this post was submitted on 30 Aug 2024
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I watched it because somewhere said it was 'Adult Animation', and I liked Blue Eye Samurai a lot. It's certainly violent (the red band trailer really sells that aspect), but felt a bit childish in other areas and it's not as accomplished as BES.
The episodes are often only about 20 minutes, so I found it very binge-able. I liked that it introduced some new ideas into the Terminator franchise, and mixed things up by setting it in Japan, but was disappointed to see how much the finale set up for Season 2 (which may be never come, considering it's on Netflix).
terminator zero story spoiler
Terminator 1 worked because it was a horror/thriller movie about a relentless robot chasing people; Terminator 2 worked because of its cutting edge special effects (it looked like that in 1991! insane!) and exciting action scenes. Terminator 3 and beyond started to focus so heavily on the time travel and paradoxes but that was never the funnest or most interesting part of the franchise. Sarah Connor Chronicles (the short-lived Fox TV series from the late 2000s) also had a similar focus on time travel, but I give it a pass because Lena Headey AND Shirley Manson were in it lol.
Terminator Zero, at about the midway part of the season, reveals that its main plot is about turning all of the different timelines of all the movies into canon. Actually now that I write that, it sounds cool, and it probably sounded cool on paper to Mattson Tomlin (the writer), but I think in execution it was lacking.