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Terminator 2 In Hindi 720p
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Sequel to Terminator. Skynet, the 21st century computer waging a losing war on humans sends a second terminator back in time to destroy the leader of the human resistance while he is still a boy. His mother is the only one who knows of the existence of the Terminators, human-like robots that exist only to kill and are nearly indestructible, and Sarah, the boy's mother is currently in a state mental hospital because of her 'delusions'. A second protector is sent back to the past by the Human resistance to protect John Connor, their future leader, at all costs.
In the last movie a cyborg was sent from the future to kill Sarah Connor, but he failed. Now a much more powerful one sent from the future to kill Sarah's son - John Connor, the leader of the future rebels. A terminator was send from the future once more, but this time to protect Connor. The only problem is that the terminator who was send to kill Connor is much more powerful and clever than the one who was send to protect him. Moreover, none can help Connor, since they do not believe in robots. Now Connor and his protector has no choice but to survive on their own.
All i can say is wow. this film has the action and terror of die hard, the anticipation of titanic and the deep psychological meanings of any top film to date. constantly kept off your seat by the lurking fear that any of the people could be the terminator 1000, and that getting close is all he needs to kill would be enough to give someone a coronary. this is only ever broken up by the excellently written narative by sarah giving deep insight into how her brain works. these bursts of action sandwiched between thought makes a powerful movie. i am still in shock, i have changed my fav. movie ever from "the rock" to this one. well done cameron.
Looked really promising from the start. But as the story rolled on I really believed we were watching a special effects show rather than a sequel. It lacked that claustrophobic feeling of the first. It lacked any real danger too. Sorry, but Robert Patrick will never be menacing as Arnold was. Then it came to the story of how Sky Net was created. Oh dear. Big mistake. How can a computer be created from the brain chip of a Terminator it sent back in time??? A paradox. Hate it when a Director overlooks something as important as this. The directors cut, or properly called T1000 edition on DVD is far superior. Anyone with a bit of knowledge of how science fiction works will agree with me on the paradox ruining the credibility of the entire storyline. Good acting in all with strong performances from all however
What is notable, though, is the amount of compassion invested in the film by Cameron and co-screenwriter William Wisher. There's a fairly well-drawn moral message in T2 that was more or less absent in the first film.
However, this was changed in Terminator 3, and in the accompanying television series, neither of which were made with any input from the writers of the first 2 films. T3 introduced the idea that Judgment Day is inevitable; it was merely postponed when Cyberdyne was destroyed. Humanity will eventually seal its fate by continuing to develop artificial intelligence, which one day will overthrow mankind. Cameron did shoot an alternative ending almost 40 years in the future, where Judgment Day did not happen and the Earth was safe, but he deleted it because it was too cheerful compared to the rest of the movie, and not in line with the powerful message of the movie: that the future is not set. He chose a more ambiguous ending instead. However, we must also note that due to the films after T2, we must look to the predestination paradox to explain this answer. The predestination paradox explains that whatever has happened was meant to happen. A time-traveller attempting to alter the past in this model, intentionally or not, would only be fulfilling his role in creating history as we know it, not changing it, or that the time-traveller's personal knowledge of history already includes his future travels to his own experience of the past. Effectively, it means this: the time-traveller is in the past, which means he was in the past before. Therefore, his presence is vital to the future, and he does something that causes the future to occur the same way his knowledge of the future knows has already happened. What this means is that Judgement Day never really happened in 1997. Sarah Connor said that it would be in 1997 because she did not know what would happen in the events of T2. So, conclusively, if we look at the Terminator saga as a whole, the answer to this question is no. When time-travelling happens in the Terminator saga, nothing really changes, because what is done in the past has already affected the future in which the time-travellers came from. After freeing its arm from the cogwheel, the T-800 continues to pursue the T-1000 who has Sarah pinned by his left finger blade through her shoulder. The T-800 sneaks up behind and rams the T-1000 with a steel bar, but the T-1000 easily pulls it out and turns it on the T-800 then pounds him with a heavy metal beam, mashing his head and exposing his robotic eye. When the T-800 tries to get to his grenade launcher, the T-1000 impales him with the metal bar through his abdomen, pining him to the grated floor. The T-800 is zapped by electricity and goes limp. The T-1000 continues to go after John, mimicking Sarah's voice to lure him closer. Meanwhile, the T-800 boots back up using an alternate power route. He pulls out the iron bar, grabs the grenade launcher, and crawls up to the platform where the T-1000 has taken Sarah's form. Suddenly, the real Sarah appears behind