The Bechdel Cast - The Terminator & Terminator 2: Judgment Day
Episode Date: December 5, 2019On this episode, the Bechdel Cast celebrates our three year anniversary! Jamie and Caitlin discuss The Terminator and Terminator 2: Judgment Day. Hasta la vista, Patriarchy. (This episode contains sp...oilers)For Bechdel bonuses, sign up for our Patreon at patreon.com/bechdelcast.Follow @BechdelCast, @caitlindurante and @jamieloftusHELP on Twitter Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Kay hasn't heard from her sister in seven years.
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Hello and welcome to the Bechdelcast, my name is Caitlin Durante
And my name's Jamie Loftus
Happy three year anniversary, Jamie I know, this is so exciting podcast my name is caitlin dorante and my name is jamie loftus happy three-year anniversary jamie
i know this is so exciting it doesn't feel like it's been that long but it also it's been like
the weirdest three years in the history of the country so it also feels like forever true
congratulations congratulations to you hey here we are. We just got fish tacos. Hasta la vista, baby.
Hasta la vista, bitch.
Wow.
Wow.
Now it's feminist.
Now it's feminist.
Now it's feminist.
We neolibbed it.
We did it.
So today, that is why it's just the two of us.
Just the two of us.
We're doing a little celebratory three-year anniversary episode.
We got our fish tacos.
We watched two movies, not one. Just we got our fish tacos. We watched
two movies, not one. And I'm excited about it. Yeah. So before we jump in, just the regular
biz out of the way. Oh, yeah. What is the podcast? What is it? Who are we? What have
we been doing for three years? Good Lord. Honestly, existential. Couldn't tell you. Well, this is our podcast about the portrayal of women in movies. And it is based around or as a jumping off point for our discussion, we use the Bechdel test. a media metric developed by cartoonist Allison Bechtel that requires that two female identifying
characters in a movie have to have names they have to talk to each other about something other
than a man for at least two lines by our standard our relatively low standard the bar changed right
maybe it's time to I mean it's the tricky thing is if we demand more, nothing will pass.
Exactly.
Oh, what a nightmare.
You know, maybe we should have gone, you know, it would be funny if we were like, I'm going to start a feminist movie podcast or a James Cameron fan podcast.
This episode would have a little bit of both.
James Cameron is, what is going on? Multitudes is going multitudes he contains going on with that person
oh we're talking about terminators today because a new one just came out uh-huh about a month ago
i i did not see it i saw it and i have a little bit to say so so if you haven't seen it yet i'll
give a spoiler warning a spoiler warning but uh we'll talk about that a little later on.
Yeah.
But these are some of my favorite movies, which is why I insisted that we do them.
So what is it?
What is your history with the Terminator franchise and like these two specifically?
By the way, we're covering the Terminator and Terminator 2 Judgment Day.
Correct.
Yes.
I saw them both when I was 16 years old.
Back to back? Yes yes because my family owned not unlike the james cameron titanic 2 vhs tapes oh did they sell it in a bundle yes so my family
had the t1 and t2 vhs bundle box set and they were in my house for a few years, but I just like didn't pay them any
mind. And then one day I was like, I'm 16 years old. It's time for me to watch Terminator. And I
Wow, it's a rite of passage. And I watched them both on the same day back to back. And I loved
them, especially T2, which is which is I think widely considered the favorite
the better movie although there I met a number of people who like Terminator 1 better and I think
they're silly but also you know to each their own but yeah I would I would rank T2 among my top 10 favorite movies of all time.
Wow, to this day?
To this day.
Wow.
I love that movie particularly.
And just, I mean, well, okay, so then I saw those and I was like, I guess I'm a huge Terminator fan now.
So I have been for, you know, going on 15 plus years.
I saw Terminator 3 Rise of the machines in theaters it was terrible bad i saw
terminator salvation in theaters it was like fine but i never felt the need to watch it again
skipped terminator genesis and then daenerys connor right yeah but then i uh did see Terminator Dark Fate on opening day.
What's your history, Jamie?
Nothing.
Didn't care about him.
Honestly, not crazy about him now.
I liked T2 a lot from a feminist perspective.
There's a lot about T2 in particular to love.
I love watching Sarah Connor kick ass.
It's just not, if you've been listening to the podcast podcast this is never going to be a movie that appeals to me right i don't like 80s blockbusters in general
i get dragged in the reviews sometimes uh and i have this to say sorry for being so fucking young
no i just i'd never seen these before uh prepping for this episode because I intuited that they were not for me.
And that was generally true.
I think that there's a lot of cool stuff to talk about, though.
I am.
I'm excited to talk about it.
But especially like Terminator 1 in particular, I'm just like, I mean, it's the effects are pretty of the time.
Just like the synth score that's happening.
I mean, that's fun. It's's fun but it's like pretty silly i like respect its place in history and all that and it is kind of cool from like a filmmaking
perspective to see like a movie that clearly was not being set up to have a sequel then have a
sequel and have the sequel be so much better right um because we feel like that very rarely happens true and also except for paddington too of course but like i mean of
course i mean those are the two major majorly cited ones t1 and t2 and p1 and p2 and depending
on who you are the cheetah girls uh yeah no i i just had never uh gotten around to seeing it and
you know now i can't say that anymore and And that's my history with the Terminator franchise. I'm not going to see the new one. Because I have to go see Parasite 500 more times.
Of course. Yeah. Well, should we dive into the recap?
Yeah, let's do it. to do a more condensed version of the recap than usual for both movies since we are covering two
so if if if things aren't as thorough as you like um we do have to remind you after three years it
is still a free podcast we've been very defensive lately i i mean honestly people are coming at us
more and more for being like read a book i'm like uh we we're not legally required to read a
book first of all we have never purported to have read a book true and we never will nor would we
okay so uh the terminator 1984 yes but we open in los angeles ever heard of it
in 2029 it's a post-apocalyptic wasteland.
Little did they know that we were not even going to survive until 2029.
True. Yeah. Or that might actually be the last year. Maybe they were right. Anyways.
True. Yeah, yeah. But there's a war happening between humans and machines. Then we cut back to LA in 1984. Two people show up out of thin air. One of them is
Arnold Schwarzenegger, who is a Terminator who has been sent back in time to kill Sarah Connor.
And you see his butt.
You see his butt. Yep.
You see that, I mean, the nudity choices in this movie are, I think, very interesting.
True.
There's more male nudity than female nudity that never happens
the other is kyle reese a soldier from the human resistance in the future who is sent back to
protect sarah connor then we meet sarah connor she is a young woman she works as a server but
the reason she's being targeted by the Terminator is because she is the mother of
John Connor, the leader of the human resistance in the war against the machines in the future.
Which is good, because we all know that the value of a woman is ascribed to whose mother she is.
Right. Oh, yes. We'll talk all about that. Yeah. And the machines figure out that if they can go
back in time and kill John Connor's mother,
then they won't have to deal with John Connor. So both Reese and the Terminator get their hands
on some guns and then they go to try to find Sarah. The Terminator starts killing every Sarah
Connor in the phone book. And then he goes to kill Sarah at home. Only she's not home,
but her roommate ginger is and the
terminator kills her thinking it's sarah right right after she has sex because it's the 80s
right because women who have sex in a you know scary movie uh have to die but again at least
the man dies as well true uh meanwhile the deaths of these other Sarah Connors are being reported on on the news and Sarah hears about it.
So naturally she starts freaking out.
And also at this time, Sarah notices that this dude is stalking her.
It's Reese, but she assumes that it's the guy who's been killing these other Sarah Connors.
Well, but as we know, Caitlin, the guy who is stalking you actually is your husband, is your baby daddy.
Right.
I think there's a lot of good lessons right at the top.
Yes.
So then the Terminator figures out where Sarah is and he goes to kill her.
But Reese intercepts him and saves Sarah by shooting the Terminator.
Except it's really hard to kill Terminators.
So he gets back up and keeps chasing them
and then reese is like sarah come with me if you want to live so they escape and sarah's like what
the fuck who are you what's going on right which is fair legitimate questions yeah and reese explains
everything that i explained just a moment ago including including how the Terminator is a cyborg.
Right.
Armored alloy endoskeleton underneath living human tissue.
There's a lot of this movie that is just things being explained to the alleged protagonist of the movie.
Yep.
And also that this Terminator will not stop until Sarah Connor is dead.
Yeah. He also explains the nuclear war that will take place a few years from now that the machines started because they became artificially intelligent.
And more about that in Terminator 2.
Ooh.
Meanwhile, the Terminator is still chasing them.
And he has Terminator vision.
So he's very good at finding them it's great it's good it's like
target detected and we're like computer enhance enhance some great hacker imagery uh-huh for sure
and then there's a car chase a crash and then sarah and reese are taken into police custody
and a criminal psychologist dr silber Silberman, talks to them.
And everyone, based on the information that Reese gives, thinks that Reese is crazy because he's claiming to be a time traveler from the future who was sent back to stop a cyborg from killing Sarah.
Right.
So they're like, he is delusional.
And she is also not sure.
Right.
At this point, whether she believes him either right
and then the terminator shows up at the police station and we get the famous i'll be back right
line and he kills several of the police officers but reese manages to get loose he and sarah escape
again and reese tells sarah he's like, by the way, my name is Kyle.
