want Sarah Connor to be an unpleasant and unwatchable character and said, I think Sarah is tough, but it s not uncomfortable to watch.

Cameron believed that removing John Connor would prevent the film from feeling like a retread of previous films. Discarding John Connor allowed for new characters to be worked into the story. Miller said, You can t have John be a 36-year-old accountant somewhere. And really, when you think about it, he could be sort of a pathetic figure as a man who had missed his moment in history and was relegated to this banal, ordinary existence . Describing the opening scene, Miller said, You want to slap the audience in the face and say, Wake up. This is going to be different. I feel like that accomplished that. I hate the violence of it. I hate the idea of a kid being shot, but the dramatic fuel that it gives the story is kind of undeniable. In the early stages of development, there was consideration given to the idea that Dani Ramos could be portrayed as John s daughter, or that she could have some other connection to the Connors. However, Miller disliked the idea that she would be related to them. There were never plans to feature John Connor in any other scenes besides the opening. Linda Hamilton was somewhat shocked by the decision to kill John Connor, which she believed would upset a lot of fans, but she also said she wanted the film series and its characters to evolve. She was pleased with the film s characters, feeling that earlier sequels to Terminator 2 lacked characters the audience would care about.

Miller was dissatisfied with the final film s idea that Dani would send Grace to the past, saying, We set up this whole where Grace is kind of Dani s surrogate child and a mother sending her child to die for her is just…yeah, I had a different scene in mind. Additionally, several endings were considered, including one where Sarah and Dani would bury Grace, and another where Grace s body would be burned and sent down a river. Eventually, Miller suggested the idea that Dani would go to see the younger Grace. The ending playground scene was a late addition to the film.

Cameron devised the idea of a T-800 Terminator that is just out there in this kind of limbo for more than 20 years after carrying out an order, becoming more human in the sense that he s evaluating the moral consequences of things that he did, that he was ordered to do back in his early days, and really kind of developing a consciousness and a conscience . Cameron considered this iteration of the character to be more interesting than those featured in his first two films, saying, We ve seen the Terminator that was programmed to be bad; you ve seen the one that was programmed to be good, to be a protector. But in both cases, neither one of them have free will. Schwarzenegger enjoys interior decorating, so Cameron suggested that his T-800 character in the film have a drapery business. Miller arranged the script s structure to have Schwarzenegger s character appear later in the story, to allow time for the three female lead characters to develop.

Casting

By April 2017, Schwarzenegger had joined the project to reprise his role. That September, it was announced Hamilton would reprise her role as Sarah Connor, who she previously portrayed in the first two films. Hamilton had also briefly reprised the role for the 1996 theme park attraction T2-3D: Battle Across Time, and provided her voice in an uncredited role for Terminator Salvation. Because previous Terminator films did not do well with audiences, Miller felt it was necessary to have Hamilton reprise the role. Cameron, Ellison and Miller only wanted to bring back the Sarah Connor character if Hamilton would reprise the role. The film s storyline was devised first so the trio would have an idea to pitch to Hamilton. Cameron said that he sent Hamilton a long rambling email with a lot of reasons why she should do it and a lot of reasons why she shouldn t . Cameron s main reason why Hamilton should return was that people liked her in the role. There was never a version of the film that excluded Hamilton, and Miller said there was no backup plan in the event that she declined the role.

After approximately six weeks, Hamilton chose to sign on to the film, which did not yet have a completed script for her to read; that was still being refined. Initially, Hamilton was unsure if she wanted to reprise the role. She had been semi-retired from acting, and said, I didn t want it to look like a shameless money grab. I am living this quiet, lovely life that doesn t involve being a celebrity, and you really have to think, do I really want to trade that in again for another 15 minutes? Because so much time had passed since her last appearance as Sarah Connor, Hamilton had assumed that she would never reprise the role, and she was surprised by the offer to do so. Of her decision to return Hamilton said, I was very pleased that all of the years had passed, because I could fill the years up with so much backstory and inner life that could power the character.

Hamilton spent more than a year working with a fitness trainer to get into physical shape for the role. Hamilton said she put 10 times more effort into her physique than she did for Terminator 2. This included a regimen of supplements and bioidentical hormones, as well as training with Green Berets. She also took weapons training. Commenting on Hamilton s role, Cameron said he liked the idea of an action film starring a 62-year-old actress. Hamilton chose to dye her hair gray for the film, as she wanted viewers to see her character as an old woman. Hamilton disliked the physical training, and she had suggested that her character be portrayed as a fat person so she would not have to train for the film, although the idea was rejected.

In March 2018, it was announced that Mackenzie Davis had been cast in the film. Miller said of Davis, I didn t just want a woman who could physically fit the role but emotionally as well. Mackenzie really wanted to do it; she came after the role. She worked harder than anybody. After Davis was cast, she undertook physical training for the film s fight scenes. Schwarzenegger and Gabriel Luna also underwent physical training for the film. Luna was first considered for a role in December 2017, when a four-month casting process began for him.

The production team wanted to cast an 18-to-20-year-old woman as the new centerpiece of the story. Hamilton rehearsed lines with several actresses who were auditioning for the role of Dani, and she immediately felt that Natalia Reyes was the right choice. When Reyes sent in an audition tape, all she knew about the project was that it was a big American movie. She soon had a meeting with Miller through Skype, before coming to Los Angeles to audition with Hamilton. For her next audition, Reyes was flown to Dublin to audition with Davis, who was there shooting another film. The casting process lasted a month and a half for Reyes before she was finally cast. Afterwards, she went through physical training to prepare for the role.

Because the film is partially set in Mexico City, the cast includes several Latino actors, including Reyes, Luna, and Diego Boneta, who were cast as primary characters in April 2018. Reyes said, This movie is a reflection of Hollywood now. We are just changing these stereotypes and the ideas and the cliches of what a Latino should be. Cameron watched all the audition tapes and gave his approval to the casting choices. By June 2018, Jude Collie had been cast as the double for a young John Connor, with Brett Azar reprising his role from Genisys as the body double for a younger T-800.

Cameron announced in July 2019 that Edward Furlong would reprise his role as John Connor from Terminator 2: Judgment Day. Furlong later maintained that his role in the film was small, and Miller regretted that Cameron had made such an announcement. Furlong s likeness was used to recreate his younger face digitally using CGI. He also gave a performance through facial motion capture footage that was added into the film. For his performance, Furlong simultaneously watched footage of Collie during the film s opening scene and had to match his own performance with Collie s precisely. Furlong is credited as John Connor reference . Furlong was disappointed by his small role, which was limited to one day of work.

Filming

Production was intended to start initially in March 2018, but was delayed due to casting. It was then expected to start during May and end during November with filming taking place in Hungary, the United Kingdom, Spain, and Mexico. In April 2018, the film s release date was delayed until November 2019. Filming began in Spain on June 4, 2018, under the working title Terminator 6: Phoenix. Filming subsequently moved to Hungary and the United States, before concluding in November 2018.

The film, like Cameron s initial Terminator films, is rated R, whereas the previous two films were rated PG-13. Miller said the film is rated R because the fans kind of demanded it, in a way , saying that the DNA of Terminator is an R-rated movie and that to not do it R feels disingenuous to the source material . Initially, certain scenes were filmed in two ways—with and without R-rated violence and language. This gave the filmmakers an alternative in the event that the film s intended R rating should be reconsidered. The filmmakers eventually abandoned this method after deciding definitively on an R-rated film.

During filming, Cameron made further changes to the script to perfect the characters. In some cases, his script changes were submitted to Miller only a day prior to filming the scene. Hamilton rejected certain actions and lines of dialogue that she felt were uncharacteristic for Sarah Connor. Schwarzenegger also added and changed some of his own lines during filming. Cameron did not visit the set, as he was busy filming his Avatar sequels. He also did not want to interfere with Miller s directorial work.

Spain

The first day of filming took place in Isleta del Moro, Almería, Spain. It involved the pivotal opening scene featuring the characters of the T-800, Sarah Connor, and John Connor. The three characters were portrayed in the scene by body doubles, and digital de-aging was later applied to give them a youthful appearance. The doubles wore special hoods that tracked their head movements, allowing their facial features to be replaced later by new motion capture facial footage recorded by Schwarzenegger, Hamilton, and Furlong.

During filming of the opening scene, Hamilton expressed dissatisfaction with the body double s portrayal, feeling that it did not accurately reflect the character. Hamilton advised the body double on how to portray the character for a more fierce response to the T-800 character. Hamilton was disappointed that she had no onscreen part in the scene and later said, It wasn t me and it really hurt. I cried my eyes out when I got home. The film used more stuntwomen for Sarah Connor than Terminator 2. Hamilton said she really got a little crazy trying to micromanage them to ensure that they moved the way her character should. For this reason, Hamilton performed some of her own stunts.

Scenes that were set in Mexico were shot entirely in Spain, where filming lasted approximately 30 days. Spain was chosen for budgetary reasons and because of safety concerns over drug cartel violence in Mexico. Filming locations included the Madrid neighborhoods of Pueblo Nuevo and Lavapiés, which stood in as Mexican towns. For these scenes, the film crew repainted cars to resemble taxis and also left old vehicles on the streets to suggest they were abandoned. An artist was also hired to paint graffiti art to further give the location a Mexican appearance. Boneta, who was born and raised in Mexico City, was asked to meet with the film s art department leaders to ensure that the filming locations in Spain had an authentic Mexican look. While filming in Spain, Luna coached several actors on how to speak Spanish with a Mexican accent.

In July 2018, filming took place for two weeks in Catral, including the San Juan industrial estate. Filming also took place in Cartagena, and at the Aldeadávila Dam. A combination of practical effects and CGI were used for a highway chase sequence in which the Rev-9 pursues Grace, Dani, and Diego. Sarah Connor s present-day introduction also takes place on the highway, and Hamilton rehearsed the scene extensively before it was filmed. Approximately seven freeway locations in Spain had been considered before settling on the final choice, consisting of new roads leading to the then-unopened Región de Murcia International Airport.

The highway chase sequence required a crew of approximately 300 people, with many different film departments involved. A custom-built pod car, similar to a dune buggy, was built to haul a pickup truck during filming. This allowed Davis, Reyes and Boneta to act out their scenes in the truck while the driving was handled by a professional driver in the pod car. Cameras were attached to the pickup truck to film the actors while the vehicle was in motion. One shot filmed at the San Juan industrial estate depicts the Rev-9 driving its plow truck through a wall, which was built specifically for the shot. The highway chase was initially planned to be twice as long. The Rev-9 was to have killed a cop and stolen a motorcycle to continue its pursuit, and the motorcycle would be shot at and destroyed. The Rev-9 would subsequently leap onto a truck and then onto Dani s vehicle. The extended sequence was previsualized, but Miller chose not to film it as the sequence was considered crazy enough already. Previously, Miller had wanted to film the motorcycle sequence for his 2016 film Deadpool.

Hungary and U.S.

Filming moved to Hungary on July 19, 2018. Filming locations there included Origo Film Studios in Budapest. Part of the film s C-5 plane sequence involves the characters floating in the fuselage in zero gravity. Miller spoke with pilots to do research into gravity and the plane s action scenes, which were difficult to choreograph because of the constant gravity changes depicted. Hamilton said the film s script was the first one that she did not fully understand, because of the large amount of action. Animated previsualization aided the cast during such scenes. In Budapest, special effects supervisor Neil Corbould created the film s largest set piece: the fuselage of the C-5. The set was constructed on an 85-ton gimbal, the largest ever built. The set was capable of rotating 360 degrees, and could tilt backwards and forwards at 10 degrees. It was powered by five 200-liter-per-minute hydraulic pumps, as well as more than a mile and a half of hydraulic hoses. A pit had to be dug in the concrete floor of the sound stage to accommodate the large set, which took approximately five months to design and another five months to build. The set was 60 feet long, half the length of a real C-5 fuselage, and it contained a bluescreen at one end for post-production effects to be added in later. The rotating set helped to achieve the sense of gravity needed for the scene, and the set also allowed the camera crew members to strap themselves inside. The plane set was padded for actors who shot scenes inside it. Foam replicas of military vehicles were also situated inside the plane with the actors.

Davis said shooting the film was the hardest thing she had ever done because of the physical requirements. One scene depicts a Humvee falling out of the C-5 plane, with Grace having to open the vehicle s parachutes to land it safely. Davis was suspended with wires to perform the scene, which was filmed in Budapest. An underwater action scene took weeks to shoot and involved immersing Hamilton and Reyes in a water tank. The scene depicts Sarah and Dani inside the Humvee after it falls over the dam and into water. The scene was shot in a tank surrounded by a large bluescreen stage which depicted the exterior environment. For the scene, each day of shooting took place over 12-hour periods from the evening to the morning. Another scene depicts the T-800 and Rev-9 fighting underwater.

The film includes a scene where the characters are held in a detention center on the Mexico–United States border. Miller said it was not meant as a social commentary or political statement on immigrant issues related to the border, stating that the scene was just a natural evolution of the story . He noted: I tried to walk a line there because it s a terrible situation, but I didn t want to vilify border guards. They re people doing a job. The system is the problem. And even the choice to do it really wasn t a statement. It really was a function of us putting the story s beginning in central Mexico and then traveling. Miller was emotional while filming the scene because of its depiction of immigrants being held in a detention center. Luna said, We don t make any overt political stances; we just show you what s happening in the world and you receive it however as you may. Scenes at the detention center were filmed in July 2018, at an old Nokia factory in the Hungarian city of Komárom.

In late July 2018, Schwarzenegger began filming scenes in Budapest. In September 2018, filming took place at a Mercedes-Benz factory in Kecskemét. Filming in the United States was scheduled to begin in mid-October. Carl s cabin was built from scratch. While the filmmakers liked the surrounding scenery, they rejected a previous house that was built on the property for another production, so it was torn down to construct the new home. Schwarzenegger completed filming on October 28, 2018. Filming wrapped in early November 2018.

Post-production

Cameron, who also works as a film editor, was heavily involved in the editing of Terminator: Dark Fate. He saw a rough cut of the film in early 2019 and provided Miller with notes on how to improve it feeling it needed to be perfected. He said the film transformed quite a bit from the rough cut. The initial cut of the film, known as an assembly cut, was two hours and 50 minutes. Miller s director s cut was closer to the film s final runtime. Three or four minutes were removed from the director s cut, including a few scenes. Some scenes were also trimmed, including the underwater fight and those on board the C-5 airplane. In his director s cut, Miller said he removed a lot of stuff that Cameron thought was important. Miller also said that he and Cameron had many disagreements about lines of dialogue which Miller thought were poetic and beautiful , while Cameron thought they were unimportant. Because of the lack of full control throughout the project, Miller said he would likely not work with Cameron again, although the two maintained a good relationship. The final cut of the film runs for 128 minutes.

At one point late in production, Miller considered placing the opening scene later in the film, when Sarah is in the motel room explaining John s death to Grace and Dani. However, Miller said this structure really changed a whole lot of stuff in a negative way , and he ultimately decided to keep it as an opening scene, in order to start the film off by shocking the audience. The opening scene was originally longer as it featured dialogue between Sarah and John. This was cut from the final film as Cameron and Miller believed that the visual effects did not hold up well when the characters spoke. Another deleted scene went into more detail on how Carl knew about other Terminators arriving from the future. The scene, written by Cameron, explained that Carl created a cell phone app to track the arrivals, which disrupt cell phone signals. The scene was removed because it was considered too humorous compared to the rest of the sequence, which has a serious tone as it involves Sarah meeting her son s killer. A shot was deleted from Carl s final fight with the Rev-9 that depicted it ripping flesh off of Carl s arm. Miller said, We had to walk the line between gross and horrific , and he described the arm skin as hanging like a big piece of jerky , saying, That s where we drew the line.

The film contains 2,600 visual effects shots and was edited using Adobe Premiere Pro and Adobe After Effects. The visual effects were provided by Industrial Light & Magic (ILM) and Scanline VFX, supervised by Alex Wang, David Seager, Arek Komorowski. Eric Barba was the production supervisor with help from Blur Studio, Digital Domain, Method Studios, Unit Image, Rebellion VFX, Mammal Studios, Universal Production Partners (UPP), Weta Digital, Les Androïds Associés, The Third Floor, Inc. and Cantina Creative. ILM was initially going to be the sole company working on visual effects, but others were brought on due to the amount of work that had to be done on the film. The Third Floor handled some of the previsualization. Method Studios created visual effects for scenes involving the C-5 airplane and a helicopter crash. The company also created an establishing shot of a military base, and several shots set during the border crossing. Blur Studio handled scenes that depict Grace s future as a soldier.

ILM handled the de-aging in the opening scene. ILM s visual effects supervisor, Jeff White, said a lot of work went into the scene to ensure that the characters faces looked realistic and had the same likenesses as Terminator 2. After seeing the digital head shots, Schwarzenegger provided guidance to the ILM team, which made subtle adjustments to perfect his character s facial movements. The ILM team also created the liquid metal effects of the Rev-9. The team studied time-lapse photography which depicted the growth of algae and fungus, and this inspired the liquid metal movements.

According to Cameron in February 2019, the film s working title was Terminator: Dark Fate. This was confirmed as the film s official title the following month.

Music

Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
Film score by

Tom Holkenborg
Released November 1, 2019
Genre Soundtrack
Length 58:00
Label Paramount Music
Terminator soundtrack chronology
Terminator Genisys
(2015)
Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
(2019)

Tom Holkenborg composed the film s score, reuniting with director Tim Miller after their collaboration in Deadpool. Holkenborg recreated Brad Fiedel s original Terminator theme while also introducing Latino elements to reflect the ethnicity of Dani Ramos. Holkenborg used approximately 15 instruments while composing the score, and also used the sound of an anvil and the banging of a washing machine. Holkenborg described his score as being way more aggressive than Fiedel s. The soundtrack was released digitally on November 1, 2019, by Paramount Music.

Soundtrack

All music composed by Tom Holkenborg except where otherwise noted.

