THE
TERMINATOR |
|
Is it really that difficult? It must be because it's so rare. If you have any kind of science background at all (liberal arts majors can stop reading now), there are two critical features a good sci-fi film must have. First, a good, interesting, entertaining plot and second: good science. This is not nit-picking it's no different than a doctor insisting on accurate details on ER. Because if you spot something presented as scientific fact that you know is wrong, it destroys your suspension of disbelief. THE TERMINATOR is that rare example of a movie that qualifies on both counts. The story MOVES! You're hooked from the start and never given a chance to relax. AND the science behind it works AND this is the only movie I've ever seen that understands the difference between lasers and plasma beams. I'd be willing to bet the farm that battlefields 50 years from now will look very familiar to anyone who's seen this movie. !!!SCIENCE MOMENT!!!: For more science on the other Terminator movies, go to THE SCIENCE MOMENT page. The story begins with a garbage truck. It's late at night and the truck is emptying dumpsters when from nowhere strange arcs of electricity appear. There's a flash of light and there he is: a naked Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger: TERMINATOR 2, TOTAL RECALL). He comes across a group of punk rockers (this was the early 80's), lead by a very young Bill Paxton (ALIENS, NEAR DARK, FRAILTY) and kills them when they refuse his flat, emotionless demand to give him their clothes. Meanwhile, in another part of town, the lightning arcs again and future soldier Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn: ALIENS, THE ABYSS, MEGIDDO: OMEGA CODE 2) drops naked to the pavement. Unlike THE TERMINATOR, it's clear right away that this visitor feels pain and shows emotion.
It also becomes clear that both characters are searching for a woman named Sarah Connor. Two unfortunate women with that name are killed by THE TERMINATOR before we meet the intended Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton: TERMINATOR 2). She narrowly avoids death through the help of Reese, who we learn was sent specifically to protect her. Another very cool thing this movie has going for it is the way it handles exposition. Up until now everything has been shown rather than spoken (which, duh!, is the way movies are SUPPOSED to be done). But when Reese rescues Sarah he has to tell her (and us) that the reason all this is happening is because in the near future a super-intelligent computer called SkyNet will trigger a nuclear war in order to exterminate humanity. To finish the job, SkyNet builds robot tanks, aircraft and soldiers like the Terminator. This genocide fails only because of a man named John Connor, who leads humanity to victory in the future. In a last, desperate act, SkyNet (who reminds me A LOT of Colossus from the movie THE FORBIN PROJECT) sends a Terminator back through time to ensure that John Connor is never born, by killing his mother, Sarah. Reese tells Sarah all this in bits and pieces as the two of them run for their lives from the unstoppable Terminator. The exposition blends so well with the action that you hardly notice. Excellent job. An excellent job is the standard for co-Writer / Director James Cameron (ALIENS, TERMINATOR 2). His reputation for being a perfectionist may make him difficult to work with, but it's all up there on the screen. The only stain on his and this movie's reputation involves well known science fiction writer Harlan Ellison. Ellison sued Cameron, claiming that elements of this movie were taken from his short stories "Soldier" and "Demon With a Glass Hand." One result of the lawsuit was a change in the film credits giving story credit to Ellison. Unfortunately, this movie gets an !!!UNFAIR RACIAL CLICHÉ ALERT!!!: For more on this issue, visit THE UNFAIR RACIAL CLICHÉ ALERT page. Excellent action, good science, and a compelling story with characters you really care about makes it easy to give THE TERMINATOR 5 Shriek Girls.
|
|