Terminator Salvation
Directed by McG
Runtime: 115 min.
All Terminator movies are the same: junk. But McG’s Terminator Salvation has an important new element: humanity. In the opening scene, terminally ill scientist Dr. Serena Kogan (Helena Bonham Carter) poignantly addresses Marcus Wright (Sam Worthington), a convicted murderer on Death Row. Her odd request that he donate his organs to science could be sinister, but Carter’s humble, needful manner has an undercurrent of suffering, far beyond the expected sci-fi villainy. She looks at Wright sympathetically, even when he insults her—and that’s the hook.Worthington’s hard-assed response is complex. His shaved-head, blue-eyed demeanor belies his criminality. It’s not a thug’s face but the defensive masculine air of someone who’s gone bad because he’s desperate to show what he’s made of to an unkind world. If this sequel is to live up to its title, here’s the actor to do it.
Too bad Terminator 4 goes only half-way to Salvation. It’s still junk, but the good news is that Worthington gives it emotional weight. Despite
the time-hopping nonsense about protecting John Connor (Christian Bale)
and his teenage father-to-be Kyle Reese (Anton Yelchin) from the T-600
killing machines (sent by the Skynet organization to eradicate
humanity), it’s Marcus Wright’s new figure of anger, compassion and
sacrifice that matters.
No doubt the emotional element comes from what director McG learned from his good, underrated 9/11-catharsis movie, We Are Marshall. Marcus
Wright’s longing for a second chance, to redeem himself, becomes the
series’ lynchpin out of a deeper understand of life and death than most
franchises (totally absent from Star Trek). The Terminator series is, basically, over-valued schlock— at first novel, the sequels became pointless. It’s
the prime example of how grade-B movies escaped their place and now
dominate culture. Audiences have become connoisseurs of junk. Earlier
generations used to memorize poems, now it’s the pop arcana of comics
and thrill rides that reduce human experience to sensationalism and dread.
Marcus is a reminder of what
heroes ought to be.Worthington’s wipes Christian Bale off the screen—an
easy feat. Bale’s merely the poster child for movie nihilism. Worthington’s
makes Wright’s sacrifice memorable. His plea, “I Am Human,” while
hanging in cruciform recalls the great martyr image evoking St. Steven
from Irvin Kershner’s RoboCop 2. But Terminator 4 isn’t high art that transforms the genre into a new understanding of media and society like Neveldine/Taylor’s extraordinary Crank 2: High Voltage. It’s
only frequently distinctive—as when McG stages a monochromatic battle
scene, one with silhouetted burning trees, explosions that spray like
blooming flowers or a cameo with a Schwarzenegger android.
McG’s boyish sensationalism is inoffensive, justified by paying attention to how Wright preserves an unlikely human essence. Worthington
is a find. He suggests a pin-up version of the character actor Michael
Rooker and gives the franchise’s most empathetic performance since
Linda Hamilton’s stunned, almost-silent-movie pantomime of fear and
surprise in Terminator 2. Worthington makes Wright’s sacrifice
pitiable, strong and a little orgasmic.When an entranced resistance
fighter (Moon Bloodgood) puts her head to his chest, she exclaims, “You
have a strong heart. God, I love that sound!”

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