the T-1000-Sarah and blasts it with several rounds from her shotgun until she runs out of ammo. The T-800 finishes with his grenade launcher, sending the T-1000 plummeting into a vat of metal.and is dissolved. John tosses in the remaining robotic arm and the microchip, and they rejoice that it's over. However, the T-800 reminds them that there is one more microchip—the one in his head—and that they must destroy him, too. John pleads with him to stay with them, but the Terminator won't take no for an answer. He can't terminate himself, so he hands Sarah the remote control and steps onto the pulley. Slowly, she lowers him into the vat of molten metal where he is consumed. In the final scene, Sarah and John drive down the highway, and Sarah says in an voiceover: The unknown future rolls towards us. I face it for the first time with a sense of hope. Because if a machine, a Terminator, can learn the value of human life, maybe we can too. He does so to destroy all technology from the future that could lead to the development of Skynet, since the threat from the T-1000 was at an end. This would, in effect, be the greatest protection John could ever be afforded. Should Skynet pursue further assassination attempts to alter the time-line, the human resistance would most likely send a protector back in time to make sure the survival of the human resistance is not jeopardized; hence the release of Terminator 3, where the human resistance finds out a "Terminatrix" has been sent to destroy John's fellow lieutenants. Another protector, a T-850 model 101 terminator (this time reprogrammed by future Kate Brewster) is sent through time to defuse the threat against her life. The movie and the novel are in conflict concerning this question. In the novel, the T-800 immediately commits suicide by stepping into the molten steel once the T-1000 has died. In the movie, this moment is drawn out to generate emotional issues about the T-800's mortality. However, as a soldier doing a duty, the T-800 probably would not have required others to end his life when the future was at stake. The T-800's death sequence from the official novel: Terminator put his hand on John's shoulder. "I must complete my mission." And as he said that, the human side of his face came back into the light. He reached toward John and his metal finger touched the tear trickling down his cheek. It was the revelation. "I know now why you cry, although it is something I can never do." He turned to Sarah and said, "Goodbye." "Are you afraid?" There was the briefest instant before he responded. "Yes," he said. Not because he was going to cease functioning as a terminator, but because he had sensed a vision beyond his programming of a cosmic order vast beyond Skynet's comprehension. And it gave him a sense of his first feeling. Fear. Of where he was going next, if anywhere. Of course, he hadn't been asked for further details on his answer, so he didn't say any of this. He simply turned and stepped off the edge. [page 235] During the scene when collecting weapons from the hidden cache at the compound of Enrique, John Connor asks the T-800 if it felt fear. To this the T-800 simply replies, "No." John then asks, "Not even of dying?" The T-800 again replies, "No." John Connor presses further, "You don't feel any emotion about it one way or another?" This is when the T-800 says conflictingly, "No, I have to stay functional until my mission is complete. Then it doesn't matter." From the official novel: As the chromed skeleton was dissolved into the same primal stew as the T-1000, Sarah and John watched [the] Terminator sink into the lava, the metal hand going last... At the last second it formed into a fist with the thumb extended... a final thumbs-up. Then it was really gone. Mother and son watched the molten metal for a while. Then John remembered [the] Terminator's other arm back down the row of smelters, and ran to get it. It was a pile of useless, twisted metal, but the metal was from the future and this time they weren't leaving anything to chance. When John tossed the pieces in, one by one, he and Sarah felt a shudder deep within the bowels of the earth. As if a massive pivot was turning. Of course, later, John would think back and assume it was merely the huge machines pounding away in the mill. He would be wrong. History had been reborn. [page 236] The T-1000 knows that in order to lure John out of hiding, he needs to put Sarah in danger, because John came to her rescue at the psychiatric hospital. Afterward, the T-1000 is then able to mimic Sarah just like he did with his other victims. In doing so, all he needed to do was call out John's name and let John see "his mom" hurting so he would go to her, therefore exposing himself to the T-1000. Luckily for John, the real Sarah was able to get back to him in time. Some consider this point in the story a plot hole, claiming the T-1000 did not imitate any of its earlier victims until they were dead. However, the T-800 explains that the T-1000 can mimic anything it samples merely via physical contact; it does not require the individual to be dead before it can take his/her form. The guard at the psychiatric hospital was sampled when he walked on the T-1000, who fully copied him before killing him. Sarah herself is sampled by the T-1000 during the torture scene. (Also, she might have been sampled in the elevator in Pescadero when the T-1000 is on top of the car, stabbing into it; one of those stabs slashes Sarah on the shoulder.) One can presume he was preparing to kill Sarah when the T-800 intervened, giving her time to escape. At that time, while torturing her, another objective the T-1000 might have had was to simply trick Sarah into speaking so it could sample her voice, another aspect to aide it in luring John to it.
