I’ll go first. Mine is that I can’t stand the Deadpool movies. They are self aware and self referential to an obnoxious degree. It’s like being continually reminded that I am in a movie. I swear the success of that movie has directly lead to every blockbuster having to have a joke every 30 seconds

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Terminator is better than Terminator 2, and as cool as it is Terminator 2 should never have been made (or should have a different script).

    I know the mob is raising the pitchfork, but hear me out, there are two main ways time travel can solve the grandparent paradox, these are Singular Timeline (i.e. something will prevent you from killing your grandfather) or Multiple Timeline (you kill him but in doing so you created an alternate timeline). Terminator 2 is clearly a MT model, because they delay the rise of Skynet, but Terminator is a ST movie. The way you can understand it’s an ST is because the cause-consequences form a perfect cycle (which couldn’t happen on an MT story), i.e. Reese goes back to save Sarah -> Reese impregnates Sarah and teaches her how to defend herself from Terminators and avoid Skynet -> Sarah gives birth to and teaches John -> John uses the knowledge to start a resistance -> The resistance is so strong that Skynet sends a Terminator back in time to kill Sarah -> Reese goes back to save Sarah…

    The awesome thing about Terminator is how you only realise this at the end of the Movie, that nothing they did mattered, because that’s what happened before, the timeline is fixed, humanity will suffer but they’ll win eventually.

    If Terminator was a MT then the cycle breaks, i.e. there needs to be a beginning, a first time around when the original timeline didn’t had any time travelers. How did that timeline looked like? John couldn’t exist, which means that sending a Terminator back in time to kill Sarah was not possible, Reese couldn’t have gone back without the Terminator technology, which they wouldn’t have unless the resistance was winning, and if they are winning without John, the Terminator must have gone back to kill someone else and when Reese went back he accidentally found Sarah, impregnated her and coincidentally made a better commander for the resistance which accidentally and created a perfect loop so that next time he would be sent back and meet Sarah because she was the target (what are the odds of that). Then why is the movie not about this? Why is the movie about the Nth loop after the timeline was changed? The reason is that Terminator was thought as a ST movie, but when they wanted to write a sequel they for some reason decided to allow changes in the timeline which broke the first movie.

    • swordsmanluke@programming.dev
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      11 months ago

      Ah! A fellow holder of the belief that time travel stories are better when they are internally consistent! I hate e.g. Looper for having time travel that makes no goddamn sense. It takes me out of the story when the characters are literally watching the timeline change before them as it magically radiates out from one point. And then our protagonists somehow remember the original timeline… Bah.

      …So I must ask - have you seen Primer? If not, maybe you’d like it!

      • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Of course I’ve seen Primer, enough times to understand it even (I hope), it’s my favourite time travel movie.

      • muzzle@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        If you want your time travel to be internally consistent go watch “FAQ about time travel” it’s British, low budget, mostly consistent, and hilarious.

    • meleecrits@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Not to mention that it’s fucking stupid to have all your infiltration units have the exact same face and body. The first movie even showed other terminators with different faces, so why is every T-800 Arnold?

      That said, T2 is one of my favorite movies.

      • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        This tries to play on the idea that skynet is terrifyingly smart in some ways, but still deficient in others.

        It doesn’t really “make sense” but it’s the whole reason there’s a chance of an “ongoing” conflict between humans and skynet. If skynet was as smart as it should be, humans would be long gone.

    • ASeriesOfPoorChoices@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      You would love the episode in S4 of Miracle Workers which addresses this scenario.

      Basically, the Terminators are in an endless loop killing Johns and being killed by them. It’s just a boring job for them now.

    • Empricorn@feddit.nl
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      11 months ago

      I really, really appreciate this unpopular opinion, it made me see things in a different light. Unfortunately, the convincing you just did pales in comparison to how good Terminator 2 was. It wasn’t just a cool flick, a sequel, a “time travel movie”, etc, it was something special and it was amazing. But I fully understand and appreciate when time travel in movies doesn’t make 100% sense, because it almost never does …

      • mindbleach
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        11 months ago

        Personally I appreciate that the first three films all explore different models of time travel, and they kinda work together.

        The Terminator is a fixed loop. The past is immutable. You cannot break reality because paradoxes are prevented.

        Terminator 2 is a multiverse: you cannot break reality because paradoxes are nonsense. You can change “the past,” but you can’t change your past. You traveled to a different timeline and you’re free to do whatever. This is compatible with the first movie because you’re also free to do things exactly as they happened in your timeline.

        Terminator 3 sucks. But it’s also a closed loop. You cannot break reality because paradoxes are impossible. Time travel is an equation balanced by the laws of the universe. Only possible universes can exist. You’re free to do whatever… but it will result in a timeline where all past and future observations are internally consistent. This is compatible with the second movie only because that movie had no Breakfast Club close as originally intended. It’s also what the franchise has stuck with, now that it is apparently a whole-ass franchise.

    • GBU_28@lemm.ee
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      11 months ago

      I thought everyone (skynet, the resistance) thought it was ST as of T1, but that was wrong, as seen in T2.

      • mindbleach
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        11 months ago

        And then arguably T3 disproved T2’s “no fate” model by requiring some closed loop.

