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Spoilers Terminator: Dark Fate Review and Discussion

Grade Terminator: Dark Fate

  • A+ “Come with me if you want to live.”

    Votes: 1 1.7%
  • A

    Votes: 6 10.3%
  • A-

    Votes: 5 8.6%
  • B+ “I’ll be back.”

    Votes: 13 22.4%
  • B

    Votes: 8 13.8%
  • B-

    Votes: 6 10.3%
  • C+ “Chill out, dickwad.”

    Votes: 5 8.6%
  • C

    Votes: 2 3.4%
  • C-

    Votes: 4 6.9%
  • D+ “All you know how to create is death and destruction!”

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • D

    Votes: 2 3.4%
  • D-

    Votes: 1 1.7%
  • F “I know now why you cry.”

    Votes: 5 8.6%

  • Total voters
    58
But it likely can't be done in a two-hour sci-fi beat 'em up. Something that would be more fitting for a series on a streaming service.

Which wasn't an option in the 1980s. Yet I believe the films have done an exemplary job of providing entertainment that works on more than one level. You can watch them as action films and enjoy the fights, you can enjoy them as time travel yarns, you can look past that to the underlying themes they really do try to explore.

After all no one questions whether Blade Runner manages to be cerebral within the popcorn format, or 2001.
 
So? Maybe it does, maybe it doesn't. Why should the franchise have one clear, unambiguous "message"? Why can't it ask questions and let us think for ourselves?

Exploring the question is much more provocative than simply providing a pre packaged answer, especially if it's the one people expect. You seem to want the latter, I'd rather the former.
I have no Terminator in this fight but good grief do I love this response.
 
Lets assume that any Terminator can build a time machine.

The resistance built a time machine in the 1960s, in the TV Show, but a Terminator who missed his target, by 7 decades, just decided to hang out in a dark room for 70 years looking at paint flake off a wall.

So was it Sarah or Carl (who survived longer in an earlier timeline) who tattooed directions to Carl onto Grace, to get to Carl in 2019.
 
Indeed, which was my point earlier in the other thread when I pointed out how that delineates man and machine. Skynet believed killing John Conner in the past would alter the future to one where it would never have to fight a serious resistance. It saw him and him alone as being the key factor in the equation, whereas in truth humans don't work that way.

They find something to believe in and there was never a reason it had to be him.

Zack Stentz had an interesting thread on Twitter over the weekend where he talked about how different Terminator stories had wrestled with the "Who is John Connor?" question. He observed that in the first two movies, as you say, John is the inspirational figure who rallies humanity to fight back, but it nonspecific about how he did it or what it was about him that made him the Great Man in the "great man theory of history." Terminator 3 deflated that by having it be a tautology; John led the resistance because someone who already knew he'd lead the resistance made sure he'd survive Judgement Day in a place where he'd have access to the kinds of resources that'd make a resistance practical. Salvation ended up being a jumble, because it was written one way, where John is barely seen, filmed another, where John ends up being an empty suit whose purpose was as a symbol who can be assumed and appropriated and not a real person, and then finally had him be a generic military leader guy.

Stentz argues, and I agree, that TSCC had the most interesting answer, that John Connor was an oddball lateral-thinking weirdo that had started relating more to his reprogrammed Terminators than to his human soldiers, who had a capacity for empathy with the Machine which would allow him to fight effectively on its terms and, ultimately, wage a war where history itself was a weapon and he'd have to not just understand Skynet (and other AI factions), but understand himself enough to blindly coordinate with his own counterparts in the alternate timelines they were all creating.

And, as Sarah somewhat desperately points out in Dark Fate, despite everything, John did defeat Skynet and save the world, just a little faster than anyone expected.

Of course, we also never see what happens in a world where John Connor is killed before Judgement Day (except for thirty seconds that will never be paid off at the end of TSCC), so it's hard to be sure if Skynet was right or not that John Connor was the right person in the right place at the right time, and no one else would be able to step up and beat it (remember, Skynet isn't just sending back Terminators for fun, at least not at first; it is its last act before it's destroyed; it doesn't care about the resistance, it cares that the resistance won).
 
