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- From: kloepelm@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca
- Newsgroups: alt.cult-movies,rec.arts.movies,rec.arts.sf.movies,alt.answers,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Terminator/Terminator 2: Judgment Day FAQList
- Followup-To: rec.arts.sf.movies
- Date: 10 Oct 1994 22:42:47 GMT
- Organization: Computer and Network Services, U of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
- Lines: 1156
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Message-ID: <37cg17$tmd@quartz.ucs.ualberta.ca>
- Reply-To: kloepel@psych.ualberta.ca
- NNTP-Posting-Host: gpu.srv.ualberta.ca
- Summary: This posting contains a list of answers to frequently asked questions
- about the films The Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu alt.cult-movies:44617 rec.arts.movies:116686 rec.arts.sf.movies:20896 alt.answers:4987 rec.answers:7827 news.answers:27378
-
- Archive-name: movies/terminator-faq
- Posting-Frequency: monthly
- Version: 2.20
-
- The Terminator/Terminator 2: Judgment Day
- FAQ
-
- compiled and maintained by
- Karsten A. Loepelmann
- kloepel@psych.ualberta.ca
-
- Version 2.20
-
-
- This FAQ is Copyright 1994 by Karsten A. Loepelmann. All Rights Reserved.
- Permission is granted for reproduction, distribution, transmission, or
- storage for noncommercial purposes only, on the condition that the contents
- are not changed in any way.
-
- Posted monthly to:
- news:alt.cult-movies
- news:rec.arts.movies
- news:rec.arts.sf.movies
- news:news.answers
-
- -----------------------------------------------------
- Table of Contents
- (*) indicates that the answer has been modified since the last version of
- this FAQ (v. 2.10)
- (+) indicates a new question
-
- 0. Introduction
- 0.1. World-Wide Web access to this FAQ
- + 0.2. Questions that need answering
-
- 1. What are the different movie versions?
- 1.1 _The Terminator_
- 1.2 _Terminator 2: Judgment Day_
- 1.2.1 Why were there scenes cut out of T2?
- 1.2.2 What is the missing ending?
-
- 2. Are the Original Motion Picture Soundtracks available?
- * 2.1 The Terminator
- 2.2 T2
- 2.2.1 What songs in the movie are not on the soundtrack?
-
- 3. What 'Terminator' comics are there?
- 3.1. Now Comics
- 3.2. Dark Horse Comics
- * 3.3. Marvel Comics
-
- 4. What 'Terminator' computer/video games are there?
-
- 5. What are the filmographies of the some of the people involved with T2?
- 5.1. James Cameron
- 5.2. Arnold Schwarzenegger
- 5.3. Linda Hamilton
- 5.4. Robert Patrick
-
- 6. Miscellaneous questions
- 6.1. What year does T2 take place?
- * 6.1.1 Are there mathematical errors in the script?
- 6.2. Why did it take the T-1000 so long to show up at John's house in
- Reseda?
- 6.3. Why didn't the security guard at Pescadero State Hospital not notice
- the T-1000 on the floor?
- 6.4. Does the T-1000 have to touch the object it takes the form of?
- * 6.5. Why did the T-1000 change back to the policeman at Pescadero State
- Hospital?
- 6.6. Why did the orderly in Pescadero State Hospital lick Sarah's face?
- 6.7. If dogs are used to identify Terminators, why doesn't the dog at the
- desert hideout bark at the Terminator?
- 6.8. Why does Sarah carve the words "NO FATE"?
- * 6.9. What gun does Sarah use when she attempts to kill Dyson?
- 6.10. Why doesn't Sarah kill Dyson?
- 6.11. When the T-1000 goes to Dyson's home, what police radio is it
- listening to?
- 6.12. Why didn't the T-1000 try to imitate Dyson and develop Skynet itself?
- 6.13. When the Terminator was firing the big machine gun in the Cyberdyne
- lab, is the bullet belt moving or not?
- * 6.14. Does the T-1000 have a third arm when it is flying the helicopter
- and shooting its weapon at the same time?
- 6.15. What was that "ripple" that went through the T-1000 after it fought
- the T-800 and left him behind?
- * 6.16. Why did the T-1000 take the shape of Sarah instead of the T-800 after
- it drove the spike through his back?
- * 6.17. Why did the T-1000 try to get Sarah to call to John?
- 6.17.1 Why didn't the T-1000 kill Sarah?
- 6.18. If the T-1000 was destroyed when it fell into the molten steel, why
- wasn't it destroyed when the semi tow-truck blew up?
- 6.19. Why didn't the Terminator "disappear" when John threw the CPU into
- the molten steel?
- 6.20. Isn't the Terminator's arm being left behind in the huge gear going
- to lead to the creation of Skynet anyway?
- 6.21. When the T-1000 is on top of the elevator in Pescadero State
- Hospital, why doesn't it just cut the cables?
- + 6.22. What about <insert continuity glitch here>?
-
- 7. Trivia
- 7.1. Who was originally cast as the Terminator?
- 7.2. How many lines did Arnold have in T1?
- 7.3. What is Harlan Ellison's connection to the Terminator movies?
- 7.4. What is the 'crushing foot' motif?
- 7.5. Is "judgment" spelled correctly?
- 7.6. How did Linda Hamilton prepare for T2?
- 7.7. Does Linda Hamilton have a twin sister who appeared in T2?
- 7.8. What hardware/software was used to produce some of the FX in T2?
- 7.9. What machine code is displayed on the Terminator's visual display?
- 7.10. What is the literal translation of "Schwarzenegger"?
- 7.11. What does "Hasta la vista" mean?
- 7.12. Did the movies win any Academy Awards?
- 7.13. How much money did T2 make?
- 7.14. Miscellaneous trivia
- + 7.15. Is there a real Skynet?
-
- 8. Time travel questions.
- 8.1 How did the (liquid *metal*) T-1000 travel to the past? Didn't they
- destroy the time machine?
- 8.2 How can Skynet exist if the chip and arm were destroyed?
- 8.3 If John gave a speech to Reese in 2029, who gave it to Sarah and
- conceived John in 1984, and then Sarah told it to John, then who
- *wrote* the bloody speech?
-
- 9. Will there be a _Terminator 3_ movie?
-
- * 10. Credits
- 10.1. Bibliography
-
- Abbreviations:
- JC=James Cameron
- LD=Laser Disk
- T1=_The Terminator_ movie
- T2=_Terminator 2: Judgment Day_ movie
- T-1000=the 'liquid metal' Terminator in T2
- T-800 or Terminator=Arnold's character (look for the context to define the
- movie/Terminator to which this refers)
-
-
- ============================================================
- 0. Introduction
- This Frequently-Asked Questions list is based largely on the T2 FAQ compiled
- by Doug Fierro, last dated 11/10/91. (Doug's email address is dead -- Doug,
- are you out there?) That is why the initial release of this FAQ was
- considered version 2.00. Due to high demand for information on the Terminator
- films, the FAQ has been resurrected. Contributions/discussion are welcome!
