Please enable javascript to view this site.

Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image Image

Terminator Salvation (Movie Review)

05.21.2009 | By |

Rating:

Terminator Salvation does not seem like a Terminator movie, at least when compared to what we have experienced from filmmakers James Cameron (The Terminator, Terminator 2: Judgment Day) and Jonathan Mostow (Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines). This fourth Terminator is a different breed with a divergent feel, almost as if director McG (née Joseph McGinty Nichol) decided to fuse Cormac McCarthy’s The Road with Transformers. Gone (at least mostly) are the time travel paradoxes and the concept of a single, indestructible villain. In their place is a futuristic war movie. With its idea of an insurgency striking against an implacable evil empire, there’s more than a little Star Wars in Terminator: Salvation. However, not even at its Empire Strikes Back bleakest was Lucas’ series this dark.

A Departure from Time Travel

For the first time in four movies, Terminator: Salvation does not move back and forth in time. Except for a prologue in 2003, it stays rooted in 2018. This is a period not explored in previous installments of the cinematic series. Of course, after all the muddying of the past that transpired in the second and third Terminator films, it’s no longer clear how much of the “established” future remains valid. As in Star Trek, we’re dealing with an alternate universe, so all bets are off. Will John Connor really become the legendary leader of a human resistance that overcomes the machines (as indicated in The Terminator)? Will he be killed by a T-800 that is subsequently reprogrammed by his wife (as established in T3)? One of the problems with introducing time travel is that standard rules no longer apply, leaving filmmakers free to do anything they want.

An Ambitious but Disjointed Screenplay

The screenplay for Terminator: Salvation went through significant rewrites. It is credited to John Brancato and Michael Ferris but was polished by the likes of Jonathan Nolan (who worked on it after Christian Bale joined the project) and Paul Haggis. The result shows the effects of many fingerprints—too many subplots with too few payoffs—but it is more ambitious than the storyline for T3, which followed the basic “Cameron formula” established in the first two entries.

Unfortunately, despite several rousing action sequences (involving cars, trucks, motorcycles, giant Transformers-like robots, and flying hunter-killers), the first two-thirds of Terminator: Salvation feel rambling and disjointed. The final 30 minutes (or so) compensate for the deficiencies of what comes before. The climax is great—non-stop, kick-ass action with a surprise or two.

The Plot

In 2018, John Connor (Christian Bale) is not yet the worldwide head of the human resistance. He is, however, one of many local leaders and the voice of the resistance on the radio. His superiors, led by the uncompromising General Ashdown (Michael Ironside), believe they have created a weapon that can shut down the machines if it’s deployed at a close enough range. Connor volunteers to test it.

While doing so, he has a secondary objective: to locate a younger version of his father, Kyle Reese (Anton Yelchin), who has been targeted by the machines for termination. Reese, skulking around the ruins of Los Angeles, joins forces with a mysterious stranger named Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington), who is headed for San Francisco, the heart of the machine empire. Reese’s partnership with Marcus doesn’t last long—the machines capture the teenager, leaving Marcus with the task of finding John Connor to mount a rescue operation.

Lack of a Central Villain

The weakness of the film lies in the lack of a central villain. Random T-600 Terminators pop up occasionally, only to be dispatched rather quickly (though not easily—they are tough to destroy). There is conflict between Connor and Marcus, but neither is a bad guy; in fact, their goals align.

Action movies need strong antagonists. The engine that drove the three previous Terminator movies was the threat represented by the time-traveling killers. Without that element, Terminator: Salvation struggles to lock onto a target. It finally snaps into focus when the T-800 makes its first dramatic appearance. Suddenly, there’s a recognizable villain and a clear goal. All is right with the world.

Easter Eggs for Fans

McG, knowing his audience and being a fan, includes Easter eggs. Composer Danny Elfman employs Brad Fiedel’s signature score at several key points. The first words uttered by Kyle Reese are: “Come with me if you want to live.” Later, Connor deadpans, “I’ll be back.”

Linda Hamilton provides vocal work when her son listens to the taped journals she recorded for him back in the 1980s. Arnold Schwarzenegger is back, after a fashion, in the role that catapulted him to action megastar status. When his character, created here using digital mapping and effective editing, steps onto the screen, the audience erupts. There’s no doubt this is the high point of Terminator: Salvation. It suggests that if Schwarzenegger wants to return to the franchise after his political career, the fans will welcome him back. In fact, one could argue that the actor’s absence leaves a gap McG can’t fill.

Solid Performances

The action sequences are pulse-pounding, the special effects are top-notch, and the post-apocalyptic atmosphere is palpable, but we’re left waiting until the end for the real Terminator to show up.

Bale is suitably intense as Connor. This is a solid portrayal of obsession, and Bale dominates the screen. He’s more of a force here than in his Batman movies, but that’s to be expected since there’s no cowl or cape involved.

Sam Worthington, a relatively new face to North American audiences, is an effective foil for Bale, though his American accent could use some work. Perhaps the biggest surprise is Anton Yelchin. Although I wasn’t impressed by Yelchin’s version of Chekov in Star Trek, he nails Kyle Reese. It’s as if someone de-aged Michael Biehn 35 years and put him to work.

Bryce Dallas Howard takes over for Claire Danes as Connor’s love interest, though she has little more to do than stand in the background holding her pregnant belly. Moon Bloodgood, as one of Connor’s underlings, has the “action female” role, though she’s no Linda Hamilton when it comes to physicality.

Grim Aesthetic

By radically desaturating color, sometimes to the point where scenes are almost black-and-white, McG develops a strong post-apocalyptic aesthetic. It’s reminiscent of the recent TV series Battlestar Galactica, where everything was dark and grimy, and bright colors rarely made appearances. One could argue that McG overdoes it, but he’s clearly unafraid of venturing down potentially unappealing roads. The faux note of hope injected at the film’s end does little to dispel the fact that, if the humans win the war, the price will be astronomical.

An Extraneous Addition?

Perhaps the ultimate problem with making more Terminator movies is that the entire story was told by Cameron in the first two films. The subsequent sequels, including this one, have been struggling to explore corners where the time travel contrivance allows for flexibility and interpretation.

Terminator: Salvation, like its immediate predecessor, is enjoyable and contains some top-notch action sequences, but it feels extraneous. It is everything a good summer movie should be. While it does not dishonor the Cameron chapters of the saga, it also does not prove to be an indispensable addition to them.

Other Movie News

Select a Page