And then we realize that there's Kyle visibility in this movie.
I know.
You're like, wow, we're really making space for Kyles here.
Interesting.
I mean, shout out to all our Kyle fans.
But also, like, take a good long look at the mirror.
Okay.
So then they go to a motel.
And Reese makes some bombs to try to kill
the terminator with and then he makes some love then he makes some love in what i am so excited
to describe later it's it's james cameron's pervy corner oh we're gonna read the script i'm
so thrilled can't wait oh it's disgusting so then the terminator finds them
again and there's another chase scene and a big explosion which melts off the terminators like
fleshy exterior hot hot literally and figuratively and he chases sarah and reese through what i think
is like a robotics factory, some kind of factory.
It looks expensive.
Yeah.
Reese gets killed.
And then Sarah finally crushes the Terminator in a hydraulic press.
And then she says, you're a terminated fucker.
We're like, whoa, she had to do something.
Made you wait till the end.
And then we cut to a few months later and she is Gregnant.
She is Gregnant as heck.
With her son, John.
Greg.
Greg.
Greg Connor.
I mean, would it have killed them to call him Greg?
It wouldn't have.
Wouldn't have.
Because Kyle Reese made her Gregnant.
He Gregnatted her.
Yeah, for one one shot kyle
over there really fertile guy that kyle definitely or her i mean i guess we don't know maybe they're
both very fertile it's a group effort after all and then we see her recording what's basically a podcast for for her son her son her son john greg greg
and that is the end of that movie yeah now for terminator 2 judgment day which is another
biblical reference inside of what we can't deny is the 14 bajillionth christ narrative trying to not be a christ narrative
that's very true but until you said that earlier when we were watching t2 it had never crossed my
mind that this was a christ narrative i feel like it's because i'm just seeing it though like if i
had seen it when i was young i wouldn't have but now i'm just i'm so sick like even movies i'm
loving right now are still about fathers and
sons i'm so i love parasite i'll see it a million times it's not even a spoiler it's a father and
son joint you're just like uh i've just we get it it's complicated for you guys there's been an i
just whatever it's a father and son sure okay and Okay. Yeah. I mean for T2 especially.
So yeah,
we open with some more shots of LA in 2029 being a post-apocalyptic
wasteland.
Sarah Connor's voiceover kicks in saying that 3 billion lives ended on
August 29th,
1997.
That's some like Thor shit.
Some snappy,
snappy, snappy the finger wait not thor sorry
oh no i'm canceled thanos wow i wouldn't i not to brag but i'm fucking cool and i don't see those
movies uh well i'm cool and i do see them we're both cool mr thanos and his little glovey yes but this time brilliant observations is skynet which is the
name of my external hard drive i named it skynet really yep there's also a real skynet now like
there's a government project called skynet which yikes i hate anyway so uh august 29th 97 is what
has been deemed judgment day from the people in the future because of this nuclear
attack that was initiated by the machines.
Right.
So then we cut back to, I think it's either 94 or 95.
I think it is.
Wait, let me check because I think it may be 97 for some reason.
97 is when Judgment Day happens.
Oh, wait.
So it's a few years before that.
Okay, never mind
it's 94 95 okay uh and two people show up out of thin air again one of them is arnold schwarzenegger
and he's bad to the bone oh my god yeah and then we're like okay we know this scene was
done better in the parent trap but nice effort jimmy cams yes and then the other person is
robert patrick from spy kids fame his right best known role that's all we care that he's done yes
and both of them are trying to reach young john connor uh one of them is trying to kill him and one is trying to protect him. Greg. Greg.
Sorry, Greg Connor. So Greg Connor has been living in foster care for the past few years because his
mom, Sarah Connor, ever heard of her? Yeah. Has been in a psychiatric hospital because everyone
thinks she is delusional when she talks about Judgment Day and time-traveling killer cyborgs.
And she's tried to escape a number of times.
And it seems like she's gotten close.
But they keep putting her under more and more surveillance.
And so now she's focused on getting very, very strong.
Right.
She's doing pull-ups.
Pull-ups.
Oh, my God.
I felt them in my body.
Dr. Silberman from the first movie is there.
And he's the one who's like
she is like under his supervision yes um then we cut to cyberdyne systems where this dude miles
dyson is using technology from the terminator that sarah connor crushed in the first movie
to develop other technology meanwhile john, John, Greg, Connor.
Greg.
Is at a.
He goes by Greg.
He goes by Greg.
He is at a shopping mall,
which may or may not be the Glendale Galleria.
We don't know.
Headcanon, it's the Glendale Galleria.
And we're like, go across the street to the Americana.
Right.
Go outside.
Yeah.
And the two guys who showed up in the beginning are both after
him and just when you think Arnold Schwarzenegger is the bad terminator again psych he's the
protector he's the nice one the first time I saw this when I was 16 years old I was like oh my
freaking god I can't believe it he's a good one and he's crazy but he's like he pulls the gun
out of the box of roses and then he steps on the rose and you think he's gonna kill john connor
but just kidding he saves him so that means the other guy is the bad terminator uh and he is a t
1000 a more advanced model than arnold that he can turn into like anamorphs goop
doesn't it look like he looks like an animal like if anamorphs had a way bigger i'm guessing that's
what anamorphs was ripping off like they were trying to do that effect did you ever watch
animals i didn't know oh it was a tv show about kids that could turn into owls yeah and they
would turn into like silver goop and they're like, oh, no, no. Kind of reminded me of that.
Yeah.
So he's made of like liquid metal and he can shapeshift and then also like turn his arms into swords. It kind of looks like a screensaver, too.
The way that the liquid metal looks.
It looks like an old screensaver.
Right.
I mean, it's like 1991 CGI, which was like just the very beginning of CGI.
But it's like pretty good. Yeah. No, it's cool.
I mean, even like seeing the guy's shapeshift between different like people and into like it is it still looks scary.
Yeah. And then John Connor is like, hey, Arnold.
Get it? Ha. now we're talking we we gotta go get my mom so they drive and go
to pick up sarah connor but she's already like halfway escaped from the hospital
in a scene that i now realize kill bill is very much ripping off potentially um i feel like there's no way i mean it's like quentin tarantino saw
terminator 2 like because there's i mean the beats are pretty close to identical where it's
sarah connor i mean what happens to uma thurman's character is is like a more severe assault right
but she's assaulted while she's unconscious she comes to and she kills everyone in the hospital or you know injures
them beyond and then is able to escape yeah true it's exciting so yeah she's she's well on her way
to escaping but then she sees arnold who she thinks is still a bad terminator yeah her son
john slash greg is like no he's good now can you imagine the ptsd of it's got to be a lot severe there's a lot i mean
well we'll talk about that but then some thoughts about that arnold says come with me if you want
to live and that's the same thing that kyle reese said to her so she's like i guess i gotta trust
my boyfriend said that who i still love i guess it's okay so they all meet up and then they get
the hell out of there. Yeah.
And they go and gather some weapons.
And then Sarah goes after Miles Dyson thinking that if she kills him, she can prevent the impending war.
He's doing all the work to create what will eventually become Skynet.
This is one of my favorite moments in the movie because I wasn't sure where this moment was going to go.
And it ends up being pretty cool. Right. Because she can't bring herself to kill him because she's not a Terminator after all.
No.
She's, wait for it, a mother.
A mother.
Because she's in front of his family and so forth.
Right.
So instead, she, John, Arnold, and Miles go to Cyberdyne and they destroy all of Miles Dyson's work on Skynet.
Right.
Miles ends up being, like, a hero.
Yeah.
Yes.
And I hate that he has to die, and we'll talk about that as well.
But the cops show up, and then Bad Terminator shows up, and there's a big chase, and they end up in this steel mill and there's like the fun liquid nitrogen slash like bad
terminator gets frozen yeah and arnold's like hasta la vista baby baby but the bad terminator
melts himself back together and then there's some more fighting and it's long it's quite long
but then eventually they manage to kill the bad terminator and melt
him for good in the liquid steel and then arnold terminator is like hey wait a minute you have to
kill me too because my cpu chip has to be destroyed and it's sad because he's daddy now he's daddy now
that's right greg can't catch a break and he's so upset. He watches his daddy go into lava.
You're just like, oh my God, what is poor Greg?
Yes.
Hey, Jamie.
Yeah.
I don't know if you noticed this in the movie, but when they go to pick up Sarah Connor from the hospital,
there's a sign at some point that says she's in Pescadero.
That's a six hour drive.
That's like, there's no need to think about how large California is.
But they're traveling in state.
But that's not to say that it isn't a very long voyage.
And there's like, I think something that Sarah Connor really could have used.
Tell me what do you think it is?
Well, I think this is a very graceful transition into
talking about away suitcases away caitlin creates thoughtful products built for the way modern
travelers see the world not those future doofuses like sarah connor people of now they started with
the perfect suitcase and now they offer a range of essentials all of which
would have made sarah connor's travels more seamless and you think she'd know that seeing
as she's from the near future you would think you'd think well we have some away suitcases
we got some we got some we've used them recently recently we went to denver for our live shows and then you i just used mine to go cross
country to boston and it genuinely like it's my new prop suitcase for the show i travel with
because it's just like i genuinely really i really enjoyed my away suitcase and it's cute
i've never had one that had like four wheels i was always 60 wheels are good yeah before i got my away
suitcases i was just like dragging my old ones around the rocks cotton or whatever gravel
whatever but what we're trying to say here is that all of the ways suitcases are thoughtfully
designed to last a lifetime with they've got durable exterior little shells yeah they can
withstand even the roughest and toughest of baggage handlers.