I just got back from watching it and I enjoyed it. I really liked Carl and his storyline. The idea of a Terminator getting married and raising a kid as his own was very interesting to me. As was the idea of Carl as a draper. The story he was telling Grace, Dani and Sarah in the van about the dad wanting to buy solid color drapes for his daughter's room had me cracking up.

Gabriel Luna did a good job as the Rev-9 as well. He was pretty menacing in his single-mindedness to get Dani, but I also liked the human responses he could generate in any given circumstance. "Fuck you, Terrance." "Sorry about your shed." "I prayed more in five minutes than I did my whole life."
 
terminator_dark_fate.png
 
^ :lol:

I just thought of something. Sarah tells Grace she's wanted in all 50 states. When she's detained at the border, the detective is gloating that this is the first time they've had a celebrity. All Sarah did was try to blow up a computer factory (unsuccessfully) and then finally DID blow up Cyberdyne, then went off the grid.

So how is Carl able to live an unassuming life? The first T-800 shot two Sarah Connors, Ginger, Matt, a gun store clerk, 17 police officers, ripped the heart out of a punk, theft of property (said punk's clothes, a police car, a motorcycle). Uncle Bob arrives and within 24 hours everyone's on his ass for stuff the first Terminator did. That's not counting him shooting multiple security guards and SWAT members in the knee, trashing several police cruisers, a helicopter, a SWAT van AND blowing up Cyberdyne. Then Carl shoots a kid in front of multiple witnesses and walks away. How is Carl not public enemy number one?
 
If they'd let Rev-9 kill Dani I wonder whether he'd also grow a conscience and start working with the resistance. And then Legion sends an alternate version of Rev-9 back to the start of the movie to kill the new-new leader of the resistance.
 
^ :lol:

I just thought of something. Sarah tells Grace she's wanted in all 50 states. When she's detained at the border, the detective is gloating that this is the first time they've had a celebrity. All Sarah did was try to blow up a computer factory (unsuccessfully) and then finally DID blow up Cyberdyne, then went off the grid.

So how is Carl able to live an unassuming life? The first T-800 shot two Sarah Connors, Ginger, Matt, a gun store clerk, 17 police officers, ripped the heart out of a punk, theft of property (said punk's clothes, a police car, a motorcycle). Uncle Bob arrives and within 24 hours everyone's on his ass for stuff the first Terminator did. That's not counting him shooting multiple security guards and SWAT members in the knee, trashing several police cruisers, a helicopter, a SWAT van AND blowing up Cyberdyne. Then Carl shoots a kid in front of multiple witnesses and walks away. How is Carl not public enemy number one?

Carl is from a Future where the events of T1 and T2 are well recorded history that Skynet is aware of. (Unless Carl arrived before the original T-800, and he had a different primary mission to take care of first.)

The "original" T-800 is from a future were T1 and T2 did not happen. I mean, something happened, or Dyson wouldn't have had a CPU and Arm to experiment on, but it wasn't T1 and T2.

Sorry.

I'm answering the question "How did Carl find the Connors so easily without killing a hundred people, that would make him the Target of a manhunt."

When you're asking "If Carl and the original T-800 are twinsies, why isn't Carl blamed and hunted down for the original T-800's crimes?"

Um...

Did you see Carl's beard?
 
Maybe T6 was saying there was timeloop with the coordinates on Grace. Grace got them Dani and Dani got them from Grace. I guess that theory doesn't make sense unless you accept that the future is both malleable and static, which is a big ask but it's something I had wondered on. I always figured T1 was a time loop and T2 somehow broke the loop. There never was a timeline where John Connor didn't exist or wasn't Sarah and Kyle's kid. I don't know how this works.
If the FBI had a case file on T-800/Uncle Bob/Carl, thinking they're all one bloke, it must be a confusing read on Sarah being hunted, then teaming up, then having her kid murdered by the same guy
 
That may be your opinion but historians and philosophers have spent decades debating the extent to which individuals shape history or are symptomatic of larger movements. Another perspective is that certain conditions are prime breeding ground for certain figures to come to the fore. The human race is huge and inevitably there are always people with the correct temperaments and aptitude to adopt a given role. More to the point there will always be a willingness to accept the idea of someone even if the truth doesn't really match it.

