Its hand takes on black and yellow stripes when it grabs a railing, and later its feet squish and morph into the steel floor pattern on each step. Several minutes later, when it morphs into Sarah Connor, John looks down and notices the T's feet combining with the steel floor right before telling the real Sarah to shoot it.
After the theatrical credits have run in their entirety, there are special edition credits. In the original theatrical cut, during the Cyberdyne break-in sequence, Dyson and John are seen entering the security vault and smashing the glass cases to obtain the Terminator arm and CPU, with John then saying, "We've got Skynet by the balls now". In the T Edition, we only see Dyson and John using their keys to get inside the vault before the scene cuts away.
The version shown on ABC May 15, , altered the following: Omission of the scene in the bar where the T twists the man's arm and pins him to the pool table The T's nudity was obscured by strategically-placed silhouettes Omission of the man who's shot by the T's gunfire in the lobby The orderly who licks Sarah was only hit with the night stick once in the TV version The T only shoots the guard outside the institution once in the legs Omission of the shot showing the blade going through the foster father's mouth Nearly all profanities including "hell" and "damn" deleted or dubbed over.
The version shown on the WB deleted all explicit profanity. Also deleted were the shots of the T's spike impaling the guard through the eye, the foster father's death it simply cut to the shot where the blade is pulled out , the trucker getting impaled by the T's blade, the biker getting the knife stabbed into him, the T's nudity, and the guards do not spurt blood when shot in the knees.
The version shown on the Sci-fi channel deleted the T's nudity and edited out the profanity quite well. All though it left the spike impalement scenes in it deleted the scene where the T stabs the biker and breaks his arm. In the storyboards section on the Ultimate Edition DVD, there is evidence of an early scripted scene. Set right in the beginning of the movie, it shows various battle scenes of the war until in one of them, a terminator who is aiming his gun at a soldier suddenly shuts down we see the red glow in his eye fading out , as do the others and the several hoverships and tanks.
This early draft actually described soldiers penetrating skynet and destroying it, finding the terminator factory with many terminators in both skeleton and disguised form Arnold's , and eventually sending both Kyle Reese and the reprogammed T good Arnold back to the past. The Australian theatrical release of T2 contained many of the scenes that would eventually make it onto the special edition.
These included the dream sequence with Reese but not Sarah being beaten up by the guards and the malfunctioning of the T in the steel works factory and even the alternate ending with Sarah as an older woman and John with a child of his own playing in the park. However the rental video release and subsequent home video releases were all the standard version. The British Board of Film Classification initially requested some cuts before they could pass the film with a 15 certificate in the UK.
For the cinema version, the following edits were made to what they deemed to be "heavy and realistic violence": The blows delivered to the security guard by Sarah with the wooden broom handle were reduced from four to one; the subsequent blows and shots of his bloodied face were removed. The beating of Silberman with a nightstick was reduced so that only the impact to his arm remained; the impact to the back of his legs was removed.
The initial VHS video versions the theatrical cut and the 'T edition' were cut by a further 18 seconds to reduce the following scenes: The biker being thrown onto the stove. In the uncut version, this happens in two shots. In the cut version, the start of each shot was shortened. The biker being stabbed in the shoulder. The shot of him lying on the table was shortened at the start to remove the impact this is very subtle and difficult to notice.
Sarah picking the lock on her door. The shot was shortened at the start to remove the insertion of the paperclips; what remained showed her wiggling the already-inserted paperclips in the lock. ReDa Swedish subtitle Terminator. Kingdom-Release iUrop English subtitle Terminator. AM] quanphamkt Thai subtitle Terminator. AC3-Ferol memo Arabic subtitle Terminator.
YIFY S. Remux Kosire English subtitle Terminator. AG] Habibx Arabic subtitle Terminator. DTS fet English subtitle Terminator. YIFY abu Relation Movies. Extras It takes soooo long to load, and the menu is soooo laggy! Seriously, a disc that crashes the player if you press the stop button is not a good thing in my view. But yes, tonnes of flashy Java graphics, animated menus etc, etc. And surprise, surprise!
I can click on them, certainly. They get highlighted, but nothing happens with the player. I might expect problems with the Picture in Picture content, but not even the text trivia track, nor the text commentary switch on, although I can turn those on manually with the remote, flicking through subtitle options during playback.
There are extras that I can access outside of this, the trailers, a couple of deleted scenes restored in the Extended Special Edition , and two audio commentaries. Directors like Ridley Scott would tweak around the edges, make small but meaningful changes, and in some cases come up with revised versions tighter and even shorter than the theatrical releases.
Then there were the James Camerons of the world, who would stick everything that they had to cut out, back into the film, creating the celluloid equivalent of bloatware. Once upon a time I would have appreciated these versions as they told even more of the story, and filled in character background. Terminator 2: Judgment Day has declined in my estimation as the years have passed.
But the original Terminator was a perfect movie, an efficiently put together cyberpunk chase movie that delivered an adrenaline fuelled thrill ride. The theatrical version of Terminator 2: Judgment Day is almost as entertaining. Certainly the bigger budget, the cooler effects still stand out today, and the time travel shenanigans of the story give it a stronger narrative core. The biggest problem with Terminator 2 is a middle act that sags, with young John Connor teaching the T all about humanity, while hanging out in the desert.
You almost forget there is a T after them. And after all this time, and having watched the film more times than I can remember, the John Connor T shtick just seems more corny than cute. They should have kept the future coda ending though. But it is a definitive end, and with it, we would have been spared T3, Salvation, and Genisys. On top of that, the DVD has its extras on a separate disc, loads of them.
This website needs Javascript to function properly. It might be sort of usable without it, but don't hold your breath! Seriously, you need a browser running Javascript! It looks totally pants right now, like, totally. About This Item.
0コメント