Terminator: Dark Fate (Music from the Motion Picture)
No. Title Length
1. Terminated () 1:28
2. My Name Is Dani 3:39
3. REV 9 3:10
4. Iron Spike 2:52
5. Enter Sarah 0:59
6. Grace 4:24
7. Drones Coming 1:46
8. The Wall 4:12
9. Terminator () 2:57
10. Coyote 2:18
11. The Picture on the Fridge 0:42
12. C5 4:10
13. HUMV 1:59
14. You Saved Me 5:41
15. Screaming Turbines 4:13
16. For John 7:59
17. Epilogue 1:10
18. Dark Fate () 4:19
Total length: 58:00

Marketing

A first-look promotional image showing Hamilton, Davis and Reyes was released in August 2018. It was the subject of comments which criticized the absence of the Terminator and John Connor and received backlash for its focus on the female cast members. A teaser trailer for the film was released on May 23, 2019, that features a cover version of Björk s Hunter performed by John Mark McMillan. The film s theatrical and international trailers were released on August 29, 2019. The trailers release date marked the anniversary of the original Judgment Day date given in the second film. Initially, the marketing campaign highlighted the return of Cameron and Hamilton. In the final months, the campaign focused more on the film s action and special effects. Promotional partners included Adobe Inc. and Ruffles. In September 2019, Adobe and Paramount Pictures launched a contest for people to create their own remix version of the trailer using Adobe software and assets from the film.

In early October 2019, brief footage of the film was shown during IMAX screenings of Joker. Miller and the cast went on a global press tour to promote the film, and Hamilton attended a premiere event in Seoul on October 21, 2019.

In the film, Schwarzenegger s character has a van which advertises Carl s Draperies 888-512-1984 on the side of it. The number is an actual phone number which, when dialed, plays a recording of Schwarzenegger as Carl. The number references May 12, 1984, the date that Kyle Reese time-travels to in the first film.

Merchandise

The 2019 video game Gears 5 allows the player to play as either Sarah Connor with Hamilton voicing her character, Grace or a T-800 Terminator model. The game was released on September 6, 2019. The T-800 model was later a downloadable playable character in Mortal Kombat 11, using Schwarzenegger s likeness, but without the actor voicing the character; he was voiced by Chris Cox instead of Schwarzenegger. The downloadable content was released on October 8, 2019. A mobile game, titled Terminator: Dark Fate – The Game, was released in October 2019. National Entertainment Collectibles Association released action figures based on the film, and Chronicle Collectibles released an 18-inch T-800 statue.

Release

Terminator: Dark Fate was released in the UK on October 23, 2019, and was released on November 1, 2019, by Paramount Pictures in North America, Tencent Pictures in China, and 20th Century Fox (through Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures) outside of North America and China. On October 19, 2019, Alamo Drafthouse Cinema hosted surprise screenings of the film in 15 theaters, disguised as screenings of Terminator 2: Judgment Day. The film s premiere event in the U.S. was to be held on October 28, 2019, at TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, but it was cancelled because of nearby wildfires.

Terminator: Dark Fate was released digitally on January 14, 2020, before its home video releases on 4K Ultra HD, Blu-ray, and DVD on January 28. Several deleted scenes were included with the home video release, including one in which Sarah learns that Carl has informed Alicia of his past and his true nature as a killing machine. In another scene, Sarah hijacks a man s vehicle on the highway after Grace and Dani steal hers. Another scene depicts the characters being attacked by guards as they journey towards the border. One deleted scene depicts Grace volunteering herself to an older Dani to send her to the past.

Reception

Box office

Terminator: Dark Fate grossed $62.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $198.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $261.1 million. With a production budget between $185–196 million and an additional $80–100 million spent on marketing and distribution, early estimates stated the film needed to earn over $450 million worldwide to break even. The film ended up losing Paramount, Skydance, and other studios $122.6 million. It was labeled a box-office bomb after its dismal opening weekend, and it finished as the second biggest bomb of 2019. As a result of the losses, sources close to Skydance said shortly after the release that there were no plans to continue the franchise.

In the United States and Canada, Dark Fate was released at the same time as Harriet, Arctic Dogs, and Motherless Brooklyn, and was initially projected to gross $40–47 million from 4,086 theaters in its opening weekend. The film made $2.35 million from Thursday night previews, on a par with the $2.3 million that Genisys made from its Tuesday night previews in 2015. But after making just $10.6 million on its first day, weekend estimates were lowered to $27 million. It went on to debut to $29 million. Although it finished first at the box office, it was the lowest opening in the series since the original film (when accounting for inflation), which was blamed on the lukewarm critical reception, as well as the audience s disinterest in another Terminator film. The film made $10.8 million in its second weekend, dropping 63% and finishing fifth, and then $4.3 million in its third weekend, falling to 11th.

In Germany, the film started out with 132,500 viewers, placing it third on that week s charts. In the weekend following its international debut, the film grossed $12.8 million from countries in Europe and Asia, considered a low start. The film was projected to gross $125 million globally during the first weekend of November 2019. Instead, it only made $101.9 million (18% below projections), including $72.9 million overseas. As it did in the U.S., the film under-performed in China, where it opened to just $28.2 million, far below the $40–50 million estimates.

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 70% of 349 critics reviews are positive, with an average rating of 6.2/10. The website s consensus reads, Terminator: Dark Fate represents a significant upgrade over its immediate predecessors, even if it lacks the thrilling firepower of the franchise s best installments. Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned the film a score of 54 out of 100, based on 51 critics, indicating mixed or average reviews . Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B+ on an A+ to F scale, the same score as its three immediate predecessors, while those at PostTrak gave it an overall positive score of 78%, with 51% saying they would definitely recommend it.

The Hollywood Reporter wrote that critics overall seemed cautiously excited about Dark Fate, although there s a certain awkwardness about seeing repeated recommendations that it is easily the third-best movie in the series . William Bibbiani of TheWrap wrote that, Whether Terminator: Dark Fate is the last chapter in this story or the first in an all-new franchise is, for now, irrelevant. The film works either way, bringing the tale of the first two films to a satisfying conclusion while reintroducing the classic storyline, in exciting new ways, to an excited new audience. It s a breathtaking blockbuster, and a welcome return to form. Variety s Owen Gleiberman called the film the first vital Terminator sequel since Terminator 2 and wrote that Terminator: Dark Fate is a movie designed to impress you with its scale and visual effects, but it s also a film that returns, in good and gratifying ways, to the smartly packaged low-down genre-thriller classicism that gave the original Terminator its kick.

Joe Morgenstern of The Wall Street Journal gave the film a negative review, describing it as cobbled together by dunces in a last-ditch effort to wring revenue from a moribund concept. The plot makes no sense—time travel as multiverse Dada. Worse still, it renders meaningless the struggles that gave the first two films of the franchise an epic dimension. Jefferey M. Anderson of Common Sense Media gave the movie two out of five stars: This sixth Terminator movie erases the events of the previous three (dud) sequels but winds up feeling half-erased itself. It s like a dull, pale, irrelevant carbon copy of a once glorious hit. Christy Lemire of RogerEbert.com gave Dark Fate two out of four stars, arguing that it suffered from empty fanservice and that Hamilton deserves better as does her supporting female cast. David Ehrlich of IndieWire praised Hamilton s performance and the movie s digital recreations of her, Furlong s, and Schwarzenegger s younger likenesses, but concluded that this painfully generic action movie proves that the Terminator franchise is obsolete . Tasha Robinson of The Verge stated that some combat sequences are staged clearly and cleanly , while others are packed with CGI blurs and muddy action and are hard to follow in even the most basic who s where, and are they dead? kind of way. And when Dark Fate does deign to explain what s going on, it delivers its exposition in a self-important, hushed, clumsy way, as if audiences should be astonished by the most basic plot revelations.

Peter Bradshaw of The Guardian awarded it two stars out of five, stating The Terminator franchise has come clanking robotically into view once again with its sixth film – it absolutely will not stop – not merely repeating itself but somehow repeating the repetitions. While he wrote that it was good to see Hamilton getting a robust role , he added that sadly, she has to concede badass superiority to Davis. He concluded by writing, This sixth Terminator surely has to be the last. Yet the very nature of the Terminator story means that going round and round in existential circles comes with the territory. Richard Roeper of the Chicago Sun-Times awarded the film two stars out of four, calling it a boring retread and so derivative of Judgment Day , although he welcomed the return of Linda Hamilton, praised an impressively effective Mackenzie Davis, and the winning screen presence of Natalia Reyes. Angie Han of Mashable found the film underwhelming and its title to be quite apt: Dark Fate is too thinly sketched to be anything but pastiche. It feels like a Terminator movie spit out by a machine designed to make Terminator movies. A dark fate for the franchise, indeed.

Miller said the film was never meant to be better than Terminator 2. As to the mixed reception, Miller believed that some audiences were predisposed to dislike the film after being disappointed by the last three films. He also believed that some audiences hate it because it s the sixth movie, and Hollywood should be making original movies and not repeating franchises .

Miller gave a more blunt assessment in a 2022 interview with Collider’s journalist, Steve Weinstraub: “Terminator’s an interesting movie to explore, but maybe we’ve explored it enough. I went in with the rock hard nerd belief that if I made a good movie that I wanted to see, it would do well. And I was wrong. It was one of those f**king Eureka moments in a bad way because the movie tanked.”

Fate of John Connor

The death of John Connor early in the film was criticized by critics and fans. Fred Hawson of ABS-CBNnews.com wrote that deciding to lose John Connor early on in this one made the emotional heart of the first two classic Terminator films stop beating as well. Richard Roeper argued that killing John Connor ruined what the previous two films established: Even though Dark Fate tosses aside the third, fourth and fifth entries in the series like a Terminator disposing of a hapless cop, it also undercuts the impact of the first film and the follow-up (which is one of the two or three greatest sequels of all time). First, they get rid of the John Connor character in almost casual fashion.

Corey Plante of Inverse, who was critical of Furlong s portrayal of the character in Terminator 2, nonetheless found his character s death off-putting: The character at the focus of every previous Terminator movie—the same young boy I irrationally hated since I was a young boy myself—was dead. Needless to say, it rattled me. He also found that replacing him with new heroes undermined the Connors importance established in the previous films: The future that made important died with John, and now there s a new Terminator story with a new set of heroes that makes it seem like no matter how many times Skynet or its next iteration sends a murder robot back in time to kill someone, there will always be a new hero waiting to rise up. Robert Yaniz Jr. of CheatSheet described the twist as unthinkable: In an instant, the entire crux of the franchise—the human resistance led by John—is torn away.

Matt Goldberg of Collider felt the opening did irreparable damage to the legacy of Terminator 2 by rendering it pointless: Every sequel since has diminished the ending of Judgment Day because the story needs to continue (because studios like money and can t leave well enough alone). But Terminator: Dark Fate may be the worst offender thus far as its prologue directly follows T2 and goes for shock value rather than considering what it means to continue the narrative. Richard Trenholm of CNET felt the opening twist summed up everything wrong with Dark Fate: The joy instantly becomes cringeworthy, as this prologue undermines Terminator 2 by killing a major character in such a cursory fashion it just feels silly. Ian Sandwell of Digital Spy suggested that the twist was not particularly important, given that in the other films, John Connor only exists to motivate the other characters and sets the plot in motion , and that John s role as a future leader had already been rendered moot through the elimination of Skynet.

About the controversial scene, Furlong also expressed his displeasure, and hoped to reprise the role in full in a future film. Linda Hamilton also voiced her opinion that the scene would upset fans, as she considered John to be the true main protagonist of the franchise. Nick Stahl, who portrayed John in Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, also expressed interest in reprising the role in a possible seventh film.

Cathal Gunning of Screen Rant noted the similarity between the decision to kill off John Connor in the opening scene to the deaths of Newt and Corporal Dwayne Hicks in Alien 3, which was criticized by Cameron, who had directed the preceding film, Aliens.

Accolades

The film was nominated for an award from the Visual Effects Society. Neil Corbould, David Brighton, Ray Ferguson, and Keith Dawson, were nominated in the category of Outstanding Special (Practical) Effects in a Photoreal or Animated Project. The film was nominated for three Saturn Awards for Best Science Fiction Film, Best Supporting Actress (for Linda Hamilton), and Best Special Effects in 2021.

Future

Cancelled sequels

Plans for a new Terminator film trilogy were announced in July 2017. While working on the story for Terminator: Dark Fate that year, Cameron and the writers envisioned the film as the first in the new trilogy. They also worked out the basic storylines for each planned film.

By October 2019, Gale Anne Hurd had filed to terminate a copyright grant made 35 years earlier. Under this move, Hurd would again become a 50–50 owner of the rights with Cameron, and Skydance Media could lose the rights to make any additional Terminator films beginning in November 2020, unless a new deal is worked out. Skydance responded that it had a deal in place with Cameron and that it controls the rights to the Terminator franchise for the foreseeable future . In October 2019, Cameron said that sequels to Terminator: Dark Fate would further explore the relationship between humans and artificial intelligence, while stating that a resolution between the two feuding sides would be the ultimate outcome. That month, Schwarzenegger said that Cameron would write the Terminator: Dark Fate sequels, and that Cameron would begin work on the next film in early 2020, for release in 2022.

Although the events of Terminator: Dark Fate erase Schwarzenegger s T-800 character from existence, Cameron did not rule out the possibility of Schwarzenegger reprising the character, saying, Look, if we make a ton of money with this film and the cards say that they like Arnold, I think Arnold can come back. I m a writer. I can think of scenarios. We don t have a plan for that right now, let me put it that way. Hamilton said in October 2019 that she would probably reprise her role for a sequel, although she joked that she would fake her own death to avoid appearing in it, saying that making Terminator: Dark Fate really was hard because of the physical training she had to undergo. Hamilton later gave an interview the following year in January on her future with the franchise in which she said that I would be quite happy to never return. So no, I am not hopeful, because I would really love to be done. But if there were something new that really spoke to me, I am a logical person, and I will always consider viable changes.

Following the film s performance at the box office, sources close to Skydance told The Hollywood Reporter that there are no plans for further films. In June 2020, star Mackenzie Davis expressed: I really loved the movie and I m so proud of what we did, but there wasn t a demand for it and to think that there d be a demand for a seventh film is quite insane. You should just pay attention to what audiences want . Later in December, Davis went on to reveal that the seventh film would not have been a direct sequel to Dark Fate, but a spin-off focusing on an alternate timeline version of Grace set in the future war similar to Terminator Salvation, and would not have featured Schwarzenegger.

Anime series

In February 2021, Netflix announced that they were developing a Terminator anime series in collaboration with Skydance and Production I.G; Mattson Tomlin will serve as the series showrunner.

