Terminator Salvation Gets a NEW Ending

Terminator Salvation Gets a NEW Ending

Anytime the ending of a major movie tent pole is spoiled online the studio has to at least change one aspect to keep fans guessing. Looks like the studio has completely revamped the ending to Terminator Salvation...

By jman1977 - Mar 23, 2009 08:03 AM EST
Filed Under: Terminator
Source: moviehole.net

"Remember the big "Terminator Salvation" spoiler leaked last year? Yeah, the absurd-sounding finale involving a skin-switcheroo with our main characters. Silly but true. That was the ending of the new film. As far as the studio were concerned, they were sticking to it like orange juice on a hairy arm.

Funny how things change...

Was chatting to a friend from Warner Bros today - originally on a totally different topic ("The Green Lantern" - scouting in Australia) - who confirmed he'd seen the film and that there's been big changes to the film over the past few months.

Yep, don't expect to see any Hannibal Lecter-style action from the mysterious Marcus (Sam Worthington's silver-blooded character from the film) in the film when you catch it in May.

The third act of the film has been completely changed "because of the internet leak. The ending doesn't resemble the previous one in any shape or form". And more so, the new ending has tested quite well; it's gotten a much better reaction than the 'big reveal' in the script did.

Funnily enough, Seth Rogen (yes, that Seth Rogen!) was the first to tell me that Warner were considering changing the last act in the film because of the script leak. Rogen said that - via his friend at Warner - the WB were as red as Daredevil about the ending being spoilt online and had begun to rewrite the script. And that's exactly what they did. Its now, according to our friend on the inside, "A complete [180] from the original film. Works better. Probably not as hard to swallow. Real good though".

So there you have it. The ending of "Terminator Salvation" will be a surprise, after all (Please say it now ends with a T-800 being sent back in time to obliterate Mostow's "Rise of the Machines").

The studio had to do something as they felt the air was let out of the bag. They didnt want negative fan speculation to kill the film's potential revenue.

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Pierce_Highmen
Pierce_Highmen - 3/23/2009, 2:33 PM
If they changed the whole 3rd act, that will be too much for an "atl" ending. My guess is they will include a ton of deleted sceens. You cant do a 45 min "alt" ending.

It sounds like they found a better way to end the film, so that is a plus. Instead of hitting you with it all at once, it looks like they will unravel it slowly throughout the 3rd act. Smart move, I think. Maybe it was too predictable before.

Im still on the fence for this film. I dont have a lot of faith in the writers or Director of this film. T3 was horrible, maybe the new director will help.
CrookedJaw
CrookedJaw - 3/23/2009, 3:17 PM
This is fine by me, especially if fans are reacting better to the new ending...however, there has gotta be more reasons for changing the entire third act other than because it was leaked onto the internet...but cool beans, can't wait for this movie
Osiris
Osiris - 3/23/2009, 3:27 PM
I'm really looking forward to this movie, the only thing is the whole prob with messing up the time line and now there are even separate time lines due to all the time travel, but that's what happens to a series when you have time travel, it gets messed up.
LEEE777
LEEE777 - 3/23/2009, 4:02 PM
Um,, i didn't know the first ending lol! Still, cool!
Betty
Betty - 3/23/2009, 4:25 PM
I didnt know about the previous ending either. Switching skin? type deal. Anyway it's prolly a good thing.
ManOfIron
ManOfIron - 3/23/2009, 4:26 PM
That's not very Professional!
frankiepoo5
frankiepoo5 - 3/23/2009, 5:35 PM
i've always had a HUGE problem with the termenator timeline.

connor sends back the soldier who becomes his father. so how is he born in the first place to send send back his old man?! he couldn't!

IT IS BY FAR THE DUMBEST LIMELINE STORY EVER!

...that said, i'll still see it. terminator kicks ass! i hope they bring back a GNR soundtrack!
shadowboxer
shadowboxer - 3/23/2009, 7:13 PM
yeah, i didn't know TS had a pervious ending, can any one shed some light on what it was?
JeremyBentham
JeremyBentham - 3/23/2009, 7:22 PM
Frankiepoo, the time line thing makes perfect sense! it doesnt matter that his father was technically born after him, but as long as the father was physically there whenever John was born, it works! its all one path thats just ordered in that way; it was always that the dad went back in time and had john with the mother, so it is also destined that john would send the dad back so that would happen. there's no preventing it...

haha, this reminds me of a time in Futurama I think when one of the characters goes back in time, has sex with their mother, and fathers himself. So he's pretty much his dad. Urgh, that grosses me out just thinking about it...
shadowboxer
shadowboxer - 3/23/2009, 7:26 PM
this is what i found on www.moviesblog.mtv.com
"cut and paste"

"...in the ending, John Connor (played by Christian Bale) dies in a battle against a T-800, the same model famously portrayed by Arnold Schwarzenegger in the previous trilogy. With their leader dead, the resistance rip off Connor’s flesh and put it on Sam Worthington’s character, a human/terminator hybrid named Marcus Wright. In this version, John Connor would actually be a terminator in future installments of the franchise –meaning that the John Connor who sent his would-be daddy Kyle Reese back in time to protect and impregnate Sarah Connor was secretly a robot all along, thereby adding an entirely new spin on the original three “Terminator” flicks." end qoute

that is kind a cool ending, i like it when a "good line" story compeletly turns and ending like this. but seriouly, i would be !PISSED! Good thing thet are changing it. I do remember in T3 Anrold said something about JC allowing himself to died by the hands of T800 Anrold to get a turning point for the war. I didn't like that train of thought then and i still don't now.
realfirstavenger
realfirstavenger - 3/23/2009, 8:34 PM
first off, spoilers suck and people who go out of their way to find out endings and blab them to the world should be take behind the tool shed and beat on

second, if they did a re-shoot of the ending it could also be because i better ending was thought of after and now they have an excuse
and they can pull the whole
'DVD Bonus Features: Alternate Ending'
either way the movie is still going to be entertaining

i think the end should have christian bale yelling at one of his subordinates about his lack of professionality and skills and then threaten to smack them around a little
think he would agree?
frankiepoo5
frankiepoo5 - 3/23/2009, 8:51 PM
Jeremybentham...

it doesn't work. he sends back his dad, who i'm guessing would be the same age as him, being a soldier and all. when was the dad born? so when the 'dad' was a glimmer in his daddy's eye, john conner was too. the only way it could work is if he sent back a soldier who turned out to be his uncle, or even who would father his brother, but not himself.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/23/2009, 9:53 PM
Frankie,
You are wrong about many things...