The inside is cool.
It has like a bunch of different pockets and a whole interior organization system.
What I like is that there's like compartments so that your shoes aren't going to touch your
stuff and just like stuff I hadn't even thought about.
And I just was like, oh, I guess my shoes will touch my stuff and I don't care.
But now I can care because, you know, and you can separate clean and dirty clothes it's really
nice and there's a TSA approved combo lock that keeps your belongings safe Caitlin my combo is
zero zero zero zero four extra security But you could make a real one theoretically
if you know how those sorts of things work.
You know what, Jamie?
I do and I did.
Oh, wow.
But you're not going to disclose it.
I'll never tell.
Well, I guess a woman's heart is an ocean of secrets.
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All right.
Let's check in on Sarah Connor.
Let's do it.
All right.
Well, I guess, mean there's there's a
lot to talk about here it's so we're gonna attempt to do a discussion that kind of spans both of the
movies but we'll probably be clicking in and out bear with us sarah i mean sarah connor obviously
is the main character worth discussing worth discussing and she's i for i mean i i would say
the best remembered
character from the movie even though arnold is also i don't know maybe they're tied no definitely
arnold is far more really remembered yeah god damn it they're the second one ends up being a
lot more i mean she's right up there and then she is she also got her own tv series the sarah
connor chronicles which i admittedly never watched well caitlin you're
canceled i mean like the fact that like arnold is on the poster for both movies like that i think
shows like who's potentially the more valued character in this franchise but sarah connor
for our purposes she's by far the most right but but i i think it is kind of fascinating to watch how she is treated differently
in both movies i think it's it's like one of those cool things where you can see kind of you know
like you can track the growth of a filmmaker in the space of seven years you can track the growth
of uh you would imagine society a little bit in seven years where in the first terminator sarah connor i think she's still
more active than a lot of female protagonists of 1984 but she's not extremely active she is
cast as a mother in a love interest for the most part until the very very very end uh she's not
made out to look as particularly qualified which i think is like both one of the coolest and most frustrating things about her character because i feel like
the the first movie i feel like is all about withholding information she doesn't have any
of the information or skills she needs to be an active participant right in the first movie and
then the second one is the total opposite she has most of the information
and all of the skills she needs to survive so it's cool it is cool and i mean as much as we
get frustrated when a female protagonist like in an action franchise isn't equipped with like
the skills and the information she would need to have to like be a total badass that also wouldn't
right it makes sense at least
in the first movie yeah i just i think that that's like one of those things that it comes down to
like that was a narrative choice to give her literally no information or i just like that's
one of those things where i wish like if she doesn't have the skills i mean that makes sense
she is an la waitress why would she have these combat skills but then at least give her some information give her something that doesn't mean that she's gonna have to go to like the whims and
be constantly needing I don't know I just feel like in the first one she never really has an
upper hand until the end and I feel like that's like a narrative issue or it was for me I see
what you're saying and I might be like because i love these
movies so much like i it might be difficult for me to like separate my feelings yeah but like i
don't know like yes of course it wouldn't make any sense for her to have combat training and
why would she have information about the future but like like Kyle Reese like gives her a lot of information.
Yeah.
But that's her stuff.
But that's what I'm saying is like she there's nothing she can tell him.
You know, you know what I mean?
Like I feel like it wouldn't have like made the concept of the movie work less if she even at one point in the movie had information that he didn't that was able to move the plot forward.
Like if she's
like hey there's a blockbuster around the corner that we can hide in exactly 1984 and you don't
know what blockbuster is even like goofy 1984 knowledge that could come into like i just i was
frustrated because usually i feel like most movies will toss you a bone of like something right of like I mean obviously you know she sort
of becomes the fish out of water in her own world but it you you know there's usually something and
so I was kind of like I see what you're saying I misunderstood before but yeah that yeah that's
a valid criticism for sure another thing with her in Terminator 1 is that i mean well i mean my my issue with the sarah connor thing is i agree
that she is a feminist icon especially in t2 i love so much about her but it does like her whole
you know she's she's in her 20s she's in 19 she's 19 on the first movie so she's 19 but she's 28 because movies right uh but
she's 19 she's a waitress in la which you would imagine she has some sort of creative aspiration
movie has no interest in why she's in la how she got there what her dreams are what her goals are
two men show up and tell her this is what your life is you will give birth to this boy yeah and this is
and and and we only see her push back against it one time in that scene with kyle where she's like
i can't even balance a checkbook like i don't have i can't be this like you know military hero i can't
be this terminator destroyer whatever and that's the only time we see her stand up for herself
about like well what about what i want what about my choices which we haven't i'm trying to be an actor over here you would
imagine i'm trying to audition for the for aliens directed by james cameron it's coming out in two
years i gotta get i gotta get i gotta start taking classes but the movie has i mean mean, it's and I and I and I know that this is a critical part of the movie working. But you know, it is a young woman who two guys from the future show up and say, this is what your life is. And you have to make this work. And she doesn't really have much. The movie doesn't give her much space to say, No, I get to decide what i do with my life yeah it's like well can i still moonlight as an actress in addition to that's that's the most frustrating thing about this movie in particular
and then it carries over into t2 yeah but it becomes a little too like it's so money because
well like sarah connor is targeted because she's important but she's only important because she is
the mother of a man who is actually important to the resistance.
Exactly.
Because like these movies can't envision a world where a woman is important because she's the powerful resistance leader.
They can only see a world where a man would be in that leadership role.
And she's his mother.
His mom.
His mother.
I mean, and it's cool.
It's so I mean mean there is this like
and and i know that we have to consider the time that this came out in where it was i mean for a
long time sarah connor was like about as good as you could get for a female protagonist in an action
franchise and uh for all the jimmy cammy issues we'll bring up later like he was one of the only
directors that would prioritize that and for sure work so for all of its flaws it definitely was
progressive for its time but you do see just kind of with some time and reflection that she is still
relegated in both movies to an extent to her relationships to men and and that's another thing that i feel like is
kind of fully taken from uh kill bill and the bride is that you know you can see this woman
who is kicking ass she's very capable she's excellent at what she does but it's the connection
to motherhood that ends up driving the story. Women aren't allowed to have motivations that aren't connected still somehow to domesticity.
And again, that's like obviously not to knock the concept of motherhood, but it is like the way we most frequently see women defined by in movies.
And even in these like very famous action movies, it's still that somehow right a woman can only be a participant in
narratives like that if she's also framed as you know being a mother oftentimes and yes of course
like to clarify we love motherhood we love moms it's just the societal expectation that women
must be mothers and you've got no other choice and that's what your role is as a woman in society that's what
we take issue with well and also i think just like my my frustration is just like i think it's
wonderful that there's movies about motherhood and like frank discussions of motherhood women
aren't i mean there there's one woman one for four in both of these movies is there a woman
actually writing about it so women are not allowed to have really
generally a perspective on motherhood it is an invented perspective forced upon them by a male
writer and a director and it's also just like that is the only narrative you can have like there's not
many alternatives and so i don't know and if it sounds like i'm being too harsh it's because i
don't have any um sentimental connection to these movies.
But especially in the first one, the Christ narrative was so heavy handed.
And then at the end, they're like, Jesus is about to be born.
And I'm like, I don't I can't give a fuck.
Jesus's name is Greg and he's about to be born.
You know, well, also to just touch on something that you just mentioned
um the the writers of these two films both were written by james cameron and then on the first
terminator movie gail ann hurd has a co-writing credit and then on the second movie um william
wisher has a co-writing credit uh however for the first movie that would appear to have been co-written by a woman
yeah according to wikipedia uh gail anhurd suggested some edits to the script after she
came on board as a producer of the film and then took a screenwriting credit for the film
but james cameron has stated that she did no actual writing at all i read that as well which
is just like i mean i'm glad she got paid yeah when women get
paid but also like uh let them do the fucking job right yeah yeah gail and her i mean it's
she produced both of these movies she's produced a number of famous movies um in a time where not
a lot of women were producing movies much less movies this huge right so that is great it is i mean if you if you look at the script for terminator one
it's very clear that it's a james cameron script because it is disgusting it's horny as hell so
you're just like oh this there's no way this isn't written by a man who's never made a woman come in
his life like that's the only energy you get from it so yeah i saw that as well you're like oh that
totally tracks based on the very bizarre excerpt that i've read i mean it i am happy at very least
and again it's like uh 80s early 90s like you're like i'm glad that a woman was involved and like
had influence over the store or at least some influence over the story and what happened
i mean it's frustrating though because even the terminator movie that just came out
five credited writers all men you know which is just like a continuation of this fucking hideous
thing that i feel like we're seeing as like as it becomes more of a priority and an audience demand
for there to be more inclusion in movies
where the front facing stuff, the on camera stuff is far more inclusive. And then behind the camera,
it's exactly the same. Pisses me the fuck off. Right. Because in Terminator Dark Fate,
and this is not a spoiler, because if you've seen any of the trailers, you know this, but
the three main characters of that film are three women. And you're not going to believe fans of the Terminator franchise.
