Maybe ill try again this weekend. At this point all I have to lose is making another $20.
You know... I absolutely HATED the trailers for this movie. There wasn't a single thing in them that appealed to me and a lot that didn't... but it is a Terminator film, so I had to go see it. I LIKED IT... A LOT! Now, don't get me wrong. It was far from perfect and Emilia Clarke was almost unwatchable for the first 1/3 of the film, but for me, this film found a heart that the last two utterly lacked.
Were there plotholes? Of course! Show me a time travel movie where there aren't.
Did I like the idea of alternative timelines? Well why not? Everyone else is using them to get more mileage out of their properties and Terminator had the potential built in from the beginning due to time travel... unlike Star Trek that had to ham-fistedly force it on us to justify their otherwise inexplicable changes.
T-1000 was great.
Many questions left unanswered that leaves a lot of opportunity for future films.
Not really sure where all the hate is coming from.
At least they didn't go in and gender-swap everyone...
Alright, so... Minions, or T5?
Unless your taking your kid to the cinema, T5. Don't even even waste time on the Minion movie - crap all round except the very end.
The T-1000 was polymimicalloy and could change shape into anything of equal size. It seemed to have no real power limits either but was affected by extremes of temperature. Where exactly is its chip stored?
Don't even know how classify "Marcus" other than a custom made Terminator with a human heart.
Only one way to classify him/it: stupid![]()
The T-1000 obviously never had a chip. It is just one big blob made up of nano-bots, so small it essentially can act like liquid. Like many similar designs, one bot isn't very smart but when all combined into one... very smart, very dangerous. A bit like ants![]()
Fair call
Terminator (in this film is called "Guardian" - actually he is called Pops) says in the film that the mimic-poly-alloy is safe without its chip. What chip and where does it get stored in something that can flatten out to be thinner than paper? As you have stated, there was nothing to say how or what controlled the T-1000. So I like the idea that is not one, but millions of nanos joined to form one.
Both the TX and now this ageing T-800 both have a chip and have both an endo + m-p-a.