'Avatar's James Cameron Makes Controversial Statement About Using AI in Movies – ryan
James Cameron
has previously had a strong stance against the use of AI in movies, but has seemingly started to crumble a little under the weight of the need to cut costs in the world of movie-making. While the director has made it clear that the use of AI should not impact the jobs of the millions of workers in the entertainment industry, he has been branded a hypocrite for seeming to suggest he is in favor of the implementation of the thing that his Terminator movies suggested could one day destroy the human race.
Cameron appeared on the Boz to the Future podcast, where he revealed that he believes blockbuster movies will only continue to thrive if filmmakers find a way to “cut the cost of (VFX) in half.” It seems that, for Cameron, this involves trying to work out a way of incorporating AI into the process while trying to keep all crew members on the books. He said:
“In the old days, I would have founded a company to figure it out. I’ve learned maybe that’s not the best way to do it. So I thought, all right, I’ll join the board of a good, competitive company that’s got a good track record. My goal was not necessarily make a sh-t pile of money. The goal was to understand the space, to understand what’s on the minds of the developers. What are they targeting? What’s their development cycle? How much resources you have to throw at it to create a new model that does a purpose-built thing, and my goal was to try to integrate it into a VFX workflow.”
Related
James Cameron Shared the Real Meaning of ‘Terminator 2: Judgment Day’
James Cameron has detailed how the ‘Terminator’ franchise is all about the police, the LAPD, and how we dehumanize each other through violence.
Cameron was referring to his decision to join the board of directors for Stability AI, the company responsible for the text to image company Stable Diffusion. While the director still stands by his belief that AI will not be able to effectively replace people in many parts of the process, he now believes there are ways it can be incorporated.
James Cameron Wants AI To Speed Up Processes Without Human Cost
When anyone mentions AI being used in movies, there is instant outcry. Whether it is a small image at the back of a shot, or a movie poster, there are more and more instances of AI creeping into the movie-making process, and it doesn’t look like Cameron is going to be one of the people necessarily stopping it. He continued:
“And it’s not just hypothetical. If we want to continue to see the kinds of movies that I’ve always loved and that I like to make and that I will go to see — Dune, Dune: Part Two, or one of my films or big effects-heavy, CG-heavy films — we’ve got to figure out how to cut the cost of that in half. Now that’s not about laying off half the staff at the effects company. That’s about doubling their speed to completion on a given shot, so your cadence is faster and your throughput cycle is faster, and artists get to move on and do other cool things and then other cool things, right? That’s my sort of vision for that.”
However, despite his comments drawing backlash, in the end, the filmmaker behind three of the most profitable movies of all time still doesn’t want to see AI simply being used to replicate the work of others, and doesn’t believe it will come close to replacing people anytime soon. Noting that the idea of someone typing “in the style of James Cameron” into a chatbot prompt makes him “queasy,” he added:
“I aspire to be in the style of Ridley Scott, in the style of Stanley Kubrick. That’s my text prompt that runs in my head as a filmmaker,” Cameron said. “In the style of George Miller: Wide Lens, low, hauling ass, coming up into a tight close up. Yeah, I want to do that. I know my influences. Everybody knows their influences.”
Social media users were their usual brutal selves when it came to responding to Cameron’s AI U-turn. One user on X blasted, “You literally wrote and directed 2 movies showing the consequences of humanity putting their faith in AI. You people are the absolute worst.” Another followed up with, “Why is James Cameron defending this awful AI upscaling for his films? I thought only people in the comments of youtube shorts thought this kind of upscaling looks good.” Naturally, there are those who believe AI has a place in the future of movies, and those who believe it should never be used. It seems that Cameron is one of those who is slightly changing where his heart and head lie on the matter.
