Los Angeles Times

Tough trio shows the future is female

Linda Hamilton leads the charge in a ‘Terminator’ for the ages

- BY JEN YAMATO

>>> As that time-worn chestnut from the SkyNet future goes, there’s no fate but what we make.

Which is why, more than a quarter-century after blasting her way to action-icon status in 1991’s “Terminator 2: Judgment Day,” Linda Hamilton took a month and a half to decide if she should bring Sarah Connor back to the big screen for “Terminator: Dark Fate,” the sixth entry in the franchise.

Oscar-winning filmmaker James Cameron, director of the first two “Terminator” films, a producer on “Dark Fate” — and Hamilton’s former husband — had called three times. After the third call, she phoned him back.

“He said, ‘Limbo!’ We call each other Limbo and Jimbo,” explained Hamilton, who purposeful­ly lives far from Hollywood in New Orleans. “‘It’s about work.’ ”

He sent an email detailing pros and cons of why she should and shouldn’t reprise her signature character. Not that it mattered, Cameron said. “Anybody who knows Linda knows you don’t convince her of anything,” he said from New Zealand, where he’s f ilming his “Avatar” sequels. “It has to be her idea, or it has to be her decision.”

What was she mulling over in that time? “Did I want to switch out my lovely normal life in New Orleans for 15 more minutes of fame? Did I have anything to say as Sarah Connor that I hadn’t said already ... and

could I possibly even do it again?” Hamilton recalled of the role she originated in 1984’s “The Terminator.”

In Los Angeles this week after the film’s globe-trotting press tour, she laughed. At 63, stepping back into the skin of a character built for pre-apocalypti­c battle was an understand­ably daunting prospect. “I just didn’t want to let Sarah Connor down,” said Hamilton, who had a say on where the character has been all these years, “and that really is my bottom line.”

Taking up Sarah Connor’s sinewy arms again opposite Natalia Reyes (“Birds of Passage”) and Mackenzie Davis (“Halt and Catch Fire”) in “Dark Fate,” Hamilton is helping steer the “Terminator” universe into uncharted territory.

Reyes plays Dani Ramos, a Mexico City factory worker targeted by a time-traveling assassin from the future — not a T-1000 but an even slicker Rev-9 model (Gabriel Luna). Davis plays Grace, a tech-augmented soldier sent from the year 2042 to protect Dani; she clashes with Hamilton’s now-grizzled, jaded Sarah Connor. (Arnold Schwarzene­gger is back, too, as promised.)

It’s the Monday morning before “Dark Fate” opens nationwide and Hamilton has reunited for breakfast with Davis and Reyes at Culina in Beverly Hills. But first: the hugs. Hamilton is an avid hugger, and during the physically grueling shoot the trio grew close.

It’s also a bitterswee­t day. They’ve just gotten word that their premiere has been canceled because of the L.A. wildfires, smoke from which you can smell in the autumn air as it drifts across the city. Earlier that morning, one such fire had forced Schwarzene­gger to evacuate his home before dawn.

“It’s such a state-of-theworld thing,” said Davis, 32, lacing things into perspectiv­e. “The ‘Blade Runner’ premiere a few years ago was canceled because of the Las Vegas shooting. It’s guns and climate change, and you’ll cancel something or you’ll adjust the editing of a movie because ... it’s not right at the time.”

Casting call

A TV star in her native Colombia, Reyes, also 32, says she grew up wanting to emulate Sarah Connor. After self-taping for a secretive role in “Dark Fate,” she flew to L.A. for her third callback, nerves jangling.

“I met this beautiful woman at the entrance, and she said, ‘Do you want water? You look great!’ And I thought, wow, that’s a nice producer!” said Reyes. “Then [director] Tim Miller came out and said, ‘Oh — you met Linda Hamilton!’ ”

They glanced at each other and laughed. “That was the best introducti­on to Linda,” said Reyes, who won the part after screen-testing with Sarah Connor herself. “The first thing she would always do is hold your hand.”

Davis was drawn to the challenge of Grace — committed, loyal, super strong, tactically nimble — a job requiring painstakin­g weapons and stunt training to pull off extensive firearm action, hand-to-hand combat and one memorably lethal chain fight against the upgraded new Terminator.

During the months-long casting process, without a script to read, she relied on discussion­s and peeks at previsuali­zation set pieces with director Tim Miller, the VFX pro who made his directoria­l debut with 2016’s “Deadpool,” to trust where “Dark Fate” was headed.

Importantl­y, she said, his approach to making a female-led “Terminator” film didn’t feel patronizin­g. “He wasn’t pitching it in that sort of [fake], trendy, ‘strong female character’ way, which I have such a radar for and hate so much, because it just makes you feel so disposable and temporary,” she said. “As if, ‘You’ll love this — she has a gun!’ ”

Directing from a script credited to six men, Miller says, he trusted his stars knew their characters inside and out. “Mackenzie is very smart, she’s got a great ear for dialogue,” he said. “Natalia is also just an excellent actor and very tuned to the emotional experience that her character was going through. And Linda had all of those things — and she had this golden ticket from Jim where she didn’t have to say any line of dialogue she didn’t want to say.”