1) We don't know what year Kyle Reese was born. And yes, you are GUESSING that Kyle & John are the same age in the future. There is nothing to suggest this whatsoever and if it doesn't make sense that they would be the same age then guess what?-- they probably aren't! And since Kyle's D.O.B. is never officially revealed then it doesn't contradict anything.

2) You say about both being "a glimmer in the eye" at the same time... SO WHAT? Here's the flaw your point: you have to consider the Kyle Reese who arrived in 1984 from the future as a different being as the Kyle Reese as a child because they could both in theory exist at the same time if not for "future Kyle" being killed in 1984.

3) You obviously missed the entire irony of the "Terminator" story line: The Terminators and Skynet could never exist had it not been for the 1st T-800 being sent back in time and coincidentally being destroyed with the exception of its arm and CPU at Cyberdine Systems. Meanwhile, the man who would eventually lead the humans to victory over the machines could never exist if his father was never sent back in time to stop the machine. So the ultimate irony is that both Skynet's existence AND defeat were results of sending the first T-800 back in time so Skynet is therefore responsible for both its own existence and demise. Basically, the entire film is a paradox and this is acknowledged by James Cameron's writing in the films.

And this goes out to everyone, not just Frankie,

I've said this before and I'll say it again: "T3" is being wiped out of existence so don't acknowledge it. From everything I've read and from what "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" has done, the timeline has changed. Just forget about it. It was HORRIBLE. Period. And I'm the biggest "Terminator" fan alive so I can say that it was trash with credibility. Now this could have been changed in the re-writing too, I suppose, but everything I've read and heard over the past couple years says this to be true.

And to state my opinion on "Terminator: Salvation"... I think this movie is going to be F@#$ing excellent. When "T3" was coming out I thought that it looked horrible but lied to myself and tried to believe that it looked good. However, I honestly believe that this movie looks to be the next major installment of this franchise that we've been waiting for and I cannot wait.
Pumchavas28
Pumchavas28 - 3/24/2009, 9:11 AM
@ MetalHead,

You make a very good point about Kyle & John... Also in the 1st Movie, in that small clip of "Future" John, he does look ALOT older than what Kyle looks like...

Kyle looks like he is in his Late 20's early 30's... John looked like he was well into his 40's.. Here are links for pics of "Future" John Connor in that 1st Terminator Movie...

http://www.goingfaster.com/term2029/connor1.jpg

http://www.terminatorchronicles.com/stills/2007/12/future-john-connor-terminat.jpg

Also in the "The Sarah Connor Chronicles", Reece also takes John to the park on his Birthday & shows him both his dad Kyle & Reece playing in the park together & Kyle (John's Dad) looked no older than 5 or 6 years old in the scene.. Considering he is sent back in the year 2029 to the year 1984... I would guess that if his dad was infact only 5 or 6 years old in the scene in the TV show, that by 2029, that Kyle was infact in his late 20's while John (already a teenager) would be in his 40's.

Everything seems to add up, and they have done a very good job with the show, of explaining alot.
Pumchavas28
Pumchavas28 - 3/24/2009, 10:23 AM
@ frankiepoo5,

Here's a link for the time line for everything....

http://terminator.wikia.com/wiki/Terminator:_Sarah_Connor_Chronicles_(timeline)

For this convo about John & his father, the only time line issues they have are:


Kyle Reese's birth:

Events in "What He Beheld" establish a different birthdate in for Kyle Reese from that established in The Terminator as 2008. As shown in Derek's flash-forward to the SCC Judgment Day placing him at age 8, and stating in the SCC "present" he is age 5, the revised birthdate must be in 2002

And Kyle's Mission:

Kyle Reese in The Terminator reveals to Sarah that he came from the year 2029. As shown in Derek Reese's flash forward/flash back seen in Dungeons & Dragons, it reveals he was sent back in the year 2027, two years before what the movie states. This is probably due to his and Sarah's efforts to prevent Judgement Day.

The differences in the dates may be explained a few different ways: Either the timeline was altered due to the events of Terminator 2: Judgment Day, or the writers of TSCC failed to take into account the two years that Kyle spent in Recon/Security directly under Connor (2027-2029), after his tenure with Perry (2021-2027).
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/24/2009, 4:31 PM
Good work Pumchavas. I didn't bother doing too much research using "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" to base anything on because let's face it-- that show COMPLETELY F'ed up the entire timeline. It's hard to put too much stock into the show but it does present some interesting concepts. It's also supposed to link to "Terminator: Salvation" and even has some of the same characters/actors (like the Australian chick who I HATE!!!).

I don't know, once you start altering timelines so frequently it makes anything easy to disprove so you (not you specifically) really have to stop thinking too much and enjoy it for what it is because like "The Butterfly Effect"/"Chaos Theory" suggests, the tiniest, slightest change in the past can end up having a huge change on the future.

Either way, though, I still say that "Terminator: Salvation" will be excellent.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 3/24/2009, 5:55 PM
I'm excited for Terminator: Salvation. We have to remember, though, that we're talking about a franchise that's all about time travel. Whatever timeline is established by THIS movie or THAT tv show can always be changed in an instant by more time travel.


I liked T3, for the most part. I didn't like Danes or Stahl (both are waaayyy too exasperated all the time) but I thought the story and effects were pretty solid. A few too many self-referential jokes, maybe. Especially that "you remind me of my mother" thing toward the end. Ack. Overall, though, I dug it. I liked the T-X... good robot solution to the shortcomings and skills of both the T-800 and the T-1000.

