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Terminator Salvation Review

May 21, 2009
Christian Bale and Sam Worthington in Terminator Salvation

Terminator Salvation wants to be a great film, but it has big shoes to fill.  The first two Terminator films were excellent, while the third was mediocre at best. Terminator Salvation aims to right the wrongs of Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines, bringing the franchise back to the darker more serious tone of the first two. The film has a fairly solid concept: a post-apocalyptic war against robots. The movie even has some great actors who turn out solid performances and the special effects are good. How could you go wrong? Based on my description, you would think this movie has all the makings of a great summer blockbuster: unfortunately this is simply not the case.

Full review after the break; spoilers to follow.

I really wanted to like Terminator Salvation. I consider myself a fan of the Terminator series and I was skeptical about the involvement of McG, who directed the Charlie’s Angels movies which I dislike with a passion.

All my skepticism about McG went out the window when I saw the second theatrical trailer, it completely sold me on Terminator Salvation. The trailer made the movie look amazing, which is the point of a well made trailer—it also made me realize that I’m a sucker for a well placed Nine Inch Nails tunes in movie trailers (cf. 300).

If the trailer were the movie, I would have taken back everything bad I’ve ever said about McG. However, as I’ve learned recently the trailer is not the movie, and as a result I still have plenty of bad things to say about McG.

Joseph McGinty Nichol—I mean McG—is a competent enough director, but this movie needed a good director. There are so many little things wrong with Terminator Salvation, things that a good director would have corrected during the production.

For starters, the script for the film is simply awful. The film features many talented actors, including Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Anton Yelchin, Helena Bonham Carter, and even Michael “God Damn” Ironside, but they are given very little to work with. No matter how talented an actor is they need good material to shine, the screenplay for a film really is half the battle.

The actors try, they really do. Christian Bale is a decent actor, but he’s alternately yelling at anyone and anything in sight or growling Dark Knight-style in every other scene. Anton Yelchin was really good as a young version of Kyle Reese, he makes the role played by Michael Biehn in the original very much his own. Bryce Howard is good in the few scenes she’s in, but has no time to develop her character, she’s a non-presence in the movie. Michael Ironside brings the dour demeanour he’s famous for, but his role as the Resistance leader is shallow and underdeveloped. Helena Bonham Carter is utterly wasted, her character’s entire purpose is to relay exposition to the audience. Common’s laughable delivery of the three lines he has was unfortunate. I think the musician should stick to what he does best.

Often the actors’ experience and competence manages to shine though the terrible script, but this doesn’t happen enough. Speaking of actors and their performances in relation to the script, I must mention Sam Worthington and Moon Bloodgood, who are arguably the main characters of the film.

Sam Worthington is going to be a big star, his performance almost makes Terminator Salvation worth seeing. The fact that he can generate sympathy for his character, that Marcus Wright is a likable character at all is simply amazing. Worthington is good in the film, but he’s given literally some of the worst lines I have ever heard in a major Hollywood picture. Worthington’s character could have been far more nuanced and interesting, but not enough time is spent with him for you to ever really care.

His relationship with Moon Bloodgood’s character is painful to watch.  The dialogue between the two is stifled by one awful line after another. Where Worthington can get away with it, Bloodgood often cannot: she’s simply not as good an actor.

One of the major problems I had with the film is that one of the central plot points of the movie is exposed completely and absolutely by the trailer and all of the associated marketing for the movie. Marcus Wright (Worthington), is a cyborg who doesn’t know he’s a cyborg for most of the movie.

Almost the entire first hour of the movie involves the characters and the audience trying to figure out who Marcus really is and what his motives are. As a result half the movie feels like a waste of time as the story goes through the motions of revealing he’s a cyborg. The big reveal, that holy-shit-he’s-a-robot moment, is utterly ruined for most people because they already knew the guy was a cyborg.