- The preferred forum for discussion is news:rec.arts.sf.movies
-
- In the section on time travel, there are probably no absolute right or wrong
- answers -- except as far as real-world physics can be applied to the virtual
- world of the Terminator films. I am open to alternate answers to particular
- questions, as long as they meet one of two criteria: 1) I find them
- reasonable, or 2) after discussion of the topic in a Usenet newsgroup,
- consensus is that the explanation is reasonable. This way I avoid crackpot
- ideas ;-)
-
- If you want to contribute something and start out by writing, "I know
- someone who knows this guy who met JC's gardener once, and *she* says that JC
- says that..." Well, I probably won't read much further than that. If you
- cite a reference to info that you provide, your credibility will be that much
- higher. (I'm not anally retentive. It's just that this is supposed to be an
- information file, not a *mis*information file. ;-)
-
- If you want to make sure I get your input (questions *or* answers), send email
- to my address at the top of this FAQList.
-
-
- 0.1. World-Wide Web access to this FAQ
- Those with World-Wide Web (WWW) access (e.g., via programs such as Mosaic or
- Lynx) may access this FAQ. The URL is:
- http://www.maths.tcd.ie/pub/films/T2.html
- Note that Ross Chandler (chandler@maths.tcd.ie) is the maintainer of this home
- page. (Thanks, Ross!) Please direct any questions/inquiries about the home
- page to him.
-
-
- 0.2. Questions that need answering
- I need the following information:
- *** Complete info on the LD and Special Edition VHS versions of T1 and T2
- (e.g., length, added scenes, etc.).
-
- *** Reviews/comments on the "T2" or "T2: The Arcade Game" computer games for
- MS-DOS.
-
- *** I need reviews and descriptions of all Terminator-related games (e.g., T2,
- T2 Arcade, Robocop vs. Terminator, etc.) on other computer/videogame
- platforms (Amiga, Sega, S/NES, etc.)
-
- *** Did JC write _Piranha II_?
-
-
-
- 1. What are the different movie versions?
- 1.1 _The Terminator_
- Producer: Gale Anne Hurd
- Cinematography: Adam Greenberg
- Production design: George Costello
- Editing: Mark Goldblatt
- Written by: Gale Anne Hurd and James Cameron
- Director: James Cameron
- Released 1984.
-
- As far as I know, there is only one cut of T1. It is available on VHS
- videocassette and on LD.
-
-
- 1.2 _Terminator 2: Judgment Day_
- Producer: James Cameron
- Cinematography: Adam Greenberg
- Production design: Joseph Nemec III
- Editing: Conrad Buff IV, Mark Goldblatt, and Richard A. Harris
- Written by: James Cameron and William Wisher
- Director: James Cameron
- Released 1991.
-
- The original, theatrical-release cut of T2 is available on videocassette and
- LD. There are also special editions on VHS video and LD that restore footage
- edited out prior to release. The T2 Special Edition LD has several cut
- scenes, including the alternate ending. Also called the 'extended version,'
- it comes in two packages: one with movie only, the other also includes
- supplements on the making of the movie.
-
- *** I need complete info on the LD and Special Edition VHS versions of
- T1 and T2 (e.g., length, added scenes, etc.).
-
-
- 1.2.1. Why were there scenes cut out of T2?
- Certain scenes were edited out of T2. These include a scene of Sarah opening
- up the Terminator's head and adjusting the CPU, Sarah's dream sequence with
- Kyle Reese, and the legendary extended ending.
-
- JC was interviewed for the TV show _Secrets Revealed_, hosted by William
- Devane (because of the difficulty in obtaining copies of the show, JC's
- responses are reproduced verbatim):
-
- "Well, 'final cut' really doesn't change anything. You still have to do
- what's best for the film -- and a lot of people have opinions about what's
- best for the film. And, as a responsible filmmaker, you have to listen to
- them.
-
- "In the opening of the film, we see a playground after a nuclear war, where all
- the playground equipment has been burned and blackened. And then the ending
- was to show the 'alternate future' that came about as a result of the efforts
- of Sarah and John. And then when we put the movie together, and sat and
- watched it, it just felt a little too...'sweet'. It's essentially the movie of
- the script. But no movie is ever the movie of the script -- the script is what
- you start with when you start the voyage, and when you end the voyage, you may
- be somewhere else.
-
- "So we took the ending off and we went to the dark road, kind of going into
- darkness -- the uncertain future...and that seemed to work better.
-
- "We did screen it once, with the happier ending -- because we had already
- raised the question to ourselves: 'Is this *really* the right thing?' And the
- audience seemed to concur. So we all looked at each other and went, 'Aha!
- See? Eh?' So we very quickly whipped together the alternate, which I'd
- already had in mind.
-
- "Sometimes, in that pressure-cooker of finishing the picture, the most
- instinctive responses are the best. And that's really what happened there; it
- was just instinct."
-
-
- 1.2.2 What is the missing ending?
- Again, from the TV show _Secrets Revealed_, here is a transcript of the
- alternate ending:
-
- [After the T-800 sinks into the molten steel, Sarah holds John and looks into
- the camera. NOTE: This shot is common to both versions. What follows was
- cut from the theatrical release.]
-
- [Fade to shot of the sun. Begin voiceover as the camera pans down. It is
- Washington, DC; the capitol is in the background, as are several futuristic
- buildings. Pan down to long shot of a park with a fountain and a
- playground.]
-
- Sarah: "August 29th, 1997 came and went. Nothing much happened. Michael
- Jackson turned *forty*. There was *no* 'judgment day'."
-
- [Cut to medium shot of a recreational area around the fountain. Pan down and
- across children in the playground to a well-dressed older woman speaking the
- narration into a small recording device.]
-
- Sarah: "People went to work as they always do. Laughed. Complained. Watched
- TV. Made love. I wanted to run through the street yelling, to grab
- them all and say, 'Every day from this day on is a *gift*. Use it
- well.' Instead, I got drunk. That was thirty years ago. But the
- dark future which never came still exists for me. And it always will
- -- like the traces of a dream."
-
- [Cut to a shot of an adult John Connor, pushing a little girl on a swing in
- the playground.]
- Sarah: "John fights the war differently than it was foretold. Here, on the
- battlefield of the Senate, his weapons are common sense --"
-
- [Cut to a closeup of Sarah, watching John and the little girl]
- Sarah: "--and hope."
-
- [Cut to a shot of the little girl running.]
- Girl: "Tie me, gramma! Tie me!"
