TMC
10-21-2024, 08:04 PM
https://www.empireonline.com/tv/features/terminator-sarah-connor-chronicles-josh-friedman-interview-james-cameron-cancer-cancellation/
by Alex Godfrey
Sarah Connor was dead. Or was she? Well, yes, according to 2003’s Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines – but death can’t compete with TV (or, indeed, 2019’s Dark Fate). It was 2006 when Josh Friedman, who had co-written Steven Spielberg’s War Of The Worlds, was approached by Warner Bros. Television to write what would become The Sarah Connor Chronicles. A series picking up from where James Cameron’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day left off, it followed Sarah (Lena Headey) and her prodigious son John (Thomas Dekker) as they, along with Cameron (Summer Glau), a protector Terminator, continued to battle Skynet and evade murderous cyborg stalkers. Launching in January 2008, it enjoyed two seasons until it was, in April 2009, abruptly… well, terminated.
Fifteen years on, we speak to Friedman (who went on to write on the Avatar films, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes and The Fantastic Four: First Steps) about legacy, cancer, and Shirley Manson disguised as a urinal.
by Alex Godfrey
Sarah Connor was dead. Or was she? Well, yes, according to 2003’s Terminator 3: Rise Of The Machines – but death can’t compete with TV (or, indeed, 2019’s Dark Fate). It was 2006 when Josh Friedman, who had co-written Steven Spielberg’s War Of The Worlds, was approached by Warner Bros. Television to write what would become The Sarah Connor Chronicles. A series picking up from where James Cameron’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day left off, it followed Sarah (Lena Headey) and her prodigious son John (Thomas Dekker) as they, along with Cameron (Summer Glau), a protector Terminator, continued to battle Skynet and evade murderous cyborg stalkers. Launching in January 2008, it enjoyed two seasons until it was, in April 2009, abruptly… well, terminated.
Fifteen years on, we speak to Friedman (who went on to write on the Avatar films, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes and The Fantastic Four: First Steps) about legacy, cancer, and Shirley Manson disguised as a urinal.