        As science fiction, that evolution is perfectly sensible. As storytelling… yeah, T2 as a response to T1 is so much better than T3 as a response to T2. Sarah Conner goes from a victim of circumstance, trapped by predetermination, to a psycho gym-rat ready to fight god. James Cameron explicitly tells the audience that escape and control are possible… and it’s fucking awesome.

        Then some bean counters went ‘but what if nuh-uh?’

    • Pepsi@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      i’m like way, way late on this, but i just stumbled on this thread and have to say your analysis is well thought out and you explained time travel narrative structures very succinctly.

      but your analysis completely falls apart because, and i’m not sure how, but you missed the entire fucking point of Terminator 1. In the extended edition of T2 there’s a scene in the first 15 minutes where Kyle explains it again for those in the back.

      "The future is not set.”

      added in T2,

      “The future is not set. There is no fate but what we make for ourselves.”

      That’s what Kyle comes back to explain to Sarah. Until she understands that message and acts on it, Kyle is acting in a “ST” structure. Once the terminator is destroyed by Sarah, the MT is opened up. We can speculate that Kyle was supposed to kill the terminator with his last pipe bomb, but really any moment could have caused that schism. What’s important is that Sarah is now self-reliant in terms of killing machines. Fate is what Sarah was fighting, almost a meta-antagonist. That is her struggle through the entire Terminator franchise.

      Terminator 1 is a time travel story that starts as a ST narrative, and by Sarah’s actions in the final act, becomes a MT narrative. T2 just further explores the opened-up MT narrative. There’s no inconsistency between the final moment of T1 and the opening of T2. Your gripe seems to be entirely with the first movie based on a limited understanding of the larger themes and philosophies explored in the narrative.

      Terminator 2 is a damn fine sequel and a hell of a film on its own merit.

      • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Kyle says that, he also talks about possible futures, but Kyle has no understanding of time travel

        One possible future. From your point of view. I don’t know tech stuff.

        He doesn’t even know why he has to travel naked, his answer is:

        I didn’t build the fucking thing!

        Also the quote you mention is part of the phrase that John Connor made him tell Sarah:

        Thank you, Sarah, for your courage through the dark years. I can’t help you with what you must soon face, except to say that the future is not set. You must be stronger than you imagine you can be. You must survive, or I will never exist.

        But here’s the thing, John says that to Sarah possibly because Sarah told him about it and how that exact phrase kept her going, knowing that the future was not set.

        I don’t get why you’re speculating that Kyle was to kill the Terminator, but:

        John Connor gave me a picture of you once. I didn’t know why at the time. It was very old. Torn…faded. You were young, like you are now. You seemed just… a little sad

        She was always alone and sad in that photo, Kyle had always died, and she had always run away, to me she always killed the Terminator.

        If you claim T1 is MT, let’s call timeline 1 the one Kyle comes from, and timeline 2 the one we see most of the movie, also there’s a timeline 0 where no time travel happened, with that in mind there are a few questions:

        • How does timeline 1 differs from 2? They can’t be exactly the same otherwise it’s a perfect loop which can’t have a beginning, i.e. if timeline 1 is the same as timeline 2 it’s in a perpetual loop and timeline 3, etc will always be the same
        • What happened on the timeline 0? Why was a Terminator sent to kill Sarah? John didn’t existed in that timeline, or at least not the same John that Kyle knows, he would at the very least be a lot younger (not to mention have a different father). Why was he sent to the 80s? If you’re going to kill Sarah surely you can go to the 70s or 60s, kill a kid or a baby is a lot easier and they know the city she lived in, or go to the 90s or 00s before the rise of Skynet, the internet and more technology would make it easier for them to find her. If T1 is ST it makes sense, because Sarah disappears after the 80s, and possibly erases herself from before that, so Skynet only has a small window that she left open because that’s when Kyle needs to go.
    • thecrotch
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      11 months ago

      Also Eddie furlong is fucking insufferable

      • Albbi@lemmy.ca
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        11 months ago

        As someone who enjoys the magic systems of Brandon Sanderson, I do piss on Star Wars for not having a logical basis for The Force.

        Actually it’s not that bad. Harry Potter is much worse.

      • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        No, the problem is internal consistency, in Star Wars the force works the same way in all films. But imagine if on one movie someone was shown using the force to move objects, and on the next movie the same character was shown trying to reach for something important and failing and not using the force and when asked he replies “it’s not possible to move objects with the force”. That’s the problem here, internal consistency, on one movie it’s said it works one way, on the other it’s said it works differently. I love both movies, I just think T2 shitted on one of the main things from T1.

      • cooopsspace@infosec.pub
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        11 months ago

        You’re right

        And you know how they explained time travel not making sense in Doctor Who? They called it “wibbly wobbly, timey wimey stuff” and hand waved all that shit away.

        • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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          11 months ago

          And that’s fine, but if one Dr. Who explained time travel in detail, showing things that would be impossible, the next doctor shouldn’t violate those rules, it’s about in-universe consistency.

          • muzzle@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            I’ll go ahead and guess that you haven’t seen much doctor who :)

            Dr who has av lot of qualities, consistency is not one of them (and it’s OK)

            • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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              11 months ago

              You are correct, I haven’t. But if the next Doctor said Time travel was impossible and spent the entire show not time traveling (because time travel is impossible) I bet that would raise some eyebrows.

      • dudinax@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        No, the “Single Time Line” bit is a basic feature of T1, part of what makes it great, that T2 simply throws away.