Speaking of cyborgs though, the special effects were great. The movie is dedicated to the memory of the late, great effects genius Stan Winston, and they don’t let him down. There is a nice balance of practical and computer generated effects, and they are blended together very well. The terminators themselves looked amazing and believable, not shiny and fake like some prior iterations. The previous Terminator film relied too heavily on CGI, if there is one good thing I can say about McG, it’s that I’m glad he took the effects back to basics.

The much talked about computer generated cameo by everyone’s favourite Austrian muscle man worked surprisingly well. I’m sure it was a difficult effect to pull off, but using practical and computer effects techniques in conjunction really sold it for me.

Effects-wise I really liked the film, but the action overpowers the movie. Gunfire and explosions drown out the characters and the story. Maybe McG realized that the script was absolute shite, and decided that if he had enough to explosions in the film people wouldn’t notice. Also, it wouldn’t be a McG movie without a character riding a dirt bike and going off a jump at some point… just saying.

Terminator Salvation really is a mess of a movie. Most people are just going to go see for the action and effects, which are in no short supply. If that’s all you want, then I highly recommend the movie.

But there is so much wasted potential, the film just strikes me as one giant lost opportunity. The movie doesn’t have heart, something that made the original Terminator and Terminator 2 so great. Salvation is a pale imitation, when it could have been so much more.

Maybe it will be more, maybe there is a good movie to be salvaged from Terminator Salvation. McG claims to have cut out over 40 minutes of footage. I’m sure those scenes he cut were solely devoted to character development, since this version of Terminator Salvation misses them. With the cut footage in mind I might give Terminator Salvation another chance, I’ll wait for a Director’s Cut on Blu-Ray. For now I’ll just call the movie Terminator Salvagable, in hopes that the film can indeed be salvaged.

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  • http://purplejesus.wordpress.com/ PJD

    Good write up. I was on the fence about seeing it, but now I will not, with the ringing endorsement on the dialogue. Oh well.

  • http://www.lucasrizoli.com/ Lucas

    I think part of the reason Salvation may be a let down is that the first two in the Terminator series have gone from being cool action flicks with good effects to sci-fi canon. (Yes, I’m exaggerating.) Not only does Salvation have to make up for Terminator 3, not only does it have to be as good as Terminator 2 was when it came out, it has to deal with almost 20 years’ worth of veneration and nostalgia.

    Does anyone really go to a movie for its special effects? I mean, excepting A Sound of Thunder, I don’t think I’ve seen a movie since Timecop that had disappointing special effects anyway. (Mediocre, perhaps, but not bad.) It just doesn’t seem to be reason enough to see something.

    Lastly: you knew that McG made this. You knew he was the guy that made Charlie’s Angels. You knew his name is McG. And yet you still had hope that Salvation would be worthwhile?

  • http://www.dorkshelf.com/ Will

    Like I said, the trailer really sold me on the movie. I was initially very skeptical about McG, but when I saw what he was doing with the film I figured I would give him a chance.

    All my critiques of the film aside, the movie set the right tone… the setting and the locations felt right. If only there had been more character drama to flesh out the locations… the post-apocalypse never felt desperate enough to me.

    I was talking to my friend Chris who came and saw the movie with us, there’s one amazing effects sequence near the beginning of the film… it’s a long take, involving Christian Bale as John Connor fighting a big T-600 Terminator, killing it, jumping into a helicopter, flying the helicopter, and then crashing in said helicopter after a nuclear blast occurs, then crawling out of the copter upsidedown.

    Chris says it was a gimmicky shot and not very well executed… he’s a film student so he probably knows better than I. But I thought it was extremely well executed, and actually was one of the highlights of the film for me… at the same time this moment spoke to the larger issues the film has.

    McG focused on these cool little effects moments, on these few memorable sequences over anything else. There was no reason to have that one long shot at that particular moment, no other shots like it exist in the entire film… it was a “hey look what I can do” moment for McG. It was impressive, but shallow and not meant to illicit any other response than “Holy shit that was cool.” That’s what the movie is generally competent action and effects sequences, with very impressive gems scattered between them… devoid of character or emotion.

