Am I wrong in thinking that most terminator fans want to see the future war as shown in T1 in T2? Why not do a band of brothers meets terminator type film or tv series.......
I know I've always wanted that. Oh well dreams are free hey.Am I wrong in thinking that most terminator fans want to see the future war as shown in T1 in T2? Why not do a band of brothers meets terminator type film or tv series.......
Am I wrong in thinking that most terminator fans want to see the future war as shown in T1 in T2? Why not do a band of brothers meets terminator type film or tv series......
'Terminator' was never a 'war movie'. That's what a future-war-movie would be. It's not the worst idea for the Terminator franchise but I have never understood why the fans are so obsessed with it.
James Cameron showed that future in 1-2 minute bursts. It would require a lot more dramatic substance to sustain two hours in a bleak dark hopeless setting. What else is this future movie gonna be centered on? What's the theme? What character issues? "Do that movie we saw in those 1-2 minute bursts!" is not enough to work with.
The 3rd Matrix movie was future machines vs raggedy human rebels. It looked cool in TV commercials & trailer clips. But it sucked as a whole movie.
So just keep remaking Terminator 2 and see how well they do.
Yeah, people don't really want to watch a movie about a war....Oh wait, there are thousands of war movies. Good thing no one went to see that Private Ryan movie, or that Platoon movie.
What they need to do is change the franchise. Turn it around. Make the movie about the future war and the mission to capture the Time Displacement technology. From what I've always gathered from the first movie, that was the mission, not sending Reese back. Sending him back was a last minute idea once they finally got there and learned a terminator had been sent back.
Personally, I think they should just disregard T2 also. None of the sequels (or tv show) make any sense. The machines only had time to send one terminator back before the resistance blew the complex. Reese said "no one else goes through, no one goes back." How did the machines send all these other terminators back? And even if they had time to send (I can't even count how many we've seen) more back, why send an older model back, then at the same time send a newer model, and then even newer models? All of this done before John gets into the complex. Then he arrives, sees they've sent back several, all different models, so he sends Reese, then a reprogrammed Arnold, then another reprogrammed Arnold, and just on and on.
I would really like to see a timeline of exactly when and what the machines sent back and then what exactly John did.
Some more hilarious comments from the director.
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Terminator: Dark Fate Director Tim Miller on Critics, Linda Hamilton and Those Inevitable T2 Comparisons
Spoiler alert: Terminator: Dark Fate isn’t as good as Terminator 2: Judgment Day. Take it from Tim Miller. “I don’t feel like it’s better than Terminator 2 or anything like that,” says Miller, director of the latest installment in the long-running sci-fi/action franchise. “But it was never going...www.boxofficepro.com
"This movie is a lot darker than the other Terminator movies, where if you look at T2, nobody really dies—I mean, maybe somebody in a car they ran over. But here we’ve got… let’s just say there’s a lot of death in the movie..."
Did he not see the first two films, or something??
A guy gets his heart ripped out at the start of the first film. There's a freaking nuclear explosion in downtown L.A. in T2!
"Nobody really dies"?????
Wow, Tim Miller, just wow.
Yeah, people don't really want to watch a movie about a war....Oh wait, there are thousands of war movies. Good thing no one went to see that Private Ryan movie, or that Platoon movie.
What they need to do is change the franchise. Turn it around. Make the movie about the future war and the mission to capture the Time Displacement technology. From what I've always gathered from the first movie, that was the mission, not sending Reese back. Sending him back was a last minute idea once they finally got there and learned a terminator had been sent back.
Personally, I think they should just disregard T2 also. None of the sequels (or tv show) make any sense. The machines only had time to send one terminator back before the resistance blew the complex. Reese said "no one else goes through, no one goes back." How did the machines send all these other terminators back? And even if they had time to send (I can't even count how many we've seen) more back, why send an older model back, then at the same time send a newer model, and then even newer models? All of this done before John gets into the complex. Then he arrives, sees they've sent back several, all different models, so he sends Reese, then a reprogrammed Arnold, then another reprogrammed Arnold, and just on and on.
I would really like to see a timeline of exactly when and what the machines sent back and then what exactly John did.
Sort of like the Alien franchiseWe have strayed away from the original style of the film. Because there was a so much content past the original it doesn't feel like it any more. Truth is look at the original film as a standalone. It's a horror film point blank. Then T2 and the rest came along and changed all of that.
I always thought Terminator, Alien and Predator was connected somehow. Sure Bill Paxton is in all three, but Arnold Schwarzenegger is in two of them, as well as Lance Henrikson. How to connect it. Terminator happens in '84. Predator happens in '87. Dutch is pulled into black ops research about building a defense system to counter the predators using the Cyberdyne research based on the T1 arm and chip and may even be questioned about the terminator in the photos from the police station shoot-out. If you want to include T2 you probably can, but it still feels contradictory to the first movie, it happens in '95, but doesn't change the future. Predator 2 happens in '97. Judgment day happens shortly after the Predator has left. Future war happens. Dutch is one of the blueprint outer skins for the termintors. Humans win over the machines. In the following space exploration, hyperdyne is formed from the remains of Cyberdyne research to form the androids in the Alien franchise.