Dans un futur postapocalyptique, une guerrière remonte le temps jusqu'en 1997 pour protéger un chercheur en IA traqué par un cyborg insensible et indestructible.Dans un futur postapocalyptique, une guerrière remonte le temps jusqu'en 1997 pour protéger un chercheur en IA traqué par un cyborg insensible et indestructible.Dans un futur postapocalyptique, une guerrière remonte le temps jusqu'en 1997 pour protéger un chercheur en IA traqué par un cyborg insensible et indestructible.
- Prix
- 1 nomination au total
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Yes, anime is not for everyone but this series is palatable even for non-anime watchers. The plot runs alongside the OG Terminator timeline and jumps back & forth between 1997 and 2022. There are no shortage of plot twists and unexpected turns which keeps it interesting but don't get it twisted; despite being animated, this is not the stereotypical cutesy cartoony playful Sailor Moon Hello Kitty style that anime is often is known for.
The visuals get very dark and graphic (considering the franchise) so consider yourself warned. But I guarantee it's definitely refreshing in terms of suspense and new plot content for the Terminator franchise. Binge it!
The visuals get very dark and graphic (considering the franchise) so consider yourself warned. But I guarantee it's definitely refreshing in terms of suspense and new plot content for the Terminator franchise. Binge it!
I enjoyed this anime series. Fans of the Terminator lore will find a lot to appreciate here. I was hoping Eiko would be a more developed character as her intro was so awesome... but she unfortunately ended up being more one-note. I will say though, this series has one of the best explanations on time travel that I've ever heard from a sci-fi property. It does away with the whole premise of time travel in the mainstream Terminator franchise; where there is one timeline and going back to the past can change the events of the future. Instead, this series takes, I think, a more MCU approach in which every travel to the past creates a new timeline, one where the future is uncertain. I would be interested in a sequel.
So far I'm roughly halfway through the first season and I have to say , wow , the animation Is amazing and the overall tone of the show is truly dark and it's meant to be viewed in that sense , because that is what the future truly beholds for this world judgement day , it's a completely new take on the terminator franchise and no previous entries are related in any sense , rather just the theme and direction of the future is heading towards , I am truly enjoying it so far and you can see right away this is going to be something special , if your a fan of anime and if your a fan of the terminator franchise before it took on a different direction after terminator 2 you will truly enjoy this show. It's not some fantasy overall happy tone anime , it's dark , ominous and the terminator has this hunter feel to it, inhuman and lifeless void of any empathy and true to its one objective ... termination. Give it a chance and I'm sure you'll enjoy it as much as me , if not more.
The problem for the real, die hard, fans of Terminator is that no instalment has ever made us feel the emotion that both T1 and T2 gave us. Every film since, even with Arnold involved, has lacked something. It's almost like the writers/directors never understood what made those films so popular and important in the first place. They cheapened the films with silly comedic moments, they removed human connection, they stopped exploring SkyNet and the future wars. They turned John Conner into a robot!! (Awful).
This latest instalment is set at the same time as T2 and is a refreshing take on the development of the technologies, it explores the flaws of humanity, it keeps the horror element that was so well done in T1 whilst exploring the connections that was perfectly done in T2.
Will we ever get back to the heights of T2? No, we won't, Arnold was too pivotal in those films and Hollywood wasted his involvement in further films with weak scripts. However, this show, albeit animated will give you something, it will stir those dying embers of a loved story, even if just for a moment.
This latest instalment is set at the same time as T2 and is a refreshing take on the development of the technologies, it explores the flaws of humanity, it keeps the horror element that was so well done in T1 whilst exploring the connections that was perfectly done in T2.
Will we ever get back to the heights of T2? No, we won't, Arnold was too pivotal in those films and Hollywood wasted his involvement in further films with weak scripts. However, this show, albeit animated will give you something, it will stir those dying embers of a loved story, even if just for a moment.
For the hundredth time, we get a new entry in the Terminator series where a Terminator and a human go back in time to screw with the past.
It's kind of hard to understand what makes studios think it's such a good idea to rehash to the same plot elements over and over. The second movie was the only one that twisted the formula successfully, perhaps because you can only do it twice before it starts getting old. Terminator 3 is proof of that.
Despite its flaws, and it had quite a few, Terminator 3 freed the series from repeating the same plot line over and over again. It said, "Hey, guys, this whole 'change the past' thing isn't going to work. Time to try something different."