Source: Boz to the Future
James Cameron
- Birthname
-
James Francis Cameron
- Birthdate
-
August 16, 1954
Bio
From the moment Stanley Kubrick s 2001 A Space Odyssey was introduced to the eyes of the young James Cameron the director screenwriter and producer hasn t been able to keep his mind off of filmmaking The Hollywood filmmaker has written directed and produced many successful feature films including Terminator Titanic and Aliens which show what dreams are made of James Cameron was born in Kapuskasing Ontario Canada in 1954 but grew up in Chippawa a small town just outside of Niagara Falls Ontario where demanding disciplinarian parents with whom he developed the creative energy and tireless work ethic raised him His father Phillip Cameron was an electrical engineer and his mother Shirley Cameron was an artist She encouraged her son to paint and even helped arrange an exhibition for him at a local gallery The young natural leader organized his playmates in such adventurous endeavors as building a functional catapult that pitched boulders large enough to make impact craters on another occasion he and his cohorts created a miniature diving vessel to send mice to the bottom of Niagara River In high school he wrote sci fi stories and fantasized a lot instead of doing his homework An avid reader of science fiction since childhood he was fifteen when he saw Stanley Kubrick s visionary film 2001 A Space Odyssey for the first time He became fascinated with the whole motion picture process he subsequently watched the film ten times As soon as I saw that I knew I wanted to be a filmmaker explained Cameron It hit me on a lot of different levels I just couldn t figure out how he did all that stuff and I just had to learn And learn he did grabbing his father s Super 8 camera attempting to direct his own movies Not only did Cameron desperately try to understand how motion pictures were made but also he wrote sci fi stories and fantasized a lot It was actually during a biology class in high school that Cameron wrote a short story which would later become the movie The Abyss Due to his father s job opportunities the family moved to Orange County The excited teen asked his father Los Angeles isn t that somewhere near Hollywood However the opportunities in Orange County were limited especially since Cameron didn t have a driver s license From a pragmatic standpoint I could have been in Montana There is no film industry in Orange County and since I didn t have a driver s license it made Hollywood as far away as another state I couldn t see myself as a future film director those people were somehow born into it Little kids from a small town in Canada didn t get to direct movies The dream of becoming a director seemed unrealistic as the young Cameron didn t believe it was possible I couldn t see myself as a future film director In fact there was a definite feeling on my part that those people were somehow born into it almost like a caste system Little kids from a small town in Canada didn t get to direct movies Enrolling at a nearby college California State University at Fullerton Cameron decided to study physics I liked science and I thought I might want to be a marine biologist or physicist But I also liked to write so I was pulled in a lot of different directions I liked the idea of an ocean even though I d never seen or been in one I loved the idea of being in another world and anything that could transport me to another world is what I was interested in He made the grades yet still realized that science was not a field of interest he wanted to pursue he switched his major to English and began studying literature for a while Later making the decision that either way he would not be happy he decided to drop out Taking up several jobs such as working in a machine shop being a truck driver a school bus driver painting pictures he continued to write at night The next pivotal juncture in Cameron s evolution as a filmmaker came in 1977 when he saw Star Wars for the first time It was exactly the movie he had dreamed of making since watching 2001 A Space Odyssey and it inspired him to finally reach out for the dream It occurred to him that the possibility of integrating his interests in science and art were possible due to the book Screenplay which encouraged himself and two friends to create a ten minute script together They raised the money to shoot it in 35mm and rented a camera lenses the film stocks and a studio To understand how to operate the camera they simply dismantled it and spent the first half day of the shoot just trying to figure out how to get it running When it came to the special effects area Cameron explains that he was completely self taught in special effects I d go down to the USC library and pull any theses that graduate students had written about optical printing or front screen projection or dye transfers anything that related to film technology if they d let me photocopy it I would If not I d make notes As the future filmmaker continued to educate himself in the techniques he landed a job as a miniature model maker at the Roger Corman Studios Making fast low budget productions Cameron was able to pick up the pace efficiently and effectively moving up his ranking within the studio soon working as an art director in the sci fi movie Battle Beyond the Stars 1980 and he did special effects work design and direction on John Carpenter s Escape from New York 1981 He consulted on the design of Android 1981 