Agreed about the praise for
Terminator 2. However, I prefer
The Terminator. Its smaller, darker elements somehow make the movie more plausible, as if this really could be happening out there right now. Schwarzenegger is a more plausible robot in
The Terminator because his performance is totally absent of any human mugging at all. (
T2 has a few minor moments like that, like his smirk when he says "I'll be back," or when the T-1000 wags his finger at Sarah Connor.) I love Michael Biehn's wild-eyed performance as Kyle Reese. Plus, the supporting characters--Vukavitch, Traxler, Silberman--are filled with such life. Even though we don't see that much of them, we get a very clear sense that these are real people with lives that extend far beyond the confines of their scenes in the movies.
Right now, my ranking of Cameron's movies goes like so...
1.
The Terminator.
2.
Aliens.
3.
Terminator 2.
4-7. I like
Titanic but I'm not a huge whopping fan of it. I need to rewatch
The Abyss &
True Lies before I can make an accurate judgment of them. I have some high hopes about
Avatar. I doubt it will be able to touch the top 3. But worst case scenario, it will still be better than...
8.
Piranha II: The Spawning. Probably the only bad movie Cameron has ever done. But then, did Roger Corman ever produce a good movie?
Regardless of what you think about Titanic it was the biggest movie ever and was the biggest achievement in special effects since Jurassic Park. The man is dedicated to his craft.
No it really really isn't.
If the price of a ticket to see Snow White was a nickel, and a ticket to Titanic was $10, of course Titanic made more! It's not even close to being the number one movie ever if you actually take into account of inflation.
As I understand it, the highest grossing movie in the U.S. is
Titanic. If you count worldwide B.O., it's just barely edged out by
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King. If you adjust for inflation, it's
Gone with the Wind.