Our salvation begins with the past of 2003 where a death row
inmate, Marcus (Sam Worthington (Avatar,
Clash of the Titans (2010))), signs his body away to Cyberdine for
research. Cut to 2018 where the war
against the machines has just started.
John Conner (Christian Bale (Newsies,
Shaft (2000))) isn’t the leader of the human resistance but a relatively
high ranking member. The fighters have
found an electronic signal that can kill any machine within its range of
transmission and Conner proceeds to test it as well as brood about his destined
future. Meanwhile Marcus wakes up from
cryo-sleep or some shit and wanders around post-apocalypse L.A. trying to
figure out what the hell happened to him and the world. He runs into a teenaged Kyle Reese (Anton
Yelchin (Alpha Dog, Star Trek IntoDarkness)) and they band together. But
Reese eventually gets kidnapped by the machines and Marcus teams up with Conner
to get him back.
The introduction of a new character isn’t a bad move
considering there’s no Sarah Conner, T-800, T-1000 or, hell, even T-X. But having Marcus share the good guy lead
with John Conner is plain stupid. Conner
is the guy that this series has always been about. He’s the one that Reese travels through time
for and why we went through all of that insane shit in the first three
movies. He’s the one that inspires and
organizes the humans to rally against the machines. In this universe Conner is supposed to be probably
the most important human who ever lived.
So to not finally have him take center stage and go up against some
maniacal robots feels wrong. It’s the natural
progression of where these films were gonna go (arguably Terminator 3 should’ve been the future war installment but hey, we
got what we got). It’s so weird to me
that the filmmakers thought that John Conner wasn’t enough all by himself.
But perhaps the biggest problem with Marcus is that his whole
existence really becomes inconsequential.
If he didn’t come along and shake things up for a minute Conner and
Reese still would’ve met and set the events in motion that lead up to the first
film. This is a different scenario than
parts 1-3. The first was all about
protecting the future while 2 and 3 attempted to alter it (in fact if the
series ended with T2 then the war
with the machines was actually totally prevented, but T3 changed shit and told us that the war is inevitable). Everything you see in Salvation doesn’t mean jack shit.
It’s not about preventing or altering.
It’s a slice of the war, plain and simple. So if you’re going to go in that direction
then why not do the story that James Cameron gave us in the original (it’s Reese’s
monologue to Sarah while they’re ducking the cops and the terminator in a
parked car)? Why go with this other
alternate future? It doesn’t make much
sense.
Look, I could go on and on about how poorly written this
thing is with its awful dialogue, unnecessary dual plot and extremely contrived
shoehorned echoes of the previous three movies (especially part 1 which it constantly
references). But I think you get what I’m
saying. It’s a really shitty script that
went through a ton of rewrites and boy does it show. It’s like the people that made this vaguely
knew what the Terminator movies were but
hadn’t actually seen them.
McG (3 Days to Kill)
directed this and he was definitely in way over his head. The pictures he had done before this were
films that were either kinda sloppy and dumb, like the Chalrlie’s Angels, or cheesy feel good stuff like We Are Marshall (full disclosure: I haven’t
seen either of these movies but I think I’m in pretty safe territory with these
assertions). That doesn’t mean there wasn’t
a kick ass action director waiting to break out but his track record wasn’t a
good sign. And ultimately McG wasn’t up
to the task. Yea he had a horrible
script to work with but he still made this movie and signed off on the
decisions that led to what you see in front of you.
This movie is pretty fuckin’ terrible. It’s so goddamn schlocky. Jeez, people give T3 a hard time but I think Salvation
is way worse. There’s just not many good
things I can say about it. Nothing
really works or makes me care about what’s happening. It’s a clunky noisy mess.
If you haven’t seen it, keep it that way.
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