First of all, I don't think historians care about the Terminator franchise. Second, to say that one person can't change the world is simply false. Steve Jobs changed the world. The Founding Fathers changed the world. Abraham Lincoln changed the world. People who cured diseases changed the world.

To simply say "someone else would have done it," has no basis in any studies or evidence, because someone else didn't do it.

You cure a terminal disease, you are saving lives and those lives you save also contribute to the world.

The classic example is whether we would have seen WW2 without Hitler. My take is yes, because the conditions were ripe for civil unrest and eventual conflict. Had he not been there it would simply have been someone else following a similar path. People in Germany were looking for a strong leader, they were looking for someone to blame for their misfortune and they were desperate for a unifying cause. The situation was crying out for someone to do what he did and gain power by providing people with a perceived common enemy.

Would WWII have happened without Hitler? Maybe, but all the death and the concentration camps and the horrors probably don't. There was always hate in this world, and what the Germans did was not all on one man, but the sheer evil of the Nazis required the right man at the right time. Hitler was a unique orator that had the ability to unite with hate that probably wouldn't have been so severe without him. I believe millions of lives were lost because Hitler existed. WWII would have happened at some point, but maybe not to the horrible extent where 50 million died.

Regardless, though, you don't have to agree with any one interpretation of a film if you acknowledge that it is serving a positive role by making us think. That's what sci fi is supposed to do.

Yes, sci fi should make us think, but it should do so with intelligent writing and good decisions. Here, we are simply discussing whether or not TDF ruined the significance of T1 and T2 by trivializing John Connor.

I believe that's what they did. Ultimately, this movie is trying to say that the first two movies didn't matter. John was not important at all. And if you buy into that message, neither was Dani. The machines would know that their termination of John Connor was successful and now someone else would do what he did, and that also meant that Dani was not important either. So why bother saving her?

You've just said it yourself, it goes against the grain of the first two films. That's new ground right there.

That's not breaking new ground. That's simply saying, "we're telling the exact same story but with a different person."
 
Ultimately, this movie is trying to say that the first two movies didn't matter. John was not important at all.
I don't agree. John's importance in the future was negated only because of his actions with Sarah and Uncle Bob in the present. If they had not actively sought out Dyson/Cyberdyne, he'd remain the John Connor of future legend.

The machines would know that their termination of John Connor was successful and now someone else would do what he did, and that also meant that Dani was not important either.
It's not the same AI targeting Dani. Skynet didn't figure out that it should kill someone else after John. By the time John was killed, Skynet was removed as a future threat. Legion was the one who targeted Dani, due to her leadership role against it.
 
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Terminator and Star Wars crossover!
 
I don't agree. John's importance in the future was negated only because of his actions with Sarah and Uncle Bob in the present. If they had not actively sought out Dyson/Cyberdyne, he'd remain the John Connor of future legend.

Judgment Day still happened. Humanity still got decimated by machines. Terminators still existed. John was killed young. So ultimately, what changed? What this movie said was that John's place in history, deemed the most important thing ever in the first movie, was meaningless.

It's not the same AI targeting Dani. Skynet didn't figure out that it should kill someone else after John. By the time John was killed, Skynet was removed as a future threat. Legion was the one who targeted Dani, due to her leadership role against it.

Which is the exact same story as the first movie, with no significant change except that the target is the actual target, not the mother of the real target.

Of course, the whole franchise begs the question, why target Sarah and not another relative? Sarah's mother? Sarah as a child? Sarah's father?
 
First of all, I don't think historians care about the Terminator franchise. Second, to say that one person can't change the world is simply false. Steve Jobs changed the world. The Founding Fathers changed the world. Abraham Lincoln changed the world. People who cured diseases changed the world.

