Rating: R
Genre:
Science Fiction
Theatrical Release: 07/03/1991(USA)
Release Date: 05/19/2009
SubTitles: English/French/Espanol
Dubbed: English/French
Sound: DD-EX/DDS/DTS-ESD
Run Time: 152 min
Flags: Graphic Violence, Not For Children, Profanity
Distributor/Studio: Lionsgate
A sequel to the
sci-fi action thriller that made him and star
Arnold Schwarzenegger A-list Hollywood names, writer/director
James Cameron upped the ante with this follow-up by employing a more sweeping storyline and cutting-edge special effects.
Linda Hamilton returns as
Sarah Connor, now a single mother to rebellious teen
John Connor (
Edward Furlong), during the late nineties. Having been informed by a time-traveling soldier in the first film that
John will one day grow up to become humanity's savior from a computer-controlled Armageddon,
Sarah has responded by becoming a muscle-bound she-warrior bent on educating
John in survival tactics and battle strategies. Her ranting about humankind's future has landed
Sarah in an insane asylum and
John in the foster care system. The rebellious
John has responded to his situation by getting into scrapes with the law. When a new and improved Terminator android called the
T-1000 (
Robert Patrick) arrives from the future to eliminate
John, an older model T-800 (
Schwarzenegger) is sent to protect the boy. The
T-1000, however, has the ability to morph itself into any shape it desires, allowing it chameleon-like powers and near indestructibility. The T-800 saves
John's life and helps break
Sarah out of the institution. Staying only one step ahead of the dogged
T-1000,
Sarah leads her son and the T-800 to the headquarters of Cyberdyne Systems, the company that will invent a robotic intelligence that will eventually take over the world. There, they attempt to convince inventor
Miles Dyson (
Joe Morton) to help them stop the future from ever occurring by destroying his work.
Dyson sacrifices himself in an explosion to save the world, leading to a final showdown between the two Terminators at a steel foundry.
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991), which won four Oscars in technical categories for its groundbreaking effects, was followed by a short sequel filmed exclusively as an attraction for theme parks,
Terminator 2: 3-D Battle Across Time (1996).
~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide