Plot Synopsis (continued)
Action Sequence One:
Both Terminators search and converge on John where he plays videogames
in the arcade. [Coincidentally, one game is Missile Command
- the object of the game is to prevent the nuclear destruction
of cities! John loses the game when the world gets nuked. In
another game, SEGA's "Afterburner" simulator game,
John shoots down MIGs.] When warned that a cop is "scoping" for
him, John retreats out the arcade's back door.
As John runs full speed down the mall service corridor
toward the parking garage, the Terminator emerges ahead of him and
removes his shotgun from a long box of red roses. The box falls to
the floor with the roses spilling out - his heavy boots crush the
flowers with a loud crunch. Transfixed by terror, John is in the
direct line of fire as the Terminator aims his gun at him! The second
Terminator, dressed in a cop's uniform, rounds the corner behind
John. The first Terminator yells to John: "Get down!" and
unexplicably fires at the cop with one blast - the cop is blown backwards
but is unharmed. The Terminator shields John's body and blocks the
bullets as the cop empties his pistol into the cyborg's back - the
Terminator then turns and fires repeated shotgun blasts into the
cop's body. Incredibly, there is no blood or broken flesh on either
man. As the cop/Terminator lies stunned on his back, the bullet impressions/puncture
wounds on his chest miraculously heal - he is a newer model Terminator
(the T-1000), a liquid metal Terminator with pseudomorphic capabilities.
He is capable of imitating anything that he touches. [The T-1000
model is the advanced cyborg assassin which is impossible to damage
permanently - The Terminator from the first film, the less-advanced
T-800 series model, is the good-guy human protector.]
After rough hand-to-hand combat during which the T-800
is thrown through a clothing store's front window in the mall, John
races to his motorbike in the parking garage with both Terminators
in hot pursuit. The T-1000 runs after John on his bike through the
garage and then into traffic out on the street, where he tosses the
driver out of a big-rig tow truck. As John weaves in and out of traffic
on the street and down into the concrete-lined flood control channel,
the T-1000 follows him in the massive vehicle, crashing down 15 feet
from an upper highway onto the canal. The T-800 Terminator follows
the action from above them on a service road which runs parallel
to the canal. The big-rig becomes a 'convertible' when the top is
sheared off by one of the overpasses. The T-800 sails his bike down
into the canal, miraculously keeping the bike upright when it bottoms
out on the ground. The T-800 catches up to John, sweeps the kid off
his machine and swings him onto his own Harley. Too big to fit through
a concrete abutment, the big rig at full speed crashes into the divider
which bisects the canal into two channels - the small Harley passes
through one of the channels ahead of the massive truck. The rig explodes
into flames ignited after the collision. From the inferno, the figure
of the T-1000 emerges from the flames as a smooth, chrome-surfaced
man - a featureless, liquid mercury-like shape. With each step, the
human features and colors of the shape emerge on the surface - chameleon-like,
it is transformed back into the human cop.
Following this first, kinetic action sequence, John
is entirely confused by the experience. He tells the Terminator: "OK.
Time out. Stop the bike!"
in order to ask him some questions about who saved him and why:
John: Now don't take this the wrong way, but
you are a Terminator, right?
Terminator: Yes. Cyberdyne Systems, Model 101...
John: You're like a machine underneath, right? But sort of alive
outside?
Terminator: I'm a cybernetic organism. Living tissue over a metal
endoskeleton.
John: This is intense. Get a grip, John. OK, uhm, you're
not here to kill me. I figured that part out for myself. So what's
the deal?
Terminator: My mission is to protect you.
John: Yeah? Who sent you?
Terminator: You did. Thirty-five years from now, you re-programmed
me to be your protector here, in this time.
John: This is deep...So this other guy? He's a terminator like
you, right?
Terminator: Not like me. A T-1000. Advanced prototype.
John: You mean more advanced than you are?
Terminator: Yes. A mimetic polyalloy.
John: What the hell does that mean?
Terminator: Liquid metal.
According to the Terminator, he has been programmed
by the resistance movement of the future to protect the boy with
the same kind of determination, ruthlessness, and strength that his
predecessor used to try to 'terminate' Sarah (in the first film).
They must leave the city immediately, but John wants to phone his
foster parents anyway to "warn them." During the conversation,
it is revealed that things are not normal - Janelle speaks nicely
to John while the dog (named Max) is barking loudly in the backyard.
She extends her arm toward a complaining Todd, shutting him up (off-camera).
