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I've got a great mind as well. ;)
You think? ;)
It is true what @chrisisall has said, i saw the interview as well, and it did appear Cameron was genuinely pleased with TG.
I can see why the critics (US critics that is) didn't like the film much, as if you hadn't been keeping upto date with the franchise, the fact that the complex story, and the different terminators from different time periods did make it confusing. But, i guess making John Connor an enemy was the factor that put a lot of people off, even though Connor was effectively changed into being an enemy, through no fault of his own.
This film frankly surprised me being better than I imagined possible.
- Bad performances;
- Terrible characters (O'Brian for example, wtf?!);
- Bland score;
- Extremely poor teen light novel kind of writing;
- Confusing plot;
- "Pops"
- ...
NOW however, the timeline is beyond fucked. Where does Connor even come from now??
One thing from all the movies that portrayed Connor always had me wondering was 'what was so special about him.' TG makes it seem like it's just because he had future knowledge.
That's fair enough I suppose... but imagine for a second that in TG, Pops doesn't go back to raise Sarah, but instead goes back to raise John! Maybe while Sarah's in the asylum (which still happens years before T2 takes place) Pops could arrive and train him to be a badass like what he did with Sarah in TG. That would solve the 'so now how is John born' problem, and we'd have a better understanding as to why he's such an important legendary warrior later on.
Admittedly though, I guess that could make it a little too similar to T2... and Uncle Bob would have no purpose (team up against Robert Patrick? =)) )
Seriously though, time travel movies & TV shows screw themselves logically in service to the drama. Paradox slippery slopes abound, and only TOS Trek addressed it all correctly in eps like City On The Edge Of Forever & Assignment Earth IMHO. Even the first Terminator movie has to work in a convoluted series of timelines to create John as we see him in T2... God, a person could go crazy...
Of course in many cases we shouldn't care. Time Cop, Star Trek IV, ... some films don't ask us to take it too seriously. But films like TT and T2 had it figured out pretty good though not perfect. I think Primer, a little known film, comes close.
I have always put my own spin on that. If you want to move an object in space, energy is required. It probably would be the case with sending something through time too. Now, imagine some kind of exponential relationship between the amount of energy required and the time gap one hopes to bridge. As such, the further back in time Skynet wants to send a terminator, the more energy it needs to accomplish that. It must have taken Skynet 'some' time to develop the T-1000, so that delay might be the reason why the T-1000 couldn't be sent back to 1984 any more. Even Skynet cannot draw infinite amounts of energy, ergo if another ten or twenty year interval increases the energy demand beyond reasonable supplies, it cannot be done and Skynet must settle for a date closer to its 'present day'. There is of course a way to bypass that. You can send a terminator back in time, say 10 years, have it build a time machine itself, then go back in time another 10 years and so on. I'm still looking for a way out of that. I have some thoughts but I'm waiting for the one that I like best. ;-)
To ME, the time travel as depicted in the Terminator films is much like throwing a dart at a dartboard; imperfect at best. Even a bulls-eye can land you years or miles from the white dot...
In some of the comics, a point in time and space can be fixed pretty precisely. ;-) But yeah, that's another possible route to follow. We could say that the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle puts the time travellers more or less where they want to be but never accurately. :-)
=))
However, in proper 'Terminator' news, 'Terminator 2: Judgment Day' will be getting a 3D re-release in theaters next year, and Cameron says this is the way it should be seen.