TERMINATOR GENISYS
Director : Alan Taylor
Cast : Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jason Clarke, Emilia Clarke, Jai Courtney, J. K. Simmons, Dayo Okeniyi, Matthew Smith, Courtney B. Vance, Lee Byung-Hun
Genre : Sci-Fi/Action
Run Time : 126 mins
Opens : 25 June 2015
Rating : PG13 (Violence & Brief Coarse Language)
“There
is no fate but what we make” – the filmmakers behind the fifth entry in the Terminator film series hope to rewrite
its fate, after the third and fourth films left most critics and moviegoers
cold. Sci-fi fans know the drill – artificially intelligent network Skynet has
taken over the world, killing most of earth’s population in the apocalyptic
“Judgement Day”. In the future, John Connor (Jason Clarke) leads the resistance
against the machines. In this reboot, John sends his trusted lieutenant Kyle Reese
(Courtney) back in time from 2029 to 1984 to save John’s mother Sarah (Emilia
Clarke) from the T-800 Terminator (Schwarzenegger/Brett Azar/Aaron V.
Williamson). Kyle arrives in the past to discover he has entered an alternate
timeline where Sarah Connor already knows her destiny and has been watched over
by an aging T-800 she has nicknamed “Pops” (also Schwarzenegger). Forced to
team up with Sarah and Pops, Kyle has to figure out what this means for the
future as Skynet takes on a new form; the universal connectivity app “Genisys”.
2015 has already seen the release of
new Mad Max and Jurassic Park films, with the seventh Star Wars movie due in December. We won’t be griping about the
prevalence of sequels and reboots, because those can be good – it seems the problem isn’t so much that Hollywood has
run out of ideas but that studio executives are banking too much on brand
recognition and the built-in audience a pre-existing intellectual property
brings with it. Terminator Genisys is
caught in a paradox: one won’t be able to fully grasp its place in the larger Terminator mythos without having seen
the earlier films, but if one holds the first two movies very dear, it’s likely
to be a considerable disappointment. The “alternate timeline” route, not unlike
with the 2009 Star Trek reboot, seems
like a reasonable premise for a series built on time travel. However, the
directions that Laeta Kalogridis and Patrick Lussier’s screenplay takes this in
often feel like desperate attempts to stretch out a series that should have
ended with 1991’s T2 (or at least the
theme park attraction T2: 3D Battle
Across Time). Judgement Day is postponed - again - and our protagonists
have to stop this new Judgement Day from happening – again.
The film is comparable to a greatest
hits album as sung by a cover band – it’s trying its darndest to add something
to the existing material but often feels perfunctory in having to hit those
certain iconic waypoints along the way. Genisys
actually does a fine job of setting up its fairly convoluted back-story in
its opening minutes – we’re told in relatively concise fashion what Skynet is,
what happened on Judgement Day, who John Connor is, why Kyle Reese needs to be
sent back in time and what the scope of the threat is. Even then, more than a
passing familiarity with T1 and 2 is needed for all of it to make proper
sense. There’s also the matter of the spectacle – sure, there are plenty of
action set pieces and there is some cool new imagery, particularly during a scene
involving a MRI scanner, but none of it is truly awe-inspiring or unique. The
first two Terminator films, T2 in particular, broke a lot of ground
in the realm of special and visual effects and packed in jaw-dropping moments
that still hold up today. There is a marked over-reliance on computer-generated
imagery and yes, while this is a series about robots, it all feels too
synthetic. There’s a helicopter chase that looks entirely like it belongs in a
video game and the T-1000’s (Lee) liquid metal effects are on about the same
level as those in T2 24 years ago.
Arnold Schwarzenegger’s return to
the iconic role of the T-800 does lend some legitimacy to the enterprise but we’re
sure some fans will find it difficult to accept that the lethal killing machine
is now relegated to a softer father figure and often functions as the comic
relief. Schwarzenegger still possesses the chops to pull off the action beats
and is still a believable badass. However, we don’t get anything half as
heart-rending as the bond between the T-800 and a young John Connor in T2, even when the Terminator is supposed
to have practically raised Sarah since she was a little girl. At times, this
reviewer felt like he was watching a lavishly-produced fan film that had
managed to snag an actor from the original show, akin to how Walter Koenig,
Nichelle Nichols and George Takei sometimes make appearances in Star Trek fan productions.
What makes it all the more difficult
for this to be accepted as a proper Terminator
continuation is that while Arnie
is a recognisable holdover from the earlier films, all the other re-imagined
characters look and feel so different than how we know them. Emilia Clarke goes
from being the Mother of Dragons to the mother of humanity’s last hope. She is
miscast as Sarah Connor, largely unconvincing as a badass woman who has spent
most of her life under the tutelage of a purpose-built killing machine. When
compared to how intense Linda Hamilton was in the role, Emilia Clarke seems
like she’s merely playing dress-up, whiny rather than burdened with the fate of
the human race.
Jai Courtney looks and acts nothing
like Michael Biehn, making him another puzzling casting choice. Where Biehn’s
Kyle Reese was a sensitive, scarred but romantic figure, Courtney is more
brutish. When Kyle and Sarah get into arguments, as they often do throughout
the film, it feels awfully petty instead of carrying the weight of life and
death. While undoubtedly a central figure to the mythos, John Connor has never
really been the most interesting character of the series. Jason Clarke is fine
in the role and the major plot twist in the film (which was spoiled in the
trailers and the poster) does add an interesting layer to the character, but
purists will probably find it sacrilegious. Lee Byung-hun does little more than
run fast and look menacing as the shape-shifting T-1000 and J. K. Simmons is
entirely wasted in a throwaway bit part as the lone police officer who believes
Sarah and Kyle’s far-fetched story. Doctor
Who’s Matt Smith also pops up in a small but crucial role.
As a standalone sci-fi action film, Terminator: Genisys has its entertaining
moments and isn’t as confusing in presenting its alternate timeline plot as it
could’ve been. However, it’s impossible to pretend that this film doesn’t come
with more than its share of baggage and doesn’t have a towering legacy to live
up to. In riffing on what James Cameron had created with the first two Terminator films, Terminator Genisys director Alan Taylor has delivered a pale
imitation of a sci-fi icon, an also-rans at best. Stick around for a
mid-credits sequel-bait scene.
Summary:
There is effort put into Terminator Genisys, but this attempt at continuing the
franchise can’t help but feel it exists just for the sake of existing and is
likely to alienate long-time fans of the series.
RATING: 2.5
out of 5 Stars
Jedd
Jong
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