and he made movie history when he acted as production designer on the world renowned Galaxy of Terror 1981 At the time Cameron knew he was involved in making the top movies but he was still thrilled to be a part of a team where he could be involved with the creation of a movie During this time Cameron became so obsessed and driven by his career achievements that his personal life had to take a back seat thus ending his first marriage Cameron finally got his big break in 1981 when he got his first shot at directing a film entitled Piranha II The Spawning Italian producer Assonitis was determined to produce a sequel to the original Piranha film In an effort to save money and have complete control over the film s direction the inexperienced Cameron was chosen However Assonitis and Cameron just ended up butting heads by the time the movie s release came around The movie was to be produced on Jamaica but when Cameron arrived at the studio he discovered that his crew was comprised primarily of Italians who spoke no English and that the project was under financed I was fired after three weeks as the producer of the film really wanted to be a director that s why it starts off with intense scenes and ends up with topless women running around on a yacht The movie of course was terrible After being given the red light by Assonitis for editing the disaster flick Cameron desiring to edit his own flawed masterpiece broke into the editing room with a plastic credit card He taught himself to use the unfamiliar Italian editing equipment and secretly re cut the entire movie Assonitis continued to pester Cameron about the lousy shooting and editing Cameron under duress in a feverish comatose stage had a nightmare about an invisible robot hit man sent from the future to kill him So he started to work on the project and his nightmare bloomed into the script which would catapult his filming career The Terminator 1984 While waiting for Terminator to be financed Cameron accepted two writing jobs Cameron worked on the screenplay of Rambo First Blood Part 2 1985 with Sylvester Stallone and Aliens 1986 the sequel to the 1979 science fiction classic Alien Cameron was positive that the dream he had earlier had potential so he contacted action producer Gale Anne Hurd He sold her the script for one dollar on condition he be allowed to direct the movie and direct it his way The result was a low budget movie made on a mind bogglingly minimal budget of 6 5 which became a huge success The Terminator received international acclaim and recognition appearing in Time magazine s Top Ten best list grossing over 80 million worldwide This movie did not only score a huge financial victory and firmly established Cameron s reputation as both a screenwriter and director of undeniable talent but it launched Arnold Schwarzenegger s career as well After The Terminator Cameron was asked to direct the second Aliens movie of which he had already written the script in a three month period Cameron demanded that Gale Anne Hurd be brought on board as a producer Before shooting Aliens James Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd became involved both professionally and romantically and after a short courtship were wed The movie Aliens was well received by the audience and critics alike with its riveting special effects a well written script and an Oscar worthy performance from Sigourney Weaver The movie received seven Academy Award nominations winning the Oscar for Best Visual Effects and Best Sound Effects The film became the most successful R rated film ever grossing approximately 180 million worldwide Rambo 2 grossed over 250 million globally making it an international mega hit For Aliens Cameron received NATO s award as director of the year A buzz began to circulate around Hollywood concerning this up and coming director Everybody who was anybody wanted to befriend and work alongside Cameron on his next project However instead of settling for the all mighty dollar deals to direct other people s stories Cameron decided to put all of his talents into his own work The Abyss 1989 was born The Abyss would later set new standards for underwater shooting The crew along with Cameron had to design and create most of the gear worn by the actors which was no small feat Furthermore the entire movie was exhaustingly time consuming and expensive and post production ended up delayed because of some of the difficult effects shots that were to be in the movie which were later edited out The film took 18 months to complete The movie received four Academy Award nominations winning an Oscar for the Best Visual Effects and grossing 90 million worldwide Even though Cameron was getting the opportunity to excel even further professionally his personal life was yet again paying the price Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd were departing ways during the production and ended up divorcing right after the movie was finished Cameron went on to produce the very successful movie and now TBS Movies for Guys who like movies classic Point Break 1991 Kathryn Bigelow whom Cameron married that very same year the movie was released directed the movie Point Break made over 100 million worldwide and topped the video rental charts for five weeks straight The movie is still just as popular today His involvement with The Abyss gave birth to the famous morphing effect Cameron would use to create the liquid metal T 1000 for his next mega project the hugely profitable