We're mad about it.
Another kind of conflicting thing I have about this first movie is,
so a man is sent back as Sarah Connor's protector and savior,
essentially.
So the plot of this movie forces a woman to be in a situation where she's constantly
needing to be protected by a man because he does have the upper hand in terms of having the combat
skills and all the information necessary to keep her alive she has nothing but all at the same time
though she's like she isn't framed as being helpless she like doesn't she does stuff you
know like especially toward the
end it does take a while it takes like the whole movie but also if i was in that situation like i
have no combat training if someone was like sent back to kill me i'd be like yeah i don't know how
to survive either right well again i think it's a story flaw yeah because that's like it didn't
have to go that way she could have had something she i agree that she if she even just
had like knowledge of contemporary la and she could be like we let's go this way or like we
can hide here yeah like that would have been that would have been nice right the end i like i like
all of her scenes at the end like when she starts to when she's allowed to drive right right right
yeah so in the third act essentially is when she starts to become a bit more active uh where she yeah like you said she
is driving the various cars that they've stolen um she does veer the terminator off the road when
he's chasing them on the motorcycle she saves kyle and i mean he has to save her a number of times
but like their truck rolls so she like
pulls him out of the truck and saves him and then after the terminator gets back up out of the fire
she's the one who like she breaks the glass she unlocks the door to get into the factory and then
yes she's the one who like lands the final blow of like crushing and destroying the terminator
which is cool i you know because you were like kind of set up by that
scene to make it seem like kyle's gonna be the one that does it but he dies but then he was too weak
and then she gets it was really exciting when she when she gets like the death blow because so i
mean female protagonists very infrequently get that in their own movies true so i thought that
was great yeah i mean the last act you start
to see like the and it was i mean it was kind of like heartwarming even though you're like the love
story is so bizarre but it was kind of sweet i thought to see kyle be kind of like starstruck
by her and like i don't know just kind of that was something i'm like oh if i'd seen that movie
when i was younger it would have like hit for me where she feels like oh i'm just a waitress there's there's not much to me
and then he's like no do you know how cool you're gonna be or like the coolest person in the world
she's like what and you know like that i thought that was like kind of sweet but it's like did she
really need that validation from a future man i don't know i think she's already cool even before she for sure
is she drives a moped she has a pet iguana feminist icon pugsley pugsley the iguana you know she she's
an independent woman we know what her job is she has a roommate ginger who she seems like get along
with really well i feel like we don't know that much about her.
We don't know much.
Her end game isn't being a diner waitress.
Probably not.
It isn't.
But one of the things I did like about what we know about her character early on is her date bails on her on a Friday night.
But she decides to go out to dinner and a movie by herself.
That was so cool.
Like in a lot of movies you would see that happen.
And then you would see the woman like cry over a tub of ice cream at home.
Right.
And like,
not that,
I mean,
I do that sometimes.
I was like,
it definitely happens,
but it,
in terms of setting a precedent.
Right.
Uh,
it's,
that's become,
yeah.
Like the whole like
a boy didn't want to go with me
I'm just going to eat ice cream that's become like such a trope
so yeah I really liked that
you know she's just like fuck it I'm going to go
to a dinner and a movie but like what does she want
to do with her life we don't know yeah
we gotta
take a quick break but
we'll be back
hilarious get what I did there jamie no unpack it during
the break okay well we'll be back
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Another thing. Well, OK, so even though we don't know really anything about her aspirations or, you know, just that much in general, and she doesn't get a chance to be super active until around the third act of the movie, I would argue that she's still fairly.
She's reaching.
I'm coming down fairly she's reaching i'm coming she's reaching i'm gonna come to the defense of this movie probably too much but i would argue that
she's fairly proactive throughout the movie in the sense that like when she thinks she's being
stalked by kyle reese like she goes she says something yeah she says something she goes into
a public place because she thinks that'll be safe she calls the police like i think in a lot of movies where a woman is being chased by a killer
and maybe this is more common in like horror slasher movies but also i would argue that
terminator 1984 is not unlike a slasher horror film but in a lot of cases the women in those
movies make stupid choices and that might sound victim blamey, but they're stupid choices because the male writers who write those characters think that women are stupid.
And so they write them that way.
And I think that that point, I totally see what you're saying.
And that stands just strictly based on how her roommate is treated.
Her roommate and her roommate's boyfriend, when they're murdered in cold blood right after having sex that is like a horror movie right yes yeah for sure but sarah is like using the best judgment
she can whereas in like other movies of this era again especially like you know slasher movies
the female characters were using terrible judgment and even like i watched a movie around halloween time that came
out in 2017 what was it a terrible horror movie on netflix about a killer clown called terrifier
but i was like this looks horrible let me watch this and in that movie again this movie came out
two years ago but all the female characters just like kept
making one stupid choice after another like they would go back into the creepy warehouse for no
reason at all after a bunch of very scary stuff had just happened to them i think we're used to
seeing like female characters using poor judgment or just like not being very proactive but in this
movie like sarah is making smart choices and
she's being proactive and even though she does like make a mistake because she thinks she's
talking to her mom and tells her the number of the motel that she's staying at but it was really
the terminator who had been impersonating her mother i mean who would have guessed
she had no way of knowing that she didn't know yeah so even like a mistake that she makes she didn't
do it because she's like written as a an airheaded underwritten female character i still think she's
an underwritten female character in the first movie but you see she has been imbued with 1984
street smarts and that's yeah that's good and that's also i mean like you said before this is
a movie coming out in a decade where action movies had almost no
interest in featuring women like the action movies of this time were things like die hard
first blood robocop indiana jones lethal weapon top gun like all these like hyper hyper masculine
dripping with toxic masculinity films uh that didn't have any vested interest in female
characters which might be a good point.
I mean, and it's weird because you get a taste of that with The Terminator.
But The Terminator is kind of like this, I don't know,
it's kind of like a smartly written character where The Terminator,
I mean, and we know now that like robots are also prejudiced
because they're made by people.
But I feel like The terminator is created to be
someone who doesn't discriminate just has a mission and accomplishes it so there's not even
even though he is like technically the lead macho blah blah of the movie you don't see that like
inherent sexism in him because he's a machine he's a machine he's so you're like oh that's kind of cool like you you
don't get the casual sexism that you would in a die-hard kind of movie because he's a computer
cool and i do i mean this is maybe a good point to bring up james cameron's pretty consistent
commitment to not objectifying linda hamilton in both of these movies which is again it sounds
like a very like least you can
do creative choice but not a lot of movies were making that creative choice especially in like
blockbuster movies where that's so inherent even now truly yeah I mean 80s action movies if there
was a woman in the story she was very much overly sexualized like gratuitous nudity all that kind of stuff
and if she was participating in the action it wasn't a very skimpy outfit the whole bit
yeah so that is cool and you i think especially in the first one you see more made of arnold
schwarzenegger's body than of linda hamilton's you do have that brief sex scene that we are
going to do a reading from i mean, should we get to that now?
Because I would like to talk about this romantic subplot.
Okay.
Well, let's, I guess, start by like reading.
Okay.
So do you want to be Sarah or Reese?
And then I'll read action lines.
Okay.
I'll be Reese.
Okay.
Ready?
Yes.
Action.
And so you feel nothing.
It's better that way.
Oh, Kyle.
Reese takes a long, slow breath before he answers
and when he does, his voice has a new quality,
an unfamiliar tenderness.
John Connor gave me a picture of you once.
I never knew why.
It was very old, torn, faded.
You were young, like you are now.
You weren't smiling, just a little sad. I always
wondered what you were thinking at that second. Oh, he's so cringy. He closes his eyes, reaches
towards her. His fingertips trace the contour of her nose, chin, cheeks. I memorized every line,
every curve. He opens his eyes, looking right at hers. sarah i came across time for you i love you
i always have sarah's quietly overwhelmed reese looks away i'm sorry i shouldn't have said kyle
and now the money shot she leans forward and kisses him his face face is frozen, a mask. She continues tenderly. He begins
to respond. The dam breaks
and he holds her
in a tight, trembling embrace
clinging to her like life
itself. James Cameron is literally
a virgin.
Kyle picks her up and carries her
to the bed. She kisses his neck
and chest, tracing his scars with
her lips. He unbuttons her
blouse very slowly sarah guides his powerful hands over her a sequence of cuts details impressions
sarah a very close angle as she grimaces in divine agony agony reese his face wrapped his hand clutching the pillow as if to kill it it is explosive
torrential a confluence of fate and will disgusting james cameron should be writing
like competitive erotic fanfic like i was like sir this is a Wendy. Like, please take this out.
And it's funny because I think it really did produce one of the most sexless love scenes I've ever seen.
I hate this sex scene in the movie.
Although, okay, here's what I will say about this.
It's written a little differently in the script.
What ends up on screen is Sarah being the one who initiates romantic contact with Reese.
Like, she's the one who comes on to him because she's like,
hey, what are the women like in your time?
And he's like, I don't know.
I don't talk to women.
I've only ever loved you.