Leaving aside the fact that lots of historians are sci fi fans it doesn't really matter whether they care or not. What matter is they wrestle with much the same questions that are raised by those films and regardless of what you may insist no one yet has ever found a definitive answer. The world isn't clear cut, it doesn't come with an instruction manual and it certainly isn't something we fully understand. What matters is that we try and closing your mind is a surefire way of being stuck in a rut.

As for the Founding Fathers, are you suggesting that without them North America would still be a British Colony? Seems pretty doubtful to me, but you've said it yourself, we don't know.

To simply say "someone else would have done it," has no basis in any studies or evidence, because someone else didn't do it.

Really?

That's quite the bold statement and cuts both ways when you sit back and consider it. I hope you have the academic credentials to back up your position because it's a question that philosophers have devoted a lot of time to debating.

You may believe that to be the case, I'm personally undecided, but the films explore more than one angle and for you to assert they are in some sense inferior for simply not delivering the message you have already decided upon is not only reductive but ignorant.

You cure a terminal disease, you are saving lives and those lives you save also contribute to the world.

Sure, doesn't mean someone else wouldn't have got there at some point, the scientific technique is a wonderful tool and it's frequently very surprising how often world changing discoveries happened more than once, with one party gaining the credit at the expense of others.

More importantly it is very rare for scientific discoveries to come out of the blue, Newtons' famous "If I have seen far" quote was either one of modesty, acknowledging how little of his own work would have been possible without that of others coming first, or spite tormenting Hooke amongst others (including very possibly Leibniz over calculus) for being the one whose publication of a given paper pipped the other to the post or gained greater prominence.

It doesn't matter for our purposes who was right or wrong, what matters is today we remember one man amongst several contenders and call him "great". He is lauded as possibly the greatest scientist and mathematician of his or any other day, but surprisingly little of his work can truly be said to have not been imminent anyway with others working towards much the same goals and with the same hypotheses.

Likewise we laud Charles Darwin, ignoring Alfred Russell Wallace or Patrick Matthew who also published papers proposing natural selection.

We remember Voltaire, most people accepting the myth that he discovered electricity, but forget that Galvani arguably got there first, not to mention Bennet, Cavallo or Nicholson who were all working variously in parallel or alongside the two rivals.

No one is doubting the genius of any of these people, but the assumption that they personally changed history is not as cut and dry as we might assume.

Would WWII have happened without Hitler? Maybe, but all the death and the concentration camps and the horrors probably don't. There was always hate in this world, and what the Germans did was not all on one man, but the sheer evil of the Nazis required the right man at the right time. Hitler was a unique orator that had the ability to unite with hate that probably wouldn't have been so severe without him. I believe millions of lives were lost because Hitler existed. WWII would have happened at some point, but maybe not to the horrible extent where 50 million died.

Many people could orate as Hitler did, the performing arts are full of people with his speaking abilities and the concentration camps were already a well known concept, having been in use since at least the previous century by the British.

Of course, as you say we have no way of knowing how alternate history would have played out, that's why historians play the speculative game to such an extent. Perhaps another player would have opted against throwing his armies into the Russian winter and thus inflicted more damage. We just don't know.

Yes, sci fi should make us think, but it should do so with intelligent writing and good decisions. Here, we are simply discussing whether or not TDF ruined the significance of T1 and T2 by trivializing John Connor.

It's you making that claim, I'm saying I dont care one way or another about any insult to a fictional character. What I care more about are the concepts being explored and I would suggest based on this exchange that you are falling to recognise that fully. You have a preconception of what "the message" should be and find fault because it doesn't do as you expected. That's not being thoughtful about the writing and decisions, it's being closed minded.

I believe that's what they did. Ultimately, this movie is trying to say that the first two movies didn't matter. John was not important at all. And if you buy into that message, neither was Dani. The machines would know that their termination of John Connor was successful and now someone else would do what he did, and that also meant that Dani was not important either. So why bother saving her?

