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Movie Review
Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines
By Gareth Von Kallenbach Published July 2, 2003
US Release: July 2, 2003
Directed by: Jonathan Mostow
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger , Nick Stahl , Claire Danes , Kristanna Loken
R
Running Time: 109 minutes
Domestic Box Office: $150,350,000
Directed by: Jonathan Mostow
Starring: Arnold Schwarzenegger , Nick Stahl , Claire Danes , Kristanna Loken
R
Running Time: 109 minutes
Domestic Box Office: $150,350,000
B
Easily the most satisfying and entertaining of the summer blockbusters
With a flash of light and a large burst of energy, a visitor from another time has arrived in Beverly Hills and death and destruction will follow in her wake.
Such is the premise for the new Arnold Schwarzenegger epic, "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines," by director Jonathan Mostow, who takes over the big shoes left by the series creator James Cameron. The visitor is the deadly T-X (Kristanna Loken), a cyborg killer sent from the future to accomplish what the cyborgs in the previous two films could not ? kill John Connor, and ensure that machines rule the world.
To accomplish this, she must first locate the elusive John Connor (Nick Stahl), who lives as a blip on society with no home, records, nor attachments to track him by. John is haunted by the visions of what his late mother Sarah told him about pending nuclear devastation and his destiny to lead the surviving humans to victory over the machines that would eradicate them.
With their very future at stake, the humans from the future have dispatched a second Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) to locate and protect John from the T-X. The issue with this is that the second Terminator (the T-800) is an obsolete model and is no match for the vastly superior T-X who aside from being a killer has the ability to mimic other forms and control all manner of machinery.
Eventually John meets up with a vet named Kate Brewster (Claire Danes), a lady he knew as a child and who has wondered where he has vanished to ten years after his foster parents were found dead while his mother escaped from the institute where she was incarcerated. Kate has been planning a wedding when John comes back into her life and their reunion is hampered by the arrival of the T-X and the T-800, who turn the small vet clinic where John had been hiding into a war zone.
Kate, who is convinced she is being kidnapped, is taken from the scene by John and the Terminator as they attempt to leave the city and reach safety, as it seems the T-X is not the only pending threat to humanity, but Kate's father may hold a key to survival. It seems that the elder Brewster is a General in charge of a computer network known as "Skynet," and with a virus on the loose in the nation?s systems, Skynet may have to be activated to control vital defense systems. It is at this point that the film shifts into overdrive, as a series of action and chase sequences ensue (including a spectacular car chase involving a gigantic crane as John and Kate attempt to save the world and themselves from death and total devastation).
To say the film is action packed would be an understatement, as Schwarzenegger is at the top of his game and once again shows that he is the top action star in the world and despite some recent setbacks, at 54 he is still king of the hill. His Terminator blends action and humor without ever losing his sense of brutal efficiency and determination to complete his mission no matter what the cost.
Stahl and Danes have good chemistry with one another and are elevated beyond the typical characters in distress role. Stahl plays Connor as a lonely man who is unsure of his destiny and is haunted by the notion that he is to be the savior of humanity, as he feels he can barely take care of himself. However, when the chips are down, Connor, like Brewster, finds an inner fire and strength that will ensure their place in history when their destinies arrive.
One of the biggest surprises in the film is that of Loken, as she plays the T-X with a mix of brutality and sensuality. Unlike Robert Patrick's chilling turn as the T-1000 in the last film, Loken plays the T-X as a deadly and brutal killer who takes satisfaction in her tasks, but is not above a dry sense of humor and a sense of style and fashion. She is beauty and the beast in one and is easily a match for Arnold's Terminator. Loken mixes a quiet intensity with a steel gaze as she dispatches those in her way only showing any hint of emotion when she is killing like a predatory cat toying with her prey.
The special effects in the film are solid and Stan Winston once again shows off his skills, as the designs of the machines are first-rate. The action is relentless and it is nice to see that real stunts were used for many sequences instead of being created by CGI, thus giving a sense of reality and unforced spectacle to the action that recent films such as "The Matrix Reloaded" and "Hulk" seemed to lack.
