Terminator 2: Judgment Day | |
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Film poster |
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Directed by | James Cameron |
Produced by | James Cameron Stephanie Austin B.J. Rack Gale Anne Hurd Mario Kassar |
Written by | James Cameron William Wisher Jr. |
Starring | Arnold Schwarzenegger Linda Hamilton Edward Furlong Robert Patrick |
Music by | Brad Fiedel |
Cinematography | Adam Greenberg |
Editing by | Conrad Buff Mark Goldblatt Richard A. Harris |
Studio | Carolco Pictures Lightstorm Entertainment Le Studio Canal+ |
Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release date(s) | July 3, 1991 |
Running time | 139 minutes |
Country | United States France |
Language | English |
Budget | US$102 million |
Gross revenue | $519,843,345 |
Preceded by | The Terminator |
Followed by | Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines |
Terminator 2: Judgment Day, commonly abbreviated T2, is a 1991 science fiction action film directed, co-written, and co-produced by James Cameron and starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, Edward Furlong, and Robert Patrick. A sequel to 1984's The Terminator, it follows the characters of Sarah Connor (Hamilton, reprising her role from the original film) and her son John (Furlong) as they are pursued by a new, more advanced Terminator, the T-1000 (Patrick). Schwarzenegger reprises his role as the Terminator, but while the character was the antagonist of the first film, in Terminator 2 he is a protagonist, defending John and Sarah from the T-1000 and assisting them in their attempt to prevent Judgment Day, a future event in which machines will begin to exterminate humanity.
Terminator 2 was a significant box office and critical success. It had an impact on popular culture, and is considered hugely influential in the genres of action and science fiction.[1] The film's visual effects included many breakthroughs in computer-generated imagery, marking the first use of natural human motion for a computer-generated character and the first partially computer-generated main character.[2] It received many accolades, including four Academy Awards for makeup, sound mixing, sound editing, and visual effects.[3][4]
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In 1995, eleven years after the events of The Terminator, John Connor (Edward Furlong) is ten years old and living in Los Angeles with foster parents. His mother Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton) had been preparing him throughout his childhood for his future role as the leader of the human Resistance against Skynet, but she was arrested after attempting to bomb a computer factory and remanded to a hospital for the criminally insane under the supervision of Dr. Silberman (Earl Boen). Skynet sends a new Terminator, a T-1000 (Robert Patrick), back in time to 1995 to kill John. A more advanced prototype than the Terminator that was sent after Sarah, the T-1000 is composed of "a mimetic polyalloy", a liquid metal that allows it to take the shape and appearance of anyone or anything it touches. Though it cannot mimic complex machines such as guns or bombs, it can shape parts of itself into knives and stabbing weapons and can mimic the voice and appearance of humans. It assumes the identity of a police officer and goes in pursuit of John. Meanwhile, the future John Connor has sent back a reprogrammed T-800 Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger), identical to the one that attacked Sarah, to protect his younger self.
The Terminator and the T-1000 converge on John in a mall, and a chase ensues in which John and the Terminator escape by motorcycle. The Terminator explains that he has been programmed to protect and obey John. Fearing that the T-1000 will kill Sarah in order to get to him, John orders the Terminator to help free her. They encounter Sarah in the midst of her own escape attempt, and she is initially terrified by the Terminator but accepts his assistance after he helps them to escape the T-1000. The Terminator informs John and Sarah about Skynet, the artificial intelligence that will initiate a nuclear holocaust on "Judgment Day" and go on to create the machines that will hunt the remnants of humanity. Sarah learns that the man most directly responsible for Skynet's creation is Miles Dyson (Joe Morton), a Cyberdyne Systems engineer working on a revolutionary new microprocessor that will form the basis for Skynet.
Gathering weapons from an old friend, Sarah plans to flee with John to Mexico. However, after having a horrific nightmare of a nuclear explosion she awakens with strengthened resolve and sets out to kill Miles Dyson. She wounds him at his home but finds herself unable to kill him in front of his family. Deducing her plan, John and the Terminator arrive and inform Miles of the consequences of his work. They learn that much of his research has been reverse engineered from the CPU and arm of the previous Terminator sent after Sarah. Convincing him that these items and his designs must be destroyed, they break into the Cyberdyne building and retrieve the CPU and arm. The police arrive and Miles is mortally wounded, but stays behind to trigger the detonator that will destroy his research.
