I agree with this. As much as I love this film for being the absolute peak of old style action movie making, and for being one of the last truly old school summer blockbusters, the reality is that T2 already started that really annoying trend of trying to humanize the Terminator. That is the one thing T1 will always have over all the other movies: It wasn't afraid to show the Terminator for what it truly was. A cold, emotionless killing machine that has no free will and can only ever do one thing: to follow its programming to the last. The sequels tried to turn the Arnold Terminator into this warm, fuzzy hero character, and in doing so, the character lost some of the dark edge that made it so compelling in the first place. T2 being a Cameron film, it at least had a much finer control over this: The Terminator being able to learn human traits was only briefly glimpsed at. But even then, the Terminator was only protecting John simply because the human resistance had programmed it to do so. It's still just a machine, and therefore doesn't actually have the capability to question why exactly it must do so. The Terminator doesn't have the ability to understand why exactly protecting the boy is the morally correct thing to do.
The later sequels went completely overboard with this, culminating with the Dark Fate Terminator, which completely on its own had somehow developed a human conscious and moral code, and became this nice and soft family guy that protects its woman, when no prior programming or moral guidance (that we're aware of) existed to guide the machine to this path. Yes, I get it: We all wanted Arnold to be the hero. But they could've done it in a way that doesn't completely contradict what the character originally started out as: A mindless weapon of war with only one purpose to its being. To terminate, kill and dispose of human life.
But what do I know? Who knows, maybe the recent advancements in computer A.I. technology will prove me wrong some day.
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