Terminator 2: Judgment Day 3D (2017)
Cast
Arnold Schwarzenegger as The Terminator
Linda Hamilton as Sarah Connor
Edward Furlong as John Connor
Robert Patrick as T-1000
Earl Boen as Dr. Silberman
Joe Morton as Miles Dyson
S. Epatha Merkerson as Tarissa Dyson
Castulo Guerra as Enrique Salceda
Director
James Cameron
Writer
James Cameron
William Wisher
Cinematographer
Adam Greenberg
Editor
Conrad Buff
Dody Dorn
Mark Goldblatt
Richard A. Harris
Action, Science Fiction
Rated R for strong sci-fi action and violence, and for language.
137 minutes
While "The Terminator" was a great horror film, "Terminator 2: Judgment Day"
is a great action film. While "The Terminator" was about the horror of
an unstoppable harbinger of a technologically-advanced but soul-dead
present, "Terminator 2" is, like so many action films before it,
a paradoxically violent screed against violence. The film's reactionary
politics are essentially dated, though there are several modern
fanatics who embody the paranoiac impulses that compel self-styled
freedom fighter Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton)
to fight against mental institutions, the police, and common sense to
stop artificially-intelligent computer system Skynet from obliterating
humanity in a nuclear war.
But it's important to note that Sarah is not the heroine of
"Terminator 2" as she was in "The Terminator," but rather a supporting
character who helps raise both estranged son John (Edward Furlong) and cyborg bodyguard/surrogate dad T-101 (Arnold Schwarzenegger).
The T-101 is the main character in "Terminator 2" since he, as he
boasts, is a "learning machine," capable of progressive adaptation.
This was the path to war in the era of George H.W. Bush bipartisanship:
using one lethal system to combat a more threatening system. Robots
don't kill people—people kill people.
The T-101's burgeoning ersatz humanity makes Schwarzenegger a perfectly re-purposed tool. Director James Cameron
had to convince the Austrian Oak to turn his humanoid baddie into a
good guy, a jarring transition that was partly difficult for
Schwarzenegger to stomach due to the prior failure of "Conan the Destroyer,"
another sequel that was relatively lighter than its predecessor. But
the T-101's role change works as well as it does because viewers—both
then and now—don't necessarily expect Schwarzenegger's deadpan killing
machine to be capable of serving as anybody's Jiminy Cricket-like moral
compass. Still, that's exactly what the T-101 does when he re-unites
John with Sarah, and learns from both characters first-hand the value of
preserving human life.
The T-101's change from a villain to a
hero also reflects the ambivalent optimism at the heart of "Terminator
2." Some cogs in the system can be retrained, but not all systems are
benign. The psychiatric institution, represented by vainglorious Dr.
Silberman (Earl Boen),
is tellingly dismissed since it keeps singular iconoclasts like Sarah
down, and convinces them that they must genuinely want to re-assimilate
rather than just mimic a desire to change (in "Terminator 2," bad
machines are good mimics, but good people are bad mimics). The cops,
represented by the confounded detectives who interrogate Sarah about her
connection to the T-101 and the gas-mask-making SWAT team that tries to
prevent the destruction of Skynet, are ineffectual, and hampered by a
lack of emotional inspiration.
But nuclear families, like the ones that surround well-meaning scientist Miles Dyson (Joe Morton)
and good-natured survivalist Enrique Salceda (Castulo Guerra), are all
positive since they represent a bright future that must be
protected (hope must be preserved and defended instead of cultivated and
maintained). So it makes sense that Sarah stops being a machine-like
human, and starts acting like a human machine when she encounters Miles
and Enrique, but is either suppressed, or threatened during her every
encounter with security guards, orderlies, and cops.
These central
tenets of "Terminator 2"'s fear-mongering worldview are also present in
"The Terminator," but they are perhaps more compelling in the sequel
since they are a product of Cameron's singularly fanatic creativity. I
imagine he identified as the clean-burning machine, his vision hindered
only by unyielding crew members, pressing budget restrictions, and the
small-mindedness of anyone who doesn't agree that bigger is necessarily
better.
For proof, compare the way Cameron shoots violence in
"The Terminator" with "Terminator 2." There's more gore and
impact-intensive massacres in the former film while the latter is
characterized by the relatively sleek killing style of the T-1000, or
even the scalpel-like precision of the T-101, who self-disassembles his
left fore-arm in "Terminator 2" much faster than he gouges his right
fore-arm and his left eyeball "The Terminator." And while
there aren't more collisions and car crashes in "Terminator 2" than
there are in "The Terminator," there are bigger explosions. "Terminator
2" oozes barely-sublimated tension that hails from Cameron's
highly personal vision, as we see during formative car
chases, pyrotechnics, and body-morphing computer effects.
In fact,
one major reason to revisit the "Terminator 2" is that the
post-converted 3-D makes the film's textures that much richer,
especially any surface covered in fire, sweat, or light. Special effects
designer Stan Winston's cyborg puppets and computer effects are worth
the extra couple of bucks for 3-D, especially his body-deforming designs
for the T-1000, like the bifurcated "Pretzel Man," or the porous "Donut
Head."
Schwarzenegger and his mostly excellent cast-mates may
not need a glossy technological reboot, but it is nice to be reminded on
a big screen, through engrossing close-ups, tracking shots, and complex
lighting set-ups, that Cameron knows how to use his human cogs to
maximally service his hulking anti-authoritarian
blockbuster. His maximalist style pays off big time, making "Terminator
2" that rare genre classic that is every bit as good as its reputation.
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