samsnee
Ok
- Joined
- Dec 28, 2006
- Messages
- 23,489
- Reaction score
- 16,768
- Points
- 103
Alien and Aliens. Terminator and T2.
Two of the greatest original/sequel movies ever.
And two franchises that didn’t know when to die.
But which one has gone more off the trails, and sequels are trash? For the sake of discussion, sequels like Alien vs Predator, and tv shows like Sarah Connor Chronicles aren’t included.
Aliens franchise:
Alien 3 tried to take it back to its roots with a single alien in a confined space. And while Fincher’s direction is admirable, the tension and sense of dread wasn’t there.
Alien Resurrection was pure trash.
Prometheus had a lot going for it. Ridley Scott back at the helm. A strong cast. Budget to support the vision. And was a complete misfire and only muddled the mythology with how the Engineers were handled.
Alien: Covenant. I have not seen this movie. But by all accounts it was worse than Prometheus.
Terminator franchise:
Rise of the Machines: T2 closed the loop and ostensibly prevented Skynet from being created. Any storyline to try undo that would be a Sisyphean task. While the T-X, killing Sarah offscreen, and some of the early 2000s humor did not work, that ending was brilliant.
Terminator Salvation: The movie more known for Bale yelling at the lights guy than anything else. We finally get a future war and it looks nothing like we were promised. Instead of focusing on John Connor, we get sidetracked with Marcus who has the charismas of a paper bag.
Terminator Genisys: The weird spelling in the title wasn’t the dumbest thing in this movie. That would be making John Connor the bad guy.
Terminator Dark Fate: I enjoyed it. Basically a mash-up of the first two movies, it wasn’t the most original. But was good to see Linda Hamilton back and Arnold can play the Terminator in his sleep.
I’m going to give Terminator a slight edge of still being watchable. None of the sequels are amazing but a couple have their moments.
Aliens had the benefit of having Ridley back in the director’s chair, creating high expectations. But with that comes even greater disappointment.
Two of the greatest original/sequel movies ever.
And two franchises that didn’t know when to die.
But which one has gone more off the trails, and sequels are trash? For the sake of discussion, sequels like Alien vs Predator, and tv shows like Sarah Connor Chronicles aren’t included.
Aliens franchise:
Alien 3 tried to take it back to its roots with a single alien in a confined space. And while Fincher’s direction is admirable, the tension and sense of dread wasn’t there.
Alien Resurrection was pure trash.
Prometheus had a lot going for it. Ridley Scott back at the helm. A strong cast. Budget to support the vision. And was a complete misfire and only muddled the mythology with how the Engineers were handled.
Alien: Covenant. I have not seen this movie. But by all accounts it was worse than Prometheus.
Terminator franchise:
Rise of the Machines: T2 closed the loop and ostensibly prevented Skynet from being created. Any storyline to try undo that would be a Sisyphean task. While the T-X, killing Sarah offscreen, and some of the early 2000s humor did not work, that ending was brilliant.
Terminator Salvation: The movie more known for Bale yelling at the lights guy than anything else. We finally get a future war and it looks nothing like we were promised. Instead of focusing on John Connor, we get sidetracked with Marcus who has the charismas of a paper bag.
Terminator Genisys: The weird spelling in the title wasn’t the dumbest thing in this movie. That would be making John Connor the bad guy.
Terminator Dark Fate: I enjoyed it. Basically a mash-up of the first two movies, it wasn’t the most original. But was good to see Linda Hamilton back and Arnold can play the Terminator in his sleep.
I’m going to give Terminator a slight edge of still being watchable. None of the sequels are amazing but a couple have their moments.
Aliens had the benefit of having Ridley back in the director’s chair, creating high expectations. But with that comes even greater disappointment.