The T-1000 pursues John, Sarah, and the Terminator, catching up to them in a steel mill. In a climactic battle, the Terminator fires a grenade into the T-1000 and it falls into a vat of molten steel where it is destroyed. John throws the pieces of the first Terminator into the steel as well. The Terminator then sacrifices himself, asking Sarah to lower him into the steel so that his technology cannot be used to create Skynet. Sarah looks to the future with hope, believing that if a Terminator can learn the value of human life, then perhaps humanity is not doomed to self-destruction.
Hamilton suggested Sarah became psychotic in the intervening years after her encounter with the Terminator.[5]
Biehn reprised his role from The Terminator in a cameo appearance, but his scene was cut from the theatrical release.[6] It was restored in the Special Edition of the film.
Schwarzenegger received a salary of $12–15 million for his role as the Terminator,[7][8] whereas Linda Hamilton received a mere $1 million to reprise her role of Sarah Connor[9] Billy Idol was Cameron's original choice for the T-1000, and Cameron had drawn storyboards to resemble him, but Idol could not accept the role following a motorcycle accident.[10] Cameron stated that "I wanted to find someone who would be a good contrast to Arnold. If the 800 series is a kind of human Panzer tank, then the 1000 series had to be a Porsche." Originally, he thought of casting actor Michael Biehn, who played Kyle Reese in The Terminator, in the role with the explanation that Skynet managed to clone Reese's body and use it for a new Terminator. Cameron ultimately dropped this idea after deciding the audience would find it too confusing. McG, the director of Terminator Salvation, said that the T-1000 will be reintroduced in the fifth film: "I like the idea and the perspective for the next picture that you meet Robert Patrick the way he looks today, and he's a scientist that's working on, you know, improving cell replication so we can stay healthier and we can cure diabetes and do all these things that sound like good ideas, and to once again live as idealized expressions as ourselves".[11][12] He also said the original story they had in mind for the T-1000 would satirize the world's "obsession" with youth and aging.[13][14]
The sawed-off shotgun used by Schwarzenegger throughout the film was a modified Winchester Model 1887, modified especially for the film to allow it to be "flip-cocked" by the actor in several of the film's scenes.
I always felt we should continue the story of The Terminator, I told Jim that right after we finished the first film.[15]
Though there had been talk of making a sequel to The Terminator immediately after the original's release, legal and technical issues prevented it. The legal gridlock was finally broken by Mario Kassar in 1990, whilst the technical ones by James Cameron himself during the making of The Abyss.
James Cameron and William Wisher completed the 140-page first draft on May 10, 1990. By July 15, the first shooting draft was distributed to the cast and crew. [16]
Anthony Cortes served as personal trainer for Linda Hamilton, who began training for three hours each day, six days a week, thirteen weeks before filming began. She also lost twelve pounds on a nonfat diet, which continued throughout the film's six-month shoot. Uzi Gal, an Israeli commando, trained her for her actions scenes with "judo and heavy-duty military training. I learned to load clips, change mags, check out a room upon entry, verify kills."[17]
Shooting began on October 9, 1990 and was completed on April 4, 1991.[18] Most of the key Terminator effects were provided by Industrial Light & Magic for computer graphics and Stan Winston for practical effects. The external shots of Cyberdyne Systems Corporation were filmed on location at an office building on the corner of Gateway Boulevard and Bayside Parkway in Fremont, California. Of the fifteen minutes that the T-1000 displays its morphing and healing abilities, only six of those minutes were accomplished with pure computer graphics.[19] The other nine were achieved in camera with the use of advanced puppets and prosthetic effects created by the Stan Winston studio, who were also responsible for the metal skeleton effects of the T-800.
I had a ball with [Schwarzenegger] on the set. Absolutely. We were both very professional. We both showed up, did our work, and we were under, well, I was under a great deal of pressure because I was an unknown and I had been given this plum role and I didn't want to screw it up.[20]
The budget, which was believed to have been $90 million at the time - 3.5 times the cost of the average film - was already nearly earned back prior to the films release. Worldwide rights were sold for $65 million, video rights for $10 million, and television rights for $7 million.[21]
Linda Hamilton's twin sister Leslie Gearren was used in scenes that required two Sarahs. She is the mirror image of Sarah in the scene where they open up the Terminator's head, and in the scene where the T-1000 impersonates Sarah,[17] she is whichever one is farthest from the camera, alternating between the real Sarah and the T-1000 based on camera position. Another set of twins, Don and Dan Stanton, were used to play the mental hospital security guard and the T-1000 copying him.[22][23]
James Cameron nearly removed Edward Furlong from the project after Furlong messed up his lines out of nervousness from being in the same scene as Linda Hamilton, in a scene that was ultimately deleted (in which the Connors attempt to reboot the Terminator), but Cameron was persuaded by casting director Mali Finn to give Furlong one more chance. At that point, Furlong was able to deliver his lines without any problems. The scene is available in the Extreme and Ultimate editions of the DVD.
