Once you manage to settle back in the series timeline, the movie is actually a fair dystopian action entertainment. Bale offers a strange grunting Connor, but it actually works in the end.
Terminator Salvation
2009
Action / Adventure / Drama / Fantasy / Mystery / Sci-Fi / Thriller / War
Terminator Salvation
2009
Action / Adventure / Drama / Fantasy / Mystery / Sci-Fi / Thriller / War
Plot summary
In 2003, in the Longview State Correctional Facility, the criminal Marcus Wright is on death row, and is convinced by the cancerous Dr. Serena Kogan to donate his body to her research and he accepts. In 2018, after an unsuccessful attack to a Skynet facility, only John Connor survives, but he discovers that Skynet is developing the powerful new model T-800. Out of the blue, Marcus appears naked and with amnesia in the location. Marcus befriends the teenager Kyle Reese and the girl Star who help him to survive the lethal machines and they travel together in a Jeep. Meanwhile the resistance discovers a signal that might turn-off the machines and John offers to test it. When Kyle is captured by a machine and brought to the Skynet headquarters, Marcus decides to help the youngster and heads to Skynet; on the way, he saves Blair Williams who suggests to him that he should meet John Connor first. But Marcus steps on a mine and is submitted to surgery, when a secret about his origins is disclosed.
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Fair action movie
Nice change of pace for the series, although this is nothing more than a fun popcorn flick
Big, bold, brash and flashy. Those are four words you could use to describe this, the fourth film in the TERMINATOR saga, which has arrived in cinemas with a ton of publicity surrounding it. First off, the internet was abuzz when surfers discovered that McG, the director responsible for the execrable CHARLIE'S ANGELS films, had been hired, and then there was all that furore surrounding the leaked audio clip of Christian Bale ranting at some poor technician. In the end, the question is simple: is this a worthy addition to the series? The answer is yes and no. No, because no film in existence will ever be able to reach the heights of the Cameron-directed first two movies in the series, and yes, because this is nearly as effective a popcorn flick as TERMINATOR 3. Both the latter films are similar in that they're straightforward blow-em-up action epics full of effects and stunt work structured around a slim storyline.
Where TERMINATOR SALVATION has the edge over its predecessor purely because the plot isn't just a re-run of the last film's; instead, this is a movie that takes place in a post-apocalyptic future where the world has been decimated by nuclear war. It's not the kind of dark and gritty future seen in the Cameron films, but instead a glossy, effect-filled landscape in which huge robots duke it out with human survivors. It's quite similar to the TRANSFORMERS films in that respect, but the script is far more intelligent – and the cast far better at their jobs.
Christian Bale is one of my favourite actors and he's fine here as John Connor, but his character really takes a back seat. Just as Bale faded into the background when paired with Heath Ledger in THE DARK KNIGHT, here he steps back to allow Aussie newcomer Sam Worthington his fair share of the spotlight. Worthington, in an emotional, multi-layered turn as a death row convict hiding a dark secret that he himself doesn't even realise is very good and has the potential to go far in Hollywood. Of the supporting acts, Moon Bloodgood excels as a tough femme fatale, newcomer Anton Yelchin is excellent as the young and determined Kyle Reese, and Michael Ironside lends much-needed gravitas as a seasoned rebel leader. Only Bryce Dallas Howard and Helena Bonham Carter suffer in what are extraneous roles.
Of course, those looking for substance behind the action won't find much, because TERMINATOR SALVATION is in essence a chase thriller, nothing more, nothing less. It's a string of blistering action set-pieces full of robots blowing people up and people blowing robots up. The CGI effects are for the most part very good indeed, especially the hulking robo-skeletons who blow away the rusty stop-motion of the original 1984 movie, although some of the backgrounds are very obviously non-existent. The scene with the massive people-collecting robot alone is better than the whole of that dratted TRANSFORMERS movie, while a road chase with robo-motorbikes is a fun nod to MAD MAX 2. Speaking of nods, there's a nice line in references to the previous movies, with Linda Hamilton returning for uncredited voice-over work and even Schwarzenegger himself making an appearance, albeit digitally rather than in person. I'm a big fan of action films and TERMINATOR SALVATION ticks all the boxes. I look forward to re-watching it one day to see whether it holds up to repeat scrutiny, but in the main this is an effective, crowd-pleasing popcorn flick that breathes new life into what was previously a dead franchise.
SkyNet war movie more complicated than it needs to be
In 2003 Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington) is on death row, and donates his body to research. Years later after Skynet has taken over, John Connor (Christian Bale) is just one of the fighters against the machines. When he attacks a Skynet facility, he finds that Skynet is developing the powerful new model T-800. He seems to be the sole survivor, but unbeknownst to him, a naked Marcus emerges.
This is the war movie that everybody expected after the first Terminator movie came out. We all thought about the apocalyptic world of battling Skynet. The movies have always been pre-Judgement day. This is the first movie post-Judgement day.
The CG has finally caught up to the vision. The action is dark, and big as it should be. The story is too complicated for it's own good. The Marcus character is too complicated when a simple underdog character is all that's required. And the complications just add to the messy ending.