-
- [Cut to a medium shot of the girl climbing up onto the bench beside Sarah, who
- ties her granddaughters' shoe. Cut to a closeup of the little girl as she
- looks up at Sarah and giggles. Cut to a medium shot of the two.]
- Sarah: "How's that?"
-
- [Cut to a shot of the girl]
- Girl: "Thank you, gramma."
-
- [Cut to a shot of the two; Sarah leans down and gives the girl a kiss. The
- girl runs back to the playground. Cut to a shot of the girl running into
- John's arms. The two embrace, then John helps her onto a slide.]
- Sarah: "The luxury of hope was given to me by the Terminator. Because if a
- machine can learn the value of human life--"
-
- [Cut to a shot of Sarah, smiling, watching the children.]
- Sarah: "--may be we can, too."
-
- [Fade to black.]
-
-
-
- 2. Are the Original Motion Picture Soundtracks available?
- 2.1 The Terminator
- Original soundtrack. Music composed, performed, and produced by Brad
- Fiedel (6 tracks). There are 5 additional rock songs from the film
- included. Total playing time is 35:39. DCC Compact Classics, DZS-058.
-
-
- 2.2 _Terminator 2: Judgement Day_
- Original motion picture soundtrack. Music composed and produced by Brad
- Fiedel. CD contains 20 tracks (all orchestral); total playing time is 53:45.
- Varese Sarabande, VSD-5335.
-
-
- 2.2.1 What songs in the movie are not on the T2 soundtrack?
-
- There are three songs. One is "Guitars, Cadillacs" written and performed by
- Dwight Yoakam (played in the bar where the T-800 gets his clothes). Another
- is "Bad to the Bone" written by George Thorogood, performed by George
- Thorogood and the Destroyers (played when the T-800 walks out of the bar).
- And finally, "You Could be Mine" written by Izzy Stradlin and W. Axl Rose,
- performed by Guns 'N' Roses. The latter song was written especially for T2;
- the former two were not.
-
- "You Could Be Mine" appears on "Use Your Illusion II" (Geffen GEFD-24420).
- "Bad To the Bone" lives on the album "Bad To The Bone" (Cat number unknown)
- and also the compilation "The George Thorogood Collection" (EMI CDP 7924152)
-
-
-
- 3. What 'Terminator' comics are there?
- The license to T1 has been held by two companies at different times: first by
- Now Comics, and later by Dark Horse Comics. These comics expanded on the
- canon presented in the T1 movie *only*, not explicitly incorporating the
- events of T2. Currently, this license is apparently with another
- publisher. The license to T2 was obtained by Marvel Comics, which only
- produced an adaptation of the T2 movie. The current status of this license is
- unknown. [Warning! Spoilers below, especially in the _RoboCop Versus The
- Terminator_ synopsis.]
-
-
- 3.1. Now Comics
- _The Terminator_ (1988?), issues #1-17. "It's after the first Terminator
- film, set in the future with the focus on John Conner's [sic] battle with
- Skynet. This movie tie-in doesn't follow the film's direction at all, and as
- a comic has a lame story with so-so art." [from _Hero Illustrated_ #6]
-
- _The Terminator: The Burning Earth_ (1990), issues #1-5. Written by Ron
- Fortier, fully painted art by Alex Ross (of _Marvels_ fame). In 2041, John
- Connor and the human resistance race to stop Skynet from using its nuclear
- stockpile to finally annihilate the human race.
-
- _The Terminator: All My Futures Past_ (1990), issues #1-2. Written by
- Chuck Dixon, fully painted art by Diego and Delsol. This story takes place in
- 2029, and chronicles the departure of the Terminator and Reese to 1984.
-
-
- 3.2. Dark Horse Comics
- _The Terminator: Tempest_, issues #1-4 (1990). Written by John Arcudi, art by
- Chris Warner & Paul Guinan. A group of humans, led by Colonel Mary Randall,
- travel back in time to stop Cyberdyne Systems Corporation from developing
- Skynet technology. The only things standing in their way are four
- Terminators, including a half-human/half-Terminator cyborg sent back in time
- by Skynet.
-
- _The Terminator: One Shot_ (1991), one issue. Written by James Robinson,
- fully painted art by Matt Wagner. Has a pop-up page in the middle. Tells the
- story of a female Terminator sent to kill the *fourth* 'Sarah Connor' living
- in Los Angeles, and the person sent back in time to stop the Terminator.
-
- _The Terminator: Secondary Objectives_ (1991), issues #1-4. Written by James
- Robinson, art by Paul Gulacy & Karl Kesel. Terminators from the _Tempest_
- series are still around, but they'll have to go through Colonel Randall (the
- surviving time-displaced human resistance soldier from _Tempest_), a Cyberdyne
- technician, and a cyborg from the future to fulfill their secondary
- objective: kill Sarah Connor.
-
- _The Terminator: The Enemy Within_, issues #1-4 (1991/1992). Written by Ian
- Edginton, art by Vince Giarrano, painted covers by Simon Bisley. The
- human/Terminator cyborg 'Dudley' struggles to reassert his humanity over his
- machine side, as questions about the Cyberdyne technician's loyalty arise.
- Meanwhile, four human reinforcements from the future and inquisitive LAPD
- Detective Sloane join Mary Randall in a showdown with the remaining
- Terminator.
-
- _The Terminator: Hunters & Killers_, issues #1-3 (1992). Written by Toren
- Smith, Adam Warren, & Chris Warner, art by Bill Jaaska, Dan Panosian, &
- Jeff Albrecht, painted covers by John Taylor Dismukes. Chronicles the efforts
- of a team of Russian Special Forces resistance fighters in 2029 as they race
- a group of Terminators sent by Skynet and its Russian arm, Mir, to obtain a
- submarine stocked with nuclear missiles.
-
- _The Terminator: Endgame_, issues #1-3 (1992). Written by James Robinson,
- art by Jackson Guice & John Beatty, painted covers by John Higgins. Dudley
- informs Colonel Randall that yet another new Terminator has been sent to kill
- Sarah Connor and her baby. Randall again seeks the aid of Detective Sloane,
- who is tracking the serial killer 'Catfish.' In the hospital in which
- Sarah is giving birth, Randall, Sloane, Catfish, and the Terminator all meet
- in a surprising final confrontation.
-
- _RoboCop Versus The Terminator_, issues #1-4 (1992). Written by Frank Miller,
- art by Walter Simonson. In the future, the catalyst for Skynet's sentience is
- discovered to be the cyborg Alex Murphy: RoboCop. A lone female soldier
- travels back in time to Detroit -- and destroys RoboCop! As changes in the
- timestream sweep to the future, Skynet sends Terminators to the past, which
- *prevent* the soldier from killing RoboCop, who then destroys the Terminators.
