You can't have John be a year-old accountant somewhere. And really, when you think about it, he could be sort of a pathetic figure as a man who had missed his moment in history and was relegated to this banal, ordinary existence, when in fact had Sarah not chosen to destroy Cyberdyne, he would be the leader of humanity. Nobody wants to see that. Secondly, [John's death], that's rocket fuel for Sarah. And lastly, you need to clear the stage for these new characters.
They are not going to be able to have their moment, or come into their moment, with John hanging around. There's just no good way to do that. This is going to be different. That one moment effectively put a black cloud over the entire film.
Terminator comes back in time to kill the chosen one. Chosen one and protector run and fight to survive. Chosen one almost dies but is saved by an ex-Machina. Arnold Schwarzenegger dies because, why not. Those same beats trigger the adventures of the previous films, thus the senseless death of John Connor cuts even deeper. Say what you will about the film, but at least it tried something different in the franchise.
Only Kyle Reese Michael Biehn , a fiercely dedicated soldier from the future, can save her before the Terminator ends her life and prevents her son from saving the future from the tyranny of the machines. Sarah Connor spent years training her son, John Eddie Furlong , to be the hero of the revolution, before she was institutionalized for her paranoid fantasies and paramilitary acts of terrorism. But when John is targeted by a new liquid metal T Robert Patrick , and rescued by a heroic older model Schwarzenegger , John realizes she was right all along.
Together they try to change the future, kill an unkillable machine and make seemingly impossible images and action sequences look plausible. Terminator Salvation promised a feature-length look at the future war between John Connor and Skynet, but ended up boring some and disappointing most.
Then Terminator Genisys tried to retcon the previous two movies and create an alternate timeline, only to succeed in confusing and annoying fans more than anything. Dark Fate arguably succeeded in crafting a good follow-up to Terminator 2: Judgment Day , but by that point, it seems most fans had given up.
Terminator: Dark Fate 's most memorable moment, for better or worse, was the onscreen death of John Connor, the foretold savior of humanity. John was shot by another T that Skynet had sent back in time as a contingency, even though by the time it arrived, John and Sarah had effectively prevented Skynet's existence. Here's why the sequel went that route. The initial idea for killing off John Connor early on in Terminator: Dark Fate came from franchise creator James Cameron, who returned to produce Dark Fate after having no involvement with the third-fifth films.
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