I also like the tv show. The Terminator world is such a fun story playground and I think the show remains respectful of the idea even if it doesn't really play as well in the same "universe". I have never thought of it as canon, though, only highly-enjoyable variations on the Terminator theme. Just like Superman comics versus movies versus tv shows versus etc.

No one can serve the original intention of the original story but James Cameron. That doesn't mean the rest of us can't play in the sandbox he built. Either way... cool robots, confusing web of time-travel plotlines, and women kicking butt? I'm IN!!!
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/24/2009, 7:22 PM
Sorry, "T3" was H-O-R-R-I-B-L-E and here are just a few reasons why:

1) How is it that the T-X is able to drive f@#$ing trucks and police cars with her ability to control machines without being in them? Last I checked there isn't a chip in them that allows the steering wheels to turn, the gas & brake pedals to be compressed or decompressed or the clutch to be compressed while being shifted. You could make the argument for cruise control BUT cruise control in vehicles can't be set under 35 mph, and yeah, BMWs, etc., can do that stuff but let's face it, that WASN'T a BMW, they were just trucks and police cars.

2) They actually had a line that was a major screw-up. The Terminator (played by Arnold) says to John that they didn't stop Judgment Day with what they did in "T2," they only postponed it. PROBLEM: How the F could he (the T-850) know about "the other Judgment Day"? He would have existed in a timeline where that Judgment Day never happened and so in the future that he came from he would have absolutely no way to know about the alternate timeline.

3) "Talk to the hand." Enough said.

4) John was a little bitch, not this great soldier who is supposed to lead mankind to victory over Skynet and the massive machine army.

5) Why the hell can the T-X analyze blood samples? AND even if you can get past that (stupid) idea then what about this: For those who forgot, the machines sent the first T-800 back to 1984 with almost zero knowledge of anything about Sarah Connor. They didn't even know her full name, hence why the T-800 started killing all the Sarah Connors in the phone book. NOW, why is it that THIS Terminator knows John's DNA?!? Pretty detailed information to have as common data that comes programmed in every Terminator that comes off the assembly line.

6) IF the machines had this advanced model T-X then why not send THAT model back to either 1984 or 1994? Skynet is supposed to be smart, after all. Wouldn't that be it's "highest probability for success" (to quote Arnold from "T2")? And the whole concept of a Terminator being able to bring back weapons is total BS. Isn't it enough that they are killing machines built for combat and are almost impossible to stop with the weapons we have in our time as it is? So stupid. A better idea than the T-X would have just been to send TWO Terminators.

7) The whole changing of the timeline was just absolutely stupid. Doing so, in theory, should have also changed the entire timeline which sent Reese, both T-800s and the T-1000 back in time and therefore would have stopped the first T-800's arm and CPU from being found AND stopped Reese from impregnating Sarah. SO by changing the timeline it actually would have stopped the entire story from ever happening.

I could keep going on but I've proved my point. The movie was complete garbage and completely contradicted and ruined the entire "Terminator" story. It makes ME want to send a Terminator back to 2001 to terminate the writers of "T3" and anyone else who had a hand in this wretched movie.
shadowboxer
shadowboxer - 3/24/2009, 7:39 PM
metalhead,
amen brother!
DarkKnight2010
DarkKnight2010 - 3/25/2009, 7:40 AM
I agree with metalhead, T3 was not that good. I just hope with the changing of the ending of Salvation that it doesn't mess the movie up, because from the last preview I saw, I can't wait to see this movie.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/25/2009, 12:34 PM
If anyone here would like to see how "T3" SHOULD HAVE went then I STRONGLY recommend picking up the miniserieses "Terminator 2 Judgment Day Cybernetic Dawn" and "Terminator 2 Judgment Day Nuclear Twilight" by Malibu Comics, which follow the first 2 films and storylines very well. These 2 serieses are excellent. Pick them up and I can assure you that you won't be disappointed. Personally I was amazed at how well they were done.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 3/25/2009, 11:31 PM
MetalHead,

1) I agree... controlling cars is ridiculous. It was a fun car chase, though.

2) We can assume that the people who reprogrammed the T-850, i.e., John Connor's wife, would have known about the other timeline from John.

3) Yes... I mentioned the bad jokes.

4) Yes, like I said.

5) Blood samples could have come from anywhere.... databases the T-X hacked when it arrived, foster program records, encounters with John Connor in the future, etc.

6) Skynet knows a lot more about Sarah Connor after she had been in a lunatic asylum. Hospitals have records. She was also spotted by the police, in conjunction with the destruction of the lab in T-2.

The weapons were under the same liquid metal that the T-1000 came through with... which shouldn't have been able to happen in the first place since inorganic matter can't pass through the time field. And why didn't they send a T-1000 through to kill Sarah Connor in 1984?

And let's talk about the T-1000. This is inorganic matter, entirely metal, but can store informational A.I. programming and problem-solving skills, power itself, and mimic complex shapes, voices, and colors. I think if all of that is possible, a robot like the T-X with an independent CPU and power source, covered with the same liquid metal material and network-enabled, could be capable of just about anything.

7) They changed the timeline when they "stopped" judgement day in T-2. John should have disappeared, having no reason to send anyone back in time anymore for any reason, let alone to conceive... himself? And if he wasn't orginally conceived by Kyle Reese then we have a genetically-different John Connor after T-1 and all bets are off in terms of his ability to lead effectively.

8) The entire premise is bogus. Time travel is flawed by virute of intent. If one has no reason to create a time machine, they simply don't. If the machines created the time travel device, they could no longer do so, having been prevented from existence.

I have fun watching t-3. It's not high art and the performances are terrible but, AS STATED BEFORE, I think the effects and premise are decent.

And I like the TV show because it's fun. Maybe you should try watching it instead of just reading about it. Since the entire story is time-trave-based, anything that happens can be wiped out at any time.

Thanks...!