Year 2019
ReleaseDate 2019-11-01
RuntimeMins 128
RuntimeStr 2h 8min
Plot An augmented human and Sarah Connor must stop an advanced liquid Terminator from hunting down a young girl, whose fate is critical to the human race.
Awards Awards, 1 win & 12 nominations
Directors Tim Miller
Writers David S. Goyer, Justin Rhodes, Billy Ray
Stars Linda Hamilton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mackenzie Davis
Produced by James Cameron,Edward Cheng,Bonnie Curtis,Howard Ellis,David Ellison,Dana Goldberg,Adam Goodman,David S. Goyer,Don Granger,Lee Grumett,John J. Kelly,Julie Lynn,Tim Miller,Billy Ray,Peter Welter Soler
Music by Junkie XL
Cinematography by Ken Seng
Film Editing by Julian Clarke
Casting By Mindy Marin,Lucinda Syson,Tonucha Vidal
Production Design by Sean Haworth,Sonja Klaus
Art Direction by Monica Alberte,Miguel Arregui,David Bryan,Luke Edwards,Alejandro Fernández,Claire Fleming,Stuart Frossell,A. Todd Holland,Florian Müller,Tom Still,Lucienne Suren
Set Decoration by Damian Galan Alvarez,Nimrod Hajdu,Ana Medina
Costume Design by Ngila Dickson
Makeup Department Francesco Alberico,Kristin Arrigo,Isabel Auernheimer,Jo Best,Kate Biscoe,Jim Charmatz,Bill Corso,Becky Cotton,Anna Dalmau,Montse Damas,Anna Daniel,Pedro Raúl de Diego,Judit Farkas-Arful,Jessie Harrison,Jorge Hernández Lobo,Kornél Hidas,Szilvia Homolya,Judit Hornyák,Dóra Horváth Kertai,Rita Horváth,Fanni Hudák,Monica Huppert,Beata Javorszki,Jamie Kelman,Norma Lee,Dennis Liddiard,Barbara Lorenz,Alicia López,Carolina Montes,Miklós Novák,Michael Ornelaz,Cristina Patterson,Orsolya Petrilla,Geoff Redknap,Saray Rodríguez,Mária Schlisser,Taylor Schulte,Brian Sipe,Steven R. Soussanna,Marva Stokes,Noémi Szabó,Susana Sánchez,Nuria Vela,Michelle Vittone,Larry Waggoner,Samantha Ward,Michael White,Stan Winston,Zsófia Zámborszky
Production Management Eliana Victoria Alcouloumre,Gábor Bakos,Gergö Balika,Alberto Barrios Barcia,Anna Bates,Bea Batisz,Orencio Carvajal,Patricia Cos,David Dilley,Leire Emparanza,Lucia Fernandez Lobera,Marta García Covarrubias,Shari Hanson,Bill Hill,Coral Jimenez,Gabor Kaban,Steven Kaminsky,Péter Karácsony,John J. Kelly,Krisztian Kertai,Enric Llopis,Alex McCullough,Austin Michaelis,Dániel Molnár,Albert Morera,Dana Nelson,Gergely Orbán,Pepe Prado,Carlos Ruiz Boceta,Miriam Ruiz Mateos,Peter Seres,Melele Sánchez,Fiore T. Lyubomirova,Thane Watkins,Melanie Weldon,Peter Welter Soler,Zsófia Zatureczki,Zdravko Zhekov
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Julieta Alcaide,Gloria Alonso Martínez,Cristina Amengual Watson,Gergely Apjok,Ada Bautista,Andor Berényi,Gábor Bordi,Edward Brett,Carla Celda,James Chasey,Sándor Csali,Isabel Delclaux,Helena Doz,Laura Díez,Botond Emody,Eva Ferradas,Natalia García Bescós,Lee Grumett,Bianka Gál,Árpád Görögh,Márk Herjeczki,José Luis Iglesias,Ona Jané i Millà,Márk Katona,Márton Katona,Óscar Manero,Lara Martín,Quique Medina,Bálint Megyeri,Dániel Mertz,Sandra Miguel,Lõcsei Márton,Benedek Nagy,Pep Parés Font,Ricardo Ron Pérez,Cynthia Ruiz,Marco Schleicher,Philip J Silvera,Ferenc Iván Szabó,Ágnes Talmácsi,Jeff Taylor,Jo Tew,Zsolt Tolmár,Csilla Tornallyay,Danny Triphook,Miki Vargas
Art Department Cristina Acuña,Monica Alberte,Pau Albin,Antonio Andraus,Clàudia Ballester-Freixas,Lajos Balogh,Mike Battle,Kieran Belshaw,Enci Bognar,Bela Bordas,Mike Britton,Dawn Brown,Katelyn Budke,Eszter Bukai,Chris Caldow,Julian Caldow,David Christopher Campbell,Chan Canelo,Robert Castillo,Nivanh Chanthara,Miguel Chillon,András Csernóczki,Lisa Curry,Stian Dahlslett,Gaspar Dalmy,Eddie Del Rio,Luis Doce,Mark Dodwell,Gorka Domaica,Carlos Jesús Domingo,Olaf Dzurik,Máté Dános,Pedro Díaz Peinado,Gergely Dömölki,Alonzo Edwards,Reid Embrey,László Tibor Erdélyi,Claudia Ethridge,Alan Farkas,Monica Feito,Norbert Alte Fieszl,Chris Fix,Danny Florian,Cristina Foradada,Tamás Füzfa,Toto Gabor Toth,Gábor Gajdos,Juan Garces,Mar García,Tamas Gelei,M. Marcos Gonzalez,Reka Gottlieb,Laura Granell Jiménez,Benett Gyurik,Lászlóné Gáll,Beth Hajdukiewicz,Krisztián Handa,Zoltán Haut,Sean Haworth,Jason Hendrich,Paloma Hernandez Santos,Beatriz López Herrerias,Tamás Hevér,Levente Hideg,Ádám Hollos,Gyongyi Horvath,Balázs Horváth,George Hull,Kevin Hunter,Gergö Hódur,Ioan Alexandru Ichim,Attila Illés,Joni Indursky,Tamás Ináncsi,James Isaacson,Valentín Isakov,Daniel Izar de la Fuente,Zsolt Jancsó,Sándor Jani,Charlie Jaramillo,David Jiménez Díaz,Terry Jones,Tamas Juhasz,Szilvia Kaldi,Bence Kalmár,Zsuzsa Kanovics,Laszlo Kelemen,Graham Kelly,Edvin Killinger,József Kiss,Krisztián Kondora,Viktoria Koreny,Nóra Kovács,Nóra Patricia Kovács,Zsolt Kovács,Patrik Krizovensky,Maciej Kuciara,Vajk Körmendi,Márk Langfeld,Geoff Leavitt,Tamas Lengyel,András Levendovics,Olga López León,Sam Lorimer,Rob MacPherson,Paula Maestro,András Maracskó,Candice Marchlewski,Noémi Maros,Ana Martinez Fernandez,Néstor Martínez Sánchez,Francesc Masso,Isaac Maté,Elsa Mayuri,Gary McMonnies,Lászlo Melicher,Nicola Meloni,Francesca Menichelli,Dan Milligan,Nuria Muni,Istvan Muranyi,Laura Musso,Franciska Nagy,Javier Navarrete Fernández-Nieto,Márton Nedjalkov,Cyndi Nello,Aurelia Nemes,Gergo Nemeth,Carlos Nieto Lopez,Julian Nix,Zoltan Novak,Kalman Nyilas,Nedda Négyessy,Jamie O Hara,Sándor Alexander Oláh,Javier Orgaz,Annamária Orosz,Aitana Ozaeta,Ana Palazón,Rami Pap,Gergely Papp,Attila Pataki,Balazs Pelcz,Adorjan Portik,Jared Purrington,Márk Pétersz,Ozike Racz,Amandeep Rahi,Jos Richardson,Isona Rigau,Szilvia Ritter,Graham Robinson,Manuel Romero,Mothokgo Ronald,Matt Rowe,Iñaki Rubio,Jill Salaver,José Luis Saldaña,Tibor Sasvári,Zsófia Sipos,Lance Smith,Máté Sonyovszki,Christopher Stanback,Erzsébet Staub,Jeremy Stecker,Roland Stevenson,David Sues,Levente Sulyok,Gábor Sumicz,Csaba Szabo,Attila Szabó,György Szabó,Tibor Szabó,Mátyás Szakonyi,Gabor Szanto,Peter Szollosi,Rafael Szécsi,Tibor Szécsi,Zoltán Sípos,Krisztian Takacs,Tamás Takács,Róbert Taller,Victorine Tamafo,David Temprano,Adriana Toth,Yasmina Tous,Oscar Troitiño,Vilmos Törköly,István Törzsök,Maria Valls,Gena Vazquez,Zsolt Veres,Toldi Veronika,Oskars Vilnitis-Pantelejevs,Zoltán Virányi-Fontan,Márton Vojnits,Gabor Voros,Zsolt Várhelyi,Rae Yamamoto,Fante Zamora,Lipcsei Zoltán,Torma Zoltán,Éva Zöld,Szalay Ákos,Levente Sulyok
Sound Department Deb Adair,Ignacio Arrojo,Kirk Baily,Steve Baine,David Berón,David Betancourt,Tamás Bohács,Jim Brookshire,Stephen Brown,Diego Casares,Natalia Castellanos,Cary Clark,Sam Cousins,János Csáki,Vicki Davis,Devin Donaghy,Julie Feiner,Eddie Frierson,Rodrigo Gil,Lee Gilmore,Thomas Giordano,Mike Gomez,Tim Gomillion,Ben Greaves,Samuel R. Green,David Grimaldi,Jackson Gutierez,Gina Gyles,Áron Havasi,Craig Henighan,Marabina Jaimes,Mark Kenna,Tom Lalley,Daniel Lepervanche,Luisa Leschin,Skip Longfellow,Sal Lopez,David Lucarelli,Marta Meseguer,David Michie,György Mihályi,Richard Miro,Juan Montoto Ugarte,Corina Mora,Andy Nelson,Jonathan Nichols,Lee Orloff,Arthur Ortiz,Alberto Pacheco,Peter Persaud,William Michael Redman,Michelle Ruff,Mac Ruth,Clay Savage,Peter Schulteisz,Luke Schwarzweller,Stan Sellers,Adriana Sevan,Yohannes Skoda,Jill Smith,Skip Stellrecht,Shane Sweet,Levente Udud,Derek Vanderhorst,Jack Whittaker,James Wright,Eliza Zolnai,David Zyler,Richard A. Carr
Special Effects by Mariano Alvarado,Louis Andrews,James Bainger,Xavi Bastida,Dennis Bentivengo,Lucy Best,Julian Borbidge,David Brighton,Raytheon Buna,Rodney Burke,Eloy Cervera,Luc Corbould,Malcolm Crash Corbould,Neil Corbould,Pau Costa,Teresa Costa,Aaron Cox,Keith Dawson,Jabin Dickins,Felipe Dorado,John Duffy,Andrew Ellwood,Nicholas Ellwood,Raymond Ferguson,Marcelo Firmano,Damian Fisher,Bence Füredi,Tono Garzón,Gergely Glovotz,Faye Green,Stuart Heath,Andrew Homan,Stephen Hutchinson,Lee Illingworth,Matthew Keen,Laurent Kermel,Steve Knowles,Chris Leech,Edward Leeson,David London,Jasmin Lyford,Lindsay MacGowan,Shane Mahan,Kevin Mathews,Kevin Matthews,Kenny McCafferty,Doug McKenna,Doug Meacham,José M. Meneses,Gary Merrington,Tim Mitchell,Orlando Murray,Declan O Donnell,Charlie Paton,Epiffany Phillips,Peter Pohl,László Pál,Ronnie Rackley,Kieran Reed,Andrew Ryan,Lilla Schwarz,J. Alan Scott,Ty Senior,Tibor Skornyak,Eva Stepanek,Mark Tanswell,Mario Torres Jr.,Tamas Uzoni,Matt Ward,Nigel Wilkinson,Jonathan Wilson,Glen Winchester,Damon Weathers
Visual Effects by Sameer Yatin Aawlkanthe,Bahget Abdalmalek,Dustin Lee Abram,David Adan,James Adkins,Ankita Agrawal,Tanseer Ahmed,Dan Akers,Tosin Akinwoye,Alper Aksit,Amer Alameddine,Paul Alexiou,Azra Alkan,Tom Allisey,Richard Almodovar,Stephanie Alvarado,Chrisser Alvarez,Weverton Alves,Gerard Emmanuel Amador,Andrew Anderson,Matt Anderson,Tor Andreassen,Alexey Andreev,Pasquale Antonelli,Danish Anwar,Rousselos Aravantinos,Guillaume Babin,Rajesh Babu,Tigran Badalyan,Jenny Jiyeon Bae,Randall Bahnsen,Jörg Baier,Andrew Bain,Hasan Bajramovic,Morarji Bala,Martin Balcerzak,Michael Balzer,Danny Banda,Spriha Banik,Eric Barba,Georgij Barklaja,Steve Barnes,Aaron Barr,Dario Barrera,Jordan Bartlett,Jay Barton,Addison Bath,Vojtech Batko,Ada Bautista,Joel Bautista,Dugan Beach,Christopher Beatty,Jean-Paul Beaulieu,Mike Beaulieu,Eric M. Beaver,Cory Bedwell,Thabo Beeler,Jonathan Benayoun,Scott Benza,Jaume Berch,Liz Bernard,Lisa Beroud,Thomas Bevan,Philip Billones,Claudia Blackburne,Ian Blewitt,Joao Bogossian,Thomas Boland,Joshua Bolin,Ricardo Bonisoli,Daniel Booty,Alexis Borchardt,Kevin Bouchez,Rigel Bowen,Steve Braggs,Samantha Finkler Brainerd,Stefan Brand,Alex Branton,Elliott Brennan,John Brennick,Bill Bridges,Jared Brient,Scott Brisbane,Danielle Brooks,Aaron Brown,Dave Brown,Paul Buckley,Bruce Buechner,Sirius Buisson,Matthew Bullock,Isaac Buono,T.J. Burke,Jana Buryskova,Gábor Bödö,Gem Ronn Cadiz,Thomas Campos,Marco Cantaluppi,Margaret Cardell,Charley Carlat,Jon W. Carr,Kris Carson,Lewie Carson,Yeri Casanova,Erico Caselle,Lesly Cazares,Carlo Cersosimo,B. Kalyan Chakravarthy,Katherine Chambers,Karhoe Chan,Kien Geay Chan,Thomas Chan,Viki Chan,Malavika Chandrakanth,Yashvhanth Chandrasekaran,Wang Chang,Arrev Chantikian,François Chardavoine,Catrina Chelariu,Joel Cheyne,Praveen Kumar Chira,HyunJin Cho,Hyemee Choi,Nicolas Chombart,Soomin Chon,Darren Christie,Danny Clark,James G. Clark,Nicolae-Gheorghe Cojocaru,Joseph H. Coleman,Chad E. Collier,Janice Barlow Collier,Amanda Collins,Cynthia Collins,Rafael Colon,Kevin Conlon,Tristan Connors,Traian Constantinescu,Niko Conte,Chris Cooper,Michael Corcoran,Theo Coriton,Karl Cottee,Evelyn Cover,Mathew Cowie,Nathan Cox,Nick Crew,Wesley Cronk,Sean Cushing,Scott Dace,Dalmas Rémy,Anna Dankova,Will Van Dao,Rhea Darch,Filippo Dattola,Brad Davenport,Dexter Davey,Jeffrey de Guzman,Mark Andrew De La Garza,Carlos Patrick De Leon,Max Decroix,Mitchell Deeming,Kevin Desa,Derek Desmond,Fabrice Di Cicco,Eric J. Dima-ala,Linda Dimaculangan,Julian Dimsey,Chris DiPaola,Van Le Do,Aleksa Dodic,Martin Dolezal,Hannes Doornaert,Michael Drew,François-Côme Du Boistesselin,Geer DuBois,Cecile Dubois-Herry,Laura Dubsky,Ryan Duhaime,Andrew Dunkerley,Clementine Dupont,Margaux Durand-Rival,Sylvain Duroyon,Ryan Dutour,Bappaditya Dutta,Sunil Dutta,Andrea Dutti,Daniel Duwe,Lukas Dvoracek,Chris Dwyer,Matthew Eberle,Kade Eckstein,Andi Edirisinghe,Christopher Edwards,David Edwards,Jake Efthymiou,Sergej Eichmann,Brent Elliott,Dean Elliott,Gastón Emery,Arlend Engar,Verónica Granadero Estrada,Youngbin Eun,Jack Evans,Alan Fairlie,Paul Faulkes,Conny Fauser,Fathima Feminò,Victor Maiorino Fernandes,Caithlin Ferrier,Dan Finnegan,Tommaso Fioretti,Martin Fischer,Jonathan Flanders,Dadrian Flavors,Oliver Fleming,Tony Flemming,Carlos Flores Tavitas,Brad Floyd,Larkin Flynn,Kate Forrest,Carl Forsell,David Fox,Duncan Fraser,Evan Fraser,Carl Frytz,Chris Fung,Andrius Gabriunas,Katarina Gacevska,Gergely Galisz,Lisa Gane,Vikas Ganer,Nathan Gardner,Pätrick Gehlen,Darcy George,Abhishek Ghorui,Jami Gigot,Michael Gilbert,Francesco Giugliano,Jose Gloria,Jake Golding,Marc Gollenia,Ilia Goncharov,Daniel Gonzalez Solozabal,Avi Goodman,Alexander Goodwin,Mariana Gorbea,Yann Goument,Markus Graf,Sandro Grassetti,Julian Gregory,Michael Leigh Gresham,John Gresko,Rodolphe Groshens,Branko Grujcic,Juani Guiraldes,Anthony Guiry,Tamás Gyermán,Remal Halabi,Martin Halle,Jamie Hallett,Lindsay Hallett,Alex Halstead,Michael J. Halsted,Giles Hancock,Rikke Gjerløv Hansen,Heiðrún Tinna Haraldsdóttir,Michael S. Harbour,Petr Harmacek,Ty Harmon,Gregory Harrington,Dylan Harris,Ian A. Harris,Sho Hasegawa,Julien Hassenforder,Eric Hawksley,Andrew Hawryluk,Joseph Hayden,Patrick Heinen,Ivo Hejcman,Dominic Hellier,Chris Hempel,Chris Henryon,Petr Hepner,Lazaro Hernandez,Joshua Herrig,Lukas Herrmann,Evan Hirschberg,Andrew Hodgson,Benjamin Hoellrigl,Claire Louise Hoey,Orion