just wondering if anyone has cried while watching a Terminator movie?
I know there was a similar question before, but this is a bit different.
anyway i was only lucky to Terminator 3 and the cinema as i was too young for T2 and wasn't even born for T1. but when i watched T3 (which i like and think is GREAT!!) at the cinema i remember i hardly moved in my chair, i don't even remember blinking (lol).
i must admit i did cry while watching it though. i the scene when John is talking about Sarah and how she died, and how see tried to survive long enough to make sure Judgment day would never happen. i went all cold and felt a tear crawl down my cheek.
Only time I ever felt like crap was at the end of Terminator 2 when he gets lowerred into the steel.
The combination of the selfless Terminator, the fact he became more human and in a way, had a childlike innocence to him, and that John was bawling his eyes out, knowing his friend was never coming back. I think I saw it when I was seven, I'm sure I was welling up by the time of the "thumbs up" bit.
I did cry a little at the end of T2, when he lowers into to the steel. The end of T3 really made a huge impression on me, every time I see it I feel... a little empty or cold in the inside.
Arnold: I know now why you cry. But it's something I can never do.
[last lines]
Sarah Connor: [narrating] The unknown future rolls toward us. I face it, for the first time, with a sense of hope. Because if a machine, a Terminator, can learn the value of human life, maybe we can too.
I remember crying when Arnie said "I'm sorry, John, but I have to go." (or something like that) and was lowered into the molten steel... I think i was 7 or 8 at the time. 1st time I watched T2.... Such a touching ending/scene.... :'(
__________________ [SPOILER - highlight to read]: All your Rick Roll are belong to me!!
The terminator in T2 was such a loveable character. He emulated the perfection of virtues that humanity strives to acheive, yet he isn't human. He was beatufiful.
He very much embodied the perfect father figure that John Connor had needed his entire life (even as an adult). Thus when it came down to the moment when Sarah, John, and the audience had to say their final goodbye it became a highly (the most) touching and moving scene in the film.