10 Movies That Struggled To Define Their Own Rules
10. The Future Is Not Set (Or Is It?) - Terminator 2: Judgment Day
The Terminator franchise has a habit of flip-flopping on its own prevailing philosophy when it's convenient for its box office.
Though the brilliant Terminator 2 came up with Sarah Connor's (Linda Hamilton) iconic mantra, "no fate but what we make," it's hardly one that's emblematic of the series as a whole.
And it all begins with the original Terminator movie, which has Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) reciting the message, "the future is not set," even though John Connor's very conception appears to be ordained by the law of determinism itself.
T2 nevertheless concluded with the hopeful implication that the destined apocalyptic future had been averted, only for Terminator 3 to completely reverse that, insisting that Judgment Day was always inevitable, as is reinforced by Terminator: Salvation's future war setting.
By the time Terminator Genisys and Terminator: Dark Fate materialised, the franchise had settled into a routine of melding the familiar with the "new," and the fated with the unpredictable.
Genisys presented a villainous John Connor (Jason Clarke) while revisiting several classic franchise moments, and Dark Fate killed off Connor only to deliver a thinly-veiled rehash of the first two movies.
At this point we get into a meta-discussion of the series' goals, which are sadly always going to put Cameron's ultimate message at the mercy of box office bucks.
The grand irony, of course, is that with Dark Fate's commercial failure, the future of the franchise itself is anything but set.