Holder-Monk,James Hollingworth,Blake Hollins,Paul Hopkins,Niall Horn,Daniel Hourigan,Lane Howard,Greg Howe-Davies,Heather Hoyland,Zdenek Hrazdira,Jiaxuan Hu,Wanghua Huang,Natapon Huangsakuncharoen,Wendy Hulbert,Karen E.M. Hulse,Alexander Hunt,Andrew Hutchinson,Seona Hwang,Sonia Alexia Ioannou,Joni Jacobson,David Jaffe,Ebrahim Jahromi,Hetal Jain,Daehwan Jang,Lukas Jankovcin,Piotr Jankowski,Timothy Jeffs,Kirsten Jelliffe,Silvio Jemma,Samuel Jensen,Carolina Jimenez Garcia,David Johnson,Odigie Johnson,Adam Jones,Morgan Jones,Thom Jones,Scott Joseph,Jessica Jung,Anto Juricic,Bora Jurisic,Tomas Kalhous,Kirill Kalitukha,Georg Kaltenbrunner,Ashutosh Karemore,Nitant Karnik,Ravi Krishna Kasumarthy,Kristian Kebbe,Patrick Keenan,Laurent Kermel,Cindy Khoo,Anne Kim,Bumjun Jeremy Kim,Haetsal Kim,Hyungrok Kim,Kai Kyoungsoo Kim,Oliver Kirchhoff,Miroslav Kolarik,Jordan Koler,Arek Komorowski,Elicia Koo,Allie Koppel,Dmytro Korolov,Jack Kosoyan,Vaclav Kostun,Arun Krishnan,Kolby Krook,Pavel Král,Satbir Singh Kukreja,Ramyanth Kumar,Sunil Kumar,Vishishth Kumar,Toyotaka Kuroda,Frankie Kwak,Felder Kwek,Julian Körrenz,Ying Ghit La,Giorgio Lafratta,Alison Lake,Grant Laker,Jaymie Lam,Alberto Landeros,Cynthia Latour,Mathias Lautour,Tristan Laville,David C. Lawson,Toan-Vinh Le,Andre LeBlanc,Laura LeBlanc,Michael Lederhuber,Chan-ran Lee,Danny Lee,James Jooyoung Lee,Jarett Lee,Justin Lee,Ken Lee,Wei Ling Lee,Woohyuck Eric Lee,Win Leerasanthanah,Juliette Lemaire,Chun Ho Ray Leung,John M. Levin,Joseph Li,Gretchen Libby,Lenka Likarova,Sheng Yaw Lim,Isaac Lipstadt,Llewellyn Littlemore,Victoria Liu,Dave Logan,Reilly Lohr,Andy Long,Sagar Lonkar,Jane Lovell,Alison Luong,Marco Lusardi,Maxime Luère,Michael Löffler,Miguel Macaya,Thomas MacKenzie,László Maczó,Martin Macák,Jason Madigan,Tytus Majerski,Marcin Majewski,Ineke Majoor,Marco Maldonado,Zachary Mallett,Emil Malm,Karey Maltzahn,Jona Maluck,Gabriel Mandala,Avery Mann,Patrik Marek,Petr Marek,Nicholas Markel,Chulev Marko,Muhammad Marri,Aldo Martinez Calzadilla,Geordie Martinez,Johannes Masanz,David Mason,Greg Massie,Petr Matas,Sachin Mathew,Dominik Matousek,Daniel May,Jake Maymudes,Neil Mayo,Zack Mazerolle,Samantha McConnell,Chris McCrowe,Daniel McCue,Brody McIlveen,Chris McIlveen,Jason McKeeman,Lee McNair,Brandon McNaughton,James McPherson,Gagan Mehta,Michael Melchiorre,Mike Melendi,Bradley Melenhorst,Glenn Melenhorst,Elard Meneses,Andre Metello,Josh Methven,Keith Meure,Johannes Mewes,Jaymie Miguel,Jay C. Miller,Scott Miller,Adrian Millington,Jane Min,Stephen Misek,Marco Misino,Harsh Mistry,Akmal Mlahaili,Taisa Monteiro,Elizabeth Montes,Lauren Moore,Lauren Moore,Jim Moorhead,Scott Morgan,Paul Moriaux,David Manos Morris,Hugo R.A. Morris,Vita Morrison,Henrique Moser,Adrian Moyes,Alejandro Mozqueda Torres,Harry Mukhopadhyay,Viktor Muller,Rémi Munier,Asuka Murata,Jackie K. Murphy,Martin Murphy,Kailene Murray,Devan Mussato,Patrick T. Myers,Daisuke Nagae,Emmi Nakagawa,Liam Nantes,Amit Narwani,Tim Nassauer,Josiah Nathan,Philip Negroski,Sebastian Ness,Donald Netzel,Sarah Neveu,Mervyn New,Thomas Newbury,Gretel Ng,Yuhon Ng,Vinh Nguyen,Bruno Nicko,Sam Nixon,Thijs Noij,Tamara Nowicki,Gopi Nukavarapu,John O Connell,Erin D. O Connor,Kelly O Toole,Mike Ocoboc,Stefano Oggeri,Erik Ojong,Nathan Ortiz,Jon Ossitt,Pradeep Kumar Padmanabha,Prashant Shishupal Padvi,Fred Palacio,Anne Palm,Francesco Panzieri,Vincent Papaix,Ian Parra,Shreekant Patel,Laura Bonde Pedersen,Vasho Pekar,Bernardo Pereira,Craig Pereira,Bridgette Perrers,Kalle Peterson,Eric Petey,Matteo Petricone,William Petrie,Naphat Phawatthanankun,Laura Philippe,Margaret Phillips,Robert Pik,Ryan Pilcher,Melanie Plett,Maude Poirier-Caron,Tomás Pokorný,Alexandru Popescu,Sravan Porumulla,Mathew Praveen,Quentin Prenant,Jeremy Pronk,Karl Punt,Klee Quisido,Andy Rajput,Ashwin Ram,Anand Ramesh,Johanna Ramos Santiago,Sasmit Ranadive,Kurt Rathjen,Rohith Ravindranath,Diego Rebello,Michelle Redman,Tyagi Reetuj,Beat Reichenbach,Jun Ren,Panya Ren,Jonathan Reynolds,Dávid Ringeisen,Saysana Rintharamy,Ali Rizvi,Charles G. Roberts,Joshua Robertson,Dylan Robinson,James Robison,Barnaby Robson,Gabriel Roccisano,Cesar Rodriguez Bautista,Brendan Rogers,Michael Rogers,Anthony Romero,Simon Rosenthal,Simon Ross,László Ruska,Brian Rust,Rahul Kumar Sahu,Kenneth Sales,Remus San Diego,Kevin San,Mohan Sangeeth,John E. Sasaki,Florian Sauvage,Joseph Scarr,Robert Schajer,Nabil Schiantarelli,Jade Schiff,Roman Schmidt,Stefan Schneider,Carsten Schulte-Braucks,Brian Schultz,David Seager,Giuseppe Seda,Alvaro Segura,Antoine Seigle,Lorenzo Serran,Fulvio Sestito,Ryan E. Seymour,Manesh Shafiei,Sophie Shanahan,Shareef Shanawany,Amrish Sharma,Gary Shelley,Christian Sherriff-Smith,Al Shier,Shervin Shoghian,Randal Shore,Ziad Shureih,Davide Sibilia,Alfonso Sicilia,Aleksandra Sienkiewicz,Joseph Silva,Victoria Simiele,Richard Simko,Jason Simmons,Shane Simms,Ariel Simone,Domenick Simpson,Deepak Singh,Kishore Singh,Nikita Sinha,Ed Siomacco Jr.,Magnus Skagerlund,Maciej Skoluba,Eván Skíbin,Ben Sledge,Ted Slominski,Edmond Smith III,Dane Allan Smith,Natalie Smith,Rebecca J. Smith,Alexander Sokolov,Pawan Solanki,Nelson Sousa,James Spadafora,Joseph A. Spano III,Jiri Stamfest,Jon Stanley,Aaron Stewart,Aaron Patrick Stewart,Eric Stewart,Kane Stewart,Daniel Stift,Michele Stocco,George Stone,Naomi Stopa,Sheldon Stopsack,Rosalind Stratton,Sujil Sukumaran,Mathew Sullivan,Sina Sultani,Mallela Suresh,Digant Sutar,Brendan Sutherland,Tibor Szentkuti,Kouji Tajima,Kazuki Takahashi,Neil Russell Tan,Eric Tang,Ahmet Levent Tasel,James Tavet,Katrina Taylor,Lewis Taylor,Greg Teegarden,Werner Ten Hoeve,Adrian Teng,Andrew Tennant,Corrine Teo,George Tesler,Jeff Tetzlaff,Shivas Thilak Anthikkat,Nathan Thomas,Samantha Thrupp,Jamie Tilston,Tim Tobin,Shermaine Toh,Kazuma Tonegawa,Joe Toole,Adrien Toupet,Fabio Tovar,Stuart Tozer,John Treusch,Satya Prakash Tripathy,Nicholas Tripodi,Sam Tull,Niki Turkovic,Péter Tárik,Vaclav Uhlir,Ilkka Uitto,Emily Unruh,Sourabh Uppal,Nate Usiak,Elisa Valenzisi,Adrien Vallecilla,Luke Vallee,Michele C. Vallillo,Vladimir Valovic,Rick van de Schootbrugge,Olivier Van Zeveren,Pravin Dayanand Vartekar,Levente Vass,Matteo Veglia,Rajesh Velayudhan,Lies Veldeman,Daniel Veszely,Jesse Vickery,Pau Viladot,Archie Villaverde,Tracy Villeda Meneses,Gallois-Montbrun Volcy,Anne Vu,Pablo Vázquez,Thomas Dane Wagener,Paul Waggoner,Shoshanah Wall,Christina Wallace,Isabel Wallace,Will Wallace,Christopher Walsh,Ed Walters,Alex Wang,Meow Nutjaree Wannasri,Shawn Warawa,Ryan Anthony Ward,Tim Ward,Ben Warner,Adrian Watkins,Logan B. Watkins,Elijah Watson,Martin Toby Watson,Matt Weaver,Darrin Wehser,Roman Weisgerber,Melanie Weldon,Jeff Wells,Evan Wen,Jennifer Wessner,Ryan Weston,Jeff White,Marc Whitelaw,Shonnan Wibrow,Katie Williams,Brad Willis,Jody Wilson,Wade Wilson,Kyle Winkelman,Tnaya Witmer,Florian Witzel,Justin Wong,Stephen T.Y. Wong,Alex J. Wood,Chris Wood,Drew Wood-Davies,Marvin Woodyatt,David Wortley,Ed Wou,Megan Wren,Gary Wu,Tuba Yalcin,Hailie Yang,Robert Yeh,Jeremy Yeokhoo,Alexander Yip,Cobol Yu,Can Yuksel,Jacob Zaguri,Valerian Zamel,David Zbriger,David Zeng,Laura Zentil,Eric Zhang,Lei Zhang,Lauren Zimmer,Lauren Abrahams,Morris Abramian,James Elijah Aguilar,Sergio Alarcon,Ivan Alaykov,David Drury Allen,Shudhdodhan Milind Ambhore,George Antzoulides,Chris Armsden,Michanol Arnaud,Paul Ashall,Murat Ayasli,Dan Ayling,Gregory Bellis,Miguel Berube Ouellet,Prabin Bhandari,Udit Bhardwaj,Ben Bigiel,Adam Blank,Loganathan Boopathy,Nick Booth,Gregory Bossert,Adam Bradley,Christina Bruce,Giovanni Bucci,Jakub Budina,Jean-Baptiste Cambier,Dan Camp,Nathan Camp,Cedric Enriquez Canlas,Barbera Carlo,Edward Catley,Tyler Cayce,Kirk Chantraine,Jason Chee,Gyanon Chitrakar,Tadeusz Chmiel,Martin Cicmanec,Pete Coggeshall,Carlos Conceicao,David Conley,Lydia Cosgrave,Kevin Couture,Steve Cronin,Jiri Cvancara,Fabio D Amico,Jaroslaw Dawidziuk,Silvia Debnarova,Robert Dorris,Matthew Dravitzki,Paz Drimer,Brian Ducharme,Sapachok Dumrongkunawut,Yogesh Duwal,Peter Dworin,Shahar Eldar,Adam J. Ely,Pavan Kumar Endarapu,Gabriel Escobar,Vincent Escueta,Jenzel Tom Fantolgo,Chloe Feodoroff,Benjamin Flynn,Jeremiah Forkkio,Ludovic Fouche,John Fragomeni,Victor Frenkel,Natalie Fritz,Rino George,Michael Gladkey,Abhijitsinh Gohil,Matteo Grassi,Todd Greshuk,Vendula Gresova,Vinod Gundre,Bishal Gurung,Michael Guttman,Adam Hall,Matt Hallen,Paul Harling,Samuel Harrison,Chrystian Hebert,Quentin Hema,Hamed Hematyar,Katie Hooten,Davin Hun,Kosuke Iwasaki,Miguel Jaramillo,Julien Jentgen,Gios Johnston,Jeremy Jones,Kiran Bhakta Joshi,Gilbert Juarez III,Rakesh Maharjan Jyapu,Sanjay Jyapu,Thepnarin Kanoksrithaworn,Prakash Karki,Rupak Kayastha,Dániel Keresztes,Simran Khalsa,Mohammad Amir Khan,Samira Khan,Hyungwoo William Kim,Kalvin Kingdon,Doron Kipper,Jinny Ko,Matthew Koehler,Jessica Koubi,Dmitri Krasnokoutski,Praveen Kumar,Madan Lama,Ram Lama,Uira Lamour,Mark Larranaga,Julien Lasbleiz,Gary Laurie,Katya Lebedev,Dong Gun Lee,Kerry Lee,Soon Ngee Chris Lee,Zoey Lee,Matt Leonard,Nicolas Leroy,Noll Linsangan,Jason Locke,Caroline MacLeod,Gyanendra Maharjan,Mahendra Maharjan,Nigendra Maharjan,Radip Maharjan,Rakesh Maharjan,Sabin Maharjan,Suroj Maharjan,Udaya Maharjan,Rupa Majhi,David Man,Charana Mapatuna,Quentin Marmier,Andrew Martin,Richard Matsushita,James Meikle,Kenneth Meyer,Daniele Mieli,Jonathan Mitchell,James Moore,Neil Roy Moss,Matt Mueller,Shane Mulholland,Naren Naidoo,Dan Nanu,Trent Newton,David Nguyen,Steve Nichols,Drew Nielsen,Mark Nijjar,James P. Noon,Ciaran O Connor,Kate O Donnell,Yvonne Oh,Eric Oliver,Ellery Ortiz,Peter Palarik,Luis San Juan Pallares,Eion-Ray Patterson,Cara Payne,Kristian Pedlow,Ondrej Podzimek,James Pollard,Nick Proulx,Cesar Quijada,Jacquelyn Racine,Kade Ramsey,Nabin Raut,Kisholay Ray,Benjamin Reicher,John Relosa,Paola Rocchetti,Calvin Romeyn,Francesco Rosati,Yury Sakovich,Peter Salter,Miroslav Samanek,Neha Samant,Shane Saravia,Robert Sariscan,Graham Saxby,Anoop Shakya,Honey Sharma,Nithin Shivaraju,Rameshwor Shrestha,Adnan Siddique,Akhauri P. Sinha,Chris Solon,Michael Solorzano,Vikramjit Sorensangbam,Vladimira Strukanova,Olivia Suh,Matt Sullivan,Lubos Gerardo Surzin,Agata Szczepanska,Takashi Takeoka,Ian Tang,Simon J. Taua i,Andrew Taylor,Jamie Telfer,Raphael Thiery,Gareth Thomas,Daniel Thomson,Eric Timm,Martin Tlusty,Syria Toliver,Joseph Towe,Danny Turner,Ed Ulbrich,Rachel Ulicny,Nimesh Vaidya,Jakub Valica,Balazs Varga,Benito Vargas,Tarquin Vosper,Aidan Waugh,Ros Webb,Kenneth Weide,Aaron Weldon,Lyndsey Will,Emily Williams,Wirak Winsuth,Frantisek Wirth,Martin Wiseman,David Wong,Howard Yan,Diana Yordanova,Matthias Zeller,Shaolei Zhang
Stunts Dan Adams,Zoltan Andrasi,Santi Arribas,Rafael Ayuso,Brett Azar,Estephany Balaguer,Denes Balint,Lloyd Bass,Bence Bauer,Kristof Belovai,Adriana Benito,Morgan Benoit,Ferenc Berecz,Jon Bermúdez,Attila Beros,Alejandro Bertero Álvarez,Andrés Borcel,Krisztián Botka,Freddy Bouciegues,Andrea Campoamor,Lorenzo Casares,Manuela Cauxeiro,Adrián de Cea,Jimmy Chhiu,Jason Chu,Jude Collie,Maddy Curley,Krisztián Czirják,Altomero Brasiilio Da Silva Jr.,Gergo Daniel,Miklós Danka,Jeff Danoff,Joaquín de Diego,Arcdoni de Rosario,Caitlin Dechelle,László Demény,Jayson Dumenigo,Elisa Díaz Sanz,Rick English,Miguel Espada,Natalia Espadas,Jesus Espin,Andrea Estévez,Debbie Evans,Roel Failma,Balázs Farkas,Gerda Fazakas,Eduardo Fedriani,Catarina Fernandez-Jimenez,Catalina Fernández,Jessi Fisher,Eniko Fulop,Shauna Galligan,Tim Garris,Kinga Gavalda,Bela Gerner,Daniel Gerzsenyi,Lance Gilbert,Máté Gyöngyösi,Ádám Gáspár,Tamas Hagyo,Regis Harrington,Sierra Hawkins,Diego Herberg,David Hernández Silva,Junior Herrera,Gergely Hodur,Gergely Horpásci,Dori Horvath,Rob Hunt,Urs Inauen,Danko Jordanov,Laszlo Juhász,Micah Karns,Nemoda Katalin,Abel Kocsis,Adam Kocsis,Csaba Komondi,Bri Marie Korin,József Kovalik Jr.,József Kovalik,Géza Kovács,Norbert Kovács,Tibor Milos Krisko,Mariusz Kubicki,György Kökényesi,Sara Leal,Balazs Lengyel,Billy D. Lucas,Chus Lucas,María Jesús Lucas,Jalil Jay Lynch,Juan Antonio López Enciso,Alejandro López Estacio,Mónica López,Carlos López-Balboa,Palma Magyar,István Draco Markolt,Ramon Alvarez Martos,Fernando Martín Maestro,Mike Massa,Zoltan Molnar,Tamás Molnár,Iván Montejo,Attila Mora,Alicia Moreno,Sheila Mulero,Vanda Móczár,Richard Nagy,Tsogtsaikan Narantsogt,Jack Nevils,Ivan Nieto,Carlos Nieto-Balboa,Anyachukwu Jireh Nneoma,Carlos Núñez,Béla Orsányi,Iván Orsányi,Jimmy Ortega,José Antonio Oña Sánchez,Abian Padrón,Meggin Penkal,Bruno Pereira Medeiros,Joe Perez,Gábor Pesta,Gábor Piroch,Brett Praed,Liza Prosvirova,Razvan Puiu,Iván Pérez Rodríguez,Jota Jota Ramos,Ryan Rasberry,Balog-Dutombé Menyhért René,Jimmy N. Roberts,Ricardo Rocca,Sonia