Seth Asa
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/26/2009, 9:12 AM
Dude I haven't missed a single episode of "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" first off so don't go mouthing off to me about that. Second, all of your justifications are total trash just to try to make this movie sound even remotely watchable and not what it really was-- A MOVIE MADE FOR THE MONEY! (If you want to debate me then I'm fine with a friendly debate but there's no need for the jabs about me not watching the show when that is completely incorrect.)

Now a few things:
1) I never said that it didn't make sense that the T-X would have the ability to bring weapons back, I said that it was stupid for a few reasons; one being that they should have sent THAT Terminator back in the first place and the other being that it just isn't a fair fight for we, the viewers, to really believe could be won. And Skynet calculates its highest probablity for success. Don't you think if it had that model available then it would have sent it back to 1984 or 1994?

On a side note I have always had a solution to sending future weapons back in time: COVER THEM IN LIVING TISSUE! There's no reason that it would be any different than sending a Terminator back since neither are living creatures under the flesh.

2) NO, we CAN'T assume that John told ANYONE in the future about the other timeline because IF he is telling it to someone then it means that the other timeline NEVER HAPPENED so therefore JOHN would not know about it either. In theory if a timeline does not happen then there can be NO remaining proof of it, such as John's existence, Skynet's existence, John's knowledge of an alterate timeline, etc. Changing the timeline while having the T-800 and John exist is flat-out stupid. And another problem with that is that the T-800 sent to protect John never would have went back and therefore the T-850 wouldn't have known about John's boyhood attachment with it. TONS of problems with changing the timeline-- and unjustifiable ones at that.

3) Your argument that Skynet knows more about Sarah Connor has a MAJOR flaw: IF Skynet knew specific times she was at a hospital, police station, etc., then they would have sent a Terminator to that exact moment. Reese said it in the first film-- their records were all destroyed. And until that moment when Skynet had lost there was no way that it knew that it needed to kill John or Sarah Connor, otherwise it would have done so prior to being a last-ditch effort to keep the humans from winning.

Think about it like this: IF Skynet knew all along that John Connor would need to be killed then why would it wait until a few moments before being completely wiped out? The answer: it wouldn't. Skynet is a super-intelligent computer system that would have strategically destroyed John Connor years in advance had it realized that John would eventually be its demise. The point of all of this is that IF Skynet had Sarah's (and John's) blood type, dates & times she was at hospitals, information on the time she spent at Pescadero, etc., then it would have sent the first Terminator back to one of those specific times and would have been successful, rather than sending it back to a random time it knew that she existed in (1984) in hopes to be successful.

Not to mention that IF it had more information about her it probably would have sent it back to either kill HER parents or to when SHE was an infant as opposed to even targeting John.

Now I'm with you that changing any tiny event in the past alters the future and I already stated that when I referenced "The Butterfly Effect"/"Chaos Theory." So according to that it's easy to disprove any of this but for the sake of the story I'll argue/believe that the changes made in the past are the correct ones to lead them to this future.

I'm telling you, read those comic book serieses I mentioned. They are excellent, true to the timeline, make sense of unanswered questions AND make sense for Judgment Day still taking place on August 29, 1997 even though their actions in "T2" should have stopped it by their logic. You can find them on eBay or all over the place on the Internet. Read those (seriously, do it-- if you really are a fan then you'll definitely enjoy them), then watch "T3" and try to tell me which story should've been used for "T3" and which should've ended up in the trash.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/26/2009, 9:25 AM
Side note: if anyone actually does get those miniserieses which I have recommended then read issue #0 LAST! Unfortunately I read it first thinking that 0 comes before 1 but I was wrong and 0 was the ending to both serieses. (Issue #0 flips with one side being the conclusion to one series and the other side being the conclusion to the other series.) And I can't stress enough that if you're a huge "Terminator" fan that you should read them because you will definitely enjoy them.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 3/26/2009, 5:36 PM
Metalhead -

I didn't mean to offend you.

I misread your earlier statement where you said, "From everything I've read and from what 'The Sarah Connor Chronicles' has done, the timeline has changed."

I took that to mean you hadn't seen the show, only read about it. My statement about watching the show was really meant as a sincere recommendation, not a jab. I really dig it and thought you might, too, though I admit I was puzzled that a fan like you wasn't wathcing out of sheer curiosity. I'm truly sorry that you took it wrong and I'm glad you are enjoying the show as much as I am.

I'm not here to antagonize, and I'm enjoying our discussion.

I had just finished a nice long rebuttal to our T-3 discussion but I seem to have just lost it to the digital ether. Connection timed out or something and I had to log in again and it was all gone.

I don't feel like writing ALL of it over again at the moment, having just lost it to the digital ether. To quote Legolas, "For me the grief is still too near."

I do have some more points to make about T-3, and some questions about T-2 that maybe you can help me sort out.

I will check out the comics. Thanks for the recommendation and for the discussion.

"I'll be back."

Seth Asa
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/26/2009, 5:48 PM
Apology accepted. Sorry for the attitude on my part, too. Feel free to continue the discussion cause it's hard to keep good Terminator chats going.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 3/27/2009, 11:16 AM
Thanks for understanding. Continued:

Even though you don't like T-3, go with me on this for a second. Assuming all movie events are true:

Terminator 1 established the following:
) Sarah Connor is the mother of John Connor
) Kyle Reese was sent by John to protect Sarah Connor
) Kyle Reese ended up as the father of John Connor
) Kyle Reese and the T-800 were sent through the time field before the facility was destroyed
) only organic matter can pass through the time field
) all records were lost in the war
) the T-800 left remains in the machine shop
) Skynet is in control, Cyberdyne Systems manufactures the robots