Maybe John wasn't important? Maybe Dani isn't? Is that so terrible?

Legion had no way of knowing about John anyway, so had no lesson to learn from his fate, from its' perspective the whole problem was entirely fresh. We know and Linda knows, Carl too, but Legion is the successor to Skynet in spirit only, it doesn't have its' memories.

That's not breaking new ground. That's simply saying, "we're telling the exact same story but with a different person."

Yes it is, it's just that you don't like the ground being broken. The new ground is the idea that all of the assumptions drawn from T2 might not be as valid as we thought and there are still questions to be asked. You seem to want those assumptions reinforced in a new story whereas what the film actually did was question them by creating a twist.
 
As for the Founding Fathers, are you suggesting that without them North America would still be a British Colony? Seems pretty doubtful to me, but you've said it yourself, we don't know.

Maybe not a British colony, but there's no way to speculate where it would be if you erased all the Founding Fathers from existence. Maybe a pure monarchy would still exist. America was a great experiment that worked. I would think it would still be an independent nation, but the freedoms that the Constitution brought to the world cannot be denied. The concept of the government getting its power from the people rather than the reverse was very untested and it took that revolution to work it out. Even the early stages of the US were ironing things out, like the discussion of President for life with Washington.

If the Founding Fathers never existed, I think much of the revolutionary concepts they brought to the world would never have happened. Human culture existed in a certain way for thousands of years. America changed all of that. Maybe things change anyway, but no, without those specific men, the world would be MUCH different today.

Do I think we would still be a British colony? Probably not, but I doubt we would be a representative republic, and we may not be one nation. Maybe we are several nations.

Now THIS is an interesting conversation that had the movie gone into it, would have changed the reaction to it. Too bad this is coming from you, and not the writers.

That's quite the bold statement and cuts both ways when you sit back and consider it. I hope you have the academic credentials to back up your position because it's a question that philosophers have devoted a lot of time to debating.

You may believe that to be the case, I'm personally undecided, but the films explore more than one angle and for you to assert they are in some sense inferior for simply not delivering the message you have already decided upon is not only reductive but ignorant.

There's nothing ignorant about it. I watched the first two films and they were awesome. This movie just basically takes the message of those films and turns it upside down. The entire plots are irrelevant and John, who was so important in the first two films, is marginalized. The first two movies delivered a very clear message that is not debatable. This movie does the opposite. As a sequel in this franchise, it absolutely is inferior.

No one is doubting the genius of any of these people, but the assumption that they personally changed history is not as cut and dry as we might assume.

But again, we wouldn't get there at that point. For all we know, if not for Hitler, we would have warp drive as the now unborn grandson of a Jewish person that Hitler killed is never born. Or perhaps the same for the cure for cancer. Now maybe years from now we get both those things, but all the lives changed because cancer still exists are still lost.

Let's go back to this franchise. Reese said all was lost until John showed them how to turn the tide. Because of John, humanity won. So take that away, there shouldn't be time to have another human rise up. They should be dead. This movie makes both Skynet and John irrelevant. It's all about how you can't change a thing.

That's the exact opposite of the No Fate mantra of the second movie.

Yes it is, it's just that you don't like the ground being broken. The new ground is the idea that all of the assumptions drawn from T2 might not be as valid as we thought and there are still questions to be asked. You seem to want those assumptions reinforced in a new story whereas what the film actually did was question them by creating a twist.

There is no new ground being broken. This is the exact same story as before. The only difference is that they decided John was not relevant--someone else was. That's not new ground. It's just telling the same story but explaining why they are doing it with different people.
 
This is confusing. Is it the exact opposite or nothing new?

They are saying that John Connor is meaningless. That's not ground breaking. That's simply trivializing the first two movies and rendering them pointless.

If you watched the movie, you wouldn't be confused. In fact, if you didn't watch the movie, it was basically a retelling of the first two movies with a touch of the third. Nothing we haven't seen before. The only difference is that they killed John Connor and just substituted a different name. That's not ground breaking.
 
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