Rodriguez Rodriguez,Seon Rogers,Michael Ryan,Alberto Sanchez,Marc Sangra,Julia Schunevitsch,Andras Seregi,Philip J Silvera,Nilla Sinko,Réka Sinkó,Péter Sokorai,Viktor Sokorai,Patrick J. Statham,Gáspár Szabó,Ákos Szalai,Zoltan Szanto,Tibor Szauervein,Miklós Szentváry-Lukács,György Szántó,Zoltan Szántó,Szilvia Szöllösi,Szilvia Szöllösi,Ildikó Szücs,Alberto Sánchez,Levente Tamási,Vladimir Tevlovski,Francisco Torres,Frank Torres,Gabor Toth,Amy Lynn Tuttle,Kinga Barbara Tóth,László Ujvári,Miklos Ungvari,Steve Upton,Cuco Usín,Judith Vázquez,Ryan Watson,Justin A. Williams,Vanessa Zamarripa,Viktoria Zambo,Patrik Zana,Kocsis Zsofia,Diego Álvarez,Ramon Álvarez,Dan Adams,Miguel Arregui,Mehrzad Asgi-Kermani,Rafael Ayuso,Sam Bailey,Estephany Balaguer,Domingo Beltrán,Morgan Benoit,Israel Bodero,Roberto Bonacini,Dave Booys,Bryce Branagan,Solomon Brende,Dacio Caballero,Renato Camargos,Lorenzo Casares,Jussilinho Ángel Castro,Jimmy Chhiu,Jason Chu,Christopher Clements,Wayne Dalglish,Caitlin Dechelle,Laurent Demianoff,László Demény,Jayson Dumenigo,Andrea Estévez,Debbie Evans,Balázs Farkas,Bence Ferenczi,Jessi Fisher,Roberto Freire,Juan José Gallego,Shauna Galligan,Pablo Garaizabal,Tim Garris,Alejandro Gómez de la Torre,Tamas Hagyo,Regis Harrington,Diego Herberg,Ignacio Herráez,Urs Inauen,Amy Johnston,Miguel Juzgado,Micah Karns,Mariusz Kubicki,Victor Leon,Billy D. Lucas,Miguel Ángel Luque,Jalil Jay Lynch,Alejandro López Estacio,Carlos López Lozano,Mike Massa,Dani Medina,Kytková Tomsíková Miroslava,Matthew Miscione,Alicia Moreno,Vanda Móczár,Carlos Nieto-Balboa,Katie O Donovan,José Antonio Oña Sánchez,Jeremy Oña,Alejandro Pantany,Tomás Paredes,Meggin Penkal,Athena Perample,Gábor Piroch,Kyle Potter,Jade Quon,Jota Jota Ramos,Roberto Rincón Sánchez,Jimmy N. Roberts,Ricardo Rocca,Ilderado Rodriguez,Brandy Rodríguez,Juan José Rodríguez,Seon Rogers,Joe Ross,Manuel Santos,Julia Schunevitsch,Andras Seregi,Philip J Silvera,Amy Sturdivant,Aaron Toney,Amy Lynn Tuttle,Myriam Villalobos,Raihau Villierme,Tony Vittorioso,Kaloian Vodenicharov,Thomas Vu,Josh Wood,Vanessa Zamarripa
Camera and Electrical Department Jason Adler,Manel Aguado,Pol Alberca,Bryan Antin,Darren Bailey,Jeff Baker,Gábor Balda,Brian Bartolini,Miguel Benavides,Marcos Benito,György Benyó,Alex Berger,Antal Berger,Heller Bertalan,Attila Bilik,László Bille,Chisko Blanco,Alex Bokhari,Josep Boladeras,Viktor Boldizsár,Jorge Bretón,Bonnie Briggs,Kerry Brown,Juan Bueno,Roman Bugovskiy,José Burgos Sologuren,Donát Bánkuti,László Bánszki,Dániel Bérces,Zoltán Bók,Jesse Cain,Gabe Camacho,Roberto Campos,Bruce Carothers,David Catalán,Carlos Cañal,Tim Christie,John Clisham,Barney Coates,David Coello,Adam Coles,Jimmy Cox Jr.,Attila Csoboth,John Curran,Bence Czeh,Máté Czinder,Ádám Czonev,Adam Dale,Krisztián Demeter,Dhamarata Dhiensuwana,Michael DiGiovanni,Balázs Dobó,Alan Downs,Keith Dunkerley,Mark Epstein,Roberto Escudero,Ibon Esparza,Márton F. Tóth,Péter Faludi,Bence Faragó,Dániel Farkas,Dániel Farkas,Zsolt Farkas,Gonzalo Fernández de la Vega,Julio Fernández Santa,Adrián Fernández,György Filip,Ádám Fillenz,Roland Fodor,Peter Fort,Shawn Fossen,Micky Froehlich,Raquel Rodríguez Frías,András Féniász,Norbert Földi,Javi G. Marinero,Krisztián Galanics,Gustavo García Sierra,Javi García,Balázs Gellén,Fernando Gil G.,Eduardo González Mon,Alex González,Ben D. Griffith Jr.,Daniel Guirles Alda,Nándor Gulyás,Tibor Gulyás,Ákos Gulyás,Almási Gábor,Scott Hatley,Matt Hawkins,Kim Heath,Dénes Herceg,Tamas Hevizi,Jason Hindman,Colm Hogan,Krisztián Horváth,Tom Howard,Robert Howie,Ben Howlett,James Hughes,Larry Hurt,Bogdan Iofciulescu,Steve Irwin,Banga István,Víctor Jiménez Aparicio,Zoltán Jánossa,Kiss József,Bence Karácsondi,Vilmos Keszler,György Gábor Kiss,András Kollmann,Attila Kolozs,Márk Komáromi,Attila Korponai,Emil Kovács,János Kovács,Nagy Krisztián,Ferenc Krámli,Attila Kárpáti,King Lanaux,Brad Larner,Dan LeCuyer,Chris Yestin Lee,Jonathan Maurice Lee,Patrick Linn,Kristóf Lánczos,Aarón López,Elías M. Félix,Sergio Mantecón,Laura Martínez,Paul Mihai Mateias,Tamás Matolcsy,Gonzalo Mañana,Bruce McCleery,Douglas McCormick,Christophor McGovern,Christopher TJ McGuire,Felix Merinda,Esther Mestres,Guy Micheletti,Diósy Mihály,László Mihály,Eric Mikhaelides,Courtney Marie Miller,Natalia Minguela,Duncan More,Guillermo Moreno Garcia,Sergio Morilla,Mic Mueller,Oriol Murcia,Adam Murray,Bankhardt Máté,Imanol Nabea,Alex Narváez,Csaba Nemesházi,Tibor Novák,Attila Négyessy,Zoltan Aron Odor,Iñigo Olea,Francesc Olivé,Márk Oláh,Anita Oravecz,Péter Orosz,Krisztián Paluch,József Tibor Pap,Ferran Parera,Jay Patel,Dávid Perlaki,Daniel Pershing,Raúl Peña,Toby Plaskitt,György Posztos,Clara Pozas,Sturm Pál,Máté Pálla,Kristóf Párdányi,Diego Pérez Hurtado,Balázs Péter,Marek Radolf,Marci Ragályi,Sean Roberts,José Luis Rodríguez,Natalia Ruiz Guillamón,Xavi Ruiz,Scott Russell,Béla Rácz,Hiram Ríos,Víctor Sarasa,Gabor Schmidt,John Charles Schneider,Zoltán Schrammel,Bálint Seress,Karina Silva,Susana Siscart,John Skotchdopole,Chris Sol,Jon Solana,Nacho Solera,Edgar Solé,Roger Spain,Ádám Stankovits,Hopper Stone,Chris Summers,Pablo Suárez Fernández,Diego Suárez,Bálint Svigruha,Andrew Sykes,Izabella Szabadkai,György Szeljak,Attila Szilágyi,Attila Szûcs,Ana Sánchez Tejera,Meritxell Sánchez,Virgil Tatu,Joshua D. Thatcher,Máté Tibai,Badonics Titusz,Bence Barnabas Tobik,Máté Tollay,Nicholas Turner,Ryan Turner,Martin Twine,Dániel Tóth,Barnabás Ungár,Adam Varadi,Peter Varnai,Gergo Vasari,Dávid Vidács,Daniel Vilar,Gareth Viner,John Warner,James D. Wickman,Dave Wightman,Greg Wilson,Brian Woronec,Dávid Zih,Adam Skardelli
Casting Department Mar Clar,Andrés Cuenca,Marton Dancz,Rou Díaz Prieto,Dulcie Jones,Kara Lipson,Zsolt Ferenc Maier,Mindy Marin,Elvira Morales,Yaël Moreno,Georgia Fleury Reynolds,Alex c Rivera,Eliseo Ruiz,Peter Simko,Georgia Simon,Lucinda Syson,Zsuzsa Tóth,Veronika Varjasi,Natasha Vincent,Anabel Vázquez,Alejandro Álvarez
Costume and Wardrobe Department Jeanette Apel,Brian Bachman,Danielle Baker,Király Balázs,Javier Bernal Belchí,Amelia Bianchi,Barbara Bibiloni,Eszter Bognár,Andrea Bordacs,Tom Caddy,Kyle Callanan,Carlos Calvo de Mora,Lara Campbell,Imogene Chayes,María Checa,Angel Concepcion,David Craig,Libby Dempster,Nora Gondocs,Wendy J. Greiner,Agnes Grzybowski,Marta Margo Gómez Vidal,Belén Hernández Sánchez,Eszter Holler,Zoltán Horváth,Rita Jakab,Brigitta Katona,Lilla Kleininger,Eva Magyar,Marina Marit,Mariola Martinez,Mar Marín,Arieana Tate Mussenden,Christopher Oroza,Zsolt Paráda,Rose-Marie Salmon,Carolina Sapina,Laura Schneemann,Rebeca Sola,Erik Spangler,Csaba Toth,Mátyás Tóth,Cristina Ureña,Réka Vitényi,Rachael Webb-Crozier
Editorial Department Jeff Bauer,Beau Cardall,Paul Carlin,Matthew G. Carson,Jim Eberle,Emily Faw,Ryan-Marquis Gali,Thomas Harkey,Mark Jones,Gary Lam,Carl S.G. Moore,Nick Nassif,Shane O Connor,Amy Pawlowski,Jason Sinclair,Tim Stipan,Brian Zwiener,Remy Bonett,Peter Cromwell,Valance Eisleben,Oliver Farkas,Richard Flores Jr.,Cassandra Howland,Borna Jafari,Adam Jurkovich,Christopher McDonald,Szabó Máté,Lauren Orlowski,Ryan Shovey,Anna Stalter
Location Management Pedro Tate Aráez,Ali Adilamin Al-Nashi,Julian Araez,Alberto Barrios Barcia,Chris Baugh,Joaco Cabana,Ivan Antonio Cabanillas Vozmediano,Nicolás Cardozo Basteiro,María Castillo Armas,Marcos Chanca,Zsigmond Cholnoky,Simon Crook,Tóth Daniel,Zsolt Dobák,Tamás Ferenci,Alberto Fernández,Ricardo Ferrari,Karim Ferrero,Bálint Forgács,Marc Fàbrega,Marta García Fernández-Pacheco,James Gierman,Rubén Gundín,László Gyenes Jr.,Rubén Gómez,Gabor Hege Hegedus,Balázs Horváth,Máryon Kesztheyi,Ted Kim,Ferenc Kondor,Irene Del Campo Lopez,Teresa S. Maestre,Mattheus Makowsky,Irene Manrique Matin,Hideg István Megyer,Iván Merkert,Zsolt Molnar,Antonio Garcia Navarro,Nick Oliver,István Papp,Szabolcs Pogány,Maria Roman,Ara Romero Moreno,Leigh Romero,Vilmos Romvári,Teresa Rosado,Mario Santa Cruz,Nico Santavicca,Eva M. Schroeder,Juan Terán,Balázs Tóth,Bence Tóth,Sándor Vas,Shane Vazquez,Miguel Ángel Villanueva,Viktor Zsebók,Ferenc Újvári,Martín Alaminos,Alberto Barrios Barcia,János Cserven,Christopher Kusiak,Futo Laszlo,Scott Allen Logan,Jaime Maellas,Manel Manteca,Enrique Martín Guadamuro,Sofia Ochoa,Santos Paoletti-Boville,Jaime Polo,Shane Vazquez,Andras Viz
Music Department Shwan Askari,Sara Barone,Michael K. Bauer,Jonathan Beard,Philippe Briand,Sandy Cameron,Blake Cooper,Antonio Di Iorio,Abderraouf Djeffel,Chris Fogel,Kevin Globerman,Benjamin Joe Hayden,Luanne Homzy,Benjamin Jacobson,Alex Klingle,Kevin Kumar,Brandon Lau,Erich Lee,Songa Lee,Pablo Lopez,Jeff MacDonald,Tasnim Mahbub,Lucia Micarelli,James Murray,Hannah Parrott,Conrad Pope,Ben Powell,Erin Michael Rettig,David James Rosen,Peter Rotter,Jarrod Royles-Atkins,Jason Schmid,Jacob Shrum,Steven Silvers,Christopher Still,Jacopo Trifone,Edward Trybek,Henri Wilkinson,Ken Aiso,Sean Barrett,Gevorg Chepchyan,Jordan Cox,Benjamin Hoff,Maxwell Karmazyn,Michael Kaufman,Steven Kofsky,Jonathan Moerschel,Jacob Moreno,Jacob Moss,Gabriel Saban,Jamie Thierman,Robert Wolf
Script and Continuity Department Paula Casarin,Eric Gruber,Andrea Trigo,Martina Vazzoler,Gabriella Winkler,Dóra Sárközi
Transportation Department Csaba Bagossy,Miguel Basurama,István Bognár,Timothy Bouslaugh,Simao Braz Lopes,Natalia Sánchez Calvo,Thais del Mar,Richard Fábrega,Noe González,Helena Guzmán,Charles Heidet,Richard Holmes,Darren Holvey,Miklós Horvát,Leon Keegan,Claudia Kossik,Sonia Parada,Jr. Sandor Paradi,Ashley Jade Parkes,Sergio Peralta,Bánó Péter,Jaume Quiles,Lafuente Perea Rafael,Antonio Ramón,Diego Rodríguez Lobalzo,Adrian Diaz Such,Zoltán Szepesi,Gábor Szénási,Alejandro Torres García,Vince Tupai,Paul Wambach,Oti Yebra,Miguel García Morales,Jordi Nebot,Rodrigo Perea
Additional Crew Martín Alaminos,Simon Andrews,Kassandra Arko,Cristina Armario,Darien Asian,John B. Austin,Allison Avery Jordan,Paty Avila,Luis Ayuso,Rafael Ayuso,Nedda Azizian,Laboszki Balazs,Camila Barberis,Csilla Bedi,Matt Bell,Daniel Benjamin,Lisa Birch,Matthew Blain,Kevin Blood,Sam Boardman,Israel Bodero,Dave Booys,Ági Bornemissza,János Boros,Marc Bortz,Anna Boglarka Botka,Amanda Boyd,Amanda Brand,Azu Burdeos,Oszkár Bócsik,Ivan Antonio Cabanillas Vozmediano,James Cameron,Sam Carmichael,Jussilinho Ángel Castro,Sara Chaisson,Beverly Cole,Michael Coleman,Carolina Cosmen,Peter Cseri,María Cuenca,Jeli Daniella,Viktor de Hegyessy,Terri Depaolo,Jose Maria Diaz,John Doherty,Marilyn Dozer-Chaney,Christina Dunlop,Henrietta Dörgö,Annicka Ekvall,Marie Elder,Csilla Elek,Dániel Erdélyi,Dave Evans,FeTa Felkai,Juanito Fernández,Nicole Flowers,Jay Floyd,Kenan Jerome Floyd,Heather Fortin,Anouk Frösch,Jess Gamble,Aser García Rada,Evan Godfrey,Ade Gorst,Sandra Granero,Dave Green,Shannon Griffith,Alberto Gutierrez Gonzalez,Attila Gyurkó,Peter Harcourt,Zack Hardy,Rob Hoey,Josefine Holmberg,Jason Horwood,Gyöngyi Tövök Istvanne,Amanda Lee Jacoby,Adam Jaklics,Pablo Jiménez,Alyssa Joseph,Bence Juhász,Camille Jun,Kathleen Keller,Neil Kellerhouse,Owen Keys,Ferenc Kondor,Laura Zsofia Kotz,Norbert Kroó,Ágnes Kubikné Siroki,László Kálmáncsi,Julia Lawton,René León,Magnus Lygdback,Rozsnyai Mariann,Ian Richard Marshall,Colin McDaid,Bliss McDonald,Yesika Mena,Dániel Mertz,Tara Mews,Ben Michael,Stewart Scott Mitchell,Viktor Mitev,Sara López-Rosado Molero,Antonio Molina,Gábor Molnár,Norma Morales,Bárbara Morelos-Zaragoza,Steven Moth,Szabó Máté,Norbi Nagy,Róbert Nagy,Richard Neale,Jack Nevils,Shaun O Banion,Vincent Parker,Mario Parra Barba,Malcolm Pearce,Alejandro Perez,Nayra Petrini,Joe Petényi,Maggie Phelan,Philip Pickford,Janos Prihoda,Diána Pálfalvi,Dieter Rauter,Joshua Ravetch,Nancy Reid,Rosa Maria Rodriguez Botia,David M. Rodriguez,Luis Rodriguez,Daniel Rogers,Amanda Rolo,Gigi Romero,Ricardo Ron Pérez,Cynthia Ruiz,Juani Ruiz,Lorenzo Rusin,Chandler Sant,Matt Sargent,Evelin Lina Schindler,Dee Schuka,Dave Shaw,Mackie Shilstone,Erik Singer,Joss Skottowe,Konstantin Smola,Zsolt Soltész,Boglárka Szabó,Johanna Szalai,Péter Szántó,Uxue Sáenz,Victorine Tamafo,Wisinger Tamás,Kinga Trimmel,Kolos Trimmel,Jodi Tripi,Violeta Tudela,Michael N. Turner,Tamas Urhegyi,Ángel Villarroel,Walter von Huene,Emõke Vágási,Nik Wilkerson,Chris Winn,Eric Winn,Chris Youngless,Patrick Zapata,Yaroslavna Artamonova,Will Banks,Lisa Birch,Veronika Bojtos,Martin Burns,Annie Bydlon,Giles Dumper,Nuria Hernando,Luis Montalvo,Dave Shaw
Thanks Brett Leonard
Genres Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Companies Paramount Pictures, Skydance Media, Twentieth Century Fox
Countries USA, Spain, Hungary
Languages English, Spanish
ContentRating R
ImDbRating 6.2
ImDbRatingVotes 176367
MetacriticRating 54
Keywords time travel,sequel,robot,terminator,mexico