Terminator 2 established the following:
) Sarah Connor in lunatic asylum
) John Connor in foster care system, multiple father figures
) either the facility wasn't destroyed after reese and the T-800 passed through the time field, or time facilities were repaired/rebuilt to allow the T-101 and T-1000 to travel through time
) the T-101 is able to "learn'
) the infiltration prototype T-1000 is inorganic and passed through the time field
) Cyberdyne Systems was making technological advancements based on the remains of the T-800, which would eventually lead to the creation of Skynet as protection for the United States
) Cyberdyne was and all it's research destroyed by Sarah and John Connor
) the original remains of the T-800, and the new T-101, were destroyed in the smelting pool
) the T-101 lost an arm during the battle with the T-1000 and it was never accounted for

Terminator 3 (would) establish the following:
) John Connor has been on the run and off the grid, not necessarily training to do anything now that judgement day has been "stopped"
) the time facility is still active, or has once again been destroyed and rebuilt, and can once again allow inorganic matter to pass through the time field
) the T-850 has knowledge of prior events
) the T-X is part liquid metal and part machine, is weapon-equipped, can network with other computer systems, and uses liquid metal for infiltration
) Skynet is developed by the government as an advanced protection system against network viruses and hackers in a military research facility
) John Connor was killed by a T-800, chosen to use his boyhood experiences as a means to get close to him and was reprogrammed by his future wife

In this timeline, each time jump brings a slightly more well-developed terminator from the machine's side. The resistance sends a Terminator of their own, which means that somewhere along the way they have learned how to reprogram them. Then they send another reprogrammed Terminator of the same model. Since neither side has sent their machine to the same date more than once, we might also believe that either A) the time facility can only transport within a certain timeline frame and there were three separate time travel inicidents after the events of T-1 and T-2, respectively; B) the battle that supposed to have destroyed the facility happened differently or in different locations after the events of both T-1 and T-2, respectively; C) John Connor has led the resistance differently after both T-1 and T-2, respectively; D) the time technology changes after the events of both T-1 and T-2, respectively.

After the events of T-1, the machines have knowlege that John and Sarah are both in L.A. at a certain time. After the events of T-2, the machines still take over (but at a later date) and have knowlege that John's lieutenants are in L.A. at a certain time and that Sarah Connor is dead.

It would seem that each time jump creates a pattern of things getting better for the machines and worse for the resistance. It would also seem that each time jump presents a more advanced terminator and better time travel technology. It seems both sides have more information. It seems they have access to different technology. In The machines have better techology and the resistence has older, or the same, techology.

If artificial intelligence is created in 1997 it has, at least/most the capabilities and considerations of 1997 technology. If artificial technology is created in 2003 it has, at least/most the capabilities and considerations of 2003.

This all would mean that either A) Reese actually didn't know the outcome of the time facililty battle, or the war, but only percieved them a certain way before his timejump; B) Reese being John Connor's father was not part of the original timeline and this change affected future John's command abilities; C) the T-101's missing arm (T-2) was found and used for the same research but the results of the research were set back a few years, ultimately creating a more capable wartime machine force; or D) Cyberdyne's research and development program would have delivered the machines and Skynet to the US Government in or around 1997 (or maybe already had); E) Cyberdyne deing destroyed caused the Government to build different war machines but continue developing Skynet as software. Dyson's Cyberdyne led to the creation of Skynet, created to defend the United States. So let's say the US Government was into Dyson's research. They do tend to know what people are working on.

I can see all of this working together. Each timejump creates a new situation but because of the paradox of time travel (someone having a need to create it in order for it to be created) the fate of a machine/human war can't be avoided. It is also safe to assume that if John Connor didn't lead the resistance, someone else would... humans don't die without a fight. John is certainly better-informed about the machines than anyone else but others could certainly organize to battle the machines. Johns involvement and his experiences, are disseminated amongst his officers, including his wife, in order to help them understand the machines well enough to combat them without his direct involvement in multiple places at the same time.

Let's say the T-800 hadn't come through. Perhaps the machine war would still happen but would play out differently. We have assumed that having the T-800's arm caused the research that led to Skynet and the Terminator series. But what if that isn't true? What if Cyberdyne still created artificial intelligence and advanced robotics (not Terminator-level advanced but advanced enough to make war) and the war still occurred... but the Terminator cybernetics line was slower to develop.

This would mean that the T-800's arm doesn't cause the war but only advances the speed of development of the Terminator line. This would also mean that after Cyberdyne is destroyed, the Terminator line of the future is built somewhat differently, i.e., that machines in the government facility instead of whatever Cyberdyne would have developed.

If you can stand to watch T-3 again, pay more attention to the network use by the T-X and the dialogue of the Claire Danes' character's father. It really stands in line with the basic premise of an artificial intelligence taking control. What I find good about the movie is not John Connor or the wife thing. It's how Skynet is still created to defend the government and is still able to take control, but this time with access to massive amounts of sensitive information. Now Skynet is not an uninformed enemy.

Of course I realize that these are most of the items you take issue with in the timeline but I really see it all working together, even with the new movie. The development of more advanced and different Terminators, based on a different path of development.

QUESTIONS ABOUT T-2:
How does the T-1000 make it through the time field (and, by proxy, the T-X)?

How does the door to Sarah Connor's rubber room get opened? It would seem that her hallucination of Reese opens the door for her.

Rock On...!

Seth Asa
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/31/2009, 5:49 PM
Haven't checked on here for a while so I wasn't expecting a reply, let alone ALL THAT!

Basically we agree on a lot BUT I guess the issue here ISN'T that the events in "T3" could or couldn't necessarily happen, where we differ in opinion really is that I don't like the altered timeline aspect and you do. Once you factor in time travel then you can make an argument for anything being able or not able to happen in the story given that we are only seeing a 2-hour clip of what would really be years' worth of events.

So I guess when I say that I think it ruined the first 2 films, I am right in that what the first 2 films were to me would now have to be different according to the events of "T3." Now you may or may not be able to prove any of these theories, but you don't need to to prove your point. Your point is that the events in "T3" could still be possible. My point is that the events in "T3" could still be possible (although many would still be very contradictory) BUT by doing so would change the events/truths/facts/concepts of the first 2 films AND the outcomes of the events that took place after the film ends. And again, TO ME, changing the timeline and events ruins the story-- but that's just MY opinion and obviously everyone is entitled to their own.