The T-1000's decreasing efficacy is explained in a few scenes cut from the theatrical version of the film but are able to be viewed as part of the director's cut or on most versions of the DVD as a deleted scene. After being frozen in the liquid nitrogen and then shattered, the T-1000 starts to show evidence that it may be malfunctioning. As it is walking, its feet, up to about the knee, involuntarily imitate the diamond plate flooring it walks across and its hand bonds with and imitates a yellow-striped railing. The T-1000 itself seems confused by this but is unable to stop it. Later, when it calls John in Sarah's voice, the glitch occurs again: John glances down, and there's a quick shot of the T-1000 imitating the grating its standing on right before Sarah shoots it the 1st time. In the theatrical version, the only evidence of the glitch is the slight flutter that you see after it crushes Arnold's arm in the gear. This may explain why it moves much more slowly during the final conflict, which allows Sarah to escape while it is dealing with the T-800. This is called an ontological paradox. It's not clear how these would resolve in reality. While it may be logically confusing to track exactly where and how Skynet originated, understanding of time and space in the future may have advanced enough to accept that Skynet needed to send terminators back through time, not to ensure its seeds were planted, but to protect its inevitable creation from its enemies like John Connor. This reasoning, however, goes deeper than what the movie describes about Skynet's ambitions. Assuming that mankind will one day, be it in the near or distant future, invent microchips and machines smart enough to take over control, Judgment Day will also happen sooner or later. As a result of the human resistance, Skynet sends Terminators to the past to kill their leader and protect its own existence. However, they leave traces of their technology behind in the past, causing the creation of Skynet to occur earlier and the date of Judgment Day to be pushed backwards in the timeline. So Skynet's technology does not directly influence its own creation per se, but merely the time of its creation. Basically, despite the message of the film being that there is no fate, some things are inevitable, and even if the events of The Terminator (1984) hadn't taken place, Skynet would eventually have been built somehow. The placing of the original arm only built the foundations quicker. The T-800's mission is to ensure the survival of John Connor. The fact that the future John Connor didn't reprogram the T-800 to consider such a side mission derives from an obvious inability to predict what Skynet might already have planned. It was better to simply escort the young John Connor into indefinite seclusion. Another possibility is that the future John had simply accepted the fact that, despite what he made Kyle memorise on the subject, while the future can be altered, the big picture remains pretty much the same. Also, if the Terminator did somehow purge Skynet's existence, John never would have been born. The 3rd and 4th film, along with the television series, can be alternative interpretations/spinoffs, as James Cameron considered the story closed, with his own original ending featuring an elderly Sarah surrounded by grandchildren and John becoming a Senator in what appears to be a peaceful future time. According to the writers of the new films, while Skynet was physically destroyed, the idea of Skynet (i.e. A.I.) is irreversible and therefore the creation of Skynet was merely postponed. This is explained more clearly in a deleted scene from T3, which can be found on the DVD. Also, when the T-800 loses its arm in the gears during the fight at the steel mill, it is still there at the end of the movie; it wasn't destroyed in the molten steel like the rest. Another possibility is that Dyson wasn't the only one who brought work home, and other Cyberdyne workers could have the data for the chip on their home computers. There could also have been an offsite server that kept the files saved, so if the building was lost the files wouldn't be lost as well. If the future war never happens, then the Terminator never came back for the first movie, and neither did Kyle Reese. If Reese never came back, then there is no John Connor. If someone from the future changes the past and changing the present to one in which that future never happened, then theoretically you unmake the past, as well. This is all according to the Eternalism theory of time. The "Growing Block" theory of time allows the events of this movie to take place (i.e., for there to never be a war, but the Terminators/Reese still travel back; likely what Cameron intended). If one takes the novelization of T3, all of the patents and research were backed-up off-site. After the company headquarters was lost; the Defense Department obtained the patents and contracted with the Air Force and Cyber Research Systems to continue Cyberdyne's artificial intelligence projects. Skynet's completion and Judgment Day was merely postponed 7 years. One could also consider an original timeline where Skynet was still developed by