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Christian Bale’s Original Terminator 4 Role Was WAY Better

It is understandable that Bale wanted to take on the part of John Connor instead. Alongside his mother Sarah and the T-800 itself, John Connor is one of the Terminator franchise’s best-known characters. However, the original script for Terminator: Salvation only obliquely referenced John, making the human resistance leader into a Colonel Kurtz-esque figure barely glimpsed before the end of Marcus Wright’s long, twisty quest. Revising Terminator: Salvation’s original script led the movie’s creators to beef up John’s role for Bale, stripping him of this intriguing ambiguity and making him the movie’s co-lead alongside Worthington’s Marcus.

This setup was the worst of both worlds for the sequel. Terminator: Salvation’s John Connor didn’t have enough screen time to become an engaging character on his own merits, despite Bale’s best efforts. Meanwhile, Worthington’s take on Terminator: Salvation didn’t blur the lines between man and machine in a way that Bale proved he was qualified to earlier in his career, making the finale’s twist feel out of place and pointless. Even though Marcus not knowing he was an android should have huge implications for earlier Terminator movies, this didn’t stop the revelation from falling flat since viewers had little reason to see Marcus as the movie’s hero. Instead, Marcus was just one of two leads in Terminator: Salvation, something that would have been solved if Christian Bale took the Terminator part he was offered instead of opting to play John Connor.


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Christian Bale’s Original Terminator 4 Role Was WAY Better

It is understandable that Bale wanted to take on the part of John Connor instead. Alongside his mother Sarah and the T-800 itself, John Connor is one of the Terminator franchise’s best-known characters. However, the original script for Terminator: Salvation only obliquely referenced John, making the human resistance leader into a Colonel Kurtz-esque figure barely glimpsed before the end of Marcus Wright’s long, twisty quest. Revising Terminator: Salvation’s original script led the movie’s creators to beef up John’s role for Bale, stripping him of this intriguing ambiguity and making him the movie’s co-lead alongside Worthington’s Marcus.

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This setup was the worst of both worlds for the sequel. Terminator: Salvation’s John Connor didn’t have enough screen time to become an engaging character on his own merits, despite Bale’s best efforts. Meanwhile, Worthington’s take on Terminator: Salvation didn’t blur the lines between man and machine in a way that Bale proved he was qualified to earlier in his career, making the finale’s twist feel out of place and pointless. Even though Marcus not knowing he was an android should have huge implications for earlier Terminator movies, this didn’t stop the revelation from falling flat since viewers had little reason to see Marcus as the movie’s hero. Instead, Marcus was just one of two leads in Terminator: Salvation, something that would have been solved if Christian Bale took the Terminator part he was offered instead of opting to play John Connor.

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#Christian #Bales #Original #Terminator #Role

Christian Bale’s Original Terminator 4 Role Was WAY Better

It is understandable that Bale wanted to take on the part of John Connor instead. Alongside his mother Sarah and the T-800 itself, John Connor is one of the Terminator franchise’s best-known characters. However, the original script for Terminator: Salvation only obliquely referenced John, making the human resistance leader into a Colonel Kurtz-esque figure barely glimpsed before the end of Marcus Wright’s long, twisty quest. Revising Terminator: Salvation’s original script led the movie’s creators to beef up John’s role for Bale, stripping him of this intriguing ambiguity and making him the movie’s co-lead alongside Worthington’s Marcus.

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr3’); });

This setup was the worst of both worlds for the sequel. Terminator: Salvation’s John Connor didn’t have enough screen time to become an engaging character on his own merits, despite Bale’s best efforts. Meanwhile, Worthington’s take on Terminator: Salvation didn’t blur the lines between man and machine in a way that Bale proved he was qualified to earlier in his career, making the finale’s twist feel out of place and pointless. Even though Marcus not knowing he was an android should have huge implications for earlier Terminator movies, this didn’t stop the revelation from falling flat since viewers had little reason to see Marcus as the movie’s hero. Instead, Marcus was just one of two leads in Terminator: Salvation, something that would have been solved if Christian Bale took the Terminator part he was offered instead of opting to play John Connor.

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1535570269372-ccr4’); });

googletag.cmd.push(function() { googletag.display(‘div-gpt-ad-1550597677810-bta’); });

#Christian #Bales #Original #Terminator #Role


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