The movie really stars hot young "Game of Thrones" actress Emilia Clarke, who follows in the footsteps of all-time female badass Linda Hamilton in taking on the role of Sarah Connor. Hamilton played her with a toughness and grit that called to mind a female Rocky Balboa.
Clarke, on the other hand, may be a 29-year-old actress, but she seems so young and high-strung that she comes off like she's starring in a sequel to "Juno" rather than saving the planet from rampaging killer robots. As the adult John Connor, supervising events from 2029 Los Angeles, Jason Clarke's odd looks and nasty facial scar undermine the badass nature that his character needs to have because he looks like Randy Quaid.
And Jai Courtney as Kyle Reese – Connor's right-hand man, who goes back in time to save Sarah Connor and impregnate her with John – is just a plain, generic, good-looking action hero. As Bruce Willis' son in the last awful "Die Hard" movie, he nearly drove a nail into the coffin of that franchise, and he may just do the same with the "Terminator" films.
This latest entry in the series is the second, after "Salvation," to be rated PG-13. While normally I'm happier to spotlight a G, PG or PG-13 film rather than an R since I'm a Catholic critic partially concerned with the moral content of films, the first three "Terminator" films were dependent on pushing their action violence to inventive and gritty limits.
Toned down enough to be deemed OK for teens by the ratings board, the result makes all of the action sequences feel like the filmmakers pulled their punches and limited their weaponry damage throughout. This not only detracts from the escapist fun of a world-class action series, but just feels bland throughout. At least there is almost no profanity, and we never see Connor and Reese have sex, as their inevitable "mating" (Arnold's word for it in the movie) is thankfully switched into a budding romance that never goes beyond a sweet kiss. Be forewarned, however, that the time-travel machine that's key to the movie requires that anyone who uses it remove their clothes, so there is briefly seen rear male nudity, mostly in shadow, and implied nudity from Sarah Connor - though none of this is in a prurient, sexual context.
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Of course, one can never underestimate the stupidity of the masses, and "Terminator: Genisys" is likely to clean up overseas, where blowing things up real good is more important than having well-motivated characters and a sensible plotline. But here, audiences are as likely to be underwhelmed as the one I saw it with opening night.