StreetDoc67 wrote:
3.5 stars out of 5? Sorry, I only give it 1.5 stars out of 5 and solely because of the special effects. All in all I thought it was a huge disappointment for the following reasons.
1. Christian Bale's portrayal of John Connor was about as 3 dimensional as a Hannah Barbera cartoon character. It only took me 30 minutes to come to the conclusion that I couldn't give a shit whether he lived or died - hardly what you want the audience to feel for your main protagonist. His performance was flatter than the monochromatic coloring of the sets. By far one of the worst acting jobs of his career.
He wasn't the main protagonist. Marcus was. That was pretty evident, actually, since he was the one that the movie began with. I will agree that Bale's performance left something to be desired but I think he's taking extra flack because of the tirade that was caught on tape and this is the performance we got out of it.
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2. The machines were lack-luster antagonists. It's like the writers forgot that you need to generate a dislike for the bad guys. Instead it seemed they would just rely on the past movies for that without any effort to make you hate the machines. In the earlier films all the terminators had personalities and were clearly brutal, efficient killing machines. In this flick they were all robotic, 99% speechless retards that seemed inept at their primary function of TERMINATING the humans they were fighting.
Why do you need to generate a dislike? There is nothing more painful than a writer taking the initiative to "create" a bad guy. Like, let's take a villain and have him kill a baby. We'd really hate him for that! That's such a cop out. These "villains" weren't meant to be "hated". The whole point of SkyNet is to show how soulless the future has become, not how evil. While in T2, Cameron did a masterful job of creating a villain whom you ultimately wanted to see get killed--at least the guy was a villain with dimensions. The terminators here, while they are dimensionless, served the purpose of the theme of the film. If you didn't like that, fine. But give me a break that we need more writers with agendas to shove "evil" down your throats. Makes me sick.
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3. Some of the shit was just silly. I know it's a sci-fi flick but successful sci-fi successfully blends reality with the impossible to make it authentic. Two cases in point - ***SPOILER ALERT*** -- First, the shocking of the “good” terminator with electrical cables to bring him back to life is a stupid and tired Hollywood ploy. Did they recruit a class of 3rd grade boys to come up with that one or just sit in the front row of the equally retarded movie Crank 2: High Voltage? How unoriginal. Second – earlier in the movie they make it clear that such basic medications as antibiotics are hard to come by in the post apocalyptic world, but at the end these survivors are able to perform a freaking heart transplant in a dusty, outdoor operating room(which of course the Terminator and Connor are matches for) and then somehow make a lifetime of advanced immunosuppressive drugs appear out of thin air to keep Connor from rejecting the heart he just received.
It's stupid and tired, but it's a part of just about every action/adventure movie out there. There's always a deux-ex-machina waiting to happen, and either it works or it doesn't. I hate these things, too, because they are easy-outs--but again, I was kind of expecting it. Not that it's possible to do something like that, but Hollywood always churns out unbelievable predicaments that you can't possibly get out of. Since the whole of the movie worked for me, I didn't nitpick that kind of stuff. Call me a lazy critic if you want.
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4. The biggest reason this movies sucked though was they left Moon Bloodgood’s nude scene on the cutting room floor so they wouldn’t get an R rating! Geeese. If they’re going to make the movie suck, the least they could have done was to keep in the hot chick’s t0pless scene they’d been bragging about weeks earlier.
The only thing that saves you from a snarky remark from me is that you point out that the studio itself was "bragging" about it just before taking it out. I could give a shit about nudity in an action/adventure/sci-fi flick. It wouldn't add anything to the story or anything. If I wanted to see the girl naked, I'd look at her doing naked photo shots for Playboy or something.
I do agree with some of your points, but overall I did enjoy the film. I liked how dark it was, and how ominous SkyNet was, almost like the Nothing in "Neverending Story".
Plus, I think you're undermining the fact that in some ways, Connor himself was an antagonist to Marcus. I think if anything, that could've been strengthened. Maybe that was in the original script and Bale nixed it. But I think that would've been even more interesting if they just completely turned Connor AGAINST his own people because of his own fears of the machine/man.
Overall I still think the film worked.