Terminator 2 Judgment Day Cameron capitalized on the success of T 1000 by launching his own special effects company Digital Domain in collaboration with effects wizard Stan Winston and corporate giant IBM Terminator 2 Judgment Day budget spiraled out of control and became the most expensive movie of all time but it was also the most profitable movie James Cameron has worked on grossing 500 million During this time he divorced his wife Kathryn Bigelow and got hooked up with Linda Hamilton the female star from the terminator movies He also formed his own production company Lightstorm Entertainment and inked an exclusive deal with Fox to finance his next three movies but he exceeded the limit of Fox s funding on each of his next two films T2 received six Academy Award nominations bringing home four in Best Makeup Sound Visual Effects and Sound Effects Editing It also received the Ray Bradbury Award for Dramatic Screenwriting five Saturn Awards from the Academy of Science Fiction six MTV Movie Awards and the People s Choice Award As a result of their union Linda Hamilton gave birth to a baby girl Josephine Archer in 1984 During this time period Cameron wrote produced and directed the action comedy True Lies America s version of the James Bond icon which grossed a cool 365 million in worldwide box office The following year while he was in pre production of his next movie Titanic Lightstorm Entertainment presented Strange Days directed by Kathryn Bigelow from a screenplay by James Cameron and Jay Cocks Unfortunately it didn t become the great success it deserved The most recognizable and successful piece of film Cameron has ever worked on work up to that point is the retold story of Titanic Cameron spent most of his time at the bottom of the Atlantic to see the Titanic s wreckage visiting it a total of twelve times It was sort of like going to Mecca first and getting religion We went there with very specific objectives and I took two things away from the experience explained Cameron Working around the wreck for so much time you get such a strong sense of the profound sadness and injustice of it and the message of it You think There probably aren t going to be many filmmakers who go to Titanic There may never be another one maybe a documentarian So it sort of becomes a great mantle of responsibility to convey the emotional message of it to do that part of it right too Taking charge of the responsibility Cameron cast a spectacular cast many of their features resembled the real life crew Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet were cast as the leading roles which the story plot revolved around the love of the two Cameron served as director producer and editor on the film and due to the film s production 200 million tremendously exceeding its budget Cameron forfeited his fees except the 1 5 million received for the screenplay When production costs for Titanic blew well past expectations Cameron gave back his director s fee essentially working for free with the idea that he would profit only if the movie actually rang the cash registers as of course it did Titanic opened in the US on December 19 1997 and took in approximately 25 5 million in its first weekend The movie quickly replaced George Lucas s Star Wars as the top grossing film of all time grossing more than a billion dollars worldwide Furthermore the movie later won eleven Oscars tying it with the unforgettable movie Ben Hurr It won Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director Cameron truly became King of the World When asked about becoming a film director by inspiring directors Cameron is prepared I tell them that no two people will ever do it the same way and there is nothing I can say that will help you Whatever your talents are whatever your strengths and weaknesses you have to find the path that s going to work for you The film industry is about saying no to people and inherently you cannot take no for an answer In recognition of his contributions to underwater filming and remote vehicle technology the University of Southampton awarded Cameron the honorary degree of Doctor of the University Cameron received his degree in person at the graduation ceremony in July 2004 His latest movie Avatar topped Titanic and became the highest grossing movie of all time Cameron doesn t create a film because he is trying to pander to the audience He does it because he is passionate about it He s keenly aware that his passions must convert into something commercial but he doesn t place commerce ahead of passion Passion is palpable Audiences can feel it So is pandering And audiences can feel that too Even though James Cameron has been nominated for and won countless awards he still strives to be a director truly committed to his work as only a perfectionist could Perhaps that is the reason why he is so renowned globally for he can create new genres of films and stretch our imagination to places where we have never gone before
James Cameron
has previously had a strong stance against the use of AI in movies, but has seemingly started to crumble a little under the weight of the need to cut costs in the world of movie-making. While the director has made it clear that the use of AI should not impact the jobs of the millions of workers in the entertainment industry, he has been branded a hypocrite for seeming to suggest he is in favor of the implementation of the thing that his Terminator movies suggested could one day destroy the human race.
