Linda Hamilton aged much better than the makeup would suggest.
Sarah was supposed to be 64 there and Linda Hamilton is 64 now, though she was playing Sarah at 54 or 55 in Dark Fate. (Her character is nine years younger.)
Linda Hamilton aged much better than the makeup would suggest.
I wonder why they changed their mind about this ending.
Linda Hamilton aged much better than the makeup would suggest.
You mean you didn't get the memo? Positive endings aren't allowed.![]()
That's too bad I like it.
Hm... because it's awful, ridiculous, or tonally all out of whack with the two movies it would have concluded?I wonder why they changed their mind about this ending.
Now that you mention it, that does sound familiar, but it still acted just like Skynet.Was it ever mentioned, but I think Legion was a collection of AIs all rolled into one.
Maybe because it tied things up to tightly, and pretty much removed all wiggle room for more sequels.I wonder why they changed their mind about this ending.
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Maybe because it tied things up to tightly, and pretty much removed all wiggle room for more sequels.
I don't see what it would change. It's time travel, which means that timelines can be changed. After all, isn't that what they did?
Either John believes Judgment Day is definitely, 100% prevented, and thus his work in that respect is done, or he spends his whole life off the grid/hiding. Anything else, including the abominable deleted ending where he's a US Senator, would be nonsensical.
Wow, I've never seen that ending before. I quite like it.
IIRC, Cameron does commentary for the deleted ending, either on its own, or as part of the regular commentary track. It wasn't about leaving room for sequels; it was about the tonal whiplash it would have produced, and how it would have distracted from the emotional climax of Uncle Bob's self-sacrifice.it really was a last minute decision to go with the 'unknown future' in order to leave room for a sequel.
I do have to wonder about the life lived by this particular timelines version of Sarah Connor. She was still wanted for horrendous crimes, now she's sitting in a public park visiting with her son the senator. Did she fake her death? Does she have a new identity? Did she do time? Is she in hiding? Are these visits in the park the only place where she can actually visit her grandkids while her son the senator stands at a distance not acknowledging her because if it came out that the Senator's mother was believed to be a psychotic killer and wanted by the law it would ruin his career? @Mr. Laser Beam -- did the novelization* answer any of these questions?Aging can be accelerated by excessive stress... Perhaps the actress lived a happier life than her character...
IIRC, Cameron does commentary for the deleted ending, either on its own, or as part of the regular commentary track. It wasn't about leaving room for sequels; it was about the tonal whiplash it would have produced, and how it would have distracted from the emotional climax of Uncle Bob's self-sacrifice.
And it wasn't the last time he shot an ending of mind-boggling awfulness, either:
Guaranteed, keeping that ending would have lost the movie its Best Picture win.
... And now, for old time's sake, my Terminator Time Chart, which justifies T3's existence via its "the military originally created Skynet" theory:
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.... Its great to have Arnold back, but Jai Courtney and Emilia Clarke are horrible actors, even worse then Sam Worthington in Salvation. What makes this movie better then Salvation is Arnold and just how batshit insane parts of the movie are, which make it much more interesting but still not a "good" movie.
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@Mr. Laser Beam -- did the novelization* answer any of these questions?
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