Probably followed the trail of crazy from the car chase.
I agree with this. It's not as if they would have been hard to find.Probably followed the trail of crazy from the car chase.
That definitely sounds like something Sarah would have with her equipment.I don't remember what specifically gave me the idea, but I got the impression Sarah had a police scanner in her car, and that's how she found them.
It's almost as if dogs are sentient mammals with individual personalities, or something.Enrique's dog in T2 is comfortable around Uncle Bob.
The only reason that Skynet would have programmed childcare into a terminator is if Skynet's human allies and collaborators were in danger of being targeted for termination by the Resistance.
Well the Terminators are supposed to be infiltrators. I am sure some of them could be assigned some kind of "deep cover" hiding out among humans until the time was right. And maybe sometimes that meant caring for children.
I imagine they could potentially insinuate themselves into a human community for years if need be...waiting...like a slowly ticking time bomb. Maybe they are like some of the Cylons in nuBSG, who live human lives, fighting along side of the resistance...until one day, they snap and kill everyone.
Even the children.
The humans would never know if they could trust *anyone* around them. Even their closest friend.
(Well, until the undercover Terminator tried to walk through a metal detector...)
Well there were to be two sequels if this movie did well. The have now been cancelled. In think at this point even a reboot would be boring. Do we really want to see another retread? I think these guys have really destroyed the franchise with the last 2 especially. They should have just continued the story after T4 and moved on showing the resistance fighting skynet and ultimately defeating it. But instead they chose to move backwards with the last two movies with the older weaker protector battling stronger Terminator or terminators to protect a savior.
Still, PIRANHA II remains absent from the Criterion Collection.![]()
I hereby submit that Dark Fate can be summed up by this formula: "Good idea! But... too much."
- The new hope for humankind is a young Mexican nobody - good idea! But, she already works at a factory where machines threaten her future (do ya get it, do ya get it?!)... too much.
- The new terminator villain can split himself in two for more effective combat - good idea! But, it's also almost completely indestructible, and shrugs off multiple explosive and military-grade weapons hits with no apparent difficulty... too much.
- Grace's enhanced metabolism means she burns herself out and must be cared for - good idea! But, instead of being fed, rested, and nursed back to health, we get a scene of her robbing a pharmacy, and Sarah randomly injecting her with various meds... too much.
- Sarah is a bitter, hardened loner with a prickly personality - good idea! But, she assumes the new woman's the mother of the machines' real target rather than the primary target herself for no good reason, and she and Grace do little but bicker at each other, long after it becomes clear they're on the same side... too much.
- We get slam-bang freeway chase and detainee breakout sequences - good idea! But, we then break into and out of an Air Force base, casually steal a military cargo plane, have an altered gravity fight, parachute into a reservoir and fight underwater, then have a two-part battle royal inside a hydroelectric dam... way, way, way too much.
- A terminator without a mission grows a conscience, and becomes a family man - good idea! But... actually, this is the one area where we don't get nearly enough.
And for a "back to basics" movie that erases T3, it doesn't mind re-assembling the following factors: a liquid metal/endoskeleton hybrid that remotely commands other machines, humans other than the Connors being targeted, Skynet succeeding in killing John, Judgment Day being merely postponed, an action scene in an Air Force base which our heroes fly away from, arriving at a generations-old industrial site without bystanders, and killing the bad terminator with a gadget from our future hero. Even given that T3 is itself a shameless retread of the first two movies, that's a lot of borrowing from the movie you're essentially remaking with a new third installment.
To be sure, there were some great moments sprinkled throughout - okay, sprinkled throughout the first half - of the flick. But the second half was just too damn long, exhausting, and narratively empty. It was fun seeing Linda back, but I'm a big fan of T3's Nick Stahl/Claire Danes, pairing, too. So, in the T3 vs. Dark Fate battle... Dark Fate has higher highs, but, due to its bloated, plot-hole-filled second half, I have to give the win to Rise of the Machines overall.
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Stahl/Danes FTW!![]()
On how franchise fatigue may have impacted its performance at the box office, he said: "The things they seemed to hate the most about the movie, were things I can't control. I can't control you didn't like Genysis or you felt betrayed by Terminator 4. I can't help that."
Maybe not, Tim, but you didn't have to show the future war in daylight, and you didn't have to overload the second half of your movie with just as much meaningless, OTT action noise as Genysis. And Carl is pretty much Genysis' Pops 2.0 - as much as I enjoyed the character, you didn't have to do another cuddly Arnold, assuming you were required to include him at all. (He could have played the human T-101 template, for instance, which due to the Sgt. Candy scene being cut from T3, has never appeared on the big screen.) It can definitely be argued that to bring Linda Hamilton back but keep Arnold around is to miss a great opportunity to emphasize her further.Tim Miller said:The things they seemed to hate the most about the movie, were things I can't control. I can't control you didn't like Genysis or you felt betrayed by Terminator 4. I can't help that."
All hail Linda Hamilton, giver of zero effs! Just watch how she replies when asked how Dark Fate is, at the five-minute mark:
She passes it off as a joke a (long) moment later, but... I see you, Ms. Hamilton. I see you.![]()
All hail Linda Hamilton, giver of zero effs! Just watch how she replies when asked how Dark Fate is, at the five-minute mark:
She passes it off as a joke a (long) moment later, but... I see you, Ms. Hamilton. I see you.![]()
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