☆ ☆ ☆ ☆
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) – J. Cameron
Until I rewatched The Terminator (1984) at the end of
last year (and Aliens, 1986, at the start of this one), I had forgotten what a
great director of action James Cameron was (having more or less tuned out after
Titanic, Avatar, etc.). So, I guess it
comes as no surprise (in this rewatch) that Terminator 2 plays out like one long
action sequence. This is (of course) a sequel but the original film’s sci-fi
plot with its potentially confusing time-travel elements did not really take
too long to explain to Amon (who missed the first one): AI-robots send a “terminator” (Arnold S.) back
in time to the kill the mother of the future leader of the revolution against
the machines before he is born (and a human also comes back with him, hoping to
protect Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), but ending up fathering the future hero
as well). As T2 begins, we are advised
that another terminator and another protector have come from the future – to the
90s – this time to kill John Connor (Edward Furlong) himself. So, when Arnold appears, naked as before,
seeking clothes, a gun, and a motorcycle, from the local biker bar, we think,
yup, that’s the terminator. Yet, this is
not the same Arnold that we saw in 1984 at the start of his career, more of a
monosyllabic tough guy (“I’ll be back” notwithstanding). Fast forward to 1991
and he’s revealed his comic side and presented a more charismatic face to the
world (beyond just the brawn). So, again no surprise that Arnold plays
John Connor’s protector in this film (reprogrammed by Connor himself in the future)
and the true bad guy, the T-1000 liquid metal terminator model, is played by Robert
Patrick. Patrick needs to kill Connor to stop the revolution but the heroic
trio need to stop not only T-1000 but also Joe Morton from using the remnants
of the Terminator from the first film to engineer the robots of the future who
eventually take over, setting this plot into motion. But the special effects
are really the star here, which is no slight on Hamilton’s buffed up Sarah,
Patrick’s steely singlemindedness, Furlong’s cocky but vulnerable teen, or
Schwarzeneggar’s compelling schtick (“Hasta La Vista, Baby!”). Nevertheless, despite so many minutes given
over to sheer action (and shape-shifting Patrick), by the time we get to the
ending, the film has earned its emotional conclusion (which might have prevented
the opportunity for a sequel, given that the future can change, but you know). You might call this one of the sequels that
tops the original but I do have a fondness for the trashy low-budgetness of the
first.

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