Showing posts with label Arnold Schwarzenegger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arnold Schwarzenegger. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines

 
 
So anybody who saw the end of Terminator 2: Judgement Day was probably thinking to themselves, "How in the name of Kyle Reese' ghost does Arnold come back from that to be in the third movie?" The answer: some things were better left unmade.
John Connor (Nick Stahl) is now his own man after supposedly preventing Skynet and a war with machines from destroying most of humanity. But Connor, like his mother before him, has spent the last several years in paranoia of that future. As you can guess by the movie poster, this rightly so.
Again Skynet has sent an upgraded Terminator assassin, the T-X (Kristanna Loken) to destroy the Resistance of Mankind before it can ever be created and ensure the survival of the computer system that will eventually take over the world. But a new T-101 Terminator (again played by Arnold Schwarzenegger) has arrived on the scene to defend both Connor and another pre-destined war hero Kate Brewster (Claire Danes). These three are the only ones capable of preventing the rise of machines before they fight back against the humans who designed them.
For a franchise with the moral message of "There is no fate but what we make" this movie rewrites drowns the series and its characters into destinies that not only steer them away from the development of previous movies but solely exists for the sake of fan service. It tries to bring the Terminator world into the modern digitally-centred age but seldom comes up with anything creative with what it offers.
Schwarzenegger's performance is thankfully just as good as his last turn at the Terminator character, but the script really tries to make this robot into something he's not. New cast additions Danes and Stahl aren't bad, but they aren't given much development. Whereas the previous movie at least had a strong supporting cast, the movie makes little attempt to hide the fact this whole cast is built around Schwarzenegger. This also doesn't help with our new baddie, the T-X who has little cool factor to her name. She may have superior CGI, but she's definitely no T-1000.
For a movie that's set on the verge of a nuclear apocalypse, they don't give the audience much to invest in. One solid chase scene will keep your adrenaline at its peak but its fairly early and by the end of the movie you're left with a bittersweet impression at best.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Terminator 2: Judgement Day



Picking up where I left the Terminator marathon (yes, months ago) we revisit the iconic action/sci-fi series that launched the career of the Austrian sensation himself, Arnold Schwarzenegger, by checking out Terminator 2: Judgement Day.
Over a decade has past in movie time since Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) avoided assassination from the cybernetic T-1000, a Terminator sent from the future programmed to kill her, and in doing so, prevent her from giving birth to the saviour of mankind; John Connor. Since then, John (Edward Furlong in his film debut) has grown up in separation from his mother, who has been locked away after being deemed insane for his beliefs about the coming robopocalyse. Turns out John and the rest are in for one huge "I told you so lesson" when not just one, but two Terminators show up to throw their lives back into panic mode. ; one with the mission to protect John and the other ordered to kill him.
Reading this synopsis you might be assuming that this is just rehashing the same plot thread as the predecessor, but this is where James Cameron widens the scale of the story and much more is invested. It's the equivalent of what the movie Aliens (another Cameron sequel) did for Ridley Scott's Alien in terms of developing a larger movie. Here, bigger things are at stake, more lives are put in jeopardy and the tension is nothing short of edge-of-your-seat variety.
Character development especially goes into interesting turns for this film. Somehow they're able to give the T-1000 a character arc, even though he's specifically written to be anything but human underneath. Arnold's not just playing a literal killing machine anymore.
Sarah Connor has also seasoned over the years (quite bitterly in this case) and replaced her frightened scream queen persona from the last movie with the stone-cold pro-active soldier attitude her late beau Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) had in the previous film.
And John, since of course the events of the story essentially revolve around him (though Arnold enthusiasts would say otherwise) finally has a character since the last time we saw him, he was nothing more than a baby bump. He's a snarky, fun-loving hacker that Furlong simply nails in his performance for such a young age. To this day, I still don't know why his career hasn't taken off in a better direction.
This is a movie that best represents the themes of man vs machine and the overall message of "fighting against the future and the future fighting back." Though the marketing already kind of spoils the twist before it happens, I won't be the one to say who the villain truly is in this picture. Just know that not everything is what it seems in Terminator 2: Judgement Day.
Once again, the production quality of the movie is phenomenal under the vision of Cameron, with tightly-knit editing and strong cinematography that is something worth the Hollywood history books. Terminator 2: Judgement Day remains the most viewed installment of the franchise and personally my favourite chapter in the series. I highly recommend the Extreme Edition DVD for home viewing, as it contains a lot of new footage and documentation of Cameron's direction over the movie.
So it can only go downhill from here...