- Knowing his destiny, RoboCop destroys himself. Again, changes sweep forward in
- time, and Skynet sends back Terminators that once again prevent the destruction
- of RoboCop, and force him to merge with Skynet. The years pass and Murphy
- exists only as a virus in Skynet, waiting until he can create himself a new
- form. This new RoboCop prevents the soldier from traveling to the past. He
- replicates himself hundreds of times and takes on the Terminators and Skynet,
- then travels back in time and destroys Skynet before it becomes sentient. And
- changes sweep along the timestream...
-
-
- 3.3. Marvel Comics
- _Terminator 2: Judgment Day_, issues #1-3. Script adapted by Gregory Wright,
- art by Klaus Janson. As with any adaptation, lots of things have been cut
- out. This series is notable for its inclusion of scenes that were removed
- from the film, like Sarah adjusting the chip in the Terminator's head. Art is
- mediocre; this series is only for die-hard, completist fans.
-
-
-
- 4. What 'Terminator' computer/video games are there?
-
- The Terminator (MS-DOS):
- First-person perspective walking/driving game. You may play the T-800 or
- Reese. Your objective (kill Sarah/kill T-800) depends on which character you
- choose to play. Average graphics and mediocre gameplay.
-
- The Terminator 2029 (MS-DOS):
- Popular split-screen (first-person combat window/third-person overhead
- navigation window) action game. You play an armoured member of the human
- resistance. You must complete 19 different missions. Nice graphics, but
- gameplay is difficult.
-
- The Terminator 2029: Operation Scour (MS-DOS):
- Add-on mission disk for T2029. More of the same; 12 new missions.
-
- Terminator: Rampage (MS-DOS):
- First-person combat game, a la DOOM! Very nice graphics and good gameplay.
- Apparently plagued by speed problems, however.
-
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day Chess Wars (PC CD-ROM):
- "Combine the excellence of the Grandmaster Chess game engine with the
- high-action science fiction drama of the Terminator, and you get T2 Chess
- Wars. While the animation is lacking in some places, the overall quality of
- the game's engine makes up for any shortcomings." [from _CD-ROM
- Entertainment_]
-
- T2 (MS-DOS):
- Third-person platform/action game.
-
- *** Anyone have any reviews/comments?
-
- T2: The Arcade Game (MS-DOS):
- First-person action game, based on the arcade game of T2. Very nice
- graphics, but has received only poor reviews.
-
- *** Anyone care to comment?
-
- T2 (handheld LCD 'video game' by Acclaim):
- Has "arcade-style continue mode, roll-over scoring and dual channel
- super-sound FX as you take on the T-1000 at the steel mill as Earth's fate
- hangs in the balance" [from the T2 Official Movie Magazine]
-
- *** I need reviews and descriptions of all Terminator-related games (e.g., T2,
- T2 Arcade, Robocop vs. Terminator, etc.) on other computer/videogame
- platforms (Amiga, Sega, S/NES, etc.)
-
-
-
- 5. What are the filmographies of the some of the people involved with T2?
- 5.1. James Cameron
- As a director:
- Piranha II: The Spawning (1981)
- The Terminator (1984), co-written with Gail Anne Hurd.
- ALIENS (1986), story by JC and David Giler & Walter Hill, screenplay by JC
- The Abyss (1989), also written.
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), co-written with William Wisher.
- True Lies (1994), also written.
-
- *** Did JC write _Piranha II_?
-
-
- 5.2. Arnold Schwarzenegger
- True Lies (1994)
- Dave (1993) [Arnold Schwarzenegger]
- Last Action Hero (1993) [Jack Slater, Arnold Schwarzenegger]
- Lincoln (TV) (1992) [Voice of John G. Nicolay]
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) [The Terminator]
- Kindergarten Cop (1990)
- Total Recall (1990) [Quaid]
- Red Heat (1988) [Ivan Danko]
- Twins (1988) [Julius Benedict]
- Predator (1987) [Dutch]
- Running Man, The (1987)
- Raw Deal (1986) [Kaminski]
- Commando (1985) [John Matrix]
- Red Sonja (1985) [Kalidor]
- Conan the Destroyer (1984)
- Terminator, The (1984) [The Terminator]
- Conan the Barbarian (1981) [Conan]
- Jayne Mansfield Story, The (TV) (1980)
- Scavenger Hunt (1979)
- Villain, The (1979) [Handsome Stranger]
- Pumping Iron (1977)
- Stay Hungry (1976)
- Long Goodbye, The (1973)
- Hercules in New York (1970) (Note: as Arnold Strong)
-
-
- 5.3. Linda Hamilton
- Separate Lives (1994)
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) [Sarah Connor]
- Mr. Destiny (1990) [Ellen Burrows]
- Go to the Light (TV) (1988)
- "Beauty and the Beast" (1987) [Catherine Chandler]
- Black Moon Rising (1986) [Nina]
- Club Med (TV) (1986) [Kate]
- King Kong Lives (1986)
- Secret Weapons (TV) (1985) [Elena Koslov]
- Children of the Corn (1984) [Vicky]
- Stone Boy, The (1984)
- Terminator, The (1984) [Sarah Connor]
- Secrets of a Mother and Daughter (TV) (1983) [Susan Decker]
- "King's Crossing" (1982) [Lauren]
- Country Gold (TV) (1982) [Josie Greenwood]
- Tag: The Assassination Game (1982) [Susan Swayze]
- "Secrets of Midland Heights" (1980) [Lisa Rogers]
- Rape and Marriage: The Rideout Case (TV) (1980)
- Reunion (1980) (TV) (1980)
-
-
- 5.4. Robert Patrick
- Fire in the Sky (1993) [Mike Rogers]
- Last Action Hero (1993) [(cameo)]
- Wayne's World (1992) [Bad Cop]
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) [T-1000]
- Die Hard 2 (1990) [O'Reilly (Terrorist)]
- Future Hunters (1989) [Slade]
- Hollywood Boulevard II (1989)
- Equalizer 2000 (1986) [Deke]
- Eye of the Eagle (1986) [Johnny Ransom]
-
-
-
- 6. Miscellaneous questions
- 6.1. What year does T2 take place?
- John Connor's DOB is February 28, 1985, and he is 10 years old in the movie.
- Thus, most of T2 takes place in the summer of 1995.
-
-
- 6.1.1 Are there mathematical errors in the script?
- Some details first: T2 begins in 2029; Skynet becomes self-aware at 2:14am EDT
- August 29, 1997 (trivia: this is a Friday).
-
- - Sarah is 29 in T2, which would make her 18 in T1. Sarah was 19 according to
- the book for T1, so this is plausible.