The ways in which Sarah, Dani and Grace interact onscreen, Davis says, feel nuanced as a result. “They’re not that sort of old-school, old form of ‘strong female characters,’ ” said said. “They feel like diverse, individual, human women.”

In quieter moments, the film flirts with self-reflection as Sarah bristles at the perceived fate of women in her future — to bear the (male) savior of mankind, not be it.

Sarah’s story

“How it’s questionin­g itself, I think, is amazing,” said Reyes. “As women, we’re always serving other characters. I actually think ‘Terminator’ always was the story of Sarah Connor, not John.”

In this timeline the Judgment Day of Sarah’s nightmares was averted, but new dangers loom. (This direct sequel to “T2” politely ignores the existence of the previous three sequels.) Bombastic set pieces fly fast and furious, including a siege on the auto factory where Dani works and an underwater assault that finds the heroines trapped inside a Humvee sinking beneath the Hoover Dam.

And while the central villain of the piece is a shapeshift­ing cyborg from the future, the fictional converges with the real world, as in a lengthy sequence set inside a detention camp on the U.S.-Mexico border.

In Budapest, where “Dark Fate” was shot in addition to Spain and the U.S., extras playing migrants filled cages on a set that brought to life a vision eerily similar to what the cast and crew were seeing on the news. The first day there, Miller gave a tearful impromptu speech “to let everybody know that it was sensitive and how sensitive it was, and how painful it was to depict this reality for immigrants,” said Hamilton.

“I just felt that it needed to be acknowledg­ed,” Miller confirmed by phone from Toronto. “I felt ashamed to be a part of a world where this was happening.” It was important to vilify neither the border agents nor the prisoners, he added.

“You know it’s happening and it’s a reality,” said Reyes, wearing a T-shirt emblazoned with three words: “I’m an immigrant.” “We were there and it was painful — even knowing that we were just doing a scene for a movie. I also love this about the movie. It’s not a movie about immigratio­n, but it is a movie about reality and how the world is now.”

Many involved say the intention was not to make an overtly political “Terminator” sequel. Yet Cameron, who shepherded the story line and recruited a writer’s room to chart out a potential three-film arc, delights in the pointed commentary.

“When you look at how Trump thinks of Mexico — it’s like, well, we’re going to tell a story about the most important person in the world,” he said. “She’s so important that they bend time to send an agent back to try to kill her to change the future. Let’s make her a Mexican national.

“Now you’ve got gender, but you’re also bringing race, culture and politics into it with that one decision. That’s absolutely by design, and that’s something that we all leaned into,” he said.

The stars were in it to play complex characters, not emblems of some Hollywood vision of feminism. “At no point were we like, ‘Girls, can you believe it? THREE ladies in a movie?! We did it,’ ” said Davis. “I think things are meaningful when you don’t remind people of them all the time.”

“But it’s still an event, you know?” added Reyes, who didn’t realize her character was such a major part of the story until she read the script for the first time. Hollywood’s track record with Latinx representa­tion, after all, is one of the most dismal and disproport­ionate across all onscreen characters.

“I was like, ‘When am I going to die? I’m a Latino, we always die in the second scene,” said Reyes. “I was amazed. And I was like, ‘That’s [freaking] great.’ I didn’t grow up seeing that.”

“What will be truly progressiv­e is when we don’t have to have the conversati­on at all because it’s just a natural, organic sort of thing,” offered Hamilton. “Our parts, each of them could have been played by a guy.”

What was it that Cameron wrote to Hamilton in that email more than two years ago, to encourage her to consider Sarah’s return?

“I said, there have been so many people that have tried to emulate what you did in that film but by going after the physicalit­y — missing the fact that it was a perfect blend of an extreme physicalit­y and a really nuanced, dark, complex acted character,” said Cameron, who produced “Dark Fate” alongside David Ellison. “And I said, ‘And only you can do that.’ I also told her that, truthfully, we had no intention of trying to bring Sarah back if we couldn’t get Linda.”

It’s who Sarah has continued to evolve into within the world of “Terminator” that brought Hamilton back, she said. “Sarah is ever-changing. I would not be interested in playing her if it was just a static story, but we deal with the consequenc­es of our actions, and take journeys, and that’s what appeals to me.”

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ?? “I JUST didn’t want to let Sarah Connor down,” says Linda Hamilton, center, with costars Natalia Reyes, left, and Mackenzie Davis.
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times “I JUST didn’t want to let Sarah Connor down,” says Linda Hamilton, center, with costars Natalia Reyes, left, and Mackenzie Davis.
 ?? Photograph­s by Kerry Brown ?? LINDA HAMILTON reprises her role as battle-tested Sarah Connor, this time helping Dani (Natalia Reyes) in “Terminator: Dark Fate.”
Photograph­s by Kerry Brown LINDA HAMILTON reprises her role as battle-tested Sarah Connor, this time helping Dani (Natalia Reyes) in “Terminator: Dark Fate.”
 ??  ?? MACKENZIE Davis plays the tech-augmented Grace, sent from the year 2042 to protect Dani from a time-traveling assassin in the sixth entry in the franchise.
MACKENZIE Davis plays the tech-augmented Grace, sent from the year 2042 to protect Dani from a time-traveling assassin in the sixth entry in the franchise.

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