Terminator 3 Rise Of — The Machines

Arnold Schwarzenegger, Nick Stahl, Claire Danes, and Kristanna Loken.

So when Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines arrived in theaters on July 2, 2003, it did so under a cloud of skepticism. Cameron was absent. Linda Hamilton declined to return. And the story had seemingly already reached a perfect, closed-loop conclusion in T2 : the future had been changed, Judgment Day averted. Terminator 3 Rise of The Machines

In the years since, we have seen Terminator Salvation (a war movie without a script), Genisys (a convoluted time-travel disaster), and Dark Fate (a James Cameron-sanctioned do-over that killed John Connor in its first five minutes and then ignored T3 entirely). Each of these films has tried to recapture the magic. Each has failed. Linda Hamilton declined to return

"Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines" was a commercial success, grossing over $440 million worldwide. While it received mixed reviews from critics, it has since become a cult classic and a staple of the sci-fi action genre. Each of these films has tried to recapture the magic

Schwarzenegger’s performance in T3 is underrated. In T2 , the Terminator was learning to be human. In T3 , it is human—or at least, a machine that has mastered human affectation. It has a pocket full of cheesy one-liners ("Talk to the hand"). It breaks into a pharmacy for painkillers. It even asks for sunglasses.

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: Skynet sends back a new, highly advanced assassin: the T-X (Kristanna Loken), a hybrid with a liquid-metal exterior and a lethal internal weapon system. Because John is untraceable, her mission is to eliminate his future Resistance lieutenants, including his former classmate and future wife, Kate Brewster (Claire Danes).

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