Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines (2003)
Warner Bros.· USA· 109 min· English
Dirigida por Jonathan MostowMúsica de Marco Beltrami
Sinopsis
John Connor, now 25 and off the grid, has spent a decade waiting for a Judgment Day that never seems to come. When a new, shape-shifting Terminatrix — the T-X — is sent back to finish what the T-1000 couldn't, an aging T-850 arrives to protect him and Kate Brewster, the woman fate has chosen to stand beside him when the missiles finally fly.
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Reseña
Following Judgment Day was an impossible assignment, and Rise of the Machines wisely doesn't try to out-spectacle Cameron — it goes smaller, meaner and funnier instead. Jonathan Mostow, a thriller journeyman rather than a visionary, treats the film as a long, brutal chase punctuated by practical car stunts (a crane truck rampage down Ventura Boulevard remains one of the last great pre-digital vehicular set pieces) and lets Schwarzenegger, now playing an older, glitchier protector model, get genuinely funny with the role for the first time.
Kristanna Loken's T-X is the film's best new idea: a Terminator built explicitly to hunt other Terminators, with a built-in plasma cannon and the ability to hack machinery on sight. She's colder and more mission-focused than the T-1000, and her fights with the aging T-850 have a real sense of one obsolete model getting outclassed by the next generation — a nice bit of hardware-as-theme thinking the script doesn't oversell.
What actually earns the film its place in the saga is the ending. Every prior film promised that Judgment Day could be stopped; this one lets it happen anyway, revealing that Skynet was never a single server to unplug but a distributed military operating system already running on every computer on Earth. It's a bleaker, more honest note than the franchise had dared strike before — the machines don't rise because a villain flips a switch, they rise because humanity built its own extinction into the infrastructure and couldn't see it.
Curiosidades y Datos
A real crane truck, really crashing
The mobile crane rampage down Ventura Boulevard used a genuine 40-ton industrial crane truck driven through practical sets and real parked cars — one of the last major pre-CGI vehicular stunts of its scale in the franchise.
The franchise's first female Terminator
Kristanna Loken trained for months in mixed martial arts and firearms handling to play the T-X, and reportedly did the vast majority of her own physical stunt work in the role.
An ending the studio didn't want
Warner Bros. and producers pushed for a happier finale where Judgment Day is averted again. Director Jonathan Mostow fought to keep the bleaker ending — Skynet activates anyway — arguing the saga needed real consequences after two films of narrowly-avoided apocalypse.
Skynet goes distributed
This is the film that redefines Skynet from a single mainframe into a distributed operating system running across military and civilian networks simultaneously — an idea later franchise entries would keep, and one that anticipated real debates about the risks of networked autonomous systems.
Skynet's reveal as a distributed operating system already embedded across military and civilian networks — rather than a single mainframe — is the film's smartest science-fiction idea and holds up better than the original's "central computer" premise; real militaries have since moved toward exactly this kind of networked, redundant command architecture. The T-X's ability to wirelessly hack other machines is a stretch for 2003-era technology but reads as far more plausible now, in an age of remotely exploitable IoT devices. The shape-shifting liquid-metal-over-endoskeleton hybrid remains, as ever, pure metallurgical fantasy.
🎵 Banda Sonora
Música de Marco Beltrami
Marco Beltrami folds Brad Fiedel's original clanking motif into a full orchestral apocalypse, at its best in the bleak, brass-heavy cues that score the Skynet activation — the first time the series' music sounds genuinely mournful rather than just propulsive.
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Reparto y Equipo
Director
Composer
Cast
- Arnold Schwarzenegger as T-850
- Nick Stahl as John Connor
- Claire Danes as Kate Brewster
- Kristanna Loken as T-X
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