Back in college I decided to watch all of The Terminator films available at the time (so, the first three). I’d seen The Terminator in high school and appreciated it, but as is usually the case, it took me awhile to get around to the others. And since this was before the days of streaming, I got DVDs from the library with all the wonderful special features, which a film major is almost obligated to watch.
That may have backfired when it came to the next movie.
On The Terminator disc was an interview with James Cameron, where he talked about his mom sending him McDonald’s coupons so that he could afford to eat while writing the script. We love a rags to riches story, so who cares if it’s true. But that didn’t have much effect on me. What got my attention was part where he talked about exposition. A time travel story requires a lot of explanation, even if, at heart, it’s a slasher film with a murder robot from the future. Given the success of the film, Cameron did it right.
The movie never stops to talk.
Whenever the characters need to convey essential information to the audience, there’s always something else happening on the screen. “Why are they shooting at us?” Yeah, who are these guys? “Okay, let me tell you,” says Cameron through Kyle Reese. If trauma imprints information on our minds, this is a good way to tell us things that we’ll remember, assuming we’re not too distracted. This was a new concept for me, but one I've kept in mind ever since. You don’t need to go to film school to get an education.
Then I watched Terminator 2: Judgment Day and was disappointed.
I knew going in that there was a subtle genre shift. The Terminator is a horror movie with action, and Judgment Day is an action movie with horror. I can appreciate both, so that was fine. But what stuck out like a thumb in molten metal was the way the exposition is handled. Almost every time the characters have something to tell us the action stops. Why did Cameron mess this up so badly? I can only assume that he didn’t want to distract us from the awesome action set pieces.
To be fair, they are incredible.