Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Terminator - along with Alien(s) and Predator - is one of the most iconic franchise to come out of the 1980s... The first and second film, likely to be timeless classics of the action and sci-fi genre. Many feel that the third film strayed somewhat on this front and it seems hard to argue on that front.

Perhaps Terminator 3's greatest error was that its reach exceeded its grasp. The effects simply weren't good enough for the ambitious stunts. Which, coupled with a so-so story made it weaker than the other films by a long shot. Even Arnie camping it up couldn't put it in the same league as the first two. Which is unfortunate as the franchise really had the potential to deliver.

Those who have their misgivings about the upcoming "Sarah Connor Chronicles" - a TV series that follows the eponymous heroine between the end of T2 and beginning of T3 may then take heart that it requires only a few minutes for it to piss all over the established events of T3. The effects of time travel... perhaps.

The inherent fear of a series set between the two films is obvious - that it would be sans Skynet... and if you don't have a time travelling killer robot from the future trying to ventilate the saviour of humanity, then why even bother? Hence, it should be reassuring to all fans of the franchise that the show does indeed include said time travelling robots and the associated gun heavy mayhem.

Projects like this are inherently difficult - especially when the original actors have been replaced by more budget friendly replacements... the budget is fractional compared to the films and yet, there is an expectation of quality and action. Terminator films may have their moments of reflection upon fate and destiny, the nature of the battle between man and machine... about how one man can change the future but it was always, at its heart, an action film... so, it would only be fair to expect this of the show.

And it does deliver. Not exactly the epic car chases, non-stop climactic action... but still enjoyable and for a film where expectations were so incredibly low - that is impressive.

No comments: