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LOOK WHO’S BACK

From Hollywood to politics, Schwarzene­gger gets real

- ROBBIE COLLIN London Daily Telegraph

“I’m afraid Mr Schwarzene­gger got stuck,” an aide tells me, and I find myself wondering: in what? Images spring to mind of the towering Hollywood icon and former governor of California striding through this dainty Knightsbri­dge hotel and getting lodged in a door frame, or having to be cut free with a circular saw from a cab outside. But, in fact, he has just been detained by a prior engagement: a video shoot in which he was filmed eating traditiona­l Austrian and American snacks and desserts, before choosing his favourites.

“They totally screwed up my diet!” he chuckles, striding into the room. “Kipferl cookies, Oreos, Twinkies, Sachertort­e.” Schwarzene­gger is 72 and has been “99 per cent vegan” for the last three years, though he still looks as if he subsists on a diet of molten steel and cinder blocks.

A household name since the mid-’80s, he has a life story that remains astonishin­g today: the boy born into postwar Austrian poverty who flexed and wisecracke­d his way to the summits of American celebrity and public life.

Perhaps thanks in part to those eight years as the Governator, his presence is very different from the usual movie star show business aura.

Everything about him suggests things are about to get done, and properly: you can feel the very atmosphere in the room sit up and straighten its tie when he arrives.

He has come to London on the global press tour for the latest Terminator film, subtitled Dark Fate, which sees him return as the deadly T-800 cyborg assassin, the role that made him a star. Dark Fate finds him living in a log cabin in the Texas wilderness, with Old Glory billowing over the porch, then summons him back for one last rodeo — with 63-year-old Linda Hamilton, no less, who returns for the first time since 1991 as Sarah

Connor, the T-800s former ally — and, before that, target.

Hamilton was absent for the franchise’s recent flounderin­gs. But her role in Dark Fate, its sixth instalment, signals its welcome return to first principles. Like the first two, it is a science-fiction chase thriller, in which a revolution­ary uprising may or may not be pre-emptively quashed by a homicidal robot skeleton from the future.

For Schwarzene­gger, the enduring appeal of the original Terminator films is something also central to Dark Fate: the paradoxica­l nature of time travel itself.

“You have to really think how it all fits together,” he explains. “Like in the new film, when Linda says, ‘The future never happened’ — that means there was a future from which they sent the Terminator­s back to the present, but because of what happened in the present it actually never existed. Heavy s--t, right?”

It was James Cameron, the director of the first two Terminator films and a producer on Dark Fate, who convinced Schwarzene­gger to return. Because Terminator­s age like humans — the T-800s terrifying chrome frame is covered with living tissue — no digital de-aging was required. Quite the opposite, in fact.

“I went to the set with my hair coloured and they started painting the grey back in,” he laments. A new Terminator film might not be the first place you’d think to look for topical commentary, but one of Dark Fate’s boldest and most surprising sequences takes place on the U.s.-mexico border. It involves the heroes breaking out of a detainment centre: cages are flung open, patrol officers thwarted, imprisoned migrants freed.

For Schwarzene­gger, this is a classic Cameron touch. “Jim writes deep,” he says, likening it to his decision to cast Hamilton as an action heroine in 1991, “when no one else in Hollywood would have dared take that risk. He writes the world as he sees it.”

Does he think the scene might prove commercial­ly risky in the United States, where border security has become a major point of contention? “It’s reality,” he shrugs. “Some films hide those kind of realities, but Jim says, ‘Let’s put it out there.’ He doesn’t f--- around.” Nor, when it comes to politics, does Schwarzene­gger.

The actor sounds practised at trotting out his record as governor — environmen­tal and energy reforms, improved infrastruc­ture, the push toward bipartisan co-operation — and recently described himself as “kinda the first populist that was elected.”

His collaborat­ive style in office is at odds with the “pick a side” politics of the moment. “Post-partisansh­ip” is even one of the pet causes of his new academic thinktank, the Schwarzene­gger Institute for State and Global Policy.

The U.S. Constituti­on holds that only natural-born citizens can become president, so failing an amendment, his time on the political front line is likely over. He still considers himself a Republican, but says the party under President Donald Trump “has veered off in another direction.”

“Trump is in there creating an extra trillion-dollar deficit and the Democrats are the ones screaming, ‘Wait a minute, you’re spending too much money.’”

He hopes for a realignmen­t “when the craziness is over,” though he remains to be convinced that will come about as a result of impeachmen­t. “It all depends on what they find out — what the realities are as opposed to the hype on television,” he says. “I just hope for America’s sake that we get through this as quickly as possible and find a way to bring the two sides back together. Because right now we are at a dangerous standstill.”

 ?? TOLGA AKMEN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Arnold Schwarzene­gger reprises his iconic role as a deadly T-800 in Terminator: Dark Fate. The cyborg assassin has aged alongside the 72-year-old actor, but both are ready for the fight.
TOLGA AKMEN/GETTY IMAGES Arnold Schwarzene­gger reprises his iconic role as a deadly T-800 in Terminator: Dark Fate. The cyborg assassin has aged alongside the 72-year-old actor, but both are ready for the fight.

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