Cameron appeared on the Boz to the Future podcast, where he revealed that he believes blockbuster movies will only continue to thrive if filmmakers find a way to “cut the cost of (VFX) in half.” It seems that, for Cameron, this involves trying to work out a way of incorporating AI into the process while trying to keep all crew members on the books. He said:
“In the old days, I would have founded a company to figure it out. I’ve learned maybe that’s not the best way to do it. So I thought, all right, I’ll join the board of a good, competitive company that’s got a good track record. My goal was not necessarily make a sh-t pile of money. The goal was to understand the space, to understand what’s on the minds of the developers. What are they targeting? What’s their development cycle? How much resources you have to throw at it to create a new model that does a purpose-built thing, and my goal was to try to integrate it into a VFX workflow.”
Related
James Cameron Shared the Real Meaning of ‘Terminator 2: Judgment Day’
James Cameron has detailed how the ‘Terminator’ franchise is all about the police, the LAPD, and how we dehumanize each other through violence.
Cameron was referring to his decision to join the board of directors for Stability AI, the company responsible for the text to image company Stable Diffusion. While the director still stands by his belief that AI will not be able to effectively replace people in many parts of the process, he now believes there are ways it can be incorporated.
James Cameron Wants AI To Speed Up Processes Without Human Cost
When anyone mentions AI being used in movies, there is instant outcry. Whether it is a small image at the back of a shot, or a movie poster, there are more and more instances of AI creeping into the movie-making process, and it doesn’t look like Cameron is going to be one of the people necessarily stopping it. He continued:
“And it’s not just hypothetical. If we want to continue to see the kinds of movies that I’ve always loved and that I like to make and that I will go to see — Dune, Dune: Part Two, or one of my films or big effects-heavy, CG-heavy films — we’ve got to figure out how to cut the cost of that in half. Now that’s not about laying off half the staff at the effects company. That’s about doubling their speed to completion on a given shot, so your cadence is faster and your throughput cycle is faster, and artists get to move on and do other cool things and then other cool things, right? That’s my sort of vision for that.”
However, despite his comments drawing backlash, in the end, the filmmaker behind three of the most profitable movies of all time still doesn’t want to see AI simply being used to replicate the work of others, and doesn’t believe it will come close to replacing people anytime soon. Noting that the idea of someone typing “in the style of James Cameron” into a chatbot prompt makes him “queasy,” he added:
“I aspire to be in the style of Ridley Scott, in the style of Stanley Kubrick. That’s my text prompt that runs in my head as a filmmaker,” Cameron said. “In the style of George Miller: Wide Lens, low, hauling ass, coming up into a tight close up. Yeah, I want to do that. I know my influences. Everybody knows their influences.”
Social media users were their usual brutal selves when it came to responding to Cameron’s AI U-turn. One user on X blasted, “You literally wrote and directed 2 movies showing the consequences of humanity putting their faith in AI. You people are the absolute worst.” Another followed up with, “Why is James Cameron defending this awful AI upscaling for his films? I thought only people in the comments of youtube shorts thought this kind of upscaling looks good.” Naturally, there are those who believe AI has a place in the future of movies, and those who believe it should never be used. It seems that Cameron is one of those who is slightly changing where his heart and head lie on the matter.