The Terminator takes the phone from John, perfectly imitates John's
voice, and tests her authenticity by asking about the dog using a
fake name: "What's wrong with Wolfie?" She responds: "Wolfie's
fine, honey. Wolfie's just fine." Sensing the trick by the T-1000
to lure John home by impersonating his mother, the T-800 immediately
hangs up the receiver and warns John:
Your foster parents are dead.
The dangerous, shape-changing T-1000 android has assumed
the human shape and voice of Janelle, disguising itself as another
character. As the camera pans to the right, her arm has elongated
and become a long sword-like spike (similar in shape to the kitchen
knife she was cutting with), impaling a milk carton container and
Todd's head to the kitchen cabinet behind him. As she withdraws the
arm, Todd's bloody body slumps to the floor. The android changes
from Janelle's shape back into the cop disguise - the liquid metal
re-shapes itself in a startling visual effect. John learns about
the next generation cyborg's awesome ability:
John: You're telling me it can imitate anything
it touches?
Terminator: Anything it samples by physical contact.
John: Get real. Like it could disguise itself as a pack of cigarettes?
Terminator: No, only an object of equal size.
John: Why didn't it just become a bomb or something to get me?
Terminator: It can't form complex machines. Guns and explosives
have chemicals, moving parts. It doesn't work that way. But he
can form solid metal shapes.
John: Like what?
Terminator: Knives and stabbing weapons.
In the interview room at the Pescadero Hospital, a
drugged-out Sarah is shown surveillance pictures of the Terminator
from 1984 taken in the West Highland police station when he killed
seventeen police officers. Staring listlessly into space, she is
also shown recent pictures of the identical-looking Terminator at
the mall. Police detectives interrogate her about the assassin-Terminator
(in the first film), pleading with the distant Sarah to react: "Ms.
Connor. We know you know who this guy is. Look. I just sat here and
told you that your son is missing. That the foster parents have been
murdered. We know this guy's involved. Doesn't that mean anything
to you? Don't you care?" Although she has been told that the
Terminator is back, she is unwilling to cooperate - the questioners
turn to leave. Sarah slips a paper clip into the palm of her hand
when they aren't looking.
In a parking lot late that night, John tells the Terminator
how his mother ended up in the mental institution with her psychotic,
driven and obsessed mission to learn survivalist tactics to achieve
her goals:
John: We spent a lot of time in Nicaragua and
places like that. And for a while there, she was with this
crazy ex-Green Beret guy, running guns. Then there were some
other guys. She'd shack up with anybody she could learn from
so she could teach me how to be this great military leader.
Then she gets busted and it's like, sorry kid, your mom's a
psycho. Didn't you know? It's like, everything I'd been brought
up to believe was all made of bulls--t? I hated her for that.
But everything she said was true. She knew and nobody believed
her. Not even me. Listen, we gotta get her out of there.
Terminator: Negative. The T-1000's highest probability for success
now would be to copy Sarah Connor and to wait for you to make
contact with her.
John: Great. And what happens to her?
Terminator: Typically, the subject being copied is terminated.
John: S--t! Why didn't you tell me?! We gotta go right now!
Terminator: Negative. It's not a mission priority.
John quickly realizes that the Terminator is "his" -
it will obey his commands - the android is programmed to follow his
instructions precisely:
John: You have to do what I say huh?
Terminator: That's one of my mission parameters.
John: Prove it! Stand on one foot. (The Terminator complies and
lifts one leg) Yes! Cool. My own terminator!
When two guys working on a car nearby appear to help
John after hearing him yelling, he tests his new-found authority/responsibility
with the android on them. He orders the Terminator to get rid of
them - and then afterwards, delivers a non-violent, moral directive
to teach the android that killing is wrong:
John: Jesus, you were gonna kill that guy.
Terminator: Of course. I'm a terminator.
John: Listen to me very carefully, OK? You're not a terminator
anymore. All right? You got that? You just can't go around killing
people!
Terminator: Why?
John: Whattaya mean, why? Cause you can't!
Terminator: Why?
John: Because you just can't, OK? Trust me on this. Look. I'm
gonna go get my mom. And I order you to help me! (John hands
the Terminator the .45)
The T-1000 pulls up in the squad car at the front gate
of the Pescadero Hospital and is waved through by the security guard.
In Sarah's cell, a night attendant tightens up her restraints and
then animalistically runs his tongue along her cheek to provoke a
response - there is none. After he leaves, she uses the purloined
paper clip to unlock and release her restraints - the T-1000 stalks
toward her down the hospital corridor.
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