Grade: C
Like any other child of the 80's Terminator is one of those beloved franchises. Unlike other children of the 80's I could see beyond Arnold and see the saga as being more than just him. His presence was great when the story required it and for many their largest single complaint on Salvation was...no Arnold. Well we got Arnold in T:G and yet where are those folks? The movie opened at #3. I digress.
Terminator Genysis suffers from all the wobbly reverse storytelling it does in order to then go down a similar, yet different road. A worse road. Regardless of what one thinks of T3 or T4 the one thing they both did was continue to move the story and mythos forward. Forward towards the Future War and the promise of John Connor as the warrior savior of mankind.
The film feels a bit like Star Trek 11('09") in that it's not ignoring the prior films as there are visuals and referenced bits of history from within. T:G uses it's divergent point as altering when Sarah gets priority treatment for protection...9yr old Sarah in '73 vs '84. However, somehow 2029 John doesn't know this, further more why does 2029 John exist cause Sarah and Kyle don't have the sex that leads to John. Instead they + Pops jump ahead to 2017. John in 2029 just simply should not exist, however, he does and he only still knows about jumping back to '84.
I'm sure that "explanation" lies in the quantum alternate timeline verbiage Pops is spouting, that's what the writers would tell me. It still needs to make sense and it doesn't. If it wasn't trying to tie into the existing mythos it'd be fine, but it is doing that, which leads to the cluster.
Also, the random T-1000 that's around. Is it the same one sent back to '73 that 'Pops' stopped? Was he lying in wait for '84 to happen? Again, that being the case the timeline should be changed even more from that point that the '84 entry point wouldn't exist cause the leap to '17 would happen meaning no John in 2029...but all that still exists, somehow. The writers are heavily crutching the story up on this Quantum Timeline stuff. AKA...just go with it.
Going with the Quantum Timeline stuff that Pops is spouting about how come Skynet doesn't just kill Kyle Reese on the time pad instead of letting him go back? Attacking John seems moot at that point. No Kyle...no John and Skynet has no one to lead an organized resistance?
So what's the game plan now?
In 2017 they destroyed(or did they, see credit sequence) Cyberdyne and Genysis BUT the Dysons are still alive. Yes both Myles and Danny live and I'm to believe that they don't have back up files somewhere off site. I've worked for two large corporations and both stored sensitive data in an offsite facility miles away.
So with no '84 chip for Cyberdyne to use, JD in '97 is delayed...delayed until 2017 but then and only then cause Connor-nator comes back to '17 to ensure that it does. So why '17? Why not jump to '95 and allow JD to still happen in '97? Clearly the early internet still existed to allow it to happen.
If the Terminator saga is constant on anything it's that sometimes fate can't be stopped. Judgement Day will happen so when is it now? If Sarah and Kyle gave birth to John asap he'd be born in '18 so the "new" Future War in this timeline should be set in the 2040's.
It's a cluster of a film and I'm moderately saddened that the original movement of the story with the Future War and battle with Skynet isn't going to fully be realized. With a final film ending with John sending Kyle back to '84.
Ranking:
- T2 - set the bar for an action sic-fi invasion flick
- T1- is really a horror film at it's core, killer unstoppable robot, whose story and acting make it more than it's premise
- T4 - moving the story to the foretold Future War, films ending realizing the promise of John as leader of the resistance
- T3 - it's odd handling of camp elements still advances thing up till that daring last shot: JD happens
- T5 - it's muddled fan service of a story with wooden and unemotional acting makes one wonder...are they all robots?