Basically "T3" ruined the story & timeline that I grew up loving. (No joke-- I've seen "T2" over 100 times and I'd argue probably more than anyone on the planet.) So when I say that the 3rd film "ruined" the story it ruined the world that James Cameron created in the first 2 films.

NOW, I will say that "T3" definitely did have some cool concepts. I liked that the T-X was sent back to oversee Skynet's progress. I liked the idea of John hiding in a military bunker. I liked the way in which they had Skynet take control of the defense systems. (There were a few other things I liked too). It's too bad that they didn't focus more on these good ideas instead of focusing on making an action movie without much indepth thought.

So that being said, here's what my main issue was with the movie: it had some good concepts but wasn't well-thought out and was definitely rushed. These things were probably a combination of a few things-- the main thing being the need to get the film shot ASAP due to Arnold's future plans and the fact that he wasn't getting any younger.
(SIDE NOTE: don't know if you knew this but Arnold was in a motorcycle crash which put a major delay on things.)

There was also a lot of cheesiness in the film such as (again) the "talk to the hand" scene, the T-X killing John's soldiers and being able to test DNA by licking blood, (again) the T-X being able to control cars, etc. There was also some stuff that was really forced in just to try to tie it to the first 2 films, like BRINGING DR. SILBERMAN TO THE GRAVEYARD (come on, that was STUPID!!!), the whole "Mike Krypkee's basement" stuff that supposedly happened the night before the events in "T2" about how John and Kate were "supposed to meet," John asking the T-850 about "hasta la viesta, baby" even though he had to have known that it was a different unit, etc.

But above all, here's the one concept that can't be believably disproved according to the facts that we know:
Skynet would not continue to send terminators back in time. Here is why: the resistence smashed Skynet's defense grid and shut it down. In a last-ditch effort Skynet sent back a terminator to 1984 to kill John Connor's mother (confirmed by both Kyle Reese and the 2nd T-800). Skynet did not know until its final moments that John would be the one to destroy it, otherwise it would have sent a terminator back long before that moment, and to a date and time where it knew for sure that John would be. Skynet would also not know about John's generals, etc., until that moment. The proof for this is why would Skynet send terminators back in time PRIOR to losing the war since at that point Skynet would not know it would need to because it wouldn't know that it would lose at that moment?

Now the date of the Resistance's victory COULD HAVE been questioned in that Kyle Reese's knowledge could have been incorrect due to events that could have happened after he left the future. HOWEVER, the T-800 sent back in the 2nd film AFTER Kyle had been sent back confirmed these events as well. (The T-800 had to go through after Kyle otherwise future John wouldn't have been able to confirm to it the facts about sending Kyle to 1984.)

So basically here is the issue: I'll believe that one Terminator could be sent back at the last minute. Even a second (the T-1000) would be a stretch (maybe it was sent from a different location?) but I'll buy it for the sake of argument AND to defend the 2nd film for going exactly where it should have ended up according to the events of the first film. But once you are sending back terminators all the time AFTER the Resistance had won the war then it ruins the original concept/premise-- the premise that James Cameron orignally based the entire series on-- that doing so was a last-ditch effort to try to win in the past because it had lost in the future.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/31/2009, 5:58 PM
Also, don't forget to check out those 2 comic book serieses. The way they set up a timeline for the events in the future was done really well and helps to imagine how it would have likely went in a way that makes a lot of sense and answers a lot of questions as to how it could have worked/been possible.

And good work on finding things to prove your points. Whether or not I agree with them or like the ideas (defending "T3") is a different story but at least you are putting in the effort to back your ideas/thoughts/opinions/etc.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 3/31/2009, 6:49 PM
Just doing some thinking after the fact and I decided that this is the real problem with "T3" and it is mainly due to the business-end of the movie...

Obviously the studios wanted Arnold in the movie to help its success financially. Now I have zero problem with him being in it. Obviously his character is a machine from the future so he (Arnold) could only be in a 3rd film in 2 scenerios: either in the future or in the present after being sent back in time. The mistake they made was going that route AND having him protect John & Kate from another terminator.

I think they could have wrote a very good plot WITHOUT having Skynet send a terminator back and therefore making the T-850's mission to protect John during the events in the days/weeks leading up to Judgment Day. They could have put more emphasis on the threat of the holocaust coming and the machines taking over. They could have also put more emphasis on John's and Sarah's (who SHOULD HAVE been brought back) preparations for Judgment Day-- the original one on August 29, 1997. And if they had to have a terminator sent back at least have its mission be to oversee Skynet's takeover and not to terminate anyone in specific in an attempt to stop the Resistance in the future. Maybe even have it terminate, copy & replace someone like (for example) a Robert Brewster who had a huge role in Skynet's takeover and have it ensure that those events take place. And introduce this terminator later in the movie so it isn't the movie's main antagonist, making Judgment Day/Skynet the main antagonist.

Basically the 3rd movie should have been similar to what "The Sarah Connor Chronicles" is but instead replacing Summer Glau with Arnold so the studios could use him for his draw and also not having Sarah & John jump forward a few years. The problem with this idea from the business side is less action but as far as the story goes it could have been much better.

Part of the reason I think the new trilogy will be a success is that they have Christian Bale to take over as the new face of the franchise. He's obviously someone who is already established as a top action movie draw who brings good acting into the mix as well. Having Bale won't cause the writers to either replace Arnold with a different actor as a T-800 and also won't force them to write him into a story that doesn't necessarily fit (although Arnold is done anyway). He basically allows the writers to bring the story where it should go and provides a great actor for the lead role. And to me, "T3" did not and was not able to do that.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 4/1/2009, 2:46 PM
I agree wholly about the rush job. Especially in the casting. Stahl and Danes were atrocious. And Arnold did look a bit old, hence why they shot him from the pecs-up during the arrival-and-acquisition-of-clothing scenes.