-
- - The T-800 says that in three years, Skynet starts the war. T2 takes place
- in 1995, so 1995 + 3 = 1998, not 1997. From February, 1995 to August, 1997
- is more than two years, so the T-800 might have just rounded it to three
- years.
-
- - From Paul Duncanson (phd@karybdis.cs.rmit.oz.au): In T1 Reese accosts a
- police officer and demands to know the date. "Thursday, May 12." Wrong! It
- is established three times that T1 happens in 1984 (title after credits in
- T1; Sarah's timecard in T1 read "Pay period ending 5/19/84"; and John's date
- of birth (2/28/1985) confirm he was conceived around May 1984). Problem is
- that May 12 1984 was a Saturday. The problem probably occurred because the
- screenplay was written in 1983 when May 12 did fall on a Thursday.
-
-
- 6.2. Why did it take the T-1000 so long to show up at John's house in Reseda?
- The T-1000 was transported to the Sixth Street Bridge in downtown LA at night
- and had access to a police vehicle and John Connor's address. Yet he only
- arrived at John's house in Reseda *after* the T-800 did! It seems like at
- least 4-6 hours between the T-1000 arriving and then getting to John's house.
- The greater LA area is big, but not that big.
-
- *** Maybe the novelization has an explanation...?
-
-
- 6.3. Why didn't the security guard at Pescadero State Hospital not notice the
- T-1000 on the floor?
- It is very possible that the T-1000 made itself thin enough to avoid being
- noticed. The T-1000 doesn't necessarily need to keep a consistent thickness
- while it is on the floor.
-
-
- 6.4. Does the T-1000 have to touch the object it takes the form of?
- The T-800 told John that the T-1000 could replicate "anything it samples by
- physical contact". It appears that the T-1000 can use a medium to do this
- without actually touching the victim's skin. In scene where the T-1000
- mimicked the guard at the coffee machine, the only contact was when the guard
- walked on the floor, where the medium was the soles of the shoes the guard
- was wearing.
-
- JC, in the T2 Special Edition Boxed Set supplements, explains that the T-1000
- has the ability to sample things that it touches at a "fantastic level." In
- a scene cut from the theatrical release, the T-1000, after killing John's
- foster parents, searches for clues to John's whereabouts. It touches the
- walls, and immediately determines that there is a cache (of tapes and
- letters from Sarah, as it turns out) behind a poster in John's room.
-
-
- 6.5. Why did the T-1000 change back to the policeman at Pescadero State
- Hospital?
- It may be that it takes more energy to mimic an object than to just keep the
- default form. When the T-1000 was transported to 1995, it had a default
- humanoid form, and that is the one it kept throughout the movie. It did *not*
- copy the form the unfortunate officer Austin who discovered it -- it only
- copied the uniform, apparently.
-
- The T2 Annotated Screenplay notes that being a policeman gives the T-1000 a
- large degree of leeway, thus is a default; also, maintaining the same form
- allows the audience to recognize the character.
-
-
- 6.6. Why did the orderly in Pescadero State Hospital lick Sarah's face?
- According to JC, this situation was presented to "dig a deeper hole that Sarah
- had to climb out of". A cut scene showed Dougie (the licker) and another
- orderly hitting Sarah before giving her drugs. Thus, Sarah is justified in
- beating Dougie later on. Any sexual abuse is only weakly implied.
-
-
- 6.7. If dogs are used to identify Terminators, why doesn't the dog at the
- desert hideout bark at the Terminator?
- The dog at the desert hideout also did not bark at Sarah or John, who were
- strangers along with "Uncle Bob". Two possibilities have been discussed:
- a) Dogs may have to be "trained" to sniff out terminators. This implies
- that John's dog Max was just barking for the hell of it, when the
- T-1000 kills John's foster parents.
- b) Not all dogs bark at Terminators.
-
-
- 6.8. Why does Sarah carve the words "NO FATE"?
- Sarah realizes that the future is not predetermined; she can change the
- future. The words show Sarah's rejection of determinism; the future is not
- 'carved in stone'. The fact that the words are carved is ironic.
-
-
- 6.9. What gun does Sarah use when she attempts to kill Dyson?
- The sound suppresser on the guns is a Sionics model, first designed in the
- 1960s, and used by the US on M-16s in Vietnam. The gun itself was a CAR 15
- (aka XM177L2), which looks similar to an M16A2 carbine.
-
-
- 6.10. Why doesn't Sarah kill Dyson?
- When faced with killing someone, Sarah cannot do it. This scene is meant to
- show that she is *not* like the Terminators. She has something they don't
- have: feelings. These feelings will not let her kill even one person. Note
- that it is not necessary the Dyson dies -- there are other ways to alter the
- future.
-
-
- 6.11. When the T-1000 goes to Dyson's home, what police radio is it listening
- to?
- Comments during this scene on the extended LD indicate that whereas the
- T-1000 'became' the uniform of the policeman, he took the radio (and gun) so
- he could monitor police activity. The T-1000 is *not* listening to the
- radio on the motorcycle.
-
-
- 6.12. Why didn't the T-1000 try to imitate Dyson and develop Skynet itself?
- The T-1000 had one objective: to kill John Connor, not to preserve its own
- future.
-
-
- 6.13. When the Terminator was firing the big machine gun in the Cyberdyne
- lab, is the bullet belt moving or not?
- From tighe@convex.com:
- It appeared that the weapon Arnold had in T2 was a General Electric
- minigun, M-134/GAU-2b. It fires a 7.62 mm round from 6 rotating barrels
- at peak cyclic rates of up to 6,000 rpm. Barrel rotation is
- powered by an electric motor. The "ammo chain" is actually an
- enclosed feeder. The bullets are inside of this feeder. That is
- why it appears to not move. If you look closely, you'll see a
- steady stream of spent cartridges dropping out of the bottom of
- the weapon.
-
-
- 6.14. Does the T-1000 have a third arm when it is flying the helicopter
- and shooting its weapon at the same time?
- Yes, and even a fourth arm in some scenes, if you look carefully.
- Although the T-1000 is supposed to "mimic" shapes it comes in contact with,
- this seems to be an acceptable modification of its shape. Note that in the
- fight scene at the end of T2, the T-1000 is clearly capable of modifying its
- humanoid appearance -- not to mention the many other myriad (partial)
- transformations.
-
-
- 6.15. What was that "ripple" that went through the T-1000 after it fought the
- T-800 and left him behind?
- The liquid nitrogen damaged the T-1000 (see the August, 1991 issue of
- _Cinefex_).
-
-
- 6.16. Why did the T-1000 take the shape of Sarah instead of the T-800 after
- it drove the spike through his back?