Cyberdyne even without the arm and the microchip. John shows an interest for hacking ATMs and manages to bypass the security systems at Cyberdyne. This could be why he is a threat to Skynet. Unfortunately, this character trait wasn't elaborated on in Terminator 3. This may indicate that the time-line has been altered with the destruction of Cyberdyne. However, it was Reese who said in The Terminator that it was John who taught the human resistance to fight and physically destroy the machines. The opening scene of T2 shows adult John coordinating the battle against the machines, and according to young John, he was instructed in all kinds of weapons in order to become a great military leader. This would suggest that tactical skills are still John's major talents. Additionally, in T3, John says, in his opening narration, that he chose to "live off the grid" meaning that he didn't want to have any sort of public identity, especially not one online, so that he wouldn't be found. His motivation for doing so is not entirely clear but we can probably assume it's because he didn't fully believe that Judgement Day had been prevented and that Skynet's existence had not entirely been wiped out. As it turns out, he was right. And his strategy works: the T-850 that's sent to protect him specifically says, "You could not be located, so Skynet sent another terminator to kill your lieutenants." That the T-X terminator found John was blind luck. A T-800 is composed of solid armor, so it is resistant to small arms fire. It may be possible to damage or even destroy a T-800 with armor piercing bullets, but the movies never address this. Unlike the T-1000, the T-800 is unable to reform its chassis if it is damaged. Because of this, a T-800 can be destroyed with any type of explosive weapon, such as a grenade, a grenade launcher, a pipe bomb, a rocket launcher, etc. A directed energy weapon like a plasma rifle is probably the most common way to kill a T-800 in 2029. The characters in the movies did not have access to weapons like these for obvious reasons. Any significant damage to the structural integrity of the chassis will either disable or destroy the T-800, as is shown in the first movie with the hydraulic press. The answer for the T-1000 is more unclear. The second movie gives us a few hints. No type of firearm will permanently damage the T-1000, although being shot multiple times seem to slow it down for a few seconds, while it regains shape. When Arnold shoots the T-1000 with the grenade launcher, it seems to damage the T-1000 so significantly that it cannot immediately reform its original shape and even loses orientation. This may be because of the damage to the T-1000 caused by being frozen by liquid nitrogen. We saw that the T-1000 was malfunctioning after this from the way it involuntarily changed to its surroundings, once sticking to the railing and again when its feet exposed the ruse of pretending to be Sarah Connor. Apparently, shapeshifting takes time, as is also seen in the scene where it has spread out on the floor and then slowly forms into the shape of a man. Conclusively, explosive weapons are a vague possibility. The T-1000 is sensitive to extreme heat, therefore a plasma rifle or any other type of energy based weapon could either damage or destroy it. Exposing it to extreme heat, as is shown in Terminator 2, will kill it. Exposing it to extreme cold incapacitates the T-1000s and has been shown to damage them also. This theoretically suggests the shattered pieces of frozen T-1000 could have been collected up and kept in a frozen state, or perhaps dropped from air over a vast area of an ocean. The low temperature and the pressure on the ocean bed and the vast distances involved would make it improbable for the pieces to relocate each other. Probably. This is suggested by a few shots that were cut from the theatrical version, and were restored in the Special Edition. After the T-1000 is frozen and thaws up again in the steel mill, he follows John, Sarah and Terminator. As he walks he grabs onto a steel yellow/black striped bar, and something strange happens: his hand automatically "fuses" with the bar, mimicking the striped color pattern. He pulls himself loose, looks somewhat confused, and changes his hand back with a fast flick. He then enters an area with a metal profile floor, and his feet uncontrollably take over the color and texture of that floor. The last shot shows John with the two Sarahs, noticing that the feet of the first Sarah seem to be fused to the grated floor. These scenes show that the T-1000 has indeed been damaged by the nitrogen freezing, as he has difficulties maintaining his current shape; his shapeshifting abilities seem partly out of his control. This indicates that the T-1000, although extremely resilient, still consists of fragile microtechnology that can be damaged. Being metal, he could be vulnerable to certain acids as well (as carried out in Genisys). Also, because of the heat from the steel mill, it is possible that the extreme heat was assisting in the adhering to the metal railing and grated floor. As shown on the movie, when the T-1000 shifts into new shape it is fully