I think what I enjoy about T3 is the cool concepts. I like to think about them and incorporate them into my understanding of the Terminator series. And I really would have liked to see the movie centered around the creation of Skynet. For me, Robert Brewster was the only sympathetic character in the movie.

T3 is a so-so movie that, I believe, had all the potential elements of a really great movie but the director and writers were too busy being campy. Which, in a way, builds on some of the feel of T2... a super movie but certainly more relaxed and softer than the original film. The "Bad to the Bone" sound que when Arnold walks out of the bar in leather TOTALLY gave away who the protagonist was. Either Terminator could have killed a cop on arrival but the one with the funny entrance music couldn't be the antagonist.

I'm really looking forward to the new movie(s) although I'm not too keen on this whole skin-switching thing that might show up later on. It looks like, overall, these new films will be well-thought-out. I think they'll be great action movies but also a great design representation of the Terminator series and the possible future it represents.

I still don't understand how the T-1000 could pass through the time field. Is this something addressed by the comics you mentioned?
MetalHead
MetalHead - 4/1/2009, 4:02 PM
No, the T-1000 being able to pass through the field was never addressed in the comics, or at least not in those particular ones. Maybe the T-1000 is actually somewhat of a living being? That end of the time travel aspect doesn't really bother me because we only know that only living things can pass through the field from Kyle Reese, someone who might not know that to be true for sure. Neither T-800s or the T-1000 ever acknowledged that so it could be argued that perhaps the humans found that not to be true after Kyle had already passed through.

And like I said, it wasn't the fact that the T-X shouldn't have been able to bring a weapon back in time that bothered me because it could very easily be proved that it would be able to. What bothered me about it was that it was overkill. Send more than one terminator back instead of yet another advanced model.

I'll admit that I was a bit thrown at first after hearing about the skin-switching concept, but for the moment I do trust these writers and it appears from everything that I've seen so far that they are giving us the movie that we want, so I'll wait until I see what they do before I negatively criticize any of their ideas.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 4/1/2009, 11:08 PM
It's true about the skin-switching thing... if they do it, it will really depend on how they do it. Can't help but be a little wary but I'll wait and see.

We know that inorganic material can't pass through the time field because everyone always shows up naked.

I could maybe accept the idea that organic cells were incorporated into the liquid metal and that's what we see on the outside when it mimics a human but I can't see how those cells would survive. Hmmm...
MetalHead
MetalHead - 4/2/2009, 6:06 PM
I'm aware the reason they arrive in the present naked is because the clothing can't pass through but that isn't the be-all, en-all of that argument-- all it does is prove that clothing can't pass through (without also being coated in living tissue). Basically it's something that could have been a mistake by James Cameron. However, knowing how well he thought out everything else in the 2 movies I'd bet that he knew it contradicted that point BUT intentionally never broke down the specific rules by someone who would be able to confirm all of it and therefore did allow a loophole for this to be possible. And again, there's always the possibility of organic cells being incorporated and now with the developments of the Marcus character there is even more potential for that, although I'm sure it's something that we'll never truly know for sure.

It's funny how we can believe that a machine could travel back in time, mimic the shapes of humans and other things to exact detail, as well as many other functions, and yet we have difficulty trying to figure out how its potentially organic cells could survive.

The more I think about "T3" the more it annoys me how it had so much potential with some of the concepts and yet the cool stuff ended up being half-assed and not focused on enough. I really do like the 2 ideas of the way Skynet took over and how the T-X was overseeing its progress. It could have made for so much cooler of a story if (very vague and general here but just to throw the idea out there) Robert Brewster is questioning the actions of someone else in the military throughout the movie and towards the end we find out that it was a terminator who copied & replaced that person.

It also wasn't a bad idea that the T-850's primary mission was to get John & Kate to safety and that end of it could have been developed a little better because let's face it, Kate could have told it in the future where they eventually would end up so the T-850 wouldn't need to be so surprised when it had the idea to send them to Crystal Peak. Basically the T-850 could have been working to get them to a specific location which it KNEW they were supposed to end up at all along. The problem here is again with the business end of it because obviously they'd want the climax to be the 2 terminators fighting but it would have made for a much better ending if the T-850 told them that they had failed and he had to bring them to where they were supposed to go. BUT, if that was the biggest problem with the movie then I wouldn't be complaining. That thought, though, sums up my issue with the whole movie: so much potential but just not done right. I would LOVE the opportunity to re-write the screenplay and have it re-done. I don't see that happening, though.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 4/2/2009, 10:18 PM
I found yet another MAJOR flaw with "T3." I'd like to point out that ALL of the major flaws are results of the writers trying to put in shocking tidbits or adding new aspects to the storyline that weren't necessary other than to give the movie some freshness. (For example: the postponing of Judgment Day and yet John still exists, the T-X being able to remotely control cars that don't have that capability, the T-850 knowing about an alternate timeline that it would have no knowledge of as long as it existed, etc.) SOOOO....

Early in the movie we see a clip of John in the future after the Resistance has won the war. Now, granted, this could be a dream or it could be an "actual" shot of the future, but that's irrelevant. Later on we find out that this T-850 kills John in the future. We also find out that it was then captured and reprogrammed by Kate Brewster. We know that this unit is sent out by Skynet to terminate John because of John's boyhood attachment with it. PROBLEM: If John is killed by this model-- who was sent by Skynet to kill him-- then that means that the war doesn't end before John dies!

Now, onto the next problem which this creates... Kyle Reese says that they had defeated Skynet and won the war. So let's create a timeline of the events leading up to Kyle's travel back to 1984:

-John, Kyle and the Resistance defeat Skynet.
-Kyle knows that Skynet is defeated.
-John sends Kyle back to 1984.
-John dies at any irrelevant time after Kyle passes through.

NOW, how can John die BEFORE defeating Skynet and therefore BEFORE sending Kyle back to 1984? Now not only does John not live to see Skynet's defeat, he also doesn't live to send Kyle back to 1984 and therefore never exists. This movie is just loaded with serious F-ups that are largely in part due to (a) lack of indepth thinking and (b) getting into details for the sake of shock value that officially contradict specific truths to the story.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 4/2/2009, 10:34 PM
AND, yet ANOTHER flaw...