- The T-1000 could have taken either shape; since the T-1000 took the shape of
- the guard at Pescadero, it would seem that the T-1000 could have taken the
- T-800's shape as well, or at least come close to resembling him. It may have
- thought it would have had a better chance of getting close to John if it took
- the shape of his mother. Don't forget that the T-1000 had no information on
- how John's relationship was progressing with the T-800, so it would assume
- that Sarah would have been a better choice.
-
- The Special Edition apparently indicates that this behaviour resulted from
- the damage experienced by the T-1000 after being frozen and shattered.
-
-
- 6.17. Why did the T-1000 try to get Sarah to call to John?
- Again, discussion has centred on several possible explanations. In order of
- plausibility:
-
- 1) The theory from the novelization is that the liquid nitrogen temporarily
- damaged its vocals.
-
- 2) Another possible reason is that the T-1000 had not heard Sarah speak to
- obtain a sufficiently suitable sample; therefore, he could not mimic her
- voice.
-
- 3) Some have suggested that the T-1000 possesses some malevolence. For
- example, it wags its finger in the steel mill after Sarah blows a hole
- through its head. Thus, it may delight in torturing Sarah both physically
- (spike through the shoulder) and emotionally (helping her destroy her son).
-
- 4) It may be that the T-1000 realized that mimicry was unsuccessful on John
- before (when it imitated Janelle). Thus, it may have overestimated John's
- ability to distinguish actual human voices from a synthesis.
-
- 5) Finally, the Special Edition apparently notes that this odd behaviour is
- also a result of being damaged by the liquid nitrogen and being shattered.
-
-
- 6.17.1 Why didn't the T-1000 kill Sarah?
- Because the T-800 came to her rescue after he broke his arm free.
-
-
- 6.18. If the T-1000 was destroyed when it fell into the molten steel, why
- wasn't it destroyed when the semi tow-truck blew up?
- Molten steel is a *lot* hotter than a gas explosion; notice that the truck did
- not melt when it blew up.
-
-
- 6.19. Why didn't the Terminator "disappear" when John threw the CPU into
- the molten steel?
- The time travel of the Terminator movies is not the same as that of the _Back
- to the Future_ series. Although no one is sure what would happen if you
- created a paradox, it is highly unlikely (and goes against the laws of
- physics for our world) that matter would just disappear into thin air.
- Time-travel paradoxes are a lot more complicated than that. [See section 8
- for more on time travel.]
-
- According to the novelization, Judgment Day is avoided; Sarah becomes a
- grandmother and John a Senator fighting the Skynet bill in Congress [see
- section 1.1.2]. Also in the book, the T-800 jumps in the molten pit on its
- own.
-
-
- 6.20. Isn't the Terminator's arm being left behind in the huge gear going
- to lead to the creation of Skynet anyway?
- It was clear from Dyson that it was the CPU that spurred the technology for
- Skynet. In the book, Sarah and John took the parts left from the T-800 and
- threw them into the molten pit.
-
-
- 6.21. When the T-1000 is on top of the elevator in Pescadero State Hospital,
- why doesn't it just cut the cables?
- Modern elevators have brakes that prevent them from free-falling to the bottom
- of the shaft; some shafts apparently also have 'buffers' at the bottom.
-
-
- 6.22. What about <insert continuity glitch here>?
- Several astute people have pointed out minor continuity discrepancies. These
- are not plot problems, they are simply byproducts of the complex endeavour of
- shooting a film. I leave it to Van Ling, Creative Technical Supervisor of
- Lightstorm Entertainment, and annotator of the T2 illustrated screenplay (see
- section 10.1: Bibliography for more details), to have the final word.
-
- From: kiraprod@aol.com (KiraProd):
- Arnold's face was NOT grafted via CG onto Peter Kent's body in the bike
- jump into the canal. You are simply looking at Peter Kent wearing Stan
- Winston facial prostheses to make him look more like Arnold.
-
- A previous post asked about the windshield continuity problem (the glass
- is popped out during the jump, then is back in until T-1000 knocks it out
- later). This is an instance of practicality taking precedent over
- continuity. Yes, the glass popped in the single take we did of the jump
- (an aborted practice take notwithstanding). However, Jim wanted the glass
- to remain intact for much of the scene, in order to a) help hide the stunt
- driver in most shots, and b) allow for clear closeups of Robert Patrick at
- the same time. This is not as mutually exclusive as you may think.
- Even Jim Cameron wasn't going to get to say "let's do this $$$$ gag again,
- and make make sure the glass doesn't pop this time!" There's a point
- where you have to decide whether to blow the bucks on a retake of a gag
- that hopefully should not yank you out of the film if the continuity is a
- little off, or to plow that money into other, more crucial parts of the
- movie, really finesse a cool CG shot, etc. I hope you'll agree we made
- the right decision. ;-)
-
- Van
-
- PS: I'm the first guy you here and see in the Cyberdyne lab intro scene,
- sitting at a terminal next to the neural net processor.
-
-
-
- 7. Trivia
- 7.1. Who was originally cast as the Terminator?
- Lance Henriksen (ALIENS, ALIEN^3, Hard Target) was originally cast as the
- Terminator, with Arnold as the hero. Arnold read the script, and asked to
- play the Terminator instead. Henriksen was recast as the cop Vukovich.
-
-
- 7.2. How many lines did Arnold have in T1?
- Arnold's voice is sued in exactly 16 lines, with 17 sentences spoken. The
- Terminator has two other lines, one with the voice of a police officer
- overdubbed, and one with the voice of Sarah's mother overdubbed. There are
- also many lines with the voice of Sarah's mother, and we learn that the
- Terminator is actually saying them, but we don't see it onscreen.
-
-
- 7.3. What is Harlan Ellison's connection to the Terminator movies?
- SF author Harlan Ellison filed a lawsuit against T1 director JC, claiming
- that Cameron plagiarized several of his short stories, namely "Soldier" and
- "Demon with a Glass Hand". The concept of 'Skynet' could also have been
- borrowed from an Ellison short story called "I Have No Mouth and I Must
- Scream". Newer prints of T1 acknowledge Ellison.
-
-
- 7.4. What is the 'crushing foot' motif?
- This refers to the recurring imagery of humanity being crushed by the
- machines. First, in the 2029 sequence of T1, there is a closeup of tank
- treads rolling over human skulls. Next, when the T-800 approaches the house
- of the first 'Sarah Connor', it crushes a small toy truck. Also, after the
- Terminator kills Sarah's friend, he walks over her Walkman headphones. In T2,
- the title sequence starts with a Terminator endoskeleton crushing a human
- skull. The imagery of the Hunter-Killer tank rolling over skulls reoccurs.
- The T-800 crushes one of the roses that falls out of the flower box when it
- removes the shotgun at the Galleria (may be a reference to the T2 tie-in
- video by Guns 'N' Roses). The T-1000 treads on the T-800's sunglasses at
- Pescadero State Hospital.
