The art product we call film aims to tell a single story from the beginning to the end. Sequel films, on the other hand, are usually made because the original movie is based on a serial novel or story. Because the filmmakers see the success of the first movie and the box office of the second movie as guaranteed, they view the business as a relatively risk-free investment. At this point, a very difficult process awaits the screenwriters. They need ideas that will both be in the concept of the first movie and develop it. This often results in errors.
The first production we will discuss in this series of articles will be Terminator 2: Judgment Day, the sequel to The Terminator. Directed by James Cameron and starring Arnold Schwarzenegger and Linda Hamilton, the production is perhaps the most popular film in the Terminator series, with its acting, script and atmosphere. It is an enjoyable production that ranks among the best sequels ever in the history of cinema. But even in this production there are many mistakes.
In the first movie, Kyle Reese says the time machine was destroyed when he left. He states that no one will ever come from the future except himself and the Terminator (T-800). But in the second movie, we see two Terminators coming from the future. In addition, when time machine technology is so advanced, why is only one person from each side being sent to the past? There is no clear explanation on this matter.
In the first movie, Kyle Reese states that only organic creatures can use the time machine. The outside of the T-800 Terminator is a living organism, and the inside is a robot, so it can pass. Accordingly, T-1000, which is completely liquid metal, should not be able to use the time machine. This problematic is actually the film's director James Cameron and co-author William Wisher Jr. also thought by. That's why they planned to shoot a scene from the future with the T-1000 covered in human skins. But they gave up on this, both because they thought they couldn't convince the studio, and because they didn't want to spoil the mystery of whether the T-1000 was on the good side or the bad side at the beginning of the movie.
On the other hand, if non-organic objects can also travel through time, then an advanced weapon could be brought in from the future that could stop the T-1000. If somehow only organic creatures can still use time machines, then why didn't the T-800 bring a weapon from the future with modern technology under the skin or surrounded by living organism skin?
In the movie, Kyle Reese was sent by John Connor, the leader of humanity's future resistance, to protect his mother. However, it is revealed at the end of the first movie that Reese is John's father. This indicates an inviolable time cycle. However, in the second film, Judgment Day was prevented and the time that should have been changed was changed. This created a situation where Kyle Reese wouldn't need to travel back in time. The last theory that can take this situation out of the paradox is the multiverse theory. But if there are multiverse, then a new timeline is created every time one travels. This makes it unnecessary to send someone to the past to change the present.
Finally, in the first movie, the T-800 was programmed to protect and obey his orders, just as the T-800 was a notorious killer because it was programmed. It should not have gone beyond its programming.
I eagerly await the date that the movie will be shown in the cinema. It looks like a movie with lots of action and entertainment.