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Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles -- An early look

by Brad Trechak, posted Dec 27th 2007 11:02AM

Terminator: The Sarah Connor ChroniclesOne of the better benefits of this job is that I can sometimes see television shows in advance of their premiere. This time around I was given an advance DVD of Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles which contained the first two episodes ("Pilot" and "Gnothi Seauton"). I'm a fan of the franchise, although admittedly I wasn't that big a fan of Terminator 3.

This show is done by the same company that was behind Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines and the upcoming Terminator 4. It was originally to be titled The Sarah Connor Chronicles. I guess the creators were concerned that nobody would recognize the franchise without the word "Terminator". Such title ambiguity did not hurt Smallville, but I digress.

TV Squad already did a script review of the pilot, but what follows is a review of the finished product.

Major spoilers after the jump...

The show begins in 1999 between the second and third movies. Sarah Connor (played by Brit actress Lena Heady) is on the run with her son John (played by Thomas Decker). They have to be very careful about not revealing their true identities to anyone or anything because if they leave any sort of clue as to their location in history, Sky net will send back Terminators from the future to kill them. This exact same premise has been used in the Terminator comic books.

Sarah is trying to live a quiet life in order to keep her son John safe so he can eventually save the world while avoiding their heavy, metal stalkers from the future. Sadly, they're not careful enough and the bad Terminators find them. But, as we learned in T2, not all Terminators are bad. A good Terminator (played by Serenity's Summer Glau) finds and protects them. She even finds them by pretending to be a student at John's school, thus achieving a level of subtlety and humanity that Arnold's Terminator could never hope to achieve. Hell, Arnold's character was never even given a name beyond "Terminator" or "T-101". Summer's Terminator is named Cameron (get the reference?). She's quite the combination of grace and ass-kicking.

Near the end of the first episode, our intrepid crew of heroes (Sarah, John and Cameron) time travel forward to 2007 thanks to some equipment left to them in a bank vault by resistance fighters of the future. The reason for this is to attempt to destroy Sky net, which was supposedly destroyed in T2. Of course, the Connors travel ling forward in time entirely contradicts T3. Truthfully, since the second movie the franchise has been built on chronological inconsistencies, self-contradictions and the idea that history can be changed. This happens with most time-travel shows. If such things bother you then this series is probably not your bag.

The second episode deals with the Terminator from 1999 recovering from supposed destruction and continuing pursuit in 2007. To get new identities, Sarah has to deal with some shady characters from her past while John goes out to a mall, defying his mother's orders to stay in the house. Cameron joins Sarah and learns about humanity as she goes.

The show is built around two science-fiction cliche's. The first is time-travel. The second is the robot (or alien or outsider-type) that is trying to become human. Both are more attempts to teach us about ourselves than true science. Both were used in T2 and afterwards.

The special effects of the show seem decent, but they're not up to its motion-picture predecessors. That would make sense considering the bigger budgets of movies. The show, while having some action scenes, concentrates less on them and more on character development which also makes sense given the serial nature of television. It wouldn't surprise me if Cameron and John fall in love in future episodes. Never would there have been such a union of natural enemies since Buffy and Angel.

The show also leads to the question of canon. The time travel rules are bent and broken a lot in the first two episodes of the show. In the new continuity, I question if the third movie even happened (and that may not be a bad thing).

I do feel the franchise suffers without the hand of James Cameron in it, however he pretty much told the story he wanted to tell in the first two movie and doesn't want or need future involvement. I say let him stay uninvolved. He created two classic Hollywood movies and let him reap the rewards of such.

Despite my somewhat negative commentary, I did enjoy the two episodes. I think the performances by Lena Headey and Summer Glau make the show not just watchable, but good. I would give the show more of a chance with future episodes. While I've read that the first four seasons have been plotted out, I don't see how the show could be sustained for more than one season. I don't think it could be kept interesting for that long. It's a good thing it's on the Fox Network, then; they tend to pull the plug on sci-fi shows after a season, anyway.

Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles premieres on Fox on Sunday, January 13, at 8 PM ET, before settling into its normal timeslot on Monday, January 14, at 9 PM ET.

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RP

I thought it was a really good show. Kept me pretty entertained and going for the whole episode. Not a whole lot of edge-of-your-seat drama yet, but certainly one of the best shows out there. Prison break beats it in clenching drama but Terminator is a lot more grabbing than season 2 Heroes.

January 14 2008 at 6:39 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
olddudemo

I had the pleasure of attending the premiere the other night and I must say that Fox did a very good with the first episode. The only question that I have is; will the series transcend from movies to TV?

Check out some photos form the Premiere here; http://www.soireeseries.com/blog/2008/01/10/terminator-the-sarah-connor-chronicles-premiere/

January 12 2008 at 1:34 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
steve

im glad to see the series come out like this, lets pretend T3 never happened! the movie was just a collection of action scenes tied together with a loose plot and arnold brought NOTHING to the movie but a name his acting is horrible and even his image was bad he's too damn old and weird looking especially with his shirt off!
The reviewer mentions that they dont have enough action scenes and focus more on character development, THATS WHAT I WANT!! it happens less in TV then movies but im sick of media treating the audience like were stupid! Dont dumb down plots make them more intricate, a show is better (like the Wire) when it takes watching the show 2-3 times to really understand everything that was said and that took place.

January 11 2008 at 8:24 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Michael

As this show is brought to us by the "fine" people in charge at FOX, I have only one question - are they planning on running the episodes in the correct viewing order this time?

December 28 2007 at 4:48 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Jeff N.

Only 9 of the 13 episodes have been completed. Bummer. So I doubt we will see an ending. I keep hearing the Writer's strike will last till the end of march or April. There won't be any scripted shows left to watch by then.

December 28 2007 at 1:45 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
nattyff

i saw the pilot, and it's good, i liked the movies, but im not a diehard fan of the franchise, so for the people like me it's a fine show.

December 27 2007 at 6:53 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Oreo

I thought it was confirmed for awhile that the show's first (and only?) season was already taped. TV Guide is one site I know said that they finished the first season.

December 27 2007 at 5:04 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to Oreo's comment
Matt

Josh Friedman in his blog mentions the pilot and 8 episodes having been shot: http://hucksblog.blogspot.com/2007/11/ext-studio-all-day.html

Summer Glau says in this interview that production has stopped, no numbers are mentioned but it appears that the full order of 13 was not completed. ( 3rd paragraph): http://tv.ign.com/articles/840/840597p1.html

The Futon Critc has TSCC listed as having 9 episodes completed: http://www.thefutoncritic.com/showatch.aspx?id=sarah_connor_chronicles&view=listings

December 27 2007 at 6:42 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
theConundrumm

heh... tvguide as a reliable source of info.... thanks for the giggle...

December 29 2007 at 12:57 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Matt

According to other sites only 9 episodes were completed before production shut down because of the Writers Strike.

Has FOX officially confirmed how many episodes were finished?

December 27 2007 at 4:47 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
CaptainAmericaHatesHippies

I saw the pilot, not expecting much, and was pleased. I can't say if the show is good, or I just enjoyed it more because my expectations were low.

Too bad it's on FOX and I've been burned too many times by them regarding genre shows as of late. I'll d/l it and, unlike malren, I don't think I'll bother to buy the DVD (Yes, DVD. Singular. Because 13 episodes is all this show will get and all of those may not even air, regardless of the strike or not. This is FOX we're talking about.).

December 27 2007 at 4:10 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Oreo

Because the 45 minute long plot is 1,000 times better than T3. The show makes T3 look like trash and I'm a T3 fan.

December 27 2007 at 3:23 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply

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