And then he's like, oh, no, I shouldn't have said that.
And then he goes over and starts fiddling with his bombs
because he doesn't know how to be around a woman.
You know how boys are.
And then she kisses him and then they have sex.
And then, of course. She gets pregnant.
But I mean, yeah, she's the one who's like initiating this sexual encounter, which I
always like to see.
It is nice.
Yeah.
And then and again, it's like another thing that this movie does that might not seem.
I mean, even now, I feel like there's still not a lot of women in movies who initiate
sex scenes, except for Rose and Titanic.
James Cameron needs a woman to initiate it.
Unfortunately, one of the other nastiest sex scenes ever written.
What I don't like, though, about this romantic subplot is, one, it exists.
It exists at all.
It was a studio note.
Of course it was.
I read that strengthening the love interest between Sarah and Reese was a studio note.
James Cameron agreed to it because apparently it hadn't been written quite that way.
Like their relationship wasn't as strong and romantic in the original script.
So he's like, yeah, sounds great.
What I really hate about it is that he shows up as this protector man.
He rescues her multiple times.
Rescues her and then also like treats her really badly.
The way he treats her physically at the beginning made me very uncomfortable.
He's repeatedly like screaming, grabbing.
I know it's like it's an emergency, but he keeps grabbing her arm and you're like, dude, saying he's like do exactly as i say don't move
unless i say don't make a sound unless i say do you understand so yeah just a lot of like
extremely aggressive pretty violent uh actions towards her and then they have sex a while later
so not into it it's not great i get how it fits into the story and it feeds into the
whole franchise and you're like oh now it's kind of this story element that's inseparable from the
entire franchise and you know hooking up with a future man sounds hot sounds great uh i just like
i i don't know i have more i i don't like that it is such an obvious studio
note relationship um that carries into terminator 2 in a way that is like doesn't feel necessary
where she's like i still love him right and which we'll get into because the whatever my thing is
listen sarah connor didn't get to decide what to do with her life. She didn't even get to name her own fucking kid.
It's like, ugh.
So I just...
She wanted to name him Greg.
She wanted to name him Greg, which makes logical sense.
The relationship is annoying, and the sex scene is weird.
Every 80 seconds, I'm just like, who is...
We were saying this when we were watching like you can just feel that
there is an entire crew in the room it doesn't feel like you're just like oh the actors seem so
like i'm like they must be so uncomfortable otherwise why would this scene appear this way
i think yeah i mean what really bothers me about it is not, I mean, the sex that they have, fine. Like, I think they're trauma bonded together.
That makes people horny.
And I think, you know, they have their sex.
But when it bleeds over into the second movie and she's like, I still love him.
I think about him all the time.
And like, she has dreams about him.
Like, they knew each other for a day.
Like, do you really, are you in love with him?
Well, if we're formally crossing over into terminator 2 territory i mean obviously sarah has a like infinity more agency
in terminator 2 than she does in the majority of the first one and and i feel like t2 is like the
feminist icon version that people really remember and cosplay as and all this stuff i mean you can
literally see how like laurie strode is dressed like sarah connor from t2 in the halloween movie
that came out last year like it is a very enduring version of this character something i wanted to
touch on this does sort of just demarcate i guess like the difference of how he approaches
her character in the first and second movies oh yes which by the way he first describes her
so in the first movie this is how he describes sarah connor sarah connor is 19 small and delicate
featured pretty in a flawed accessible way she doesn't stop the party when she walks in but
you'd like to get to know her.
Her vulnerable quality masks a strength
she doesn't even know exists.
So that's pretty fucking patronizing.
And then in T2, this is how he describes her.
He's truly a horrible writer.
Sarah Connor is not the same woman
we remember from the last time.
Her eyes peer out through a wild tangle of hair, like those of a cornered animal. horrible writer uh sarah connor is not the same woman we remember from the last time her eyes
peer out through a wild tangle of hair like those of a cornered animal defiant and intense but
skittering around looking for escape at the same time fight or flight down one cheek is a long scar
from just below the eye to the upper lip her voice is low and chilling monotone so he kind of i mean
and you can see this you can see like shades of the Sarah from Terminator 1.
But it's for the most part like a really different, like you can see where she's coming from, but she's very different in T2.
And like way more fun.
Definitely. But there are still like some little things that just like bug me is that James Cameron has this thing where he for his time, peak Cameron, although, you know, Avatar a billion, maybe there's a second coming. Cameron right had more progressive female characters than most but he does kind of he's
still a man and he still kind of uses the same I feel like quote-unquote cheat codes to give his
female characters dimension in multiple movies and Terminator 2 and Aliens I feel like he makes
a very similar choice with Ripley as he does with Sarah Connor.
Where it's she, you know, these are both very capable and motivated action heroes.
But they're motivated by mommy.
And he has difficulty, it would appear.
I mean, he doesn't in titanic but he has difficulty seeing past motherhood
in this period of movies as a conceivable motivation he can't like think of another
conceivable motivation for a woman right which is annoying and in this one too and in t2 there's a
few different moments where sarah connor you know there's like that speech where she says um oh you know what i'm
trying to bring up where she's basically oh this thing this machine was the only thing that measured
up and she's talking about how she you know she's been subtly scouting for a father for greg for
greg and you know that just sort of doubles down on the like nuclear family trope and like everyone needs
a mother and a father which we know is not true and it's not like it's a bad thing for her to want
more support in parenting but it's just such a straightforward kind of underthought i feel like
conclusion of like well of course she has to find a father for her son yeah i also this is maybe a reach but also like that bothered me
because yeah she says something like of all the would-be fathers like this machine is the only
thing that could measure up because it would never leave him or get drunk and hit him or shout at him
or say he was too busy for him but like the other part of this terminator character is that like he doesn't
understand human emotion and like it's just like completely void of like emotional vulnerability
and as someone who grew up with a father who is incapable of emotional intimacy or vulnerability
wouldn't recommend i've and yes because i've estranged myself from my dad for that reason so
i feel like sarah connor being like yeah, daddy just needs to be around.
And it's like, well, that's not good enough.
So I feel like it's like, yeah, letting fathers off the hook as long as they're just around.
And it's like, no, there's more to it than that.
Yeah, it's weird.
It's kind of complicated, too, because it's not like Sarah Connor is.
I mean, there's so something i think is very
interesting i guess this sort of crosses over t2 becomes more of this goofy father-son relationship
than i was expecting it to right that's one thing i feel like that takes up way more real real estate
in the movie than it needs to and it again implies that every kid needs a mother and a father and
like you know good terminator becomes daddy
and you're like i get like sure i guess you know and and i do like that john greg call him what you
will um he has an arc of becoming more emotionally intelligent more sensitive more empathetic i feel
like through the movie where you start out and he you know he's in foster care his mother's in a psychiatric ward and he you know says that you know he doesn't believe what
she's saying and she you know he doesn't trust what she says and he's like better off without
her all this stuff right you know which we don't get a lot of good examples of portrayals of younger
boys especially like pre-teen boys it's like a you know tentative time for anyone
so to see you know his arc be learning to believe women is really cool and so that's great i the
father-son stuff it's just like okay you know i guess it kind of feels like a different movie
in some ways but i well i do also like that part of his arc is him teaching
his new daddy he's like teaching him like emotional intelligence and like empathy a little
bit he's like you can't kill people like also like we have feelings people hurt people cry we're
afraid like he tell he basically tells as you pointed out jamie that he tells the terminator
to smile more he does
that's i think that that's a bonus scene but it's yeah i think that might be from the director's cut
but he does a scene where he's like you should smile and then he's like how do i smile i was
like oh this is uh this is like this is not trying to do this but it's kind of funny that it did
right it is cool yeah where and like the younger boy is encouraging the older man to be emotionally intelligent and consider other people and their motivations and their lives and you know, literally their lives keeping them alive. Right. That's lovely. But going back to his motivation and believing his mom that was like what I thought was one of the more compelling elements of Sarah Connor's character in the second one is we start from this
point of like it feels like weirdly like pretty modern of she is stuck in this psychiatric ward
because people don't believe what she's saying she doesn't have enough evidence of what she's saying
for people to believe it and similar to how they treated kyle in the first movie law enforcement
thinks it's easier to just kind of lock her up and and tell her that she is you know her mind
isn't right right and she sticks to her truth until what i think is kind of like a devastating
sad scene where we see there's that like really great Linda Hamilton moment where we see a clip of her from like when she first got there.
Screaming like it happened.
It happened.
Which you're just like, oh, fuck.
And then we flash forward to her.
However, long later saying to a medical professional.
I mean, the same one from the first movie.
Dr. silberman
saying even though we know she doesn't think this taking it back and being like i was wrong
the thing i know is the truth is actually not the truth now can i see my son that i thought was like
one of the most emotionally compelling parts of both movies is like she has to take back her truth in order to survive and like i just i
thought that was like a it felt very contemporary and you sort of see her dealing with even though
it's not explicitly stated but it's uh you know like a post-traumatic stress narrative with
the dreams that she's having and when she's first confronted with arnold schwarzenegger's
face again and just like i don't know it's like you see her sometimes act a little bit harshly
or a little bit abruptly but it is all grounded in this like well she's been through so fucking
much she's been so disbelieved even by her own son and just like kind of watching her go on that journey of first of all her son learning and accepting what was the truth the whole time and just her like navigating the like PTSD of what happens to her have the evidence to support her truth because a fucking corporation stole it and is now being used as research to develop the technology that will later kill everybody. that scene was super effective where she's like, it makes it seem like she's walking back what she
actually believes, but she's only doing that because she's so smart. If she says, Oh, no,
I'm feeling better. Now. I don't believe this anymore. I made all that stuff up. There's no
evidence because there is no evidence like there would be evidence if, you know, I had crushed that
Terminator. So she's walking it back, but only because she's trying to trick the psychologist into getting, yeah, putting her in minimum security.