-
-
- 7.5. Is "judgment" spelled correctly?
- Both "judgement" and "judgment" are accepted spellings, however, "judgment" is
- increasingly preferred.
-
-
- 7.6. How did Linda Hamilton prepare for T2?
- She underwent a rigorous weight-training/exercise program six days a week,
- and weapons training with a former Israeli commando.
-
-
- 7.7. Does Linda Hamilton have a twin sister who appeared in T2?
- Yes, she was in the scene at the end where the T-1000 took the form of John
- Connor's mother. Linda actually played the T-1000 version of herself and her
- sister played Sarah Connor coming up behind the T-1000. Linda's sister
- also appeared in the scene in which Sarah replaces the T-800's chip and sees
- herself in a mirror (this scene is restored in the Special Edition). NOTE:
- these scenes were not done with split screens. Linda's sister's name is
- Leslie Hamilton Gearren and she is a nurse in New Jersey. Linda Hamilton
- played Sarah on the playground during her dream sequence (in fact, she is
- holding her real-life son).
-
- (The guard in the mental institute also has a real-life twin brother, who
- actually played the T-1000 coming up behind him at the coffee machine. These
- twin brothers were also in _Good Morning Vietnam_ and _Gremlins2: The New
- Batch_.)
-
-
- 7.8. What hardware/software was used to produce some of the FX in T2?
- The systems used were Silicon Graphics IRIS 4D/340VGX RISC-processor
- workstations. The software used was Alias Studio 3.0 and Pixar's Renderman
- from ILM. The computer graphics were used, among other things, for the
- morphing/liquid metal FX, for putting the pilot's reflection on the T-1000 in
- the helicopter, and in the nuclear blast scene.
-
-
- 7.9. What machine code is displayed on the Terminator's visual display?
- 6502 assembler, specifically Apple 2+ assembly, taken from _Nibble_ (QV), a
- computing magazine. Other code visible is written in COBOL.
-
-
- 7.10. What is the literal translation of "Schwarzenegger"?
- "Black plowman"
-
-
- 7.11. What does "Hasta la vista" mean?
- 'See you later.' Literal translation is "until the sight".
-
-
- 7.12. Did the movies win any Academy Awards?
- T2 won four Oscars:
- Best Make-up: Stan Winston and Jeff Dawn
- Best Sound Effects Editing: Gary Rydstrom and Gloria S. Borders
- Best Sound: Tom Johnson, Gary Rydstrom, Gary Summers, and Lee Orloff
- Best Visual Effects: Dennis Muren, Stan Winston, Gene Warren Jr,
- and Robert Skotak
-
- T2 editors Conrad Buff IV, Mark Goldblatt, and Richard A. Harris were
- nominated in the Best Editing category. Adam Greenberg was nominated in the
- Best Cinematography category for T2.
-
-
- 7.13. How much money did T2 make?
- T2 grossed over US$490 million worldwide. It recouped its total production
- costs in its first 12 days of release. In three weeks, it grossed US$123M
- -- its closest competitor (_Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves_ took six weeks to
- reach that mark). For 1991, T2's total US box office gross for 1991 was
- US$204.4M; in the UK it took in 18.1M pounds.
-
-
- 7.14. Miscellaneous trivia
- - T2 co-writer William Wisher portrayed the guy taking pictures of the T-800
- after it smashes through the window at the Galleria.
- - The helicopter pilot whom the T-1000 tells to get out is played by Chuck
- Tamburro, T2's aerial coordinator.
- - Cyberdyne guard 'Moshier' (Mike Muscat) was also Edward Furlong's acting
- coach.
-
-
- 7.15. Is there a real Skynet?
- Astonishingly, the answer to this question is a simple 'yes'! The following
- article was carried by Reuters on June 20, 1994:
- ** VSAT CUSTOMER -- AT&T said Allied Van Lines has agreed to
- become the first customer of its new [VSAT] satellite hub service.
- AT&T said under Allied's five-year, multimillion-dollar contract,
- Allied will connect its agents' local area networks to AT&T's
- SKYNET hub service for shipment registration, scheduling and
- dispatch and to process bills of lading.
- (Before anyone starts stocking up on plasma rifles and planning to be wearing
- 2 million sunblock on August 29, 1997, realize that this is clearly not a
- automated defense network, but rather a simple communications net. Or is
- it...?)
-
-
-
- 8. Time travel questions.
- Naturally, any theory of time travel is just that: a theory. For the purposes
- of this FAQ, the best we can do is try to apply one or more of these theories,
- while still maintaining internal consistency with the info presented in the
- films. There are many theories of time travel in science fiction and comics.
- However, most discussions of time travel focus on two theories of 'real-world'
- physics: classic Newtonian and quantum mechanical physics. For a good
- introduction to the application of these theories to time travel, see the
- article, "The quantum physics of time travel" in the March, 1994 issue of
- _Scientific American_.
-
- The classical theory states that there is one existence, and thus a single
- timeline. According to this view, changing an event in the past could
- theoretically retroactively change history from the time traveler's POV.
- This theory is plagued by problems of "temporal paradoxes". For example,
- what happens if you go back in time and prevent your parents from
- meeting? (According to the movie _Back to the Future_, you will 'fade from
- existence'!)
-
- The quantum view is that time travel is possible along distortions in
- space-time called closed timelike curves; also, reality exists as a
- multiverse of infinite possibilities. Thus, if you travel back in time and
- prevent your parents from meeting, there's no paradox. Your parents still
- meet and conceive you in the timeline you came from (after all, you must have
- come from somewhere!). However, a 'version' of you will *not* be born in the
- timeline you traveled to.
-
- bcw3s@fermi.clas.virginia.edu (Brian Christopher Weaver) writes:
- "The 'many-universes' interpretation of quantum mechanics solves a lot of time
- travel paradoxes. A time traveler can make _any_ change in the past he/she/it
- wants to without endangering their existence because they came from a
- _different_ universe whose timeline is untouched by their meddling.
-
- Therefore, there really is no paradox in the Terminator movies. The
- Terminators and Kyle Reese came from a universe where the war actually
- occurred, but by the end of T2 a universe had been created where John and
- Sarah Connor lived with no global thermonuclear war. The original timeline
- still exists, however, in a parallel universe."
-
- T2 implies that its world is of one existence and a single timeline.