clothed. This would lead to the conclusion that any clothing it might appear to be wearing is also being imitated by its poly-alloy material, thus making it unnecessary for it to acquire any new clothing after being damaged. This does not apply for the T-800 model. As seen in the the first three films in the franchise, the T-800 must find a person who matches his body type and take their clothes (usually by force) and put them on himself. You can spot several bullet holes in the T-800's clothing in the end part of the movie. In T2, when the T-1000 kills the police officer at the beginning, he does not take off the officer's uniform and put it on himself, he simply mimics the image of the uniform with his built in poly-alloy, making the uniform itself nothing more than a part of his body which will heal rapidly. The only thing he takes off the officer is his standard issue Beretta 92FS and the extra ammo from his belt. In The Terminator, Dr. Silberman asked, "Why didn't this computer just kill Connor then? Why this elaborate scheme with the Terminator?", and Kyle replied, "It had no choice. Their defense grid was smashed, we'd won, taking out Connor then would make no difference. Skynet would have to wipe out his entire existence." Dr. Silberman asked, "Is that where you captured the lab complex and found the, what is it called, the, time displacement equipment?", and Kyle said, "That's right. The Terminator had already gone through, Connor sent me back to intercept and they blew the whole place." The humans had not yet won the war in the future when the Terminators were sent back. They had Skynet "on the brink," but hadn't yet finished it off. One can presume that all of the Terminators were sent back at the same time, each targeted at a specific point in the past. Why Reese only appears to know of the one sent to 1984 is another matter. According to the original draft of the Terminator 2 script, after Connor sent back Kyle, he went to a cold storage facility where he finds a whole row of 800-series model 101 Terminators with one missing (the first Terminator), and picks one off the line. This is probably why Kyle didn't know about second Terminator. According to The Future War, the final novel in the trilogy based on T2; Skynet sent back the original Terminator, and the T-100 and a female (only important to the book, not the T-X). Kyle Reese volunteers on the spot to go back, and then a reprogrammed Terminator (T-800 from T2) is sent back next. So it may be that Reese is aware and knows Sarah still is skeptical, so he only mentions the current Terminator due to him being the primary danger to the world. The real-life answer is because that is how the actor Arnold Schwarzenegger talks. The Terminator universe answer is that Skynet obviously can't have every Terminator they create and send out on infiltration missions looking exactly alike. If they did, people would easily recognize them. Skynet's source for various likenesses are probably from either people they have captured and held in custody, or people they have encountered, killed, and/or fought out in the field. Tissue samples would be taken (for cloning, tissue cultivation, etc), visual images captured, and if possible, voice patterns and sound recorded. In a deleted scene from Terminator 3, Arnold's character is shown to be modeled on a military man, Sgt. William Candy who has a high voice and southern dialect. An official says "I don't know about the voice," followed by another official, with Arnold's voice, who says: "We can fix it." However, this idea is a later rationalization created by an author other than James Cameron and also not a consideration made at the time of the film's production. Also, as the scene was omitted from the final cut, it can not be considered canon. Another problem with this explanation is that it has been established in The Terminator and Terminator Salvation that early Terminators (e.g. T-600 units) had very obvious rubber skin. While this skin was surely shaped like a human face/body, it was likely similar to a generic rubber mask one might buy in a costume shop, and not intended to look like anyone specific (i.e., Arnold). While "Model 101" is the official name of it as stated in the film series, some fans give the following as the explanation: The Series 800 Terminator is a type of Terminator mass produced by Skynet. Individual Terminators within the series are often referred to as T-800s. The Series 800 Terminators were the first in a line of Series 8xx Terminators in various timelines, including the Series 850 terminators. In the first two films, the Terminators sent back are "Cyberdyne Systems series 800 model-101", i.e. they are from the 800 series, model number 101. The model number referring to the physical appearance (i.e. Arnold), whereas the model 100 or 102 would look different from Arnold. As the future war progressed, Resistance fighters acquired more and more plasma weapons from destroyed battle units, captured factories, and uncovered warehouses. As a result, Skynet decided to harden the Series 800 Terminator against plasma attacks and add new features to aid in the destruction of mankind. The T-850s, from a