In the first movie though, time travel is a self-fulfilling prophecy. the time travel in Terminator prevents nothing. It changes nothing. The time travel is simply part of that history. The Terminators going back in time to kill John Connor's mother is what causes John Connor to be conceived and ultimately born. Judgment Day can't be averted. Sarah can only exist as the mother to give birth to humanity's savior.
The second movie undoes that loop by making the remnants of the T-800 the catalyst that allows Skynet to become self-aware and then destroying those remnants. The T-800 sacrifices itself to prevent judgement day. That is the end of the story.
It's helpful to think of it as a line with diverting paths like in Back to the Future II rather than a circle. The original timeline goes on its self-fulfilling course with Reese being sent back to father John and the original T-800 being sent back to birth Skynet. Then T2 creates a diverging line wherein the T-800 is prevented from kickstarting Skynet.
Salvation had the right idea, and honestly the perfect damn cast... It just needed a good director.
I still to this day wonder what the hell they were thinking getting McG to do that movie.
And the script was a mess (of the highest order, tens of major revisions), due to the strike, IIRC they rushed it so they had something to shoot. It was probably poison to the average director.I'm sure he wasn't the first director they were talking to... He was probably the one who finally said yes (10th or 11th down on the list). I'll bet anything that they talked to the usual suspects first. The thing is, most high profile directors probably didn't want to get anywhere near this. The intimidation, the big shoes to fill, the amount of work, etc.
And the script was a mess (of the highest order, tens of major revisions), due to the strike, IIRC they rushed it so they had something to shoot. It was probably poison to the average director.
I never saw the attempts in T2 as being successful but just another attempt at destroying the inevitable.
In T1 we see a fresh faced Sarah learn about the future, she is still very emotional and very human which is a big contrast to how we see her in T2 where she has almost become a human machine with one purpose of stopping judgement day. The same can be said about the T800 in T1 to T2 but in a reverse order. I think this time it needs to be John who starts out as a emotionless cold killing machine but he slowly learns what it means to be human again through his interactions with Kyle.
My simple idea for a T3 film would be to take the story full circle. I think the film needs to follow the original themes of robots/humans gaining and losing humanity. I would have the movie start with a very cold and robotic like John Connor that has lost his humanity in the war against the machines and has basically become a machine. I would have him and kyle on the final mission that leads up to the time travel scenes but I would have john Connor slowly throughout the film regaining his humanity as he talks with his younger father..much like Sarah did or the T800 did in T1\T2
If anyone reads this I would really like some feedback or discussion on this idea
I still to this day wonder what the hell they were thinking getting McG to do that movie.
if only Cameron would have stuck with the original ending in T2
I just don't think the story can go anywhere. It ended with T2, closing the causality loop and (most likely) preventing judgement day. Anything you do after that muddles and bloats an already complete arc. The only place you could go is in the machine war, but you run into the problem of that being an alternate future rendered moot by the original two.
I still to this day wonder what the hell they were thinking getting McG to do that movie.
Salvation might have been a much better movie but with the massive problems it encountered it was never going to achieve that. McG is a questionable director but he might have pulled it off. However stick in a writer's strike on top of massive rewrites to makeBatmanChristian Bale's involvement more prominent and they changed the direction so entirely it was doomed.
Visually I think so. The story was very much a problem but as a director he can only do so much with that. I honestly don't think there are any directors who would have walked away from this movie unscathed but he got a bad reputation right off the bat being only a director of music videos previously.