  • http://scrollseek.com ej

    will

    have you seen ‘transformers’?
    because i think that script was absolute shit but the special effects were awesome.
    that seems to be how you make out ‘salvation’.

    on the other hand, in regards to ‘the dark knight’ the special effects were awesome but the script was just as good.

    if a movie is going to be action-packed, it shouldn’t mean that you can neglect the script because that’s what it seems like they are mostly doing these days, unfortunately

  • http://www.dorkshelf.com/ Will

    ej, I’ve seen Transformers and I enjoyed it quite a bit. The script WAS terrible, but the movie had a fun, light hearted tone to it… with legitimate bits of humour for good measure. Plus it had the robots I grew up loving as a kid, rendered awesomely for live action. My enjoyment of Transformers had more to do with nostalgia than anything else.

    As for Salvation, there was nothing to it beyond the action. The first two Terminator movies had a serious, hard sci-fi tone… and so did Salvation… but those films also had a coherent plot, good pacing and character development a plenty… the second one even had funny moments. I don’t remember any funny parts from the first Terminator movie. The original Terminator was a scary movie… Arnie was relentless, cold and unfeeling… can you imagine that thing out to get you? The terminator effects looked great in Salvation, but not once was I actually afraid of the terminators.

    Like you say, scripts these days are being neglected for the big summer blockbusters. God forbid they actually make a quality film that breaks $100 million dollars at the box office… explosions and effects seem to cut it these days.

  • http://Website Andres

    Most accurate review of the film I have read so far.

  • http://www.yousunkmybattleship.com Shamhan

    I had no idea this was your site and you wrote lol. Fascinating. Excellent review too… although I’d still say it ranks up there with the first two terminators.

  • http://Website CJ

    Great review, Will. I had the chance to see this today, but opted for Star Trek.

    I was hoping they wouldn’t dwell on the cyborg-ness of Marcus for long, since they blew their wad in the commercials…you’d think they wouldn’t waste much time on it as a result.

  • http://www.lucasrizoli.com/ Lucas

    Looks like Salvation hasn’t done too well at the box office. The LA Times claims this is due to “weak audience word of mouth,” just like this review.

    Now McG won’t be able to afford that ivory backscratcher, Will. Don’t you feel guilty?

  • http://Website Tuttaytalker

    Wow… just watched it…

    It was annoying me… The scenes were cut sharp and didn’t really flow well…

    I disagree… Bale was actually alright… Not screaming all the time… Everyone gave a solid performance…. Just given a shitty script… Went from Jonathan Nolan penning it to having the final draft submitted by the moron who did Catwoman….

    Still was really upset and considered Terminator 3 to be superior to this piece of shiat

  • http://www.dorkshelf.com/ Will

    I love that they attribute it to “weak audience word of mouth”, and not the fact that they made a sub-par film.

    Raj, yeah you can see the skeleton of a longer-possibly better movie-many of the scenes feel like they’ve been edited down. Doesn’t work.

  • http://www.coffeenomad.com need coffee

    i love how they got creative with some of the robots, no so sure about the human performances though

  • http://Website egg

    I actually really enjoyed it, I grew up with 1 and 2 as a kid and 1 scared the shit out of me, and I was really impressed to see that the robots in this still scared me.
    I think the storyline was pretty good, the film managed to make me feel tense at all the right moments and worried, like when Reese was stuck in that cell, and when you find out why Connor is there, I didn’t expect that until right before and I don’t think I would have been bothered if it was a shoddy storyline. Even though everyone watching knows Connor has to go on (as this is 2018 and it’s not til 2029 that he sends Reese back) it still managed to make people worry about how he’d survive and things like that.
    There were weak moments I guess, and I see where you’re coming from, but I still rank it with 1 and 2, I thought it was really well done, the whole post-apocalyptic world they’d created had a great feel to it, and I think there was enough about the characters for the audience to get a grasp of who was who and how they felt. I just wished that kid would speak, that annoyed me.

  • http://Website kyle

    great movie , i like the special efects . solid performance from bale, he is a great actor.