DIRECTOR
James
Cameron
SCREENWRITERS
James
Cameron
William Wisher
PRODUCER
James Cameron
CINEMATOGRAPHER
Adam Greenberg
MUSIC
Brad Fiedel
EDITORS
Conrad Buff IV
Mark Goldblatt
Richard A. Harris
CAST
Arnold Schwarzenegger (T-800)
Linda Hamilton (Sarah Connor)
Edward Furlong (John Connor)
Robert Patrick (T-1000)
Earl Boen (Dr. Silberman)
Joe Morton (Miles Dyson)
S. Epatha Merkerson (Tarissa Dyson)
Jenette Goldstein (Janelle Voight)
Xander Berkeley (Todd Voight)
MPAA rating: R
Running
time: 137m
U.S. release: July 3, 1991
Video availability: VHS - DVD
Other James
Cameron films
reviewed on this website:
- Titanic
- True
Lies
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By now, of course, you've either
seen Terminator 2: Judgment Day or made up your mind to
miss it. Reviewing it at this point is like reviewing the paint
job on a roller coaster. I won't bother with the plot here, largely
because there really isn't one. T2 is, for all its flash
and fury, a rehash of the brilliant 1984 original, lacking that
film's tautness.
But still! I enjoyed T2
as much as I did the other two great American entertainments
of the year thus far (The
Silence of the Lambs and Thelma & Louise,
for those keeping score). And it's unquestionably a top-drawer
sequel, with all the mayhem and power $100 million can buy; it's
a big monster toy. James Cameron, who directed both Terminator
films, is a genuine visionary, an obsessional maximalist; even
if you find nitpicks here and there -- and you do -- T2
still bowls you over. Cameron may only make preposterous, excessive
epics laden with hardware, but nobody does it better. In T2,
he's in his element -- he has huge toys to play with.
The violence in Cameron's films
goes so far past what you're used to that it becomes bone-crunching
slapstick. Example: When the good Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger),
the older, weaker T-800 model, and the evil Terminator (Robert
Patrick), the ominously bland and frighteningly resourceful T-1000,
first meet about half an hour into the movie, they spend a minute
or two throwing each other through walls. No, wait. Go back and
read that again. Throwing each other through walls. These
are not flimsy walls, either; these are concrete walls.
"Excessive" is the word that keeps popping to mind.
Example: When the thirteen-year-old
John Connor (Edward Furlong) -- destined, in the possible future,
to become the leader of a human rebellion against the Terminators
-- tries to escape the T-1000 via motorcycle, the cyborg just
trots after him. On foot. And almost catches him, even
though the kid is burning rubber. Later, the kid's still peeling
on the motorcycle, and the T-1000 comes after him in a huge truck.
Now, the kid is in an embankment, and the truck is on a bridge
some twenty feet above. Doesn't faze the T-1000. He floors it,
drives through the railing, crashes with gargantuan bang and
metal shriek onto the pavement below ... and keeps roaring after
the kid. Excessive.
Example: Arnie, the good and
noble Terminator sent to the past by John Connor to protect his
mother and his younger self, has promised the kid that he won't
kill anybody. Fair enough. When confronted with what appears
to be the entire Los Angeles police department, Arnie doesn't
retreat and doesn't go back on his word. He just carefully, precisely
shoots the cops' kneecaps off, one cop after another. Funny,
right? But wait. In a later shot, we see a bunch of the poor
cops limping or crawling to their cars. Great touch. Hilarious.
Also excessive.
Example: The T-1000 is driving
another massive rig -- this one full of liquid nitrogen. Arnie
hops onto the hood, whips out a gigantic machine gun, and empties
it into the T-1000's face, point blank. Excessive? Hell, yes.
The point? At a James Cameron
movie, you see things you never get to see. Physics and
logic are minor issues for him. If you're a guy, do you remember
all the sadistic things you did to action figures as a kid? You'd
bury 'em, throw 'em in the street so they'd get run over, toss
'em off the roof or down some stairs or chuck 'em against the
side of the house, and they'd be back for more, because you'd
pretend that, say, Han Solo was still alive even though you smooshed
him with a brick yesterday. That's the essential appeal of the
Terminator movies. Cameron invites us boys to join him
in smooshing very expensive action figures. Also cars and trucks.
So what do women get out of
his films? Simple. In most of Cameron's movies, there's a strong
heroine. Aliens had Sigourney Weaver; The Abyss
had Mary Elizabeth Mastrontonio; and both Terminator films
have Linda Hamilton, as Sarah Connor, John's violently protective
mother. Though Hamilton did little in the original except run
and suffer, she's ferocious and feral in this outing. Powerfully
built, with years of combat training from all the mercenaries
who've been in and out of her bed, Sarah may be a more efficient
warrior than Arnie. Without expecting applause, Cameron avoids
making his heroines into mere Rambettes. He thinks women can
be heroic on their own terms. A revolutionary idea.
T2, like Cameron's other movies, isn't for the
faint of heart. I've talked to people who just snort with disdain
("Yeah, right") when I recommend T2. By so doing,
they're passing up one of the more electrifying bits of filmmaking
in many recent summers, but to them, I guess, T2 represents
mindless violence, the emblematic example of the big stupid blockbusters
we get every summer. Well, yeah, it's that too, but much more.
Cameron has used some of that $100 million to mount a horrifying
-- and meant to be horrifying -- simulation of nuclear holocaust.
That should, if nothing else, help the pacifists in the audience
feel less guilty. And Cameron has done something else: He's made
the finest violent anti-violence movie in years.
Consider: Arnie doesn't kill
anyone -- even before he has promised not to. In the 1984
film, Arnie was the killer, but he was also a malicious hoot:
because he was so absurdly implacable, audiences laughed at the
vicious things he did. If you laugh at this stuff, it doesn't
have to mean you're demented or laughing at real death and suffering,
because, of course, it isn't. Cameron pumps himself up, exaggerating
everything. In T2, you laugh at two single-minded robots
doing major damage to each other without pain or emotion. Cameron
has liberated the action film from any false empathy. We are
spectators, never asked to identify with anyone, and the movie
is a fireworks grand finale that never stops.
Which brings me to the final
reason to see T2. Remember The Abyss, with its
glob of seawater that could imitate people's facial expressions?
T2 uses the same technology to create a T-1000 that can
do ... well, anything. Ooze through bars, reconstruct itself
from tiny drops of liquid metal, mold its hands into lethal spikes;
anything. I'm hard to please -- I've seen pretty much everything
Hollywood's special-effects whiz kids can do, or at least I thought
I had. Throughout T2 I sat stunned, gaping at the mind-bending
computer effects that are inarguably worth whatever they
cost, and with a relentless circus like this one who gives a
damn about the budget? We are lucky, in these dull and barren
days of Problem Child 2, to have James Cameron to expand
the possibilities of movie fantasy, to stretch the screen till
it rips. He's the only action director I can think of who can
forge beauty out of hardware, elegance out of chaos. At its best
-- which it hits often and hard -- T2 is a masterfully
sustained symphony of violence.
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