I thought it was super effective.
I totally agree.
Cool.
Oh, I thought it was good.
One thing that this is, I mean, I guess this might be another example of it being well done know even though she does her son ends up believing her
and dyson ends up believing her it's only because she has the evidence all of a sudden right it's
never that they're like you know what i should have taken seriously what you were saying there
was no reason not to i believe you it's only when she has the flesh and robot evidence of a Terminator. And she can literally peel someone's arm down.
Like, you know, I feel like Greg only truly believes her once he's met a Terminator himself.
And Dyson only truly believes her when Arnold Schwarzenegger removes his hand.
And so it's, which I think is unfortunately kind of a realistic thing in terms of like the circumstances under which people believe women is no one really believes her until she does have the hard evidence.
Yes. demanding that it does feel unfortunately kind of on point that the two people who end up believing
her and i guess you would include um dyson's family in this as well even though they don't
have uh very large roles they don't believe it until until they see it yeah for sure so another
very cathartic moment for me in the movie is when dr silberman sees the bad terminator coming through the gate in a way
that only a like liquid metal robot would be able to do and so he sees it and in you know he's
watching this whole scene unfold where you know this other terminator is there and then his like
mouth drops a gape because he's like oh fuck she was telling the truth the whole time
right like yes fucking believe women and there's like a similar theme explored in aliens yes at
the beginning of that movie is a very similar like i swear to fucking god this is happening
and then no one believes her until there's for sure that evidence so another mr jim theme he i think is
effectively explored here i agree to just go back to that hospital scene the first time i saw that
scene where she is escaping from the hospital i just remember feeling so empowered and like
energized by it like i was like you know this teen girl was like
fuck yes go sarah because it's so cool around the same time in the movie john is telling arnold he
was like we gotta go get my mom like we gotta go rescue her i order you to do this like even
though it's dangerous and maybe the other terminator will be there like we have to go
save her so like it's set up in a way that's like maybe they're gonna have to like literally go in and
break her out but she's already basically broken herself out which I love right that she doesn't
have to be rescued um you do get the feeling that if they hadn't showed up she would get out anyways
100% yes she was like well on her way out and just kind of, I just want to do
like a little beat by beat breakdown of this. Cause I just love it so much where she is putting
on this facade of pretending to be just so drugged up that she's basically not cognizant. And she
very subtly steals a little paperclip and hides it in her mouth. And then after she's been like
locked up in her restraints in her room, she like spits out the paperclip, uses it in her mouth and then after she's been like locked up in her restraints
in her room she like spits out the paper clip uses it to unlock the restraints and then the door
then she has like broken off the handle of a broom and she uses that to beat the shit out of the guy
who has been horrible to her who has beaten her and licked her face and like electrocuted her so she breaks his face and
then drags him and locks him in a closet takes his nightstick takes the psychologist hostage
you know with the whole like Drano like liquid drain cleaner thing fucking brutal yes I loved
it and I just like that whole sequence where she's like calling the shots and doing
whatever it takes to get out of there yeah i was just like oh man like this is so fucking cool
yeah i think i mean that whole scene is so exciting and cool and also like completely like
there is no mary sue element to it because you know that she's been planning this for so long and she's been like bulking up and
her solitary confinement like she has developed every single skill she needs to pull off this
fucking incredible sequence it's so cool right because it's like it's a bunch of different
things it's us seeing a woman be like tough and smart and tactical and just like straight up kick ass in a way that is not
sexualized because in a lot of like action franchises that do feature women who are like
kicking ass like vagina suplex it's the it's the pussy slam that we see over and over but it's it's
we don't see anything like that with sarah connor it's us seeing her escape from this wrongful imprisonment because she hasn't been
believed and she's basically saying like just a giant fuck you to all the people who have not
believed her for all these years which is crazy cathartic it's so cool it's so cool and it's just
it was such an empowering awesome scene to and I love just yeah every time i see this movie i'm always just like yes and we don't see her fall into the women are only allowed to use household items as weapons here
sarah i mean she she uses what's around in the hospital but i feel like that makes perfect sense
right and she does use a broom but then she takes a nightstick and then she uses guns throughout the rest of the movie right right and so like that i mean it truly is just like she's being
treated like an action hero is treated which is great i so just i guess to kind of close on the
mommy stuff because i feel like we've been alluding to it quite a bit and it takes a larger
role in the second movie again it's kind of necessary to
the narrative because the kid exists now yes um but there is that moment that happens right after
she it seems like she's gonna kill dyson and then she's like jk i'm mommy i can't kill you
slash a lot of stuff she's human they're like sitting in dyson's kitchen with his whole with it with his wife and him and good terminator and john she's kind of railing on dyson for trying to build another
terminator she says how are you supposed to know fucking men like you built the hydrogen bomb
men like you thought it up you think you're so creative you don't know what it's like to really
create something to create a life to feel it growing inside you all you know how to do is death and destruction and then greg cuts her off and is like
mom yucky um which i don't know i mean i think that there's a lot of different reads of that
line sure there's a read of it i think that is like very empowering and really hitting the nail of the like
what james cameron is trying to do with her character right on the head of like women with
a narrow definition of what a woman is but like women can be badass and like they give life that's
so cool like there's there's a read of it that's very empowering and i think
that there's a read of it that's like a little reductive with with time and you know just
progress i don't think it was intended to be reductive at all right but you know it's like
that's the only way she can define a woman's power is through mommy stuff yes and so you know
there are moments in and for its time again it's like
that you do not get a better female action hero than sarah connor but there are times where i
feel like it leans a little too heavy on the crutch of like and her motivation is still woman stuff
you know right definitely i definitely agree with that but on the other hand i can also see
women who are mothers also feeling very empowered by sarah connor of course by the mere fact of like
she's a mom and she's also a complete badass because mother characters in movies are often depicted as like being just like naggy shrewy types of characters or just like, you know, just a typical kind of mom.
So to see.
Which is literally how Dyson's wife is portrayed.
True.
So to see like a mother character who is also extremely tough, I think is like representation that we don't get to see that often.
Again, I think it goes back to that thing we were talking about before, where it's like we have nothing against mothers and motherhood.
But for that to be the only option of a motivation is where I find it to be possibly reductive.
Yes.
It is like there is no even in Kill kill bill a movie that is allegedly about revenge
it's not really just about revenge it's also about motherhood yep so it just i mean i think
that there are more options now and that this movie was important in pushing stuff forward but
there are yeah i i do still feel like that read of it. Like there is a, I was rolling my eyes just a little bit.
For sure.
That all being said, in terms of like Sarah's badassery and like all the cool things we
get to see her do.
And to me, the very drastic stark change between her character in the first movie and the second movie is not only like
cool to see this more empowered and badass version of this character but it also like
tracks very well for what the story requires of it so like i so it makes sense for the story
which as a screenwriter um i don't like to mention it but like that i very much appreciated um however
there was something that i like couldn't help but notice if we're kind of comparing some of
the opening sequences of terminator one and terminator two where in terminator one the
terminator's in hot pursuit and sarah needs kyle reese to save her and get her away
from the terminator and all this stuff but in t2 john aka greg who is a child uh but a male child
is able to get away on his own for a little while like on his motorbike so i'm like okay well she also had a moped she did have a
moped but at the same time john has been raised by his mother his mom but in the context of like
she was always telling him like you're gonna be a military leader like you need to learn
combat and weapons and engines and like all this stuff so he was more equipped than sarah was
to like like he knew about terminators like and he probably was like oh this thing that's coming
to kill me that's probably a terminator i have to get away yeah but it's still just the optics of
like this child is able to like escape this terminator but a grown woman needs all this help totally i don't know
they both have mopeds it's like why is one more capable than the other should we talk about
dyson and his wife yes as we already sort of touched on a little bit i'm a fan of his arc
in the second movie except for the very end i don't think he needed to die right uh but i
like there was more character written for him than i assumed there would be honestly because it he's
sort of set up as someone who sarah connor would kill or that good terminator would kill but because
of the progress that those characters are already making they don't kill him and then we get to see
progress on his part of being like, I see what I've done.
I see the error of and like the tunnel mindedness of what I was doing.
How can I help?
How can I reverse it?
And so, you know, 75% of his arc I liked.
Yeah.
That's lovely.
I do.
I mean, it's worth mentioning he has his wife.
Her name.
She is named as Teresa.
Yeah.
That's all we know. That's all we know. I mean, she is named as Teresa. Yeah. That's all we know.
That's all we know.
That's all we know.
I mean, she's left at home.
She's a pretty much a tertiary character.
So I guess, I mean, she didn't have to be, but that's how the movie does frame her.
