{"version": "1.0", "type": "rich", "title": "I was thinking the other day that the '80s had a lot of good time travel movies - the incomparable Back to the Future series...", "author_name": "kontextmaschine", "author_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "provider_name": "kontextmaschine", "provider_url": "https://kontextmaschine.com", "url": "https://kontextmaschine.com/post/65394751266/", "html": "<p>I was thinking the other day that the &lsquo;80s had a lot of good time travel movies - the incomparable Back to the Future series obviously, but also Bill &amp; Ted, Terminator, Flight of the Navigator, even Star Trek 4. And Quantum Leap on TV. But recently we&rsquo;ve had what, Hot Tub Time Machine? Safety Not Guaranteed? (Well, I guess Doctor Who on TV.)<br/><br/>Which got me thinking - for a series premised on time travel, there&rsquo;s not much time travel in the Terminator movies. Like, once each movie gets going, as far as &ldquo;rules&rdquo; of the universe go, &ldquo;dogs bark at Terminators&rdquo; literally has more influence on plot developments than &ldquo;both Skynet and the resistance are capable of traveling back in time&rdquo;.<br/><br/>Really, you&rsquo;d think the resistance could just relocate back to prehistory. Hell, between John&rsquo;s conception and Cyberdyne developing Skynet from T1&rsquo;s T-800, it&rsquo;s established that closed causality cycles work, so that could be the origin of humanity, stuck in an endless recurring loop punctuated by machine-war apocalypse.<br/><br/>So I guess what I&rsquo;m saying is the third Matrix movie might have actually worked as a Terminator film.</p>"}