physical perspective, are very similar to the T-800s, however there are extensive internal modifications in the T-850 line: Upgraded OS and file storage systems (including files on basic human psychology and behavior), toughened endoskeleton (more resistant to plasma weapon attacks), stronger joints and hydraulics, improved power cells (the compact nuclear-energy Iridium cell used by the T-800 were replaced by two hydrogen fuel cells in the Series 850 Terminator providing greater power and longer life), electronic adrenaline system, limited skin regeneration, faster reboot ability, data evaluation and predictive temporal event forecasting being just a few. Thus, the Series 850 Terminator is a far more dangerous threat than its predecessor, the Series 800 Terminator. On the box of the 1st Terminator VHS edition, you can see, in the left lens of the sunglasses, "CSM101", which probably stands for "Cyberdyne Systems Model 101", which is how the terminator in T2 refers to himself when he rescues John. An important thing to mention, in the Terminator 2 teaser trailer, during the making of the Arnold terminator, the screen reads, "800 series model 101". In the T2 deleted scene were Arnold is shut down and restarted, his HUD during the restart reads, "series 800 model 101 version 2.4". In the T3 extras, Arnold is refered to as an "850 series model 101". On a side note, there is a pattern of progression in Terminator series numbers, such as from 600 to 800 to 1000, multiples of 200, but nothing is known of "hundreds" series outside of these. Either it wasn't noticed and simply discarded as garbage/rubble, or it's an error/plothole on the part of the film makers. It is possible that all of the pieces of the terminator were collected by Cyberdyne for top secret research, but that the arm and the smashed chip were the only pieces worth keeping on display, as they were the pieces being studied. It's also possible that they ran tests, carbon dating; all sorts of things on the other pieces, causing them to be destroyed. But unless it was some sort of rare metal currently unheard of on the periodic table (which wouldn't necessarily make it radioactive), it was likely considered scrap. Another headache paradox from the Terminator films. If John sent Kyle Reese back through time to become his father, then John's younger self and Sarah destroyed the building blocks of Skynet, then Skynet was erased from the timeline of the future. Therefore, there would be no reason to send Kyle Reese back in time and he would never meet Sarah and conceive John. In addition, if Skynet was destroyed this would also mean that they never developed any Terminators such as the T-800 and certainly not a more advanced Terminator such as the T-1000 which evidently was not even developed by Skynet until after the war had started. This theory was basically addressed in T3 by way of saying that Judgement Day was inevitable, therefore the events had to happen. However, at the time that James Cameron wrote T2, he intended it to be the end of the story. Since it is presently unknown how causality would resolve in the event of time paradoxes, it is conceivable that altering future events might not affect those in the present, even those resulting from recursive cause/effect scenarios. The T-800's shotgun is a sawn-off Winchester model 1887. He never uses buckshot throughout the entire film, he only uses slugs in his iconic weapon. This is obvious for two reasons. (1) Every time he shoots the T-1000 with the shotgun it leaves a large singular hole instead of several small buckshot pellet holes. When he shoots the T-1000 at close range in the head with it, the blast splits the head in half as opposed to blowing it into chunks, which buckshot would do. (2) When the T-800 ejects the shells from the shotgun they are blue not red. In the 1990s, all slug shells were coloured blue and buckshot coloured red so that people would be able to tell the two apart. Yes. In fact, the Winchester 1887 used by the terminator has an enlarged lever loop with a metal plate attached to it specifically made for better handling during flip-cocking. However, filp-cocking is still very tricky and even dangerous if not done correctly. The flip-cocking the Terminator does is an homage to that show, which James Cameron or one or more of his writers might have watched as a kid. The T-1000 is frozen solid in the accident with the CryoCo semi-truck, then broken into pieces by a bullet from the T-800's gun. Although the heat from the steel mill allows him to melt and regenerate, this incident damaged the T-1000 considerably. He begins to malfunction, first noticing this when his hand begins to meld with a steel bar against his will. He quickly starts losing control of his mimetic processes and begins to inadvertently emulate everything he comes into contact with. He is able to take on Sarah Connor's appearance to try to lure John, but his identity is quickly given away when John notices that his feet meld to the metal flooring, again, against his will. This may also be a factor in why the T-1000 was finally finished off by a grenade fired into his stomach by the T-800, which damaged him to the