A terminator (Gabriel Luna) is sent after auto worker Dani Ramos (NataliaReyes) and her family — but enhanced human fighter Grace (Mackenzie Davis) arrives just in time to rescue her, followed swiftly by Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton). The pair must keep Dani alive to save the future.

By Helen O'Hara | Posted 22 Oct 2019

The Terminator is an action classic and T2 one of the greatest sequels of all time, but none of the films that followed came even close to matching them. Until, perhaps, now. Dark Fate feels like a real Terminator movie at last, from the breakneck, deeply terrifying chase that opens it to its moving finale. This was never just Arnold Schwarzenegger’s series; it’s Linda Hamilton that’s the key ingredient.

Helpfully, this film takes true narrative risks. Mackenzie Davis’ augmented human fighter Grace comes from the future but it is not the one of John Connor and Kyle Reese. So _T2_’s happy ending stands, sort of, but Judgment Day still looms, and time travellers still try to change the past. Grace has come to protect Dani (Natalia Reyes), a fierce factory worker who faces losing her job, along with her brother Miguel (Diego Boneta), to automation (robots, eh? The worst). They’re joined by Sarah Connor (Hamilton), recognisably still the tough-as-nails fighter of _T2_ and a veteran of many past Terminator battles.

For the first time in a long time, we can look to the future of Terminator with hope.

Their foe is a ‘Rev-9’ model, a sort of 2-for-1 Terminator with the metal skeleton of the original and the oozing liquid menace of the T-1000. Unlike similar previous incarnations, however, he’s capable of functioning in both forms at once. His opening assault is astonishingly tense, brilliantly communicating the impossibility of escaping these creatures. There are callbacks, both subtle and very much not, to the earlier films through the film’s thrilling chases, and even the structure of the (impressive) action faintly echoes _T2_. But these are amped up to include C-5 cargo planes and a pleasingly destructive visit to one of the US’ border detention camps, and augmented by VFX that are generally so impressive that you can forgive a few poor moments.

Grace, Dani and Sarah share a level of physical and mental toughness but are all damaged: emotionally scarred by their contact with the future and desperate for an escape that may not exist. That desperation makes this closer in tone to The Terminator than _T2_ for most of its running time; there’s no room for Edward Furlong-style kidding around. At least, that is, until Arnold Schwarzenegger’s T-800 ‘Carl’ shows up. “I’m very funny,” he claims, which is hilarious in itself.

As familiar lines are spun in new ways and we build to a heavy metal clash of a finale, this occasionally leans too heavily on the homage but mostly, remarkably, feels like a worthy descendant rather than a cheap cash-in. Sarah must challenge her presumptions, Grace must learn a sort of peace after a lifetime of war, and Dani finds a faith that will serve her well in the years to come. For the first time in a long time, we can look to the future of Terminator with hope.

Easily the third-best Terminator film, which is more of a compliment than it sounds. It’s great to have Hamilton back in this role, but she’s ably matched by Reyes and Davis.