This is not to say that T3 is goes without issues. The film does not have the depth of story and the emotional attachment that the previous two films had, and character development is mostly nodded at as much of the premise was established in the previous films. I can see how some will take it one way and others will find issues with it differing from the original and perhaps the ending of the film.
I prefer to look at the film as an enjoyable summer film; it is entertaining, continues a great series, and is easily the most satisfying and entertaining of the summer blockbusters. And I do not think I am going out on a limb by saying that the Terminator will be back.
Such is the premise for the new Arnold Schwarzenegger epic, "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines," by director Jonathan Mostow, who takes over the big shoes left by the series creator James Cameron. The visitor is the deadly T-X (Kristanna Loken), a cyborg killer sent from the future to accomplish what the cyborgs in the previous two films could not ? kill John Connor, and ensure that machines rule the world.
To accomplish this, she must first locate the elusive John Connor (Nick Stahl), who lives as a blip on society with no home, records, nor attachments to track him by. John is haunted by the visions of what his late mother Sarah told him about pending nuclear devastation and his destiny to lead the surviving humans to victory over the machines that would eradicate them.
With their very future at stake, the humans from the future have dispatched a second Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) to locate and protect John from the T-X. The issue with this is that the second Terminator (the T-800) is an obsolete model and is no match for the vastly superior T-X who aside from being a killer has the ability to mimic other forms and control all manner of machinery.
Eventually John meets up with a vet named Kate Brewster (Claire Danes), a lady he knew as a child and who has wondered where he has vanished to ten years after his foster parents were found dead while his mother escaped from the institute where she was incarcerated. Kate has been planning a wedding when John comes back into her life and their reunion is hampered by the arrival of the T-X and the T-800, who turn the small vet clinic where John had been hiding into a war zone.
Kate, who is convinced she is being kidnapped, is taken from the scene by John and the Terminator as they attempt to leave the city and reach safety, as it seems the T-X is not the only pending threat to humanity, but Kate's father may hold a key to survival. It seems that the elder Brewster is a General in charge of a computer network known as "Skynet," and with a virus on the loose in the nation?s systems, Skynet may have to be activated to control vital defense systems. It is at this point that the film shifts into overdrive, as a series of action and chase sequences ensue (including a spectacular car chase involving a gigantic crane as John and Kate attempt to save the world and themselves from death and total devastation).
To say the film is action packed would be an understatement, as Schwarzenegger is at the top of his game and once again shows that he is the top action star in the world and despite some recent setbacks, at 54 he is still king of the hill. His Terminator blends action and humor without ever losing his sense of brutal efficiency and determination to complete his mission no matter what the cost.
Stahl and Danes have good chemistry with one another and are elevated beyond the typical characters in distress role. Stahl plays Connor as a lonely man who is unsure of his destiny and is haunted by the notion that he is to be the savior of humanity, as he feels he can barely take care of himself. However, when the chips are down, Connor, like Brewster, finds an inner fire and strength that will ensure their place in history when their destinies arrive.
One of the biggest surprises in the film is that of Loken, as she plays the T-X with a mix of brutality and sensuality. Unlike Robert Patrick's chilling turn as the T-1000 in the last film, Loken plays the T-X as a deadly and brutal killer who takes satisfaction in her tasks, but is not above a dry sense of humor and a sense of style and fashion. She is beauty and the beast in one and is easily a match for Arnold's Terminator. Loken mixes a quiet intensity with a steel gaze as she dispatches those in her way only showing any hint of emotion when she is killing like a predatory cat toying with her prey.
The special effects in the film are solid and Stan Winston once again shows off his skills, as the designs of the machines are first-rate. The action is relentless and it is nice to see that real stunts were used for many sequences instead of being created by CGI, thus giving a sense of reality and unforced spectacle to the action that recent films such as "The Matrix Reloaded" and "Hulk" seemed to lack.
This is not to say that T3 is goes without issues. The film does not have the depth of story and the emotional attachment that the previous two films had, and character development is mostly nodded at as much of the premise was established in the previous films. I can see how some will take it one way and others will find issues with it differing from the original and perhaps the ending of the film.
I prefer to look at the film as an enjoyable summer film; it is entertaining, continues a great series, and is easily the most satisfying and entertaining of the summer blockbusters. And I do not think I am going out on a limb by saying that the Terminator will be back.