Yes.
I think it's also worth noting that he's one of the very few people of color in the movie.
The franchise.
The franchise.
To this point.
Yeah. of color in the movie franchise the franchise at this point yeah but the fact that he is like a
tech genius like a person of color in stem uh was representation we were not getting very much of
especially in this era agree yeah um so that was pretty cool but yes i don't like still the only
die the character we know the best in this movie that is killed off besides like the villain.
Mm hmm.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I feel like that character could have like been brought back in sequels and like used his like tech genius brain to like help and stuff.
Well, yeah, there's like there's no reason in my head why he shouldn't have joined their team.
It seems like that was what he was doing.
And he was killed 20 minutes later.
Yeah. their team it seemed like that was what he was doing and he was killed 20 minutes later yeah
um which again just like feeds into whether it was written intentionally that way or not just
feeds into some of the horror movie tropes you see pop up in these movies which is that the person
of color always dies and is always the first to die right um even though it's for dyson it's pretty
significantly into the movie but he's the he's the character we know best who dies.
And that sucks.
Yes.
So I wish we had gotten Dyson back.
Justice for Dyson.
God damn it.
I got a little bit of context corner.
Woo, let's hear it.
For these two movies.
We'll start with Lindailton because the most recent
terminator movie is the first one she's returned for since terminator 2 and she had some thoughts
on how sarah was portrayed in the first one as opposed to the second one i guess the first one
she went into it i mean no one thought it was going to be a huge hit the first one and so she
went into it just like it was a job she described sarah and the first movie as quote so wholesome i could puke unquote
and that she didn't feel particularly empowered by the character until quote that transition from
damsel in distress to all right she's got to pull everything she's got together to get kyle up for
the on your feet soldier oh yes and so she said she was generally unimpressed
with the first turbinator until she saw it and then was like oh there's something there's
something to this and she also saw some metaphorical importance to the sex scene in the first movie
where she's on top which she felt was like a metaphor for um where that character is headed so i thought that was that
was cool she also in regards to t2 there was i think kind of an interesting exchange that you
know everyone can feel any number of ways about but it's hair related um so this is from an
interview with the hollywood reporter from like a couple weeks ago. So it goes like this.
Cameron originally proposed that Hamilton chop off her golden brown locks after Sarah's escape from an asylum. She argued successfully, meaning Linda Hamilton, for a ponytail instead, because
as she puts it, quote, you don't have to look like a guy to be strong, unquote. For some reason,
I won that argument, she recalls. It wasn't even a vanity thing. And then later on, when she became
this icon of strength and, you know, the legend sarah connor i realized that it's only because i
didn't cut my hair that she became what she did in the minds and hearts of the audience that this
was a picture of feminine strength i would love to say oh i was so ahead of my time but it really
was just an instinct that it wasn't right and then she goes on to roast demi moore's haircut in g.i.j
so i mean we i mean we know that the baldest
woman is in charge this is a rule that is held for three years now but uh i thought it was
interesting that she wanted to make that choice because i think in in the case of some action
movies written by men that is a like a writing shorthand that is like to indicate like i mean and also it's
like practical to get her out of the way but um i thought it was interesting that she like
made a stand on her character especially against james cameron which gets us into oh also linda
hamilton has done uh more activism for the bipolar community than most people have oh that's great great oh
i mean just to touch on a little bit more um yeah i think there was for a while and even almost you
know even as recently as like mad max fury road but like the shorthand for like a really strong
badass female character is like chop all her hair off or shave her head kind of thing. Right. And as someone who recently chopped off all my hair.
You can't stop killing people.
Yeah, I mean, I see what she's saying.
I think that's somewhat of a, like, I don't know.
Like, yes, I think it is important to see, like,
maybe more traditionally feminine, like, strong female protagonists
in addition to seeing, like, I don't think, like,
a woman who
maybe presents as more masculine it's become a bit tropey but i also don't think there's anything
wrong with that either so like yeah i don't know of course not i think that i think or i mean i
who who knows i feel like what she is i mean because partially the baldest women in charge
rule comes from the trope of writers using
it yeah that way exactly um but but there's also it's rooted in some military reality like there's
a lot of like it's based in some truth and some like silly like male writers tend to do this a
lot but it's like now i don't know i mean it's i feel like it's kind of neither here nor there
um and like everyone should just be able to have their hair the way they want it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And like 2019 when, you know, gender is very fluid.
Yeah.
And it shouldn't be to suggest that like short hair can't be considered feminine.
That's also not true.
But, you know, I thought it was worth mentioning.
Yeah, for sure.
Getting around to Jimmy Cameron.
Oh, Jimmy Cam. mentioning yeah for sure get around to jimmy cameron jimmy cam legendarily horrible person
to to work with specifically not like uh i mean i guess it depends on how you look at it he is
a nightmare on set i think he's very much an example of a male director who can get away
with fucking murder doing things that a female director of
any amount of experience would get fired and blacklisted for doing and uh i would also apply
that to really any marginalized community uh where it is there is some truth to like you only have so
many shots um whereas white male directors with a with a specific style can just fucking get away
with murder.
Some examples of things he's done and ways he's been described.
On the set of Avatar,
he would take people's cell phones if they were out
and he would nail gun them to the wall.
Let's see.
Andrew Gumbel of The Independent says,
Cameron is, quote, a nightmare to work with.
Studios fear his habit of straying over schedules
and over budget.
He is notorious on set
for uncompromising and dictatorial manner as well as his flaming temper leonardo dicaprio told
esquire magazine quote when somebody felt a different way on set there was a confrontation
uh and what is it sounds like it's putting it lightly yeah well you know uh leonardo dicaprio
is not necessarily you know you would think that
leonardo caprio for the amount of time he spends around 23 year olds would be more woke than he is
but um it's just not true speaking of their experiences on filming titanic kate winslet
said that she admired cameron but quote there were times I was genuinely frightened of him, unquote. He's just a notoriously scary guy.
Linda Hamilton also attested
to this, where she
was, I think, generally very
bent to his whims
on set, and then the one time she asked
to see playback of a
scene she had just done, he screamed
at her in front of everyone, and
they later got married, which she said was the biggest
regret of her life. So, what can you do uh and then just a brief uh one more thing as it pertains to sarah
connor specifically you may recall that james cameron made some uh stupid ass comments oh i
have this too 2017 uh when wonder woman came out and he just really couldn't take someone else making movies about
women and he was very reductive and the way he described it he said that Gal Gadot was too
beautiful and that she was objectified and that she was at you know and and you can view that
however you want the point is that James Cameron's like, my female protagonist is the best female protagonist,
which means that he only thinks female protagonists can be one way.
And there's only one way to be a female action hero.
It's pitting women against each other for no reason.
It's egotistical.
It's annoying.
And also it's incorrect because he says in 2017 he says quote sarah connor
was not a beauty icon she was strong she was troubled she was a terrible mother and she earned
the respect of the audience through pure grit well there may be some truth to that if you look back
at the way that james cameron describes sarah connor in his first screenplay that's not true it's just he's just like a he's just kind of a stupid ass
yes i agree i have a little bit of a little bit more specifics on this part of the context corner
when he made those comments originally about wonder woman and he also said that well because
this character was so sexualized therefore the film is not groundbreaking exactly right like okay and then
patty jenkins the director of wonder woman responded by saying james cameron's inability
to understand what wonder woman is or stands for to women all over the world is unsurprising to me
though he is a great filmmaker he is not a woman strong women are great his praise of my film monster and our
portrayal of a strong yet damaged woman was so appreciated but if women have to always be hard
tough and troubled to be strong then we aren't free to be multi-dimensional or celebrate an
icon of women everywhere because she is attractive and loving then we haven't come very far have we
i believe women can and should be everything,
just like male lead characters should be.
And there is no right and wrong kind of powerful woman
in the mass of female audience who made the film.
A hit it is, can surely choose and judge their own icons of progress.
And then James Cameron doubled down on his previous comments.
He's so dumb.
And said about Gal Gadot,
but whatever, she was miss israel
and she's drop dead gorgeous and that's not breaking ground uh and then he said uh added
about sarah connor in terminator 2 saying uh she wasn't there to be liked or ogled but she was
central and the audience loved her by the end of the film and it's just like it's just you don't get it i like patty jenkins's response a lot i'm like she shouldn't have even
had to fucking say anything right it's just like it's just another example of like he made it about
him for no reason yes no one asked him to it was in response to nothing like it was just like
he just made it about him because that's what he's like yeah and it just sucks
that he is like one of the very influential directors in hollywood who is a straight
white man who is trying to it seems attempt to include women in meaningful ways in his stories
right but he still has a very narrow view of what a like strong female protagonist should and could be
i hope that he has you know demonstrates i'm not i'm not gonna set my watch by it but like
that was incredibly recent and completely fucking toned up and to double down it's just like it's
embarrassing for him yeah and um he should be. Indeed. The last thing I had to say in this context corner is that it appears that the Sarah Connor
character is very much based on James Cameron's mother.
Huh.
Did you know?
Well, we didn't know before today that James Cameron is Canadian.
I suspect we didn't know this because he's notoriously mean.
So no one would be like, he's probably Canadian.
But he is Canadian.