Early on in Zero, we're teased with scenes from the future. You're tempted to think that maybe this time it will be different and have its own plot, one that isn't a rehash of the first film. The characters look different, and nobody is talking about John Connor, Kyle Reese, etc. Maybe this Japanese entry, freed from the burdens of American movies, will be its own thing and not rehash T1 and T2.
The first few scenes are full of gore and action, but it quickly tuns into a situation where the perfect killing machine reverts into an incompetent dumbass when faced with a named character. I was willing to forgive this idiocy because the art was pretty good, but it just kept on repeating. This terminator is about as imposing and scary as my elderly cat. It can't shoot straight, it can't engage in hand-to-hand combat, and it can't outrun or outplan children.
Then, the terminator and a resistance fighter are sent to the past. Again? Really? But, as usual, there are a bunch of twists, much like Genisys, the fifth movie. I really don't think Genisys is a good template for your Terminator anime, but this follows quite a few of the same beats, including directly plagiarizing iconic scenes from T1 and T2 while putting a minor spin on them.
As if that weren't bad enough, Zero introduced some of the most annoying children ever seen in any Terminator entry. Forget about John Connor as a 10 year old, these kids are infinitely worse, and there's no reason for them to exist except that this is anime, and all anime needs to have annoying kids.
Like Genisys, there are a bunch of plot twists at the end. Surprisingly, Zero kind of pulls them off, even if the twists are obvious. It's a nice blend of worldbuilding and halfway intelligent dialogue that was constantly missing from previous episodes. Once you get past all the filler, boring soliloquies and monologues, the children arguing, and their nanny chasing after them, you get some reasonably good episodes.
I sat through it all, so you can, too. The art is pretty good, but the plot and English dialogue are both disappointing until later. It's also full of filler involving annoying children, and the Terminator is a dumbass easily outsmarted by children, and he can't shoot straight. If you can sit through all that, though, you'll be rewarded with a couple episodes that almost make it worthwhile and add a bit of interesting lore to the Terminator franchise.
It's kind of hard to understand what makes studios think it's such a good idea to rehash to the same plot elements over and over. The second movie was the only one that twisted the formula successfully, perhaps because you can only do it twice before it starts getting old. Terminator 3 is proof of that.
Despite its flaws, and it had quite a few, Terminator 3 freed the series from repeating the same plot line over and over again. It said, "Hey, guys, this whole 'change the past' thing isn't going to work. Time to try something different."
Early on in Zero, we're teased with scenes from the future. You're tempted to think that maybe this time it will be different and have its own plot, one that isn't a rehash of the first film. The characters look different, and nobody is talking about John Connor, Kyle Reese, etc. Maybe this Japanese entry, freed from the burdens of American movies, will be its own thing and not rehash T1 and T2.
The first few scenes are full of gore and action, but it quickly tuns into a situation where the perfect killing machine reverts into an incompetent dumbass when faced with a named character. I was willing to forgive this idiocy because the art was pretty good, but it just kept on repeating. This terminator is about as imposing and scary as my elderly cat. It can't shoot straight, it can't engage in hand-to-hand combat, and it can't outrun or outplan children.
Then, the terminator and a resistance fighter are sent to the past. Again? Really? But, as usual, there are a bunch of twists, much like Genisys, the fifth movie. I really don't think Genisys is a good template for your Terminator anime, but this follows quite a few of the same beats, including directly plagiarizing iconic scenes from T1 and T2 while putting a minor spin on them.
As if that weren't bad enough, Zero introduced some of the most annoying children ever seen in any Terminator entry. Forget about John Connor as a 10 year old, these kids are infinitely worse, and there's no reason for them to exist except that this is anime, and all anime needs to have annoying kids.
Like Genisys, there are a bunch of plot twists at the end. Surprisingly, Zero kind of pulls them off, even if the twists are obvious. It's a nice blend of worldbuilding and halfway intelligent dialogue that was constantly missing from previous episodes. Once you get past all the filler, boring soliloquies and monologues, the children arguing, and their nanny chasing after them, you get some reasonably good episodes.
I sat through it all, so you can, too. The art is pretty good, but the plot and English dialogue are both disappointing until later. It's also full of filler involving annoying children, and the Terminator is a dumbass easily outsmarted by children, and he can't shoot straight. If you can sit through all that, though, you'll be rewarded with a couple episodes that almost make it worthwhile and add a bit of interesting lore to the Terminator franchise.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesReleased on August 29th which is the date of judgement day, 8/29/97.
- ConnexionsFeatured in The Critical Drinker: Drinker's Extra Shots - Terminator Zero (2024)
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Détails
- Durée
- 28m
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 16 : 9
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