Source: Boz to the Future
James Cameron
- Birthname
-
James Francis Cameron
- Birthdate
-
August 16, 1954
Bio
From the moment Stanley Kubrick s 2001 A Space Odyssey was introduced to the eyes of the young James Cameron the director screenwriter and producer hasn t been able to keep his mind off of filmmaking The Hollywood filmmaker has written directed and produced many successful feature films including Terminator Titanic and Aliens which show what dreams are made of James Cameron was born in Kapuskasing Ontario Canada in 1954 but grew up in Chippawa a small town just outside of Niagara Falls Ontario where demanding disciplinarian parents with whom he developed the creative energy and tireless work ethic raised him His father Phillip Cameron was an electrical engineer and his mother Shirley Cameron was an artist She encouraged her son to paint and even helped arrange an exhibition for him at a local gallery The young natural leader organized his playmates in such adventurous endeavors as building a functional catapult that pitched boulders large enough to make impact craters on another occasion he and his cohorts created a miniature diving vessel to send mice to the bottom of Niagara River In high school he wrote sci fi stories and fantasized a lot instead of doing his homework An avid reader of science fiction since childhood he was fifteen when he saw Stanley Kubrick s visionary film 2001 A Space Odyssey for the first time He became fascinated with the whole motion picture process he subsequently watched the film ten times As soon as I saw that I knew I wanted to be a filmmaker explained Cameron It hit me on a lot of different levels I just couldn t figure out how he did all that stuff and I just had to learn And learn he did grabbing his father s Super 8 camera attempting to direct his own movies Not only did Cameron desperately try to understand how motion pictures were made but also he wrote sci fi stories and fantasized a lot It was actually during a biology class in high school that Cameron wrote a short story which would later become the movie The Abyss Due to his father s job opportunities the family moved to Orange County The excited teen asked his father Los Angeles isn t that somewhere near Hollywood However the opportunities in Orange County were limited especially since Cameron didn t have a driver s license From a pragmatic standpoint I could have been in Montana There is no film industry in Orange County and since I didn t have a driver s license it made Hollywood as far away as another state I couldn t see myself as a future film director those people were somehow born into it Little kids from a small town in Canada didn t get to direct movies The dream of becoming a director seemed unrealistic as the young Cameron didn t believe it was possible I couldn t see myself as a future film director In fact there was a definite feeling on my part that those people were somehow born into it almost like a caste system Little kids from a small town in Canada didn t get to direct movies Enrolling at a nearby college California State University at Fullerton Cameron decided to study physics I liked science and I thought I might want to be a marine biologist or physicist But I also liked to write so I was pulled in a lot of different directions I liked the idea of an ocean even though I d never seen or been in one I loved the idea of being in another world and anything that could transport me to another world is what I was interested in He made the grades yet still realized that science was not a field of interest he wanted to pursue he switched his major to English and began studying literature for a while Later making the decision that either way he would not be happy he decided to drop out Taking up several jobs such as working in a machine shop being a truck driver a school bus driver painting pictures he continued to write at night The next pivotal juncture in Cameron s evolution as a filmmaker came in 1977 when he saw Star Wars for the first time It was exactly the movie he had dreamed of making since watching 2001 A Space Odyssey and it inspired him to finally reach out for the dream It occurred to him that the possibility of integrating his interests in science and art were possible due to the book Screenplay which encouraged himself and two friends to create a ten minute script together They raised the money to shoot it in 35mm and rented a camera lenses the film stocks and a studio To understand how to operate the camera they simply dismantled it and spent the first half day of the shoot just trying to figure out how to get it running When it came to the special effects area Cameron explains that he was completely self taught in special effects I d go down to the USC library and pull any theses that graduate students had written about optical printing or front screen projection or dye transfers anything that related to film technology if they d let me photocopy it I would If not I d make notes As the future filmmaker continued to educate himself in the techniques he landed a job as a miniature model maker at the Roger Corman Studios Making fast low budget productions Cameron was able to pick up the pace efficiently and effectively moving up his ranking within the studio soon working as an art director in the sci