- Certainly, it would seem to be futile to send someone back to change the past
- in a multi-universe existence -- unless one is very altruistic! Consider
- this: T2 implied that Judgment Day never occurred due to manipulation of the
- past. But it all depends which timeline one looks at:
-
- 1995 2029
- -----|----------------|--(existence with nuclear war) (A)
- \_______________|__(alternate peaceful existence) (B)
-
- Assuming the existence of multiple parallel timelines, if a time traveler
- could change an event in 1995 (such as destroying the CPU chip), all that
- would result is another existence (B) branching off from 1995. Note that the
- nuclear war still happens in existence (A), even if an event in the past is
- changed!
-
- What can we conclude? Quantum physics *can* explain the events of T1/T2 well.
- However, it does not make for a good story. Although saving humanity in a
- *single* timeline out of an infinity is better than none at all, this
- situation would likely not have been accepted by the moviegoing public.
- Assuming Judgment Day does *not* occur (as per the 'lost ending' of T2), JC
- wanted to show that there is "no fate" but what we make of it. This
- philosophy is reinforced by the 'single-timeline' approach.
-
- So there you have it: good physics and a watered-down story, or a ream of
- paradoxes and a strong story. Anyone care to posit a hybrid? ;-)
-
-
- 8.1 How did the (liquid *metal*) T-1000 travel to the past? Didn't they
- destroy the time machine?
-
- The T-800 was able to go through time because it was surrounded by living
- tissue. The T-1000 could imitate living tissue, but it is made up of alloy
- metals, so it is not technically a biological organism, but neither was the
- T-800.
-
- Some possibilities:
-
- - Maybe Skynet used a time machine with improved capabilities (apparently
- with the letter-boxed laserdisc for T1, you can see a type of bubble enclosed
- around Reese before he drops, so this may imply that the same type of time
- machine was used in T2).
-
- - Mimicking living tissue is sufficient. The mimetic polyalloy is capable of
- generating a 'living field' of some sort.
-
- - The time machine in T2 is in a separate existence from T1 (refer to
- section 8 on time travel).
-
- - The T-1000 was sent through wrapped-up in flesh. This is the most likely
- (but most gory) explanation. In _The Terminator: Tempest_ comic, an
- advanced plasma weapon is sent through time in the belly of a man. The same
- method may be extrapolated for the T-1000.
-
- Regarding the destruction of the time machine, Reese would have been gone
- before the machine was destroyed anyway. He wouldn't know for certain
- whether it was destroyed or not.
-
-
- 8.2 How can Skynet exist if the chip and arm were destroyed?
-
- According to the classical, single timeline/universe view, it is impossible
- -- unless Cyberdyne Systems develops Skynet technology *independently* of any
- help from the future.
-
- Assuming the existence of a multiverse of timelines, this situation can also
- be explained. In the universe in which we see the Terminator technology
- destroyed, Skynet will never exist. However, there must exist at least *one*
- timeline/universe in which Skynet technology is developed. This may occur
- due to: a) Cyberdyne independently creating the technology, or b) Terminator
- remains originating from yet *another* timeline are left behind. Thus, the
- movies must chronicle *two* different universes: one with the hellish future
- dominated by Skynet, the other is the one saved by Sarah and John.
-
-
- 8.3 If John gave a speech to Reese in 2029, who gave it to Sarah and
- conceived John in 1984, and then Sarah told it to John, then who *wrote*
- the bloody speech?
-
- According to classical physics, we have a classic paradox. No one wrote it,
- everybody just memorized it. Assuming a multiverse, on the other hand, we
- can posit that a future John Connor (whose mother encountered a Reese who
- perhaps forgot the speech) *did* write the speech, and gave it to Reese.
- Reese traveled back to 1984 in *another* universe, and gave it to Sarah
- (which we saw in T1).
-
-
-
- 9. Will there be a _Terminator 3_ movie?
- On _Secrets Revealed_, JC is cagey:
- "Well, T3...that's a *secret* of course. We can't talk about that [laughs]."
-
- (JC is obviously playing on the fact that the TV show is called "Secrets
- Revealed.")
-
- Arnold, on T2: "This movie does *not* indicate to me that there's an end to
- the story possibilities. According to what we know about the future, there
- were *hundreds* of Terminators built. This story could go on forever. I
- know Jim [JC] rules out a third film. But I don't" [from _Starlog Yearbook_,
- vol. 10]
-
- Note that by removing the ending of T2 showing Sarah and John in the future,
- JC makes it more ambiguous whether or not Skynet will be developed. I
- suppose we'll have to wait and see what the future brings ;-)
-
-
-
- 10. Credits
- - A huge credit must go to Doug Fierro (formerly at fierro@uts.amdahl.com)
- who compiled the T2 FAQ, upon which this document is heavily based.
- - Ross Chandler (chandler@maths.tcd.ie), in addition to converting this FAQ to
- html and maintaining the T2 WWW home page, contributed answers to questions
- 7.4, 7.12, 7.13, and 7.14. His contribution to this FAQ is much appreciated.
- - Paul Duncanson (phd@karybdis.cs.rmit.oz.au) helped with questions 2.2.1,
- 6.1.1, 6.5, and 6.9, among other various clarifications.
- - Brian Christopher Weaver (bcw3s@fermi.clas.virginia.edu) saved me some time
- by applying the SciAm article to the Terminator movies.
- - Francisco X. DeJesus (dejesus@archimedes.chinalake.navy.mil) gave me info
- provided by the Special Edition LD, and helped on questions 1.2.1, 6.6 and
- 6.11.
- - Aman Verjee (bkmagic@leland.stanford.edu) provided an interesting alternate
- theory in question 6.17.
-
-
- 10.1. Bibliography
- _CD-ROM Entertainment_ (May, 1994), I(1).
-
- _Cinefex_, #21. The Terminator.
-
- _Cinefex_, #47. Terminator 2: Judgment Day.
-
- _Empire_ (May, 1992)
-
- _Terminator 2: Judgment Day: The Book of the Film: An Illustrated
- Screenplay_ (1991). By James Cameron and William Wisher, annotations by Van
- Ling. Applause Theater Book Pub. ISBN: 1557830975. (Available by
- telneting to books.com -- highly recommended!)
-
- _The Official Terminator 2: Judgment Day Movie Magazine_ (1991). Starlog
- Communications International.
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- _Starlog Yearbook_, vol. 10 (Sept, 1992). Heart of Steel [interview with
- Arnold Schwarzenegger]. Starlog Communications International.
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- Deutsch, D., & Lockwood, M. (March, 1994). The quantum physics of time
- travel. _Scientific American_, 270(3), 68-74.
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- Shea, D., & Duncan, J. _The making of Terminator 2: Judgment Day_. Titan
- books Ltd.: London.
-
- --
- Karsten A. Loepelmann, Master of his domain (*psychology*, that is :-)
- "Back off, man. I'm a scientist." -- Dr. Peter Venkman
- kloepelm@gpu.srv.ualberta.ca /// kloepel@psych.ualberta.ca
-