

This caused initial cinematographer Dick Bush to be fired after about a month over Creative Differences, to be replaced by Adrian Biddle. While filming in England, he repeatedly clashed with the crew, who considered him a poor substitute for Scott, especially over their practice of taking regular breaks that slowed down production and their taunting of his wife's role as producer. Meanwhile Cameron was involved in writing a draft for Rambo: First Blood Part II, which was heavily modified for the film.Ĭameron next worked on a sequel to Ridley Scott's Alien, a film he was a big fan of. Meanwhile, Ellison noticed the plagiarism and successfully sued for some money and an acknowledgment in the film's credits. A relatively low-budget film at $6.5 million, The Terminator became a success, grossing a total of $78 million worldwide while gathering positive reviews and providing a Breakthrough Hit for the creator and a breakout role for Arnold Schwarzenegger as the titular murderous cyborg. Based on this, he wrote the script for The Terminator, lifting story material from Harlan Ellison's The Outer Limits (1963) stories "Demon with a Glass Hand" and "Soldier." When no production company wanted to let him direct, Cameron and his then-wife Gale Anne Hurd (a producer who also got her start with Corman) persuaded Orion Pictures to distribute the film, with financial backing by Hemdale Film Corporation.
#JAMES CAMERON MOVIE#
After arriving at the studio, he discovered that the movie was under-financed and that a majority of the crew were Italians who couldn't speak English.ĭuring the predictably torturous filming of Piranha Part Two, Cameron had a nightmare about a chrome-plated torso crawling out of a fire. He was hired to do special effects for Piranha Part Two: The Spawning in 1981, but ended up in the director's seat after the first director abandoned the project. He began as a miniature model maker with Roger Corman's studio, and later ended up as special effects director on John Carpenter's Escape from New York. Inspired by a viewing of Star Wars in 1977, he decided to enter the film industry.

After dropping out he took a variety of jobs and wrote in his spare time while learning about filmmaking from reading books and theses at the USC library.
#JAMES CAMERON ARCHIVE#
His first exposure to filmmaking came while he attended the California State University in Fullerton, from where he'd frequently visit the film archive of UCLA. In addition to his remarkable achievements outside of film, Cameron was inarguably one of the most proficient, admired and, above all, successful directors in Hollywood history.James Francis Cameron CC (born August 16, 1954) is a Canadian director, producer and screenwriter famous for the Terminator franchise, Aliens and the blockbusters Titanic (1997) and Avatar, eh? He also has a reputation for being a tyrant on the set of his films, earning him the nickname "Iron Jim", but one certainly can't argue with the results. 2 by Cameron's next film, the 3D sci-fi epic, "Avatar" (2009).

"Titanic" was a seminal event in cinema in terms of size, scope and commercial success, quickly becoming the highest-grossing film of all time until it was bumped to No. Despite his penchant for aliens of the deep and outer space, it was "Titanic" (1997) - a period romance based on the infamous ocean liner tragedy - that cemented Cameron as a director for the ages.

Combining his passion for oceanic exploration and technology with his love of movies, he advanced underwater filmmaking to a remarkable degree. Reteaming with Arnold Schwarzenegger, he proved himself worth the risk with the back-to-back blockbusters, "Terminator 2: Judgment Day" (1991) and "True Lies" (1994). Tales of his volcanic temper on the set of the groundbreaking deep sea adventure "The Abyss" (1989), combined with its astronomical budget and relatively disappointing box-office performance, earned Cameron a reputation as one of Hollywood's most ambitious, but problematic directors. An audacious visionary who developed new film technologies midstream in order to turn his creative visions into reality, director James Cameron was credited with single-handedly resurrecting a once-dead science fiction genre, thanks to the timeless success of "The Terminator" (1984) and "Aliens" (1986).