And in a profile of him, and this is, I wouldn't recommend this article.
It was in Vanity Fair in 2009 when Avatar was coming out.
It was called James Cameron, Secret Feminist.
And it is just praising woke icon James Cameron.
Like, who cares?
But the interesting passage concerning his mother goes as follows.
Quote, Cameron's mother, Shirley, is Sarah Connor trapped in the body of a Canadian grandmother.
I don't know why Jim thinks I'm so reliant.
Shirley shrugged to me, professing bewilderment that she might be the inspiration for the gutsy maternal characters in The Terminator and Aliens.
Well, I can take a guess. While a mother with three kids under age eight, James was the oldest
of what would ultimately be five, Shirley joined the Canadian Women's Army Corps, happily trooping
off on weekends and fatigues in combat boots to assemble a rifle while blindfolded and marked
through field in the pouring rain. At a time and place, Ontario, Canada, in the 50s and 60s,
when most women set aside their personal pursuits for the sole ambition of homemaking, Shirley was a painter and attended courses in subjects like geology and astronomy.
Often she brought along her oldest son.
So I think that that is that's lovely. the first terminator movie even more confusing because again it seems like he couldn't envision
a world where a woman would be important because she's the one who has like military training and
combat training and leadership tendencies but his mother was in the military right i mean at least
he course corrects on the second one i don't know
i mean yeah but well speaking of course correcting love what may i oh yes share um so these are
spoilers for terminator dark fate so if you would like to avoid these spoilers skip ahead about a
minute and a half okay i did see terminator Terminator Dark Fate brag. And I will say
that that movie corrects the idea that women are only important because they are mothers of the
important men. Because in this movie, the character being protected is Danny, a Latinx woman. She
is the person who ends up becoming the leader of the human resistance
against the machines. Also, the protector this time is also a woman. She is an enhanced human
named Grace, played by Mackenzie Davis. And then Sarah Connor, Linda Hamilton, is back. And so you
see a bunch of scenes with Danny, Grace, and Sarah all working together and getting stuff done.
Now, Grace and Sarah seem to hate each other for what feels like kind of no reason.
So that's a little whatever.
Awesome.
But the movie does.
Well, it was written by five men.
Right.
And the female characters aren't necessarily well developed.
And I just had some
other issues with the movie but the movie does pass the bechdel test a bunch so that's there's
just some of the some of the mistakes that i think the earlier terminator films did that dark fate
attempts to correct at the end of the day at the end of the day i just want women to write the movie and for people to stop rebooting
franchises yes because nothing's ever gonna be as good as terminator 2 exactly stop trying let's all
move on with our lives okay i think that's all i had that's all i had all right do these movies pass the bechdel test
um the first one i feel like i think the first one might it might because we've got sarah talking to
ginger her roommate and we have sarah talking to i believe the character is named in the credits as
nancy who's or no the other waitress that oh yes i don't think we learned her name in in the movie
but that other so the the server at the diner tells sarah about the news broadcast
about another sarah connor getting murdered um does sarah respond i can't totally remember
sarah does respond uh it's kind of i mean it's kind of those throwaway i mean it's kind of too throwaway
to count but they say hi to each other at one point you're late hi uh then there's that moment
where sarah kind of responds i mean i don't know if it's necessarily with words but she kind of
says like oh you know like one of those it's like they're talking to each other it's about the
murder of other women but you know if maybe it maybe it counts i don't know yeah that one i feel like i wouldn't necessarily count those because we don't ever
learn that character's name i think but then sarah and ginger do talk a little bit but these
conversations go something like ginger says they're looking at each other in the mirror and
ginger says like better than the mortal man deserves and then sarah kisses ginger on the cheek
and then later she's like ginger have you seen pugsley my feminist icon iguana but he's a man
but he's a pugsley's a male iguana so she responds and says not recently did you check the messages
and then they talk about the guy who cancels on sarah and then that doesn't pass and then she says i'm going to a
movie kiddo okay ginger says and then sarah says you and matt have a good time but we have two
lines there yeah so maybe i don't know if it does pass it's by the skin of its teeth and then what
about what you have for two i think no i think two does not pass there was one moment
where i thought theresa and sarah were almost talking but then it turns out theresa was talking
to her husband right although sarah does say to theresa get down on the floor bitch fucking down
now and theresa screams yeah so does it pass good um so you know uh it doesn't i don't know which is i think again like you almost and not to say that
you know sarah connor is characterized in the same way that princess leia is but just that
tendency of like there shall be no more than one strong woman in any movie like that rule kind of
holds in at least these two movies yes even though the character the strong female character you get is great there's no women for her to talk to nope so that's that i think what
what'd you rate the movie the two i feel like we gotta split it right yeah they're very different
in the way they treat their female protagonists i think yes i agree
okay so for terminator one i think i would only give this like a one and a half or a two
maybe just because of the whole like you're only important because you're a mummy of a man who's
important and like she's not characterized enough we don't know anything
about her aspirations she's not equipped with any skills that make her able to contribute to her own
safety or of like getting away from the terminator different stuff like that i feel like it's only
like a one and a half kind of thing but termin 2, I would double it and give it a three.
Because it's still just by the nature of, you know, sequels and storytelling.
The different hangups I have about the first movie just carry over into Terminator 2.
You know, the whole like very strong emphasis on on but i'm a mummy and that's my major
motivation and stuff like that but because she we see you know all of her general badassery
i think i'm gonna go a one and a half and then a three respectively i'm gonna go a one in four i think oh my uh one i really don't have any love at all
for the first terminator movie i think that her character is like severely underwritten and then
i like the growth she shows in the last act of the movie but i don't feel that it's more than
a nipple's worth of growth um i don't like that she's told the person she's gonna become
she can't name her own child she's defined by her motherhood etc etc i i you know and again i know
that people are gonna roast me but i'm just like i'm just not attached to these movies one nipple
for the first one uh and then i think i would go i i again like you were saying i have similar
issues with her being defined by her motherhood in the second movie.
But I think just kind of based off of how it does seem like, especially in this gigantically popular, because the second movie did even better than the first movie.
It made over $500 million.
And it was a very expensive, you were saying it was the most expensive movie made to date.
And it still doubled its budget over.
And I think seeing a character like Sarah Connor kick ass, have those moments of catharsis,
have the idea of believing women effectively tackled in a huge mainstream blockbuster movie
is, yeah, I mean, for for its time that's like huge and like i wish that
there was less defining her by her motherhood i wish that there was less i need to find a father
for my boy but i just yeah i think it's so it lets her be so much more and and definitely paved the way for more effectively written female action heroes yes i'm gonna go
one in four here no fractions for jamie today well there you have it folks the terminator
one and two episode and our three-year anniversary episode so you know happy three years once again jamie thank you here's to
five million more there's so many more movies to do um well hey jamie where can people follow you
on the internet oh uh you can follow me at jamie we never do this i know but i guess it's our
anniversary yeah it's our anniversary we don't have a guest so it's true it's our time to shine you can follow me on twitter at jamie
loftus help you can follow me on instagram at jamie cry superstar uh by the time this is released
you listen to my podcast about being in mensa for a year called my year in mensa uh and and that's
i think what do you have to say Caitlin? You have another podcast too.
I sure do. It's called
Sludge an American Healthcare Story.
Season one has wrapped
because luckily I am
now sludge free
but season two will be coming
out sometime in the new year
so check that out.
You can follow me on Twitter and Instagram
at Caitlin Duranteante and as for
our podcasts plugs you can follow us on social media at pectocast you can go to our matreon
our patreon aka matreon at patreon.com slash pectocast it's five dollars a month it gets you
two bonus episodes plus our entire backlog of bonus episodes.
We got merch.
We got merch at tpublic.com.
Holidays are coming up, gang.
If you want to treat yourself, treat someone you love.
By all means.
We've got all the designs.
We also have our seasonal designs.
If you want feminist icon baby Grinch.
No, I think it's queer icon baby Grinch. I'm so sorry you want feminist icon baby grinch no i think it's
queer icon baby queer i'm so sorry queer icon baby grinch or just a simple grinch and heels
text-free grinch as well um or or any of our designs feminist icon feminist icon alfred
molina queer icon all the classics indeed they're all there for you and hey jamie yes hasta la vista
baby hasta la vista caitlin bye bye k hasn't heard from her sister in seven years i have a proposal
for you come up here and document my project all you need to do is record everything like you always
do what was that that was live audio of a woman's nightmare.
Can Kay trust her sister or is history repeating itself?
There's nothing dangerous about what you're doing. They're just dreams.
Dream Sequence is a new horror thriller from Blumhouse Television, iHeartRadio, and Realm.
Listen to Dream Sequence on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Curious about queer sexuality, cruising wherever you get your true goals.
You can listen to Sniffy's Cruising Confessions, sponsored by Gilead,
now on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts. New episodes every Thursday.
There's so much beauty in Mexican culture, like mariachis, delicious cuisine, and even lucha libre.
Join us for the new podcast, Lucha Libre Behind the Mask, a 12-episode podcast in both English and Spanish
about the history and cultural richness of Lucha Libre.
And I'm your host, Santos Escobar,
emperor of Lucha Libre and a WWE superstar.
Listen to Lucha Libre Behind the Mask
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you stream podcasts.