point of not being able to regenerate fast enough before stumbling into the liquid steel, killing him. As pointed out before, while the T-1000 is technically a superior model, he is still just a prototype, and is possibly not up to date enough to be able to fully recover from an incident like that. The T-1000 model played by Robert Patrick is the only T-1000 model we see in the film. In the opening futuristic battle sequence we see an army of T-800 models as well as several other types of Skynet weaponry, such as aircraft fighters and tank-like machinery, fighting the resistance, but we never see any T-1000s fighting the resistance. There are three possible reasons for this. The first is that the battle sequence we see at the beginning might have been taking place before the T-1000 was ever created. The second is that the T-1000 in the film, while far more advanced, powerful, and durable, was still just a prototype and not ready for mass-production. The third, and most likely reason, is that the T-1000, unlike its predecessor, seems to have a limited emotional range. He is easily able to convince others that he is human: he smiles, can talk in modern day slang (as opposed to the T-800 who stills acts very robotic and uses words like "affirmative" and "negative" instead of saying yes or no) and conducts himself in the manner of a real police officer. In the clothing store he sees a mannequin that resembles his liquid metal form and seems somewhat surprised by its likeness to him. At the finale of the film, in the factory, Sarah shoots him several times with a shotgun. After he quickly recovers he wags his finger in a "tsk tsk" type fashion. Then, in perhaps the best example of his ability to show some emotional range, while torturing Sarah to call John out from hiding, he is thwarted in his interrogation by the T-800 who cuts him in half with a large metal rod. Previously in the film, The T-800 and T-1000 engaged in a small struggle in a mall while perusing John. The T-1000 throws the T-800 through a glass window, then immediately goes back to chasing John without bothering to see if the T-800 was capable of a quick recovery. However, after being stopped by the T-800 yet again, he seems to become extremely frustrated and proceeds to mercilessly beat the T-800, ripping off one of his limbs and impaling him with the metal rod until he is certain that the T-800 has been terminated and will not be able to hinder his objective anymore. He was unsuccessful in doing so, and in another display of an emotion, he exhibits a shocked expression when noticing the T-800 has come back, and after being shot with the grenade launcher which leads to his demise. The final point being that Skynet would not want to mass-produce a model that has the potential of thinking for itself in fear that their own creation might turn against them. Instead, they make a limited number of T-1000s for specific missions only, such as the mission of the T-1000 in this film to kill John Connor. Basically three main versions of this movie exist: (1) the theatrical version, (2) the Special Edition and (3) the Ultimate Cut plus there are special cuts in the UK (the T-1000 Edition which is a censored Special Edition version) and the Australian theatrical version that is kind of a hybrid a mix out of theatrical version, Special Edition and Ultimate Cut. This cut included the alternate ending of the Ultimate Cut and some scenes of the Special Edition. The dream sequence where Sarah meets Kyle Reese is included while the punishment by the nurses is missing. But back to the basics. In 1993, a Special Edition of Terminator 2 was released that featured more than 15 minutes of new footage. Today this is probably the most common version. Some of the "new" scenes are Sarah's dream sequence, the "learning upgrade" of the T-800 and several other sequences. In total 18 scenes were added. The Ultimate Cut which has been released on the Ultimate Edition DVD from Artisan for the first time features all the scenes from the Special Edition plus two reintegrated Deleted Scenes: the house search by the T-1000 and the alternate Judgment Day ending. Aside from the 3D effects themselves, there are only minor digital corrections done to the theatrical cut of the film. Most notably is a few scenes where it was obvious a stuntman was used, the face has been digitally replaced with the actor. The old UK theatrical version had to miss out on 2 scenes with a runtime of 8 seconds in order to receive a 15 rating by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC). The scenes show Sarah Connor beating down the carer with the broken broom stick a little longer, and how she later hits Dr. Silberman in the back of his knees with a bat. The two cuts were later also necessary for the release of Guild Home Video's and Front Video's BBFC-15 VHS, both based on the theatrical version. In addition to those two cuts, additional scenes with a runtime of 18 seconds had to be cut out. The Terminator 2: Judgment Day Enhanced Script Presentation, with highlighted dialogue and over 200 screenshots placed in sync with the story. a5c7b9f00b
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