Terminator : You're right, nothing matters anymore, only the boy. Sarah Connor:Kill me.nothing matters anymore. Suddednly a terminator appears and kills the police and John Conner as well. This season, allies become enemies, a boy becomes a man, and the terminator saga is reborn.This season, a mother will become a warrior, a son will become a hero, and their only ally will be a friend from the future.Everything he is, everything he will be, depends on her.3.19 The Last Voyage Of The Jimmy Carter.3.16 Some Must Watch While Some Must Sleep.3.10 Strange Things Happen At The One-Two Point.3.6 The Tower Is Tall But The Fall Is Short.It'd make Cameron's last words prophetic (if cheesy). It would be interesting if they retconned T3, and made Cameron John's future killer. She brutally attacks the orderly that molested her. During her actions, we quickly see how ruthless and adaptive she has become a clear result of her training, which we learn about later in the story. Maybe it's signficant or maybe they just realized they goofed with the intro last year. Character-Defining Action 3: Ruthless and Adaptive. They took out the ambiguous intro from last year and instead put in this time a much clearer one. Otherwise, it stretches credulity that cleaning up a chip would insert a new programming, given that "new" Cameron's program simply overrode the existing program upon reboot. My assumption is that he simply wrote in an override in the programming, and that's about it. I mean, for a killer machine bent on killing him, future John seems to have done a rather halfass job "reprogramming" her. I do wonder though if she was ever "reprogrammed" as the intro claims, or at least fully. I guess the writers were paying attention to the shippers, er, fandom. On Cameron and John in the final act, I found her cries of love amusing. Huh, maybe that's why they brought in the urinal lady.
One more lazy ass takedown like that (including last season's same-o-lame-o takedown), I wouldn't be able to take terminators as credible threats anymore. Sure, she was banged up, but still, it shouldn't be that easy to take a terminator down. In fact, if she wasn't overacting, then she was just plainly woodier than David Duchoveny.Īnother thing that sorta, kinda, in a very little way, grates on me is how easily they took down Cameron. The computer which controlled the machines, Skynet, sent two terminators back through time. They lived only to face a new nightmare, the war against the Machines. The survivors of the nuclear fire called the war. I'm not fond of Sheryl Manson (sp?) she just wasn't very convincing as either a terminator or a business exec. Sarah Connor: 3 billion human lives ended on August 29, 1997. The rest of the ep was good, but not as good as the opening (though it'd have been hard as hell to top that). Damn effective use of music, and I guess, to be expected given Johnny Cash last season. Oh, I don't know the chick and in any other setting, I probably wouldn't have liked the song, but it fit there to the T. All that explosion, and not a split end on that gorgeous raven lock of hers. And she had full, luxurious head of hair. The scene was (probably) unintentionally amusing the car was totaled, I mean, TOTALED, yet Cameron was still pretty as an angel (even if a vicious one at that), with only a slight sagging side of her face. I must say, though, how the Sarc went out like chump disappointed me, because I liked his char and wanted to see him more. The first few minutes was very well-done, a rather economical - in both financial and narrative terms - way to tie up a loose end. It was a good ep, but I'm a bit surprised at the sheer enthusiasm of some people over this ep, as if it were the greatest tv episode of the decade - and I've been a fan of the show since the day 1.