
James Cameron wrote, produced, and directed Terminator 2: Judgement Day after announcing a 1991 release date. The movie was put together at breakneck speed, and the theatrical prints were delivered to theaters only the night before opening day. Now, if you recall, T2 had some pretty innovative special effects, especially the shapeshifting T-1000 that melted and reformed at will.
Industrial Light & Magic only had about a dozen employees at the time, so the call went out to hire plenty of effects people. They were given the storyboards that showed how Cameron imagined the T-1000 passing through prison bars. They did not know how to do that. CGI was in its infancy, and the team figured they would have to spend millions on computers and storage to get it done. And they only had ten months. They did have the software that created the creature in The Abyss, but how would they transfer those tools to work with a real human? They ended up developing an early version of motion capture by drawing a grid on actor Robert Patrick's body and rotoscoping it. And that was just one of the problems they had to solve with 1990 technology. Read an oral history of how it all came to be from the effects team of the movie Terminator 2: Judgement Day. -via Metafilter