Opening in 2,274 theaters, Terminator 2: Judgment Day earned $54 million during its Fourth of July opening weekend. Only Batman had, at the time, had a better opening weekend with $57 million during a five day period. An anonymous theater chain owner was reported as saying "[b]ut nothing since 'Batman' has created the frenzy for tickets we saw this weekend with 'Terminator.' At virtually all our locations, we were selling out well in advance of showings, and the word-of-mouth buzz out there is just phenomenal."[24]
Made for approximately $102 million,[25] the movie was, at the time, the most expensive movie ever made. However, if adjusted for inflation, Cleopatra, which cost $44 million when it was made in 1963, would have been $219 million in 1995 dollars.[26] It was a box-office success, earning $204.8 million in the United States alone, and $519 million worldwide and was the highest grossing film of 1991, beating Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves.[25] The original Terminator grossed only $38 million in the U.S. in its theatrical run,[27] making Terminator 2's 434% increase a record for a sequel.
Upon its release, the theatrical cut ran 137 minutes. On November 24, 1993, the Terminator 2: Judgment Day: Special Edition cut of the film was released to Laserdisc and VHS, containing 17 minutes of never-before-seen footage including scenes with Michael Biehn reprising his role as Kyle Reese in a dream sequence. The subsequent "Ultimate Edition" and "Extreme Edition" DVD releases also contain this version of the film.
The Montreal Film Journal calls it "one of the best crafted Hollywood action flicks."[28] Screenwriting guru Syd Field lauds the plot of Terminator 2, saying, for example, "every scene sets up the next, like links in a chain of dramatic action."[29] The film was placed #33 on Total Film's 2006 list of The Top 100 Films of All Time.[30] Terminator 2 was also named the 35th greatest film ever by Empire Magazine on their list of The 500 Greatest Movies of All Time.[31]
The film received mostly positive reviews from critics. It currently holds a 98% "Certified Fresh" score on the popular review-aggregator site Rotten Tomatoes[32] and 91% by those who are considered as being "Top Critics" with 10 positive reviews and 1 negative. The similarly themed Metacritic rates the movie 69/100.[33] Roger Ebert, writing for the Chicago Sun-Times, who gave the film 3.5 stars out of a possible 4, complimented Schwarzenegger's performance, saying that "Schwarzenegger's genius as a movie star is to find roles that build on, rather than undermine, his physical and vocal characteristics."[34] Hal Hinson, reviewer for The Washington Post, was also very positive in his review, writing that "No one in the movies today can match Cameron's talent for this kind of hyperbolic, big-screen action. Cameron, who directed the first "Terminator" and "Aliens," doesn't just slam us over the head with the action. In staging the movie's gigantic set pieces, he has an eye for both grandeur and beauty; he possesses that rare director's gift for transforming the objects he shoots so that we see, for example, the lyrical muscularity of an 18-wheel truck. Because of Cameron, the movie is the opposite of its Terminator character; it's a machine with a human heart."[35]
Writing for Time Magazine, Richard Corliss was far less pleasing, stating that the film was "[a] humongous, visionary parable that intermittently enthralls and ultimately disappoints. T2 is half of a terrific movie -- the wrong half."[36]
In 2003, the American Film Institute released its list of the 100 greatest screen heroes and villains of all time. The Terminator was ranked number 48 on the list of heroes for its appearance in T2, as well as number 22 on the list of villains for its appearance in the first Terminator film. This is the only instance where the "same" character appears on both lists, though technically they are different characters based on the same model. T2 was ranked number 77 on 100 Years... 100 Thrills, a list of America's most heart-pounding movies.[37] Arnold's famous quote "Hasta la vista, baby" was named the 76th best movie quote on AFI's 100 Years…100 Movie Quotes list. In 2008, the film was voted the eighth best science fiction film ever made on AFI's 10 Top 10.[38]
64th Academy Awards[39]
It also won big at the 1992 MTV Movie Awards. The film took Best Movie and Best Action Sequence, Linda Hamilton won Best Female Performance and Most Desirable Female, Edward Furlong Best Breakthrough Performance and Arnold Schwarzenegger won Best Male Performance. The Academy of Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror Films awarded Terminator 2: Judgment Day with five Saturn Awards, out of the nine for which it was nominated.
The film was also nominated for three awards, winning two, at the 45th British Academy Film Awards:
The movie was first released on DVD as a single disc in August 1997.