fi movie Battle Beyond the Stars 1980 and he did special effects work design and direction on John Carpenter s Escape from New York 1981 He consulted on the design of Android 1981 and he made movie history when he acted as production designer on the world renowned Galaxy of Terror 1981 At the time Cameron knew he was involved in making the top movies but he was still thrilled to be a part of a team where he could be involved with the creation of a movie During this time Cameron became so obsessed and driven by his career achievements that his personal life had to take a back seat thus ending his first marriage Cameron finally got his big break in 1981 when he got his first shot at directing a film entitled Piranha II The Spawning Italian producer Assonitis was determined to produce a sequel to the original Piranha film In an effort to save money and have complete control over the film s direction the inexperienced Cameron was chosen However Assonitis and Cameron just ended up butting heads by the time the movie s release came around The movie was to be produced on Jamaica but when Cameron arrived at the studio he discovered that his crew was comprised primarily of Italians who spoke no English and that the project was under financed I was fired after three weeks as the producer of the film really wanted to be a director that s why it starts off with intense scenes and ends up with topless women running around on a yacht The movie of course was terrible After being given the red light by Assonitis for editing the disaster flick Cameron desiring to edit his own flawed masterpiece broke into the editing room with a plastic credit card He taught himself to use the unfamiliar Italian editing equipment and secretly re cut the entire movie Assonitis continued to pester Cameron about the lousy shooting and editing Cameron under duress in a feverish comatose stage had a nightmare about an invisible robot hit man sent from the future to kill him So he started to work on the project and his nightmare bloomed into the script which would catapult his filming career The Terminator 1984 While waiting for Terminator to be financed Cameron accepted two writing jobs Cameron worked on the screenplay of Rambo First Blood Part 2 1985 with Sylvester Stallone and Aliens 1986 the sequel to the 1979 science fiction classic Alien Cameron was positive that the dream he had earlier had potential so he contacted action producer Gale Anne Hurd He sold her the script for one dollar on condition he be allowed to direct the movie and direct it his way The result was a low budget movie made on a mind bogglingly minimal budget of 6 5 which became a huge success The Terminator received international acclaim and recognition appearing in Time magazine s Top Ten best list grossing over 80 million worldwide This movie did not only score a huge financial victory and firmly established Cameron s reputation as both a screenwriter and director of undeniable talent but it launched Arnold Schwarzenegger s career as well After The Terminator Cameron was asked to direct the second Aliens movie of which he had already written the script in a three month period Cameron demanded that Gale Anne Hurd be brought on board as a producer Before shooting Aliens James Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd became involved both professionally and romantically and after a short courtship were wed The movie Aliens was well received by the audience and critics alike with its riveting special effects a well written script and an Oscar worthy performance from Sigourney Weaver The movie received seven Academy Award nominations winning the Oscar for Best Visual Effects and Best Sound Effects The film became the most successful R rated film ever grossing approximately 180 million worldwide Rambo 2 grossed over 250 million globally making it an international mega hit For Aliens Cameron received NATO s award as director of the year A buzz began to circulate around Hollywood concerning this up and coming director Everybody who was anybody wanted to befriend and work alongside Cameron on his next project However instead of settling for the all mighty dollar deals to direct other people s stories Cameron decided to put all of his talents into his own work The Abyss 1989 was born The Abyss would later set new standards for underwater shooting The crew along with Cameron had to design and create most of the gear worn by the actors which was no small feat Furthermore the entire movie was exhaustingly time consuming and expensive and post production ended up delayed because of some of the difficult effects shots that were to be in the movie which were later edited out The film took 18 months to complete The movie received four Academy Award nominations winning an Oscar for the Best Visual Effects and grossing 90 million worldwide Even though Cameron was getting the opportunity to excel even further professionally his personal life was yet again paying the price Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd were departing ways during the production and ended up divorcing right after the movie was finished Cameron went on to produce the very successful movie and now TBS Movies for Guys who like movies classic Point Break 1991 Kathryn Bigelow whom Cameron married that very same