Nope, RIP 17 cops (including police Lieutenant Edward traxler) West Island police station casualties: 17 police officers: killed (no mercy) 9 to 11 police officers: gravely injured (most likely to the point of hospitalization) The fate of the other 2 to 4 police officers: unknown You put anyone stupid enough especially police officers (regardless of how many in question) between a terminator and yourself, you WILL get dead people especially dead cops every. Single. Time. It's no contest. it's a big fat waste of time, a big fat waste of money, a big fat waste of energy, a bigger fatter waste of innocent lives and to add insult to injury the blood of all of the terminator's victims will ends up on your hands for this dangerous mistake.
that's right, it just came back to me, he got visual recognition to reference when he killed Ginger at their apartment surely there were tons of photos of the two girls plastering the place then Sarah called to give her location not even knowing her friend was already dead. he didn't know, the T800 by at that point yet who was his enemy and what Kyle Reese looked like until Kyle could know for sure who to attack.
@@allclassallthetime4739I must have watched this scene a hundred times and it gives me chills every time he just barely misses her ducking out of the way.
Arnold is the ONLY Terminator! Michael Biehn is the ONLY Kyle Reese Linda Hamilton is the ONLY Sarah Conner Eddie Furlong is the ONLY John Conner The first two films are all we needed and all we’ll ever need. For me the series ends with T2.
I agree. Only in this reality, i would think a highly advanced cyborg with AI would pay just to avoid being sought by hostile forces. Not drawing attention to itself, because it might jeopardize its objective.
@@JD1976 In case of T-800, almost nothing could jeopardize his mission. Also, he was not designed to infiltrate 80's America - he was supposed to infiltrate the Resistance of 2029. There was simply no info on supposed state authorities whatsoever.
+George Bean Correct but it was a Thursday is 1983 which was likely what they were referring to since it was principally filmed in 1983 and RELEASED in 1984.
I have loved this song since I was a kid. Before moving to the US, I was living in Azerbaijan, which is the Ex Soviet Union. I saw this movie in 1989 for the first time. The whole USSR was enjoying Terminator, Aliens, Comando, Rambo Cobra, etc. My first ever American movie I watched were Jaws. I love this movie as well. Now I am listening to all the songs from Terminator, Cobra and Comando very loud in my car. People look at me weirdly.
hey these people look weird at you are from new generation pussy's they don't know about the 80's that's listening and watching the wrong movies and the music, they don't know jack shit i was 5 when i watched Stallone,Schwarzenegger, Van Damme, Lundgren, Snipes, Jackie Chan i loved it, as kid i was 7 teacher was shocked !!!!!!! my teacher said how do you know predator that was 1987 ???? i was like i loved it, everyone watched harry potter i am only person hates harry potter everyone was surprised i hated harry potter until today i love rap music and new generation like expendables, john wick and everything else but not everything. until today i play 80's and watch the 80's action movies my style
"Listen and understand. That terminator is out there. It can't be bargained with, it can't be reasoned with. It doesn't feel pity, or remorse, or fear, and it absolutely will not stop. Ever. Until you are dead." - Kyle Reese
I’ve always loved the way that Traxler just casually acknowledges the Tech Noir when Sarah mentions it. Makes you wonder how many times he’s stopped there, whether on or off duty.
@@joew9690 "All right, listen. The Terminator's an infiltration unit; part man, part machine. Underneath, it's a hyper-alloy combat chassis: microprocessor controlled, fully armored very tough, but outside it's living human tissue. Flesh, skin hair, blood grown for the cyborgs."
@@rickymay4096 the 600 series were rubber skin. We spotted them easily. But these are new; they look human. Sweat, bad breath, every thing. Very hard to spot. I had to wait for him to zero in on you before I could spot him
+ The way the music begins to reverb, it matches the slow motion dancing moves perfectly. But it only does that in the actual movie. Love this scene forever
Michael Biehn ( The real Kyle Reese ) deserves more credit. The scene with this song in it was epic. When Sarah Connor spots him sitting at the bar, with the slow motion scene, And then he uses the pump action shot gun to stop the Terminator. Just Epic!