Year 2019
ReleaseDate 2019-11-01
RuntimeMins 128
RuntimeStr 2h 8min
Plot An augmented human and Sarah Connor must stop an advanced liquid Terminator from hunting down a young girl, whose fate is critical to the human race.
Awards Awards, 1 win & 12 nominations
Directors Tim Miller
Writers David S. Goyer, Justin Rhodes, Billy Ray
Stars Linda Hamilton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Mackenzie Davis
Produced by James Cameron,Edward Cheng,Bonnie Curtis,Howard Ellis,David Ellison,Dana Goldberg,Adam Goodman,David S. Goyer,Don Granger,Lee Grumett,John J. Kelly,Julie Lynn,Tim Miller,Billy Ray,Peter Welter Soler
Music by Junkie XL
Cinematography by Ken Seng
Film Editing by Julian Clarke
Casting By Mindy Marin,Lucinda Syson,Tonucha Vidal
Production Design by Sean Haworth,Sonja Klaus
Art Direction by Monica Alberte,Miguel Arregui,David Bryan,Luke Edwards,Alejandro Fernández,Claire Fleming,Stuart Frossell,A. Todd Holland,Florian Müller,Tom Still,Lucienne Suren
Set Decoration by Damian Galan Alvarez,Nimrod Hajdu,Ana Medina
Costume Design by Ngila Dickson
Makeup Department Francesco Alberico,Kristin Arrigo,Isabel Auernheimer,Jo Best,Kate Biscoe,Jim Charmatz,Bill Corso,Becky Cotton,Anna Dalmau,Montse Damas,Anna Daniel,Pedro Raúl de Diego,Judit Farkas-Arful,Jessie Harrison,Jorge Hernández Lobo,Kornél Hidas,Szilvia Homolya,Judit Hornyák,Dóra Horváth Kertai,Rita Horváth,Fanni Hudák,Monica Huppert,Beata Javorszki,Jamie Kelman,Norma Lee,Dennis Liddiard,Barbara Lorenz,Alicia López,Carolina Montes,Miklós Novák,Michael Ornelaz,Cristina Patterson,Orsolya Petrilla,Geoff Redknap,Saray Rodríguez,Mária Schlisser,Taylor Schulte,Brian Sipe,Steven R. Soussanna,Marva Stokes,Noémi Szabó,Susana Sánchez,Nuria Vela,Michelle Vittone,Larry Waggoner,Samantha Ward,Michael White,Stan Winston,Zsófia Zámborszky
Production Management Eliana Victoria Alcouloumre,Gábor Bakos,Gergö Balika,Alberto Barrios Barcia,Anna Bates,Bea Batisz,Orencio Carvajal,Patricia Cos,David Dilley,Leire Emparanza,Lucia Fernandez Lobera,Marta García Covarrubias,Shari Hanson,Bill Hill,Coral Jimenez,Gabor Kaban,Steven Kaminsky,Péter Karácsony,John J. Kelly,Krisztian Kertai,Enric Llopis,Alex McCullough,Austin Michaelis,Dániel Molnár,Albert Morera,Dana Nelson,Gergely Orbán,Pepe Prado,Carlos Ruiz Boceta,Miriam Ruiz Mateos,Peter Seres,Melele Sánchez,Fiore T. Lyubomirova,Thane Watkins,Melanie Weldon,Peter Welter Soler,Zsófia Zatureczki,Zdravko Zhekov
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director Julieta Alcaide,Gloria Alonso Martínez,Cristina Amengual Watson,Gergely Apjok,Ada Bautista,Andor Berényi,Gábor Bordi,Edward Brett,Carla Celda,James Chasey,Sándor Csali,Isabel Delclaux,Helena Doz,Laura Díez,Botond Emody,Eva Ferradas,Natalia García Bescós,Lee Grumett,Bianka Gál,Árpád Görögh,Márk Herjeczki,José Luis Iglesias,Ona Jané i Millà,Márk Katona,Márton Katona,Óscar Manero,Lara Martín,Quique Medina,Bálint Megyeri,Dániel Mertz,Sandra Miguel,Lõcsei Márton,Benedek Nagy,Pep Parés Font,Ricardo Ron Pérez,Cynthia Ruiz,Marco Schleicher,Philip J Silvera,Ferenc Iván Szabó,Ágnes Talmácsi,Jeff Taylor,Jo Tew,Zsolt Tolmár,Csilla Tornallyay,Danny Triphook,Miki Vargas
Art Department Cristina Acuña,Monica Alberte,Pau Albin,Antonio Andraus,Clàudia Ballester-Freixas,Lajos Balogh,Mike Battle,Kieran Belshaw,Enci Bognar,Bela Bordas,Mike Britton,Dawn Brown,Katelyn Budke,Eszter Bukai,Chris Caldow,Julian Caldow,David Christopher Campbell,Chan Canelo,Robert Castillo,Nivanh Chanthara,Miguel Chillon,András Csernóczki,Lisa Curry,Stian Dahlslett,Gaspar Dalmy,Eddie Del Rio,Luis Doce,Mark Dodwell,Gorka Domaica,Carlos Jesús Domingo,Olaf Dzurik,Máté Dános,Pedro Díaz Peinado,Gergely Dömölki,Alonzo Edwards,Reid Embrey,László Tibor Erdélyi,Claudia Ethridge,Alan Farkas,Monica Feito,Norbert Alte Fieszl,Chris Fix,Danny Florian,Cristina Foradada,Tamás Füzfa,Toto Gabor Toth,Gábor Gajdos,Juan Garces,Mar García,Tamas Gelei,M. Marcos Gonzalez,Reka Gottlieb,Laura Granell Jiménez,Benett Gyurik,Lászlóné Gáll,Beth Hajdukiewicz,Krisztián Handa,Zoltán Haut,Sean Haworth,Jason Hendrich,Paloma Hernandez Santos,Beatriz López Herrerias,Tamás Hevér,Levente Hideg,Ádám Hollos,Gyongyi Horvath,Balázs Horváth,George Hull,Kevin Hunter,Gergö Hódur,Ioan Alexandru Ichim,Attila Illés,Joni Indursky,Tamás Ináncsi,James Isaacson,Valentín Isakov,Daniel Izar de la Fuente,Zsolt Jancsó,Sándor Jani,Charlie Jaramillo,David Jiménez Díaz,Terry Jones,Tamas Juhasz,Szilvia Kaldi,Bence Kalmár,Zsuzsa Kanovics,Laszlo Kelemen,Graham Kelly,Edvin Killinger,József Kiss,Krisztián Kondora,Viktoria Koreny,Nóra Kovács,Nóra Patricia Kovács,Zsolt Kovács,Patrik Krizovensky,Maciej Kuciara,Vajk Körmendi,Márk Langfeld,Geoff Leavitt,Tamas Lengyel,András Levendovics,Olga López León,Sam Lorimer,Rob MacPherson,Paula Maestro,András Maracskó,Candice Marchlewski,Noémi Maros,Ana Martinez Fernandez,Néstor Martínez Sánchez,Francesc Masso,Isaac Maté,Elsa Mayuri,Gary McMonnies,Lászlo Melicher,Nicola Meloni,Francesca Menichelli,Dan Milligan,Nuria Muni,Istvan Muranyi,Laura Musso,Franciska Nagy,Javier Navarrete Fernández-Nieto,Márton Nedjalkov,Cyndi Nello,Aurelia Nemes,Gergo Nemeth,Carlos Nieto Lopez,Julian Nix,Zoltan Novak,Kalman Nyilas,Nedda Négyessy,Jamie O Hara,Sándor Alexander Oláh,Javier Orgaz,Annamária Orosz,Aitana Ozaeta,Ana Palazón,Rami Pap,Gergely Papp,Attila Pataki,Balazs Pelcz,Adorjan Portik,Jared Purrington,Márk Pétersz,Ozike Racz,Amandeep Rahi,Jos Richardson,Isona Rigau,Szilvia Ritter,Graham Robinson,Manuel Romero,Mothokgo Ronald,Matt Rowe,Iñaki Rubio,Jill Salaver,José Luis Saldaña,Tibor Sasvári,Zsófia Sipos,Lance Smith,Máté Sonyovszki,Christopher Stanback,Erzsébet Staub,Jeremy Stecker,Roland Stevenson,David Sues,Levente Sulyok,Gábor Sumicz,Csaba Szabo,Attila Szabó,György Szabó,Tibor Szabó,Mátyás Szakonyi,Gabor Szanto,Peter Szollosi,Rafael Szécsi,Tibor Szécsi,Zoltán Sípos,Krisztian Takacs,Tamás Takács,Róbert Taller,Victorine Tamafo,David Temprano,Adriana Toth,Yasmina Tous,Oscar Troitiño,Vilmos Törköly,István Törzsök,Maria Valls,Gena Vazquez,Zsolt Veres,Toldi Veronika,Oskars Vilnitis-Pantelejevs,Zoltán Virányi-Fontan,Márton Vojnits,Gabor Voros,Zsolt Várhelyi,Rae Yamamoto,Fante Zamora,Lipcsei Zoltán,Torma Zoltán,Éva Zöld,Szalay Ákos,Levente Sulyok
Sound Department Deb Adair,Ignacio Arrojo,Kirk Baily,Steve Baine,David Berón,David Betancourt,Tamás Bohács,Jim Brookshire,Stephen Brown,Diego Casares,Natalia Castellanos,Cary Clark,Sam Cousins,János Csáki,Vicki Davis,Devin Donaghy,Julie Feiner,Eddie Frierson,Rodrigo Gil,Lee Gilmore,Thomas Giordano,Mike Gomez,Tim Gomillion,Ben Greaves,Samuel R. Green,David Grimaldi,Jackson Gutierez,Gina Gyles,Áron Havasi,Craig Henighan,Marabina Jaimes,Mark Kenna,Tom Lalley,Daniel Lepervanche,Luisa Leschin,Skip Longfellow,Sal Lopez,David Lucarelli,Marta Meseguer,David Michie,György Mihályi,Richard Miro,Juan Montoto Ugarte,Corina Mora,Andy Nelson,Jonathan Nichols,Lee Orloff,Arthur Ortiz,Alberto Pacheco,Peter Persaud,William Michael Redman,Michelle Ruff,Mac Ruth,Clay Savage,Peter Schulteisz,Luke Schwarzweller,Stan Sellers,Adriana Sevan,Yohannes Skoda,Jill Smith,Skip Stellrecht,Shane Sweet,Levente Udud,Derek Vanderhorst,Jack Whittaker,James Wright,Eliza Zolnai,David Zyler,Richard A. Carr
Special Effects by Mariano Alvarado,Louis Andrews,James Bainger,Xavi Bastida,Dennis Bentivengo,Lucy Best,Julian Borbidge,David Brighton,Raytheon Buna,Rodney Burke,Eloy Cervera,Luc Corbould,Malcolm Crash Corbould,Neil Corbould,Pau Costa,Teresa Costa,Aaron Cox,Keith Dawson,Jabin Dickins,Felipe Dorado,John Duffy,Andrew Ellwood,Nicholas Ellwood,Raymond Ferguson,Marcelo Firmano,Damian Fisher,Bence Füredi,Tono Garzón,Gergely Glovotz,Faye Green,Stuart Heath,Andrew Homan,Stephen Hutchinson,Lee Illingworth,Matthew Keen,Laurent Kermel,Steve Knowles,Chris Leech,Edward Leeson,David London,Jasmin Lyford,Lindsay MacGowan,Shane Mahan,Kevin Mathews,Kevin Matthews,Kenny McCafferty,Doug McKenna,Doug Meacham,José M. Meneses,Gary Merrington,Tim Mitchell,Orlando Murray,Declan O Donnell,Charlie Paton,Epiffany Phillips,Peter Pohl,László Pál,Ronnie Rackley,Kieran Reed,Andrew Ryan,Lilla Schwarz,J. Alan Scott,Ty Senior,Tibor Skornyak,Eva Stepanek,Mark Tanswell,Mario Torres Jr.,Tamas Uzoni,Matt Ward,Nigel Wilkinson,Jonathan Wilson,Glen Winchester,Damon Weathers
Visual Effects by Sameer Yatin Aawlkanthe,Bahget Abdalmalek,Dustin Lee Abram,David Adan,James Adkins,Ankita Agrawal,Tanseer Ahmed,Dan Akers,Tosin Akinwoye,Alper Aksit,Amer Alameddine,Paul Alexiou,Azra Alkan,Tom Allisey,Richard Almodovar,Stephanie Alvarado,Chrisser Alvarez,Weverton Alves,Gerard Emmanuel Amador,Andrew Anderson,Matt Anderson,Tor Andreassen,Alexey Andreev,Pasquale Antonelli,Danish Anwar,Rousselos Aravantinos,Guillaume Babin,Rajesh Babu,Tigran Badalyan,Jenny Jiyeon Bae,Randall Bahnsen,Jörg Baier,Andrew Bain,Hasan Bajramovic,Morarji Bala,Martin Balcerzak,Michael Balzer,Danny Banda,Spriha Banik,Eric Barba,Georgij Barklaja,Steve Barnes,Aaron Barr,Dario Barrera,Jordan Bartlett,Jay Barton,Addison Bath,Vojtech Batko,Ada Bautista,Joel Bautista,Dugan Beach,Christopher Beatty,Jean-Paul Beaulieu,Mike Beaulieu,Eric M. Beaver,Cory Bedwell,Thabo Beeler,Jonathan Benayoun,Scott Benza,Jaume Berch,Liz Bernard,Lisa Beroud,Thomas Bevan,Philip Billones,Claudia Blackburne,Ian Blewitt,Joao Bogossian,Thomas Boland,Joshua Bolin,Ricardo Bonisoli,Daniel Booty,Alexis Borchardt,Kevin Bouchez,Rigel Bowen,Steve Braggs,Samantha Finkler Brainerd,Stefan Brand,Alex Branton,Elliott Brennan,John Brennick,Bill Bridges,Jared Brient,Scott Brisbane,Danielle Brooks,Aaron Brown,Dave Brown,Paul Buckley,Bruce Buechner,Sirius Buisson,Matthew Bullock,Isaac Buono,T.J. Burke,Jana Buryskova,Gábor Bödö,Gem Ronn Cadiz,Thomas Campos,Marco Cantaluppi,Margaret Cardell,Charley Carlat,Jon W. Carr,Kris Carson,Lewie Carson,Yeri Casanova,Erico Caselle,Lesly Cazares,Carlo Cersosimo,B. Kalyan Chakravarthy,Katherine Chambers,Karhoe Chan,Kien Geay Chan,Thomas Chan,Viki Chan,Malavika Chandrakanth,Yashvhanth Chandrasekaran,Wang Chang,Arrev Chantikian,François Chardavoine,Catrina Chelariu,Joel Cheyne,Praveen Kumar Chira,HyunJin Cho,Hyemee Choi,Nicolas Chombart,Soomin Chon,Darren Christie,Danny Clark,James G. Clark,Nicolae-Gheorghe Cojocaru,Joseph H. Coleman,Chad E. Collier,Janice Barlow Collier,Amanda Collins,Cynthia Collins,Rafael Colon,Kevin Conlon,Tristan Connors,Traian Constantinescu,Niko Conte,Chris Cooper,Michael Corcoran,Theo Coriton,Karl Cottee,Evelyn Cover,Mathew Cowie,Nathan Cox,Nick Crew,Wesley Cronk,Sean Cushing,Scott Dace,Dalmas Rémy,Anna Dankova,Will Van Dao,Rhea Darch,Filippo Dattola,Brad Davenport,Dexter Davey,Jeffrey de Guzman,Mark Andrew De La Garza,Carlos Patrick De Leon,Max Decroix,Mitchell Deeming,Kevin Desa,Derek Desmond,Fabrice Di Cicco,Eric J. Dima-ala,Linda Dimaculangan,Julian Dimsey,Chris DiPaola,Van Le Do,Aleksa Dodic,Martin Dolezal,Hannes Doornaert,Michael Drew,François-Côme Du Boistesselin,Geer DuBois,Cecile Dubois-Herry,Laura Dubsky,Ryan Duhaime,Andrew Dunkerley,Clementine Dupont,Margaux Durand-Rival,Sylvain Duroyon,Ryan Dutour,Bappaditya Dutta,Sunil Dutta,Andrea Dutti,Daniel Duwe,Lukas Dvoracek,Chris Dwyer,Matthew Eberle,Kade Eckstein,Andi Edirisinghe,Christopher Edwards,David Edwards,Jake Efthymiou,Sergej Eichmann,Brent Elliott,Dean Elliott,Gastón Emery,Arlend Engar,Verónica Granadero Estrada,Youngbin Eun,Jack Evans,Alan Fairlie,Paul Faulkes,Conny Fauser,Fathima Feminò,Victor Maiorino Fernandes,Caithlin Ferrier,Dan Finnegan,Tommaso Fioretti,Martin Fischer,Jonathan Flanders,Dadrian Flavors,Oliver Fleming,Tony Flemming,Carlos Flores Tavitas,Brad Floyd,Larkin Flynn,Kate Forrest,Carl Forsell,David Fox,Duncan Fraser,Evan Fraser,Carl Frytz,Chris Fung,Andrius Gabriunas,Katarina Gacevska,Gergely Galisz,Lisa Gane,Vikas Ganer,Nathan Gardner,Pätrick Gehlen,Darcy George,Abhishek Ghorui,Jami Gigot,Michael Gilbert,Francesco Giugliano,Jose Gloria,Jake Golding,Marc Gollenia,Ilia Goncharov,Daniel Gonzalez Solozabal,Avi Goodman,Alexander Goodwin,Mariana Gorbea,Yann Goument,Markus Graf,Sandro Grassetti,Julian Gregory,Michael Leigh Gresham,John Gresko,Rodolphe Groshens,Branko Grujcic,Juani Guiraldes,Anthony Guiry,Tamás Gyermán,Remal Halabi,Martin Halle,Jamie Hallett,Lindsay Hallett,Alex Halstead,Michael J. Halsted,Giles Hancock,Rikke Gjerløv Hansen,Heiðrún Tinna Haraldsdóttir,Michael S. Harbour,Petr Harmacek,Ty Harmon,Gregory Harrington,Dylan Harris,Ian A. Harris,Sho Hasegawa,Julien Hassenforder,Eric Hawksley,Andrew Hawryluk,Joseph Hayden,Patrick Heinen,Ivo Hejcman,Dominic Hellier,Chris Hempel,Chris Henryon,Petr Hepner,Lazaro Hernandez,Joshua Herrig,Lukas Herrmann,Evan Hirschberg,Andrew Hodgson,Benjamin Hoellrigl,Claire Louise