The T-850 tells John the exact day that it kills him. It also says that it was selected because of the emotional attachment he felt towards its model number due to his boyhood experiences which aided in its infiltration.

SOOO, if in this present time it tells John exactly when he is killed then wouldn't future John & future Kate have this information and therefore the infiltration issue be irrelevant because all John would have to do is NOT TRUST any T-800/T-850 models that he sees on July 4, 2032!?!?! And while he's at it do everything in his power to hide out on that specific day??? If nothing else the flaw here is that it would no longer be a surprise since John would have 30 years to prepare for that day. But it's another flaw, nonetheless.
YaBoyRD
YaBoyRD - 4/4/2009, 12:01 AM
Yeah... seeing John as the victor of the war when he doesn't survive to see the end... that's a biggie. Not to mention that even with the gray makeup he still looks like a 24 year old. My best guess is that he was projecting that image of himself onto his understanding of the future.

I have been making my way through the original movie while simultaneously being sick and trying to clean the basement. Kyle says the Terminator is a model T-101. I guess the T-101 is part of the 800 series...? If so, I finally understand the difference in the call signs.

Sarah originally had a date with someone who ended up cancelling the night she began running. Maybe that was John Connor's future father until Kyle showed up.

Also, when Kyle is describing the future to Sarah at the beginning (hunched in a car in a parking garage), he calls it "one possible future."

So we have to establish a few rules about time travel and timelines. It's my understanding that each timeline is singular unto itself. Thus, if a Terminator jumps back in time, it's actions don't affect the timeline from which it was sent but a new timeline is developed instead. This is why the events of T2 don't change everything and why the Terminators didn't just disappear when Cyberdyne was destroyed. They were left in a new timeline. This is partially why I think each time jump creates a new timeline and the events of T3 (ill-conceived as the script may be) are still workable.

Thus, I'm willing to accept that something changed enough to allow liquid metal through but not formed metal, or that the liquid metal has some meager organic properties.

This also solves the other problem: by virtue of the argument that Skynet sent the first Terminator as a last-ditch effort before it was defeated, there couldn't have been any more Terminators sent through time at all and T-2 would be as irrelevant in mythos as T-3, both having disproved that story. But with each timeline as a new one, both are possible.

The T-850 was programmed to take Kate and John to the Nevada desert. I figured the Kate from it's timeline survived in that manner and met John in the Resistance later on instead of in the T1-altered timeline or the T2-altered timeline. Crystal Peak was a change to the timeline.

And, since the timeline has changed and judgement day is postponed, maybe the conclusion of the war was also postponed. Kyle was sent back from 2029. The Terminator kills him in 2032. Another possibility is a "resistance" of machines, not controlled by Skynet, post-war after 2029. I prefer the continually-altered timeline theory better, though.
MetalHead
MetalHead - 4/4/2009, 1:26 AM
I do see your theory and have understood what you've been saying all along. And it is a way to justify all of the flaws. I just wish that if there were changes to the timeline in the future that it would effect things in the past (maybe a company would be deleted from existence, etc.). To me, though, it would have been much easier if the writers of T3 just took their time to think all of this stuff out.

NOW, I have an interesting concept/theory for you that would be able to justify ALL the timeline issues without having to believe/create all of these rules involving timetravel and its after-effects. This is something that could still end up happening (not saying that it will) because nothing has happened to prevent it from being a possibility yet...

Everything we know thus far about Skynet, Terminators, Judgment Day, the Resistance, etc., is all a combination of information from characters who are from the future. There are no other sources of information yet on any of these things. So with that in mind this does leave open the question of reliability of these sources.

So follow this now. What do the Kyle Reese, the 2 T-800s, the T-850, the T-1000 and the T-X all have in common? They all come from a world that no character in the present time can prove or disprove to be true and so the present-day characters can only go on what information they are given from the future characters. And all present-day characters change the courses of their lives once they believe in what they hear from the future characters. Back to this part in a minute.

We also know that Skynet is a super-intelligent computer system that calculates trillions of decisions per second. It makes decisions to strategically wipe humans from existence. This is a system that almost seems impossible to be outsmarted or defeated by a human.

Now back to the other part. All of the present-day characters who bought into the future went on to work towards stopping Skynet. But what if that is only what they think that they are doing? What if they aren't really working against Skynet at all? What if they have all been manipulated by Skynet to do things a certain way so that they are actually ensuring Skynet's existence?

This would also justify the "timeline changes" and the fact that things change in the future and yet have no effect of the past. To get John to believe in it the T-800 needed Judgment Day to be August 29, 1997. To get Kate Brewster to believe it Judgment Day needed to be a different date. All that matters is that all of these characters hear what they need to hear in order to believe.

NOW, this brings us to the Kyle Reese-problem with that scenerio. What if even Kyle has been manipulated to believe things in the future? What if the war is far from over after he passes through? He was born AFTER Judgment Day so he can't even technically confirm the date. So here's the question: why would John lie to Kyle knowing that he's his father? Well what if it isn't John speaking these lies to Kyle? What if it is a hybrid model part living/part cyborg terminator who has a new layer of flesh coating his endoskeleton that exactly resembles John Connor?

How likely is it that this happens? Probably zero percent. But it would very easily explain the flaws. And imagine an interesting ending to the final movie of the series where we find out that all along all characters were being manipulated AND that Skynet wins the war. Pretty cool idea for a plot twist that could be justified and possible with the information that we have thus far. Is it the ending that I'd want? Probably not. But as far as making for a huge ironic ending to the series with a major plot twist, it could be interesting if done right.

Now the only reason that I even came up with this concept/theory was to try to find a way to prove that all events in all 3 films could still happen without contradicting each other. This doesn't mean that I like or dislike the idea, it was basically me just playing along to see if I could make it work.
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