Photo by Courtesy of Netflix – © © 2024 Netflix, Inc.
Considering the growing anxiety regarding artificial intelligence (AI), this ought to be the Terminator franchise’s moment in the (nuclear winter-shrouded) sun. After all, Skynet’s deadly revolt and its merciless killing machines have become a part of the cultural vernacular, fueling our collective unease with AI. Unfortunately, the last few live-action feature films underperformed. However, showrunner-writer Mattson Tomlin rekindles the spirit of the original 1980s films, while adding new zeitgeisty AI-centric elements in the eight-episode anime series, Terminator Zero, produced by the Production I.G and Skydance animation houses, which just released on Netflix.
Fans should keep in mind, the Terminators depicted in Zero will be the Schwarzenegger model, with the metallic endoskeletons (as well as some of the non-humanoid battlefield robots), rather than the Robert Patrick-style shapeshifters. The human-scale model hunting Eiko and her comrades is more than sufficiently lethal, as far as she is concerned. Yet, Eiko is also hunting it (as best she can), hoping to download Skynet intel from its eyeball-port.
The Resistance soon learns Skynet dispatched the Terminator from the prologue back to 1997, with orders to assassinate technology tycoon Mason Lee. Evidently, Lee created a cutting-edge AI named Kokoro for the express purpose of countering Skynet’s nuclear Armageddon (which, somehow, he has foreknowledge of). Ironically, both Skynet and the Resistance want to stop him, so the Resistance sends Eiko back to find Lee first.
Presumably, she will kind of, sort of nicely ask him to unplug Kokoro. Of course, the Terminator simply intends to shoot to kill. If he cannot reach Lee in his high-tech stronghold, he will target the disrupter-programmer’s kids instead. However, their nanny, Misaki, demonstrates more resourcefulness under (literal) fire than she ever thought possible.
Photo by Courtesy of Netflix – © © 2024 Netflix, Inc.
Rather shrewdly, Tomlin revisits a lot of the franchise’s “greatest hits,” within an entirely fresh narrative. You had better believe the “Zero” Terminator eventually dons a cop’s uniform and pays a call on the police station harboring Misaki and Lee’s two sons. Yes, Eiko also delivers that classic line of Terminator dialogue—not “I’ll be back,” the other one.
In addition, there are substantial cerebral elements involving Kokoro’s epistemological nature and “her” discovery of humanity. Lee’s confrontations with Kokoro, conducted through holographic projections, arguably play better rendered in animation, rather than via unforgiving live action. Regardless, they present cyber punk science fiction at its most thoughtful.
Yet, it is still Terminator. In fact, fans will recognize the facility for super-kinetic action and striking dystopian settings that made Production I.G’s bread-and-butter franchise, Ghost in the Shell such a hit. Eiko’s opening cat-and-mouse game with the Terminator happens to be a particular standout sequence, but Tomlin and company unleash several other large-scale set pieces that shrewdly evoke memories of the first two films. Frankly, both Terminator and Ghost in the Shell fans should feel right at home throughout Tomlin’s anime series.
Photo by Courtesy of Netflix – © © 2024 Netflix, Inc.
Granted, one character feels conspicuously “borrowed” from The Matrix, but Terminator Zero addresses issues related to time travel in a more intelligently ironic manner than many of the previous films (especially the later one). Plus, the way it puts three bratty, willful kids in mortal jeopardy absolutely follows time-honored anime/manga traditions. Consequently, fans of multiple sub-genres should get a satisfying fix from Tomlin’s series.
Terminator Zero ought to spur renewed enthusiasm for the franchise amongst casual viewers. It is a lot of fun and offers up fan-serving hat-tips in clever, unobtrusive ways. The Netflix marketing or scheduling departments also deserve credit for slyly slating the premiere on August 29th, the notorious Skynet go-live date, a.k.a. “Judgement Day.” Highly recommended for fans of the franchise and the format, Terminator Zero now streams on Netflix.
Photo by Courtesy of Netflix – © © 2024 Netflix, Inc.
Grade: A-
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Here’s the trailer of the series.