Hoey,Orion Holder-Monk,James Hollingworth,Blake Hollins,Paul Hopkins,Niall Horn,Daniel Hourigan,Lane Howard,Greg Howe-Davies,Heather Hoyland,Zdenek Hrazdira,Jiaxuan Hu,Wanghua Huang,Natapon Huangsakuncharoen,Wendy Hulbert,Karen E.M. Hulse,Alexander Hunt,Andrew Hutchinson,Seona Hwang,Sonia Alexia Ioannou,Joni Jacobson,David Jaffe,Ebrahim Jahromi,Hetal Jain,Daehwan Jang,Lukas Jankovcin,Piotr Jankowski,Timothy Jeffs,Kirsten Jelliffe,Silvio Jemma,Samuel Jensen,Carolina Jimenez Garcia,David Johnson,Odigie Johnson,Adam Jones,Morgan Jones,Thom Jones,Scott Joseph,Jessica Jung,Anto Juricic,Bora Jurisic,Tomas Kalhous,Kirill Kalitukha,Georg Kaltenbrunner,Ashutosh Karemore,Nitant Karnik,Ravi Krishna Kasumarthy,Kristian Kebbe,Patrick Keenan,Laurent Kermel,Cindy Khoo,Anne Kim,Bumjun Jeremy Kim,Haetsal Kim,Hyungrok Kim,Kai Kyoungsoo Kim,Oliver Kirchhoff,Miroslav Kolarik,Jordan Koler,Arek Komorowski,Elicia Koo,Allie Koppel,Dmytro Korolov,Jack Kosoyan,Vaclav Kostun,Arun Krishnan,Kolby Krook,Pavel Král,Satbir Singh Kukreja,Ramyanth Kumar,Sunil Kumar,Vishishth Kumar,Toyotaka Kuroda,Frankie Kwak,Felder Kwek,Julian Körrenz,Ying Ghit La,Giorgio Lafratta,Alison Lake,Grant Laker,Jaymie Lam,Alberto Landeros,Cynthia Latour,Mathias Lautour,Tristan Laville,David C. Lawson,Toan-Vinh Le,Andre LeBlanc,Laura LeBlanc,Michael Lederhuber,Chan-ran Lee,Danny Lee,James Jooyoung Lee,Jarett Lee,Justin Lee,Ken Lee,Wei Ling Lee,Woohyuck Eric Lee,Win Leerasanthanah,Juliette Lemaire,Chun Ho Ray Leung,John M. Levin,Joseph Li,Gretchen Libby,Lenka Likarova,Sheng Yaw Lim,Isaac Lipstadt,Llewellyn Littlemore,Victoria Liu,Dave Logan,Reilly Lohr,Andy Long,Sagar Lonkar,Jane Lovell,Alison Luong,Marco Lusardi,Maxime Luère,Michael Löffler,Miguel Macaya,Thomas MacKenzie,László Maczó,Martin Macák,Jason Madigan,Tytus Majerski,Marcin Majewski,Ineke Majoor,Marco Maldonado,Zachary Mallett,Emil Malm,Karey Maltzahn,Jona Maluck,Gabriel Mandala,Avery Mann,Patrik Marek,Petr Marek,Nicholas Markel,Chulev Marko,Muhammad Marri,Aldo Martinez Calzadilla,Geordie Martinez,Johannes Masanz,David Mason,Greg Massie,Petr Matas,Sachin Mathew,Dominik Matousek,Daniel May,Jake Maymudes,Neil Mayo,Zack Mazerolle,Samantha McConnell,Chris McCrowe,Daniel McCue,Brody McIlveen,Chris McIlveen,Jason McKeeman,Lee McNair,Brandon McNaughton,James McPherson,Gagan Mehta,Michael Melchiorre,Mike Melendi,Bradley Melenhorst,Glenn Melenhorst,Elard Meneses,Andre Metello,Josh Methven,Keith Meure,Johannes Mewes,Jaymie Miguel,Jay C. Miller,Scott Miller,Adrian Millington,Jane Min,Stephen Misek,Marco Misino,Harsh Mistry,Akmal Mlahaili,Taisa Monteiro,Elizabeth Montes,Lauren Moore,Lauren Moore,Jim Moorhead,Scott Morgan,Paul Moriaux,David Manos Morris,Hugo R.A. Morris,Vita Morrison,Henrique Moser,Adrian Moyes,Alejandro Mozqueda Torres,Harry Mukhopadhyay,Viktor Muller,Rémi Munier,Asuka Murata,Jackie K. Murphy,Martin Murphy,Kailene Murray,Devan Mussato,Patrick T. Myers,Daisuke Nagae,Emmi Nakagawa,Liam Nantes,Amit Narwani,Tim Nassauer,Josiah Nathan,Philip Negroski,Sebastian Ness,Donald Netzel,Sarah Neveu,Mervyn New,Thomas Newbury,Gretel Ng,Yuhon Ng,Vinh Nguyen,Bruno Nicko,Sam Nixon,Thijs Noij,Tamara Nowicki,Gopi Nukavarapu,John O Connell,Erin D. O Connor,Kelly O Toole,Mike Ocoboc,Stefano Oggeri,Erik Ojong,Nathan Ortiz,Jon Ossitt,Pradeep Kumar Padmanabha,Prashant Shishupal Padvi,Fred Palacio,Anne Palm,Francesco Panzieri,Vincent Papaix,Ian Parra,Shreekant Patel,Laura Bonde Pedersen,Vasho Pekar,Bernardo Pereira,Craig Pereira,Bridgette Perrers,Kalle Peterson,Eric Petey,Matteo Petricone,William Petrie,Naphat Phawatthanankun,Laura Philippe,Margaret Phillips,Robert Pik,Ryan Pilcher,Melanie Plett,Maude Poirier-Caron,Tomás Pokorný,Alexandru Popescu,Sravan Porumulla,Mathew Praveen,Quentin Prenant,Jeremy Pronk,Karl Punt,Klee Quisido,Andy Rajput,Ashwin Ram,Anand Ramesh,Johanna Ramos Santiago,Sasmit Ranadive,Kurt Rathjen,Rohith Ravindranath,Diego Rebello,Michelle Redman,Tyagi Reetuj,Beat Reichenbach,Jun Ren,Panya Ren,Jonathan Reynolds,Dávid Ringeisen,Saysana Rintharamy,Ali Rizvi,Charles G. Roberts,Joshua Robertson,Dylan Robinson,James Robison,Barnaby Robson,Gabriel Roccisano,Cesar Rodriguez Bautista,Brendan Rogers,Michael Rogers,Anthony Romero,Simon Rosenthal,Simon Ross,László Ruska,Brian Rust,Rahul Kumar Sahu,Kenneth Sales,Remus San Diego,Kevin San,Mohan Sangeeth,John E. Sasaki,Florian Sauvage,Joseph Scarr,Robert Schajer,Nabil Schiantarelli,Jade Schiff,Roman Schmidt,Stefan Schneider,Carsten Schulte-Braucks,Brian Schultz,David Seager,Giuseppe Seda,Alvaro Segura,Antoine Seigle,Lorenzo Serran,Fulvio Sestito,Ryan E. Seymour,Manesh Shafiei,Sophie Shanahan,Shareef Shanawany,Amrish Sharma,Gary Shelley,Christian Sherriff-Smith,Al Shier,Shervin Shoghian,Randal Shore,Ziad Shureih,Davide Sibilia,Alfonso Sicilia,Aleksandra Sienkiewicz,Joseph Silva,Victoria Simiele,Richard Simko,Jason Simmons,Shane Simms,Ariel Simone,Domenick Simpson,Deepak Singh,Kishore Singh,Nikita Sinha,Ed Siomacco Jr.,Magnus Skagerlund,Maciej Skoluba,Eván Skíbin,Ben Sledge,Ted Slominski,Edmond Smith III,Dane Allan Smith,Natalie Smith,Rebecca J. Smith,Alexander Sokolov,Pawan Solanki,Nelson Sousa,James Spadafora,Joseph A. Spano III,Jiri Stamfest,Jon Stanley,Aaron Stewart,Aaron Patrick Stewart,Eric Stewart,Kane Stewart,Daniel Stift,Michele Stocco,George Stone,Naomi Stopa,Sheldon Stopsack,Rosalind Stratton,Sujil Sukumaran,Mathew Sullivan,Sina Sultani,Mallela Suresh,Digant Sutar,Brendan Sutherland,Tibor Szentkuti,Kouji Tajima,Kazuki Takahashi,Neil Russell Tan,Eric Tang,Ahmet Levent Tasel,James Tavet,Katrina Taylor,Lewis Taylor,Greg Teegarden,Werner Ten Hoeve,Adrian Teng,Andrew Tennant,Corrine Teo,George Tesler,Jeff Tetzlaff,Shivas Thilak Anthikkat,Nathan Thomas,Samantha Thrupp,Jamie Tilston,Tim Tobin,Shermaine Toh,Kazuma Tonegawa,Joe Toole,Adrien Toupet,Fabio Tovar,Stuart Tozer,John Treusch,Satya Prakash Tripathy,Nicholas Tripodi,Sam Tull,Niki Turkovic,Péter Tárik,Vaclav Uhlir,Ilkka Uitto,Emily Unruh,Sourabh Uppal,Nate Usiak,Elisa Valenzisi,Adrien Vallecilla,Luke Vallee,Michele C. Vallillo,Vladimir Valovic,Rick van de Schootbrugge,Olivier Van Zeveren,Pravin Dayanand Vartekar,Levente Vass,Matteo Veglia,Rajesh Velayudhan,Lies Veldeman,Daniel Veszely,Jesse Vickery,Pau Viladot,Archie Villaverde,Tracy Villeda Meneses,Gallois-Montbrun Volcy,Anne Vu,Pablo Vázquez,Thomas Dane Wagener,Paul Waggoner,Shoshanah Wall,Christina Wallace,Isabel Wallace,Will Wallace,Christopher Walsh,Ed Walters,Alex Wang,Meow Nutjaree Wannasri,Shawn Warawa,Ryan Anthony Ward,Tim Ward,Ben Warner,Adrian Watkins,Logan B. Watkins,Elijah Watson,Martin Toby Watson,Matt Weaver,Darrin Wehser,Roman Weisgerber,Melanie Weldon,Jeff Wells,Evan Wen,Jennifer Wessner,Ryan Weston,Jeff White,Marc Whitelaw,Shonnan Wibrow,Katie Williams,Brad Willis,Jody Wilson,Wade Wilson,Kyle Winkelman,Tnaya Witmer,Florian Witzel,Justin Wong,Stephen T.Y. Wong,Alex J. Wood,Chris Wood,Drew Wood-Davies,Marvin Woodyatt,David Wortley,Ed Wou,Megan Wren,Gary Wu,Tuba Yalcin,Hailie Yang,Robert Yeh,Jeremy Yeokhoo,Alexander Yip,Cobol Yu,Can Yuksel,Jacob Zaguri,Valerian Zamel,David Zbriger,David Zeng,Laura Zentil,Eric Zhang,Lei Zhang,Lauren Zimmer,Lauren Abrahams,Morris Abramian,James Elijah Aguilar,Sergio Alarcon,Ivan Alaykov,David Drury Allen,Shudhdodhan Milind Ambhore,George Antzoulides,Chris Armsden,Michanol Arnaud,Paul Ashall,Murat Ayasli,Dan Ayling,Gregory Bellis,Miguel Berube Ouellet,Prabin Bhandari,Udit Bhardwaj,Ben Bigiel,Adam Blank,Loganathan Boopathy,Nick Booth,Gregory Bossert,Adam Bradley,Christina Bruce,Giovanni Bucci,Jakub Budina,Jean-Baptiste Cambier,Dan Camp,Nathan Camp,Cedric Enriquez Canlas,Barbera Carlo,Edward Catley,Tyler Cayce,Kirk Chantraine,Jason Chee,Gyanon Chitrakar,Tadeusz Chmiel,Martin Cicmanec,Pete Coggeshall,Carlos Conceicao,David Conley,Lydia Cosgrave,Kevin Couture,Steve Cronin,Jiri Cvancara,Fabio D Amico,Jaroslaw Dawidziuk,Silvia Debnarova,Robert Dorris,Matthew Dravitzki,Paz Drimer,Brian Ducharme,Sapachok Dumrongkunawut,Yogesh Duwal,Peter Dworin,Shahar Eldar,Adam J. Ely,Pavan Kumar Endarapu,Gabriel Escobar,Vincent Escueta,Jenzel Tom Fantolgo,Chloe Feodoroff,Benjamin Flynn,Jeremiah Forkkio,Ludovic Fouche,John Fragomeni,Victor Frenkel,Natalie Fritz,Rino George,Michael Gladkey,Abhijitsinh Gohil,Matteo Grassi,Todd Greshuk,Vendula Gresova,Vinod Gundre,Bishal Gurung,Michael Guttman,Adam Hall,Matt Hallen,Paul Harling,Samuel Harrison,Chrystian Hebert,Quentin Hema,Hamed Hematyar,Katie Hooten,Davin Hun,Kosuke Iwasaki,Miguel Jaramillo,Julien Jentgen,Gios Johnston,Jeremy Jones,Kiran Bhakta Joshi,Gilbert Juarez III,Rakesh Maharjan Jyapu,Sanjay Jyapu,Thepnarin Kanoksrithaworn,Prakash Karki,Rupak Kayastha,Dániel Keresztes,Simran Khalsa,Mohammad Amir Khan,Samira Khan,Hyungwoo William Kim,Kalvin Kingdon,Doron Kipper,Jinny Ko,Matthew Koehler,Jessica Koubi,Dmitri Krasnokoutski,Praveen Kumar,Madan Lama,Ram Lama,Uira Lamour,Mark Larranaga,Julien Lasbleiz,Gary Laurie,Katya Lebedev,Dong Gun Lee,Kerry Lee,Soon Ngee Chris Lee,Zoey Lee,Matt Leonard,Nicolas Leroy,Noll Linsangan,Jason Locke,Caroline MacLeod,Gyanendra Maharjan,Mahendra Maharjan,Nigendra Maharjan,Radip Maharjan,Rakesh Maharjan,Sabin Maharjan,Suroj Maharjan,Udaya Maharjan,Rupa Majhi,David Man,Charana Mapatuna,Quentin Marmier,Andrew Martin,Richard Matsushita,James Meikle,Kenneth Meyer,Daniele Mieli,Jonathan Mitchell,James Moore,Neil Roy Moss,Matt Mueller,Shane Mulholland,Naren Naidoo,Dan Nanu,Trent Newton,David Nguyen,Steve Nichols,Drew Nielsen,Mark Nijjar,James P. Noon,Ciaran O Connor,Kate O Donnell,Yvonne Oh,Eric Oliver,Ellery Ortiz,Peter Palarik,Luis San Juan Pallares,Eion-Ray Patterson,Cara Payne,Kristian Pedlow,Ondrej Podzimek,James Pollard,Nick Proulx,Cesar Quijada,Jacquelyn Racine,Kade Ramsey,Nabin Raut,Kisholay Ray,Benjamin Reicher,John Relosa,Paola Rocchetti,Calvin Romeyn,Francesco Rosati,Yury Sakovich,Peter Salter,Miroslav Samanek,Neha Samant,Shane Saravia,Robert Sariscan,Graham Saxby,Anoop Shakya,Honey Sharma,Nithin Shivaraju,Rameshwor Shrestha,Adnan Siddique,Akhauri P. Sinha,Chris Solon,Michael Solorzano,Vikramjit Sorensangbam,Vladimira Strukanova,Olivia Suh,Matt Sullivan,Lubos Gerardo Surzin,Agata Szczepanska,Takashi Takeoka,Ian Tang,Simon J. Taua i,Andrew Taylor,Jamie Telfer,Raphael Thiery,Gareth Thomas,Daniel Thomson,Eric Timm,Martin Tlusty,Syria Toliver,Joseph Towe,Danny Turner,Ed Ulbrich,Rachel Ulicny,Nimesh Vaidya,Jakub Valica,Balazs Varga,Benito Vargas,Tarquin Vosper,Aidan Waugh,Ros Webb,Kenneth Weide,Aaron Weldon,Lyndsey Will,Emily Williams,Wirak Winsuth,Frantisek Wirth,Martin Wiseman,David Wong,Howard Yan,Diana Yordanova,Matthias Zeller,Shaolei Zhang
Stunts Dan Adams,Zoltan Andrasi,Santi Arribas,Rafael Ayuso,Brett Azar,Estephany Balaguer,Denes Balint,Lloyd Bass,Bence Bauer,Kristof Belovai,Adriana Benito,Morgan Benoit,Ferenc Berecz,Jon Bermúdez,Attila Beros,Alejandro Bertero Álvarez,Andrés Borcel,Krisztián Botka,Freddy Bouciegues,Andrea Campoamor,Lorenzo Casares,Manuela Cauxeiro,Adrián de Cea,Jimmy Chhiu,Jason Chu,Jude Collie,Maddy Curley,Krisztián Czirják,Altomero Brasiilio Da Silva Jr.,Gergo Daniel,Miklós Danka,Jeff Danoff,Joaquín de Diego,Arcdoni de Rosario,Caitlin Dechelle,László Demény,Jayson Dumenigo,Elisa Díaz Sanz,Rick English,Miguel Espada,Natalia Espadas,Jesus Espin,Andrea Estévez,Debbie Evans,Roel Failma,Balázs Farkas,Gerda Fazakas,Eduardo Fedriani,Catarina Fernandez-Jimenez,Catalina Fernández,Jessi Fisher,Eniko Fulop,Shauna Galligan,Tim Garris,Kinga Gavalda,Bela Gerner,Daniel Gerzsenyi,Lance Gilbert,Máté Gyöngyösi,Ádám Gáspár,Tamas Hagyo,Regis Harrington,Sierra Hawkins,Diego Herberg,David Hernández Silva,Junior Herrera,Gergely Hodur,Gergely Horpásci,Dori Horvath,Rob Hunt,Urs Inauen,Danko Jordanov,Laszlo Juhász,Micah Karns,Nemoda Katalin,Abel Kocsis,Adam Kocsis,Csaba Komondi,Bri Marie Korin,József Kovalik Jr.,József Kovalik,Géza Kovács,Norbert Kovács,Tibor Milos Krisko,Mariusz Kubicki,György Kökényesi,Sara Leal,Balazs Lengyel,Billy D. Lucas,Chus Lucas,María Jesús Lucas,Jalil Jay Lynch,Juan Antonio López Enciso,Alejandro López Estacio,Mónica López,Carlos López-Balboa,Palma Magyar,István Draco Markolt,Ramon Alvarez Martos,Fernando Martín Maestro,Mike Massa,Zoltan Molnar,Tamás Molnár,Iván Montejo,Attila Mora,Alicia Moreno,Sheila Mulero,Vanda Móczár,Richard Nagy,Tsogtsaikan Narantsogt,Jack Nevils,Ivan Nieto,Carlos Nieto-Balboa,Anyachukwu Jireh Nneoma,Carlos Núñez,Béla Orsányi,Iván Orsányi,Jimmy Ortega,José Antonio Oña Sánchez,Abian Padrón,Meggin Penkal,Bruno Pereira Medeiros,Joe Perez,Gábor Pesta,Gábor Piroch,Brett Praed,Liza Prosvirova,Razvan Puiu,Iván Pérez Rodríguez,Jota Jota Ramos,Ryan Rasberry,Balog-Dutombé Menyhért René,Jimmy N. Roberts,Ricardo