Wednesday, January 24, 2024

THE TERMINATOR (1984)




THE TERMINATOR
1984 • James Cameron

Screenplay: James Cameron, Gale Anne Hurd
Producers: Gale Anne Hurd
Cast: Arnold Schwarzenegger, Michael Biehn, Linda Hamilton, Paul Winfield, Lance Henriksen, Bess Motta, Rick Rossovich, Earl Boen
Cinematography: Adam Greenberg
Music: Brad Fiedel

Orion Pictures

You still don’t get it, do you? He’ll find her! That’s what he does! That’s ALL he does! You can’t stop him! He’ll wade through you, reach down her throat and pull her fuckin’ heart out!

In the future, a great war wages between mankind and the machines. A cyborg, or Terminator, is sent back in time to present day (1984) to eliminate Sarah Connor, the mother of John Connor, who leads the human resistance against the machines. The humans send back a guardian for Sarah… a man named Kyle Reese who must help Sarah escape and outrun the deadly killing machine that will stop at nothing to change the future.

It is rare when a film cross-pollinates genres to create something extraordinary. This is what The Terminator does. The Terminator is an action movie with a science fiction concept filmed and presented as a monster movie. Schwarzenegger’s portrayal of the Terminator cyborg is absolutely terrifying. Truly, one of the great screen villains. The Terminator is essentially a hitman with a target. But the difference is, that this hitman is completely unstoppable. Bullets, knives, and explosions do not hurt it. It does not feel pain, nor mercy. These are all classic traits of any of the great horror villains from Michael Myers to Jason Vorhees… except increased exponentially.

On top of this, who is the hero of the story? Sarah Connor. A normal, all-American girl who doesn’t understand why this (literal) killing machine is out to destroy her. Sounds kind of like a final girl. Add all this to the fact that, visually, the film is incredibly dark there are a small number of daytime scenes which add to the movie's monster ambience.

Chances are, you have seen this film before. It ran on cable (remember that?) all the time and its sequel is one of the highest-grossing films of all time. It has become an iconic masterpiece that is completely worthy of its fame. The police station shoot-out scene remains to this day an all-out classic. Why is it so great? Because throughout the film, The Terminator is established as a force of nature that will stop at nothing to achieve its objective. So when he says to the cop at the front desk “I’ll be back,” you KNOW it's about to go down… even if you’ve never heard of the movie or the famous line… You just know what’s about to happen.

There is endless debate amongst the Terminator fanbase as to which film is better: The Terminator or Terminator 2: Judgment Day. What’s entertaining about this argument is that they are incredibly different films. The original is more of a thriller while the second is just straight-up ass-kicking action. However, the debate rages and that can only be a good sign: Godfather vs. Godfather II, Alien vs. Aliens, etc.

James Cameron is an incredibly talented director. The man knows exactly what he’s doing and his movies
always look spectacular and he’s always breaking new ground. The Abyss and Terminator 2 used special-effects technology that was still in its infancy and those movies STILL look amazing. Avatar, while being a recycled story, was a groundbreaking film visually, and hell, yes, even Titanic looks incredible. James Cameron knows how to make a movie. But, the most impressive film to this day still has to be the original Terminator. Why? While Avatar, Titanic, and T2 all look better, they also had HUGE budgets. Terminator was made for practically nothing (by Hollywood standards) and Cameron was put in a position where he had to create a visually impressive movie on pretty much no money. Do some of the effects look hokey in 2011? Sure. But in 1984 that was cutting-edge technology.

Unlike Avatar and Titanic, where Cameron relies heavily on his incredible visuals and sees the story as an afterthought, The Terminator story is classic. He took an old science fiction concept (man vs. machine) and put a spin on it that still keeps your imagination alive. Both T1 and T2 take the concept of fate and the concept of time travel and have a lot of fun with it. Can you change the future for the better or for the worse? Or will the inevitable always happen? It’s phenomenal storytelling.  

I’ll be back.

Notable Accomplishments
  • Inducted to National Film Registry: 2008
  • 3 Saturn Awards Wins: Best Science Fiction Film, Best Make-up, Best Writing
  • AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills - #42

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