year the movie was released directed the movie Point Break made over 100 million worldwide and topped the video rental charts for five weeks straight The movie is still just as popular today His involvement with The Abyss gave birth to the famous morphing effect Cameron would use to create the liquid metal T 1000 for his next mega project the hugely profitable Terminator 2 Judgment Day Cameron capitalized on the success of T 1000 by launching his own special effects company Digital Domain in collaboration with effects wizard Stan Winston and corporate giant IBM Terminator 2 Judgment Day budget spiraled out of control and became the most expensive movie of all time but it was also the most profitable movie James Cameron has worked on grossing 500 million During this time he divorced his wife Kathryn Bigelow and got hooked up with Linda Hamilton the female star from the terminator movies He also formed his own production company Lightstorm Entertainment and inked an exclusive deal with Fox to finance his next three movies but he exceeded the limit of Fox s funding on each of his next two films T2 received six Academy Award nominations bringing home four in Best Makeup Sound Visual Effects and Sound Effects Editing It also received the Ray Bradbury Award for Dramatic Screenwriting five Saturn Awards from the Academy of Science Fiction six MTV Movie Awards and the People s Choice Award As a result of their union Linda Hamilton gave birth to a baby girl Josephine Archer in 1984 During this time period Cameron wrote produced and directed the action comedy True Lies America s version of the James Bond icon which grossed a cool 365 million in worldwide box office The following year while he was in pre production of his next movie Titanic Lightstorm Entertainment presented Strange Days directed by Kathryn Bigelow from a screenplay by James Cameron and Jay Cocks Unfortunately it didn t become the great success it deserved The most recognizable and successful piece of film Cameron has ever worked on work up to that point is the retold story of Titanic Cameron spent most of his time at the bottom of the Atlantic to see the Titanic s wreckage visiting it a total of twelve times It was sort of like going to Mecca first and getting religion We went there with very specific objectives and I took two things away from the experience explained Cameron Working around the wreck for so much time you get such a strong sense of the profound sadness and injustice of it and the message of it You think There probably aren t going to be many filmmakers who go to Titanic There may never be another one maybe a documentarian So it sort of becomes a great mantle of responsibility to convey the emotional message of it to do that part of it right too Taking charge of the responsibility Cameron cast a spectacular cast many of their features resembled the real life crew Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet were cast as the leading roles which the story plot revolved around the love of the two Cameron served as director producer and editor on the film and due to the film s production 200 million tremendously exceeding its budget Cameron forfeited his fees except the 1 5 million received for the screenplay When production costs for Titanic blew well past expectations Cameron gave back his director s fee essentially working for free with the idea that he would profit only if the movie actually rang the cash registers as of course it did Titanic opened in the US on December 19 1997 and took in approximately 25 5 million in its first weekend The movie quickly replaced George Lucas s Star Wars as the top grossing film of all time grossing more than a billion dollars worldwide Furthermore the movie later won eleven Oscars tying it with the unforgettable movie Ben Hurr It won Oscars for Best Picture and Best Director Cameron truly became King of the World When asked about becoming a film director by inspiring directors Cameron is prepared I tell them that no two people will ever do it the same way and there is nothing I can say that will help you Whatever your talents are whatever your strengths and weaknesses you have to find the path that s going to work for you The film industry is about saying no to people and inherently you cannot take no for an answer In recognition of his contributions to underwater filming and remote vehicle technology the University of Southampton awarded Cameron the honorary degree of Doctor of the University Cameron received his degree in person at the graduation ceremony in July 2004 His latest movie Avatar topped Titanic and became the highest grossing movie of all time Cameron doesn t create a film because he is trying to pander to the audience He does it because he is passionate about it He s keenly aware that his passions must convert into something commercial but he doesn t place commerce ahead of passion Passion is palpable Audiences can feel it So is pandering And audiences can feel that too Even though James Cameron has been nominated for and won countless awards he still strives to be a director truly committed to his work as only a perfectionist could Perhaps that is the reason why he is so renowned globally for he can create new genres of films and stretch our imagination to places where we have never gone before