Produced by and pushed into being by Terminator
main-man James Cameron, it pretends that the last three movies (Terminator
3: Rise Of The Machines, Terminator Salvation and Terminator
Genisys) and TV’s short-lived Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles never
actually happened, and instead serves as a direct sequel to the second part,
1991’s Terminator 2: Judgment Day, something that might irk older-school
purists.
However, such sticks-in-the-mud are well compensated
for by the participation of Linda Hamilton (the one and only Sarah Connor
herself) and original Terminator Arnold Schwarzenegger, although chances are
Cameron and Hamilton had limited contact given that their break-up 20 years ago
was amongst the costliest ever in Hollywood.
We open with original, staticky footage from the first
films, briefly cut to 1998, and then proceed to what seems to be 2022 in Mexico
City where ‘enhanced’ human Grace (Mackenzie Davis) does the
naked-time-travelling thing in order to protect Dani Ramos (Colombian actress
Natalia Reyes from Birds Of Passage). Grace is therefore a proxy for
Michael Biehn’s Kyle Reese in Part 1 and Dani becomes a Sarah Connor stand-in,
but then we also get Sarah herself, who turns up to fire a lot of guns and even
(apparently) a rocket launcher.
Rumour has it that Linda thoroughly enjoyed returning
to the series, and had such a fabulous time that director Tim Miller (of Deadpool)
wound up having to instruct her not to smile when she was blasting and blazing.
Naturally Dani is being pursued by another seemingly
unstoppable Terminator, a Rev-9 (which sounds more like a motorbike or
aftershave) played by Gabriel Luna, which can do the molten-metal chameleon
thing like Robert Patrick’s T-1000 in Judgment Day but also proves
expert in splitting in two and coldly sneering. Grace, Dani and Sarah are
forced to escape to Texas, which results in a lengthy, pro-Mexican sequence
where they disastrously sneak across the border without mentioning the word
‘Trump’ and later wind up at the rural home of you-know-who. And yes, his
appearance is supposed to be a surprise, even though he’s in the trailer and
all over the internet talking about the damn thing.
Cameron’s participation is notable, especially in the
decision to stage as many stunts and action setpieces as possible FX-free and
with real vehicles, real people and real budget-blowing destruction, while the
inevitable feminisation of the material has already upset the more incel-ish
fans out there, who seem not to understand that the Terminator movies
have always been female and second only to the Alien pics in their
concentration on heroines, motherhood and, it must be said, a woman’s right to
choose.
And, finally, there will surely be a sequel to this, and it will be both Part 4 and yet also, trickily, the seventh Terminator movie too. Yes, you could say that, ahem, once again they’ll all… be back.
Terminator: Dark Fate (MA) is in cinemas now
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