Rocca,Sonia Rodriguez Rodriguez,Seon Rogers,Michael Ryan,Alberto Sanchez,Marc Sangra,Julia Schunevitsch,Andras Seregi,Philip J Silvera,Nilla Sinko,Réka Sinkó,Péter Sokorai,Viktor Sokorai,Patrick J. Statham,Gáspár Szabó,Ákos Szalai,Zoltan Szanto,Tibor Szauervein,Miklós Szentváry-Lukács,György Szántó,Zoltan Szántó,Szilvia Szöllösi,Szilvia Szöllösi,Ildikó Szücs,Alberto Sánchez,Levente Tamási,Vladimir Tevlovski,Francisco Torres,Frank Torres,Gabor Toth,Amy Lynn Tuttle,Kinga Barbara Tóth,László Ujvári,Miklos Ungvari,Steve Upton,Cuco Usín,Judith Vázquez,Ryan Watson,Justin A. Williams,Vanessa Zamarripa,Viktoria Zambo,Patrik Zana,Kocsis Zsofia,Diego Álvarez,Ramon Álvarez,Dan Adams,Miguel Arregui,Mehrzad Asgi-Kermani,Rafael Ayuso,Sam Bailey,Estephany Balaguer,Domingo Beltrán,Morgan Benoit,Israel Bodero,Roberto Bonacini,Dave Booys,Bryce Branagan,Solomon Brende,Dacio Caballero,Renato Camargos,Lorenzo Casares,Jussilinho Ángel Castro,Jimmy Chhiu,Jason Chu,Christopher Clements,Wayne Dalglish,Caitlin Dechelle,Laurent Demianoff,László Demény,Jayson Dumenigo,Andrea Estévez,Debbie Evans,Balázs Farkas,Bence Ferenczi,Jessi Fisher,Roberto Freire,Juan José Gallego,Shauna Galligan,Pablo Garaizabal,Tim Garris,Alejandro Gómez de la Torre,Tamas Hagyo,Regis Harrington,Diego Herberg,Ignacio Herráez,Urs Inauen,Amy Johnston,Miguel Juzgado,Micah Karns,Mariusz Kubicki,Victor Leon,Billy D. Lucas,Miguel Ángel Luque,Jalil Jay Lynch,Alejandro López Estacio,Carlos López Lozano,Mike Massa,Dani Medina,Kytková Tomsíková Miroslava,Matthew Miscione,Alicia Moreno,Vanda Móczár,Carlos Nieto-Balboa,Katie O Donovan,José Antonio Oña Sánchez,Jeremy Oña,Alejandro Pantany,Tomás Paredes,Meggin Penkal,Athena Perample,Gábor Piroch,Kyle Potter,Jade Quon,Jota Jota Ramos,Roberto Rincón Sánchez,Jimmy N. Roberts,Ricardo Rocca,Ilderado Rodriguez,Brandy Rodríguez,Juan José Rodríguez,Seon Rogers,Joe Ross,Manuel Santos,Julia Schunevitsch,Andras Seregi,Philip J Silvera,Amy Sturdivant,Aaron Toney,Amy Lynn Tuttle,Myriam Villalobos,Raihau Villierme,Tony Vittorioso,Kaloian Vodenicharov,Thomas Vu,Josh Wood,Vanessa Zamarripa
Camera and Electrical Department Jason Adler,Manel Aguado,Pol Alberca,Bryan Antin,Darren Bailey,Jeff Baker,Gábor Balda,Brian Bartolini,Miguel Benavides,Marcos Benito,György Benyó,Alex Berger,Antal Berger,Heller Bertalan,Attila Bilik,László Bille,Chisko Blanco,Alex Bokhari,Josep Boladeras,Viktor Boldizsár,Jorge Bretón,Bonnie Briggs,Kerry Brown,Juan Bueno,Roman Bugovskiy,José Burgos Sologuren,Donát Bánkuti,László Bánszki,Dániel Bérces,Zoltán Bók,Jesse Cain,Gabe Camacho,Roberto Campos,Bruce Carothers,David Catalán,Carlos Cañal,Tim Christie,John Clisham,Barney Coates,David Coello,Adam Coles,Jimmy Cox Jr.,Attila Csoboth,John Curran,Bence Czeh,Máté Czinder,Ádám Czonev,Adam Dale,Krisztián Demeter,Dhamarata Dhiensuwana,Michael DiGiovanni,Balázs Dobó,Alan Downs,Keith Dunkerley,Mark Epstein,Roberto Escudero,Ibon Esparza,Márton F. Tóth,Péter Faludi,Bence Faragó,Dániel Farkas,Dániel Farkas,Zsolt Farkas,Gonzalo Fernández de la Vega,Julio Fernández Santa,Adrián Fernández,György Filip,Ádám Fillenz,Roland Fodor,Peter Fort,Shawn Fossen,Micky Froehlich,Raquel Rodríguez Frías,András Féniász,Norbert Földi,Javi G. Marinero,Krisztián Galanics,Gustavo García Sierra,Javi García,Balázs Gellén,Fernando Gil G.,Eduardo González Mon,Alex González,Ben D. Griffith Jr.,Daniel Guirles Alda,Nándor Gulyás,Tibor Gulyás,Ákos Gulyás,Almási Gábor,Scott Hatley,Matt Hawkins,Kim Heath,Dénes Herceg,Tamas Hevizi,Jason Hindman,Colm Hogan,Krisztián Horváth,Tom Howard,Robert Howie,Ben Howlett,James Hughes,Larry Hurt,Bogdan Iofciulescu,Steve Irwin,Banga István,Víctor Jiménez Aparicio,Zoltán Jánossa,Kiss József,Bence Karácsondi,Vilmos Keszler,György Gábor Kiss,András Kollmann,Attila Kolozs,Márk Komáromi,Attila Korponai,Emil Kovács,János Kovács,Nagy Krisztián,Ferenc Krámli,Attila Kárpáti,King Lanaux,Brad Larner,Dan LeCuyer,Chris Yestin Lee,Jonathan Maurice Lee,Patrick Linn,Kristóf Lánczos,Aarón López,Elías M. Félix,Sergio Mantecón,Laura Martínez,Paul Mihai Mateias,Tamás Matolcsy,Gonzalo Mañana,Bruce McCleery,Douglas McCormick,Christophor McGovern,Christopher TJ McGuire,Felix Merinda,Esther Mestres,Guy Micheletti,Diósy Mihály,László Mihály,Eric Mikhaelides,Courtney Marie Miller,Natalia Minguela,Duncan More,Guillermo Moreno Garcia,Sergio Morilla,Mic Mueller,Oriol Murcia,Adam Murray,Bankhardt Máté,Imanol Nabea,Alex Narváez,Csaba Nemesházi,Tibor Novák,Attila Négyessy,Zoltan Aron Odor,Iñigo Olea,Francesc Olivé,Márk Oláh,Anita Oravecz,Péter Orosz,Krisztián Paluch,József Tibor Pap,Ferran Parera,Jay Patel,Dávid Perlaki,Daniel Pershing,Raúl Peña,Toby Plaskitt,György Posztos,Clara Pozas,Sturm Pál,Máté Pálla,Kristóf Párdányi,Diego Pérez Hurtado,Balázs Péter,Marek Radolf,Marci Ragályi,Sean Roberts,José Luis Rodríguez,Natalia Ruiz Guillamón,Xavi Ruiz,Scott Russell,Béla Rácz,Hiram Ríos,Víctor Sarasa,Gabor Schmidt,John Charles Schneider,Zoltán Schrammel,Bálint Seress,Karina Silva,Susana Siscart,John Skotchdopole,Chris Sol,Jon Solana,Nacho Solera,Edgar Solé,Roger Spain,Ádám Stankovits,Hopper Stone,Chris Summers,Pablo Suárez Fernández,Diego Suárez,Bálint Svigruha,Andrew Sykes,Izabella Szabadkai,György Szeljak,Attila Szilágyi,Attila Szûcs,Ana Sánchez Tejera,Meritxell Sánchez,Virgil Tatu,Joshua D. Thatcher,Máté Tibai,Badonics Titusz,Bence Barnabas Tobik,Máté Tollay,Nicholas Turner,Ryan Turner,Martin Twine,Dániel Tóth,Barnabás Ungár,Adam Varadi,Peter Varnai,Gergo Vasari,Dávid Vidács,Daniel Vilar,Gareth Viner,John Warner,James D. Wickman,Dave Wightman,Greg Wilson,Brian Woronec,Dávid Zih,Adam Skardelli
Casting Department Mar Clar,Andrés Cuenca,Marton Dancz,Rou Díaz Prieto,Dulcie Jones,Kara Lipson,Zsolt Ferenc Maier,Mindy Marin,Elvira Morales,Yaël Moreno,Georgia Fleury Reynolds,Alex c Rivera,Eliseo Ruiz,Peter Simko,Georgia Simon,Lucinda Syson,Zsuzsa Tóth,Veronika Varjasi,Natasha Vincent,Anabel Vázquez,Alejandro Álvarez
Costume and Wardrobe Department Jeanette Apel,Brian Bachman,Danielle Baker,Király Balázs,Javier Bernal Belchí,Amelia Bianchi,Barbara Bibiloni,Eszter Bognár,Andrea Bordacs,Tom Caddy,Kyle Callanan,Carlos Calvo de Mora,Lara Campbell,Imogene Chayes,María Checa,Angel Concepcion,David Craig,Libby Dempster,Nora Gondocs,Wendy J. Greiner,Agnes Grzybowski,Marta Margo Gómez Vidal,Belén Hernández Sánchez,Eszter Holler,Zoltán Horváth,Rita Jakab,Brigitta Katona,Lilla Kleininger,Eva Magyar,Marina Marit,Mariola Martinez,Mar Marín,Arieana Tate Mussenden,Christopher Oroza,Zsolt Paráda,Rose-Marie Salmon,Carolina Sapina,Laura Schneemann,Rebeca Sola,Erik Spangler,Csaba Toth,Mátyás Tóth,Cristina Ureña,Réka Vitényi,Rachael Webb-Crozier
Editorial Department Jeff Bauer,Beau Cardall,Paul Carlin,Matthew G. Carson,Jim Eberle,Emily Faw,Ryan-Marquis Gali,Thomas Harkey,Mark Jones,Gary Lam,Carl S.G. Moore,Nick Nassif,Shane O Connor,Amy Pawlowski,Jason Sinclair,Tim Stipan,Brian Zwiener,Remy Bonett,Peter Cromwell,Valance Eisleben,Oliver Farkas,Richard Flores Jr.,Cassandra Howland,Borna Jafari,Adam Jurkovich,Christopher McDonald,Szabó Máté,Lauren Orlowski,Ryan Shovey,Anna Stalter
Location Management Pedro Tate Aráez,Ali Adilamin Al-Nashi,Julian Araez,Alberto Barrios Barcia,Chris Baugh,Joaco Cabana,Ivan Antonio Cabanillas Vozmediano,Nicolás Cardozo Basteiro,María Castillo Armas,Marcos Chanca,Zsigmond Cholnoky,Simon Crook,Tóth Daniel,Zsolt Dobák,Tamás Ferenci,Alberto Fernández,Ricardo Ferrari,Karim Ferrero,Bálint Forgács,Marc Fàbrega,Marta García Fernández-Pacheco,James Gierman,Rubén Gundín,László Gyenes Jr.,Rubén Gómez,Gabor Hege Hegedus,Balázs Horváth,Máryon Kesztheyi,Ted Kim,Ferenc Kondor,Irene Del Campo Lopez,Teresa S. Maestre,Mattheus Makowsky,Irene Manrique Matin,Hideg István Megyer,Iván Merkert,Zsolt Molnar,Antonio Garcia Navarro,Nick Oliver,István Papp,Szabolcs Pogány,Maria Roman,Ara Romero Moreno,Leigh Romero,Vilmos Romvári,Teresa Rosado,Mario Santa Cruz,Nico Santavicca,Eva M. Schroeder,Juan Terán,Balázs Tóth,Bence Tóth,Sándor Vas,Shane Vazquez,Miguel Ángel Villanueva,Viktor Zsebók,Ferenc Újvári,Martín Alaminos,Alberto Barrios Barcia,János Cserven,Christopher Kusiak,Futo Laszlo,Scott Allen Logan,Jaime Maellas,Manel Manteca,Enrique Martín Guadamuro,Sofia Ochoa,Santos Paoletti-Boville,Jaime Polo,Shane Vazquez,Andras Viz
Music Department Shwan Askari,Sara Barone,Michael K. Bauer,Jonathan Beard,Philippe Briand,Sandy Cameron,Blake Cooper,Antonio Di Iorio,Abderraouf Djeffel,Chris Fogel,Kevin Globerman,Benjamin Joe Hayden,Luanne Homzy,Benjamin Jacobson,Alex Klingle,Kevin Kumar,Brandon Lau,Erich Lee,Songa Lee,Pablo Lopez,Jeff MacDonald,Tasnim Mahbub,Lucia Micarelli,James Murray,Hannah Parrott,Conrad Pope,Ben Powell,Erin Michael Rettig,David James Rosen,Peter Rotter,Jarrod Royles-Atkins,Jason Schmid,Jacob Shrum,Steven Silvers,Christopher Still,Jacopo Trifone,Edward Trybek,Henri Wilkinson,Ken Aiso,Sean Barrett,Gevorg Chepchyan,Jordan Cox,Benjamin Hoff,Maxwell Karmazyn,Michael Kaufman,Steven Kofsky,Jonathan Moerschel,Jacob Moreno,Jacob Moss,Gabriel Saban,Jamie Thierman,Robert Wolf
Script and Continuity Department Paula Casarin,Eric Gruber,Andrea Trigo,Martina Vazzoler,Gabriella Winkler,Dóra Sárközi
Transportation Department Csaba Bagossy,Miguel Basurama,István Bognár,Timothy Bouslaugh,Simao Braz Lopes,Natalia Sánchez Calvo,Thais del Mar,Richard Fábrega,Noe González,Helena Guzmán,Charles Heidet,Richard Holmes,Darren Holvey,Miklós Horvát,Leon Keegan,Claudia Kossik,Sonia Parada,Jr. Sandor Paradi,Ashley Jade Parkes,Sergio Peralta,Bánó Péter,Jaume Quiles,Lafuente Perea Rafael,Antonio Ramón,Diego Rodríguez Lobalzo,Adrian Diaz Such,Zoltán Szepesi,Gábor Szénási,Alejandro Torres García,Vince Tupai,Paul Wambach,Oti Yebra,Miguel García Morales,Jordi Nebot,Rodrigo Perea
Additional Crew Martín Alaminos,Simon Andrews,Kassandra Arko,Cristina Armario,Darien Asian,John B. Austin,Allison Avery Jordan,Paty Avila,Luis Ayuso,Rafael Ayuso,Nedda Azizian,Laboszki Balazs,Camila Barberis,Csilla Bedi,Matt Bell,Daniel Benjamin,Lisa Birch,Matthew Blain,Kevin Blood,Sam Boardman,Israel Bodero,Dave Booys,Ági Bornemissza,János Boros,Marc Bortz,Anna Boglarka Botka,Amanda Boyd,Amanda Brand,Azu Burdeos,Oszkár Bócsik,Ivan Antonio Cabanillas Vozmediano,James Cameron,Sam Carmichael,Jussilinho Ángel Castro,Sara Chaisson,Beverly Cole,Michael Coleman,Carolina Cosmen,Peter Cseri,María Cuenca,Jeli Daniella,Viktor de Hegyessy,Terri Depaolo,Jose Maria Diaz,John Doherty,Marilyn Dozer-Chaney,Christina Dunlop,Henrietta Dörgö,Annicka Ekvall,Marie Elder,Csilla Elek,Dániel Erdélyi,Dave Evans,FeTa Felkai,Juanito Fernández,Nicole Flowers,Jay Floyd,Kenan Jerome Floyd,Heather Fortin,Anouk Frösch,Jess Gamble,Aser García Rada,Evan Godfrey,Ade Gorst,Sandra Granero,Dave Green,Shannon Griffith,Alberto Gutierrez Gonzalez,Attila Gyurkó,Peter Harcourt,Zack Hardy,Rob Hoey,Josefine Holmberg,Jason Horwood,Gyöngyi Tövök Istvanne,Amanda Lee Jacoby,Adam Jaklics,Pablo Jiménez,Alyssa Joseph,Bence Juhász,Camille Jun,Kathleen Keller,Neil Kellerhouse,Owen Keys,Ferenc Kondor,Laura Zsofia Kotz,Norbert Kroó,Ágnes Kubikné Siroki,László Kálmáncsi,Julia Lawton,René León,Magnus Lygdback,Rozsnyai Mariann,Ian Richard Marshall,Colin McDaid,Bliss McDonald,Yesika Mena,Dániel Mertz,Tara Mews,Ben Michael,Stewart Scott Mitchell,Viktor Mitev,Sara López-Rosado Molero,Antonio Molina,Gábor Molnár,Norma Morales,Bárbara Morelos-Zaragoza,Steven Moth,Szabó Máté,Norbi Nagy,Róbert Nagy,Richard Neale,Jack Nevils,Shaun O Banion,Vincent Parker,Mario Parra Barba,Malcolm Pearce,Alejandro Perez,Nayra Petrini,Joe Petényi,Maggie Phelan,Philip Pickford,Janos Prihoda,Diána Pálfalvi,Dieter Rauter,Joshua Ravetch,Nancy Reid,Rosa Maria Rodriguez Botia,David M. Rodriguez,Luis Rodriguez,Daniel Rogers,Amanda Rolo,Gigi Romero,Ricardo Ron Pérez,Cynthia Ruiz,Juani Ruiz,Lorenzo Rusin,Chandler Sant,Matt Sargent,Evelin Lina Schindler,Dee Schuka,Dave Shaw,Mackie Shilstone,Erik Singer,Joss Skottowe,Konstantin Smola,Zsolt Soltész,Boglárka Szabó,Johanna Szalai,Péter Szántó,Uxue Sáenz,Victorine Tamafo,Wisinger Tamás,Kinga Trimmel,Kolos Trimmel,Jodi Tripi,Violeta Tudela,Michael N. Turner,Tamas Urhegyi,Ángel Villarroel,Walter von Huene,Emõke Vágási,Nik Wilkerson,Chris Winn,Eric Winn,Chris Youngless,Patrick Zapata,Yaroslavna Artamonova,Will Banks,Lisa Birch,Veronika Bojtos,Martin Burns,Annie Bydlon,Giles Dumper,Nuria Hernando,Luis Montalvo,Dave Shaw
Thanks Brett Leonard
Genres Action, Adventure, Sci-Fi
Companies Paramount Pictures, Skydance Media, Twentieth Century Fox
Countries USA, Spain, Hungary
Languages English, Spanish
ContentRating R
ImDbRating 6.2
ImDbRatingVotes 176367
MetacriticRating 54
Keywords time travel,sequel,robot,terminator,mexico