Cyber Me yea they dont make um like that anymore... to be honest most modern movies suck today... every now and then ull get a good one. Every know and then.
The real Kyle reese is the best way to put it,he really carried the acting and emotional weight in the film.He was a hard soldier on a mission to save the world AND meet his love whom he'd never even met.
Or when he walks into the police department with those big ass Gargoyles sunglasses. "I'm a friend of Sarah conner can I see her please? I'll be back"(when told no)
Rocky Well back then at least society wasn't afraid that if we watched an 18 that we would go on a killing spree or something like it is now lol. I'm glad i got to watch 15s and 18s when i was a kid otherwise my childhood would of sucked.
This scene in the movie is immortal. One of the great moments in cinema history where soundtrack and on-screen were combined perfectly! The burning gallows scene in Tombstone is another great one!
+WhenxChristxReturnsx well there is two things about this desire pros: 80's was awesome cons: u would be over 40 years old now and being old is not good ;)
Fun fact: during production, people thought that the set used for the Tech Noir nightclub was real and they wanted to go inside and even offered to pay the production crew. However, they had to refuse them entry even though they desperately needed the money
Quite possibly my favorite scene in movie history. It's just perfection. The look of The Terminator as he roams through a world is not his own, he almost seems confused/disturbed by it. The look he gives is just awesome as he first enters the club. Then you got the echoed music and the timing of the whole scene, and the brief firefight that ensures between two outsiders from another time. I love how the Terminator instantly reverts to its killer instinct once fired upon. Love it so much.
I know it's been 10 years, but holy shit I've finally found someone who sees it exactly like how I do. Honestly The Terminator has inspired me to write and this particular scene inspired a character
Don't forget how he broke that dude's hand. Money, entry fees and bouncers probably don't exist in the Terminator's time anyways, so give him a break, haha.
This song has haunted me for decades. And yeah, it is cuz of that scene. She just misses getting spotted, she and Kyle lock eyes, the singer’s voice trails off in echo, everyone moving in slow motion. Death and Destiny dancing on a knife’s edge. It’s a perfect scene. And there will only ever be two perfect films for me...
@@disconnected22Arguably the two best sci-fi films ever made: both dealt with the theme explored in the first proper science fiction story - Mary Shelley's Frankenstein - fear of the man-made man. "More human than human" as the man said. 🙄
+wOOdY94100 I completely agree. I almost felt bummed when I listened to this song and.absent was the part where it became echoed when Sarah caught sight of Kyle Reese sitting at the bar watching her and then the signature robotic boooooom..... boooooom.... boooooooom..... music as the terminator closes in on her and she's shrouded in that disco-red glare, the robotic, pounding music increasing in volume and urgency. James Cameron was a master of his craft... sighhhh....
TheFirstFool Good comment. My favourite musical part is just the low booming sound at the gunstore etc. "Boom boom boom boom. BOOM BOOM BOOM BOOM!" >:`! "Sarah Connor?!" KKSHH!
Bravo Lazz But, you know, it's be fitting if they used that song since it is a torture that's mentally and physically awful. And that's the definition of the third degree.
I always wondered what on earth Kyle Reese thought of this brilliant 80's song lol I mean there he is sitting at the bar (all sad and serious and out of time, superb heartbreaking work by Michel Biehn) surrounded by 80's perms and glorious shoulder pad madness. Given that this is probably the first time he's ever heard music too (well...unless you count that scene in the dreadful Terminator Salvation!) he must surely be thinking: "what the fuck is that?" lol I also think it's quite nice and realistic for John Connor's "paradox" parents to actually meet very simply in a nightclub...let's face it most of our parents possibly have. So I think people get a kick nostalgically out of this scene as they can relate to it a bit.