Three versions of the film exist: the Theatrical cut, a "Special Edition" of the film for Laserdisc, VHS and DVD and an "Extended Special Edition" available only as an Easter egg on the Ultimate Edition DVD. The "Special Edition" was titled the director's cut on the European high definition releases.
The special edition has been the same from release to release, with all the scenes that Cameron reinserted intact. There are, however, two scenes that Cameron shot but chose not to reinsert into the film which have been included as an accessible extra on most "Special Edition" releases. The first scene shows the T-1000's tactile approach to acquiring information about the physical world, "scanning" John's room with its fingertips, and eventually finding a hidden shoebox containing pictures and tapes of Sarah, seen at the end of the first film. The second scene is an alternate ending set in 2029 with an aged Sarah Connor reflecting on how Judgment Day was averted. The addition of these scenes is the only difference between the "Special Edition" and the "Extended Special Edition". This version can be accessed by pressing 8, 2, 9, 9, 7 (based on August 29, 1997, the date of Judgment Day) on the main menu of the DVD. The Easter egg is only functional on the Ultimate Edition DVD (no longer produced); however, these scenes can be accessed at a certain point in the film with the interactive mode on the Extreme DVD. In addition, the Extreme edition contains several Easter eggs, which include access to the theatrical version of the movie and a preview for the Ultimate Edition DVD.
The Extreme edition DVD has several DVD-ROM features, including Infiltration Unit Simulator and T2 FX Studio, an application where images of a person can be imported and morphed into a T-800 or T-1000, and Skynet Combat Chassis Designer, a program where viewers could build a fighting machine and be able to track progress online.[40] The Extreme DVD also contains a WMV-HD theatrical edition of T2, where the film can be watched, for the first time, in Full HD 1080p format.
Two Blu-ray editions of T2 have been released, a UK and a US version. Both are presented in a slightly washed-out 1080p transfer and included no special features and a DTS 5.1 audio track from the DVDs instead of a high definition audio track. On May 19, 2009, the film was re-released on Blu-ray with an enhanced video transfer and THX certified DTS-Master Audio 6.1 audio in two editions: a "SkyNet Edition" and a limited collector's edition encased in an Endoskull. The limited collector's edition includes the Blu-ray "SkyNet Edition" as well as the Extreme Edition and Ultimate Edition DVDs and a digital copy of the film.[41]
The film was adapted by Marvel Comics as a three issue miniseries, which was collected into a trade paperback. Prior to the release of T3, there were several sequel books including: Malibu Comics Terminator 2 - Judgment Day: Cybernetic Dawn (aka.'Present War'), Terminator 2 - Judgment Day: Nuclear Twilight (aka.'Future War'), IDW Comics T2: Infiltrator, T2: Rising Storm & T2: Future War by S.M. Stirling and The John Connor Chronicles by Russell Blackford.
Following the film, James Cameron directed an attraction at Universal Studios Theme Parks, entitled T2 3-D: Battle Across Time, reuniting the original T2 cast. Costing $60 million to produce, and with a run time of only twelve minutes, it became to most expensive venture per minute in the history of film.[42] The attraction opened in the Hollywood area of Universal Studios Florida in Spring 1996, with additional venues opening in the Upper Lot of Universal Studios Hollywood on May 6, 1999 and the New York section of Universal Studios Japan on March 31, 2001.
An Italian film, an unofficial "sequel" of sorts to the original Terminator film, was released in 1990 as Terminator II. However, it has been known by various other names including Alienators, Aliens 2, and, internationally, Shocking Dark.
Terminator 2 was later followed by two more sequels, Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines and Terminator Salvation, as well as an alternate timeline TV series, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles.
Robert Patrick makes a cameo as the T-1000 in Wayne's World, where he pulls Wayne Campbell over and asks him if he's seen John Connor while showing him a picture of Connor. Patrick also has a (non-speaking) cameo in his T-1000 costume in Last Action Hero (also starring Schwarzenegger) as Jack Slater and Danny Madigan enter LAPD Headquarters. Sylvester Stallone appears in the film, posing as "The Terminator" for a fictional Terminator 2 poster.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) | |
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Film score by Brad Fiedel | |
Released | July 1, 1991 |
Label | Varèse Sarabande |
The Terminator 2: Judgment Day film score, composed by Brad Fiedel was released on CD & Cassette Tape on July 1, 1991 by Varèse Sarabande.
Songs not included within the soundtrack
Awards and achievements | ||
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Preceded by Total Recall |
Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film 1991 |
Succeeded by Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country |
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