Terminator Salvation has heart, literally, and figuratively, in places you would least expect. It isn’t John Connor (Christian Bale) I felt sorry for because he has a hundred things to save and protect from Skynet - the world, his parents in the past, and thus, himself in the future. Through the movie I oft pondered the need for the character of Kate Connor (Bryce Dallas Howard), John’s violently pregnant wife, who has not much of a role really, other than being the carrier of the child of the leader of the resistance and thus, possible meat for the fifth Terminator movie.
I felt awful for the most evolved cyborg created by Skynet – Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington), the only cyborg of his kind, who despite being controlled by the intelligent machines, proves to them that having an indestructible endoskeleton and a chip in the skull does not make him one of them. His ‘human’ qualities and his short-lived love story with one of the members of the resistance (Moon Bloodgood) are possibly one of the only redeeming factors in this film bereft of anything other than perfectly crafted CGI.
It’s now 25 years since the first movie released, and of all the four movies, I failed to connect with anything in The Rise of the Machines. I know nothing will live up to Judgment Day, But Terminator Salvation although pretty forgettable, has left me wanting to watch it again, possibly on DVD. But again, yes, only for Marcus.
Fun moments:
1. When Connor says to his wife, “I’ll be back” and then, 10 minutes later, engages in hand-to-hand combat with the very cyborg who made that iconic statement.
2. Realising that the guy who played Kyle Reese (John Connor’s teenage father) in this movie also played Chekov, the Russian from the current Star Trek movie.
Blink and miss:
An ailing, awful-looking Helena Bonham Carter as Dr. Serena Kogan.
Verdict: 3.3 stars (Out of 5).