What was so memorable about the first terminator movie was the relentless pace. It never stopped and had your heart pounding. It was a true survival horror and made you think about being chased by an unstoppable force. So i think realistically Kyle is not really thinking about the music. Remember he's at the bar but looking at Sarah in the mirror in front of him. He's waiting until he locks on the terminator. His sole mission is to protect her and he's got seconds to do that. One false move and she's dead. Though the romantic in me likes to think that the lyrics in this songs reflect Kyle being affected by Sarah's presence. He's loved her for years through a fantasy and a picture. Now he's in the same space as her, and they also lock eyes through the mirror as this song is playing BUT Sarah thinks he's a stalker/murderer at this point LOL
"they also lock eyes through the mirror" I've watched this movie 50 times or so and never realized that he looked through a MIRROR. WTF Now the next scene makes sense, that he have to turn around to shoot
Reese was focused on the mission and had his eyes on the prize the whole time. There’s no way techcom would have chosen him for the mission if he was easily distracted. Kyle Reese was a Human T800. Not stopping until his objective was met.
Tech noir...one of the best scenes in movie history period. The tension, the slow fade out of this song to the ominous music that started playing, the acting in that scene by arnold, michael and linda all made that scene epic. I still get goosebumps every time I see that scene. The first 2 terminators were Cameron's masterpieces. (Suck it avatar fans)
My mother used to like to watch this movie and she is about 15 and my mother is forty years old , and l am now of the same age and l loved this movie like what my mother loved it. I think my mother with all my heart until l knew this wonderful song that has no equal .🙏😭😭😭
This song is very good, BUT; when the chorus and synth kick in, it is amazing! I have loved this song since the movie came out.. I jam to this in my car at night :)
I love the choice of this song in the Tech-Noir club in the movie. It's a really catchy song. Given my desire to be a writer, I wrote a script, and I have one particular scene paying obvious homage to this scene where my hero walks into a party-club to find the villain, and this song is being played over in the club, and I imagine the scene paying homage with some slo-mo, etc.
This song is all too fitting for the movie, but out of context it just sounds delightfully cheesy. This movie is oh so 80s it almost hurts. I find it kinda funny how this can be likened to Enter the Dragon (oh so 70s) in that way.
The first film was SOOOO 1980's. One major element of that storyline was finding a working payphone. You also had to pay for a hotel room with cash. Good luck with both this day of age.
I remember going with my parents to the local vhs rental store for the very first time when we got a brand new vhs player in the 80s. The first movies my parents rented were Trading Places, Bachelor Party and Terminator. Boy do I miss those days. Long live the 80s!
@@arthurfelipemuckenheim851 I actually quite liked Genisys. Yes, it was stupid and unnecessary and played very fast & loose with the rules of time-travel, but the Pops Terminator telling Reese to "Take care of my Sarah" genuinely brought a tear to my eye.
This scene, man. Something about the choice of music, the sinister, undaunted approach of the Terminator as everyone keeps dancing, the way Kyle Reese pulls out that shotgun in slow motion, the way the killing machine just slowly gets back to its feet to demonstrate that no amount of bullets will do more than briefly inconvenience it. It's one of the first scenes in any movie that I saw as a kid that defined to me what a truly well-paced action scene is. I've come back to the movie dozens of times, sometimes just to see this one brief part of it again. What better way could the movie have gone about showing the odds that our heroes are up against? This movie and its sequel are both, to my mind, amongst the greatest action films ever produced, but if forced to choose one over the other I would have to side with the former. If you haven't seen the movie before, you might seriously wonder how on Earth the killing machine is going to be stopped by the lead duo, on the run and armed with little more than homemade pipe bombs and whatever else they can scrounge. The second film becomes Terminator versus Terminator, which is a hell of a ride in its own right but doesn't create the same sense of desperation IMO. Hell, I might go watch it again right now.
легендарная эпоха была.лучший фильм и музыка.больше такого не будет. я в 1992 году только родился. в 1999 наверное только узнал о фильме терминатор. и сейчас его хочется смотреть
I’m so glad they referenced this song in the Terminator game that came out last year. A lot of references in that game that’ll get a kick out of true fans of the series
i like the first movie also more than the second one, don´t worry you´re not alone with you´re opinion. i also think the terminator was way more frightening in the first movie.