We'll be back: Schwarzenegger and Hamilton launch the new "Terminator" | showbiz



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Actors Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger perform on stage at the exclusive CinemaCon Paramount Pictures presentation at the Colosseum Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada, April 4, 2019. - AFP pic
Actors Linda Hamilton and Arnold Schwarzenegger perform on stage at the exclusive CinemaCon Paramount Pictures presentation at the Colosseum Caesars Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada, April 4, 2019. – AFP pic

LAS VEGAS, April 5 – Thirty-five years after the journey through time and a war against the synthetic intelligence of the future united them, resistance leader Sarah Connor and cyborg badbadin The Terminator had a nostalgic meeting yesterday in Las Vegas.

Arnold Schwarzenegger and Linda Hamilton, the stars of the 1984 blockbuster The terminator, took center stage at the CinemaCon Cinema Industry's annual convention to delight fans with the sixth performance of the sci-fi action franchise, Terminator: Dark Fate.

"I'm so excited to see everyone come back. Jim Cameron and Linda Hamilton, the whole team is back, "said Schwarzenegger, introducing his co-star and the legendary director of the original, which takes over the production this time around.

"That's where it all started in 1984 and it changed my life," said the 71-year-old Hollywood star and former politician.

The latest payment, scheduled for the month of November, is considered one of the film events of the year and the opportunity to hand over the US $ 1.8 billion (RMB 7.55 billion) franchise to rails after three exits that yielded money, but disappointed the critics.

The original and its suite, Terminator 2: the day of judgment (1991), obtain average ratings of 100% and 93% respectively on the film's website Rotten tomatoes and are considered touchstones in 20th century cinema.

Such was the cultural hallmark of these films that the action hero Schwarzenegger was nicknamed "the governor" when he had made his Hollywood fame a success on the political scene.

The former Austrian-born bodybuilder was elected governor of California at a historic booster vote in 2003 – but he proved that victory was not a coincidence if he had ordered his Phil Angelides' opponent to be reelected.

And in a more recent slate wiping, Terminator: Dark Fate, barred by dead Pool director Tim Miller, picks up where The day of judgment leave behind.

Hamilton, 62, told fans to play Sarah Connor, a wide-eyed, ingenian who has become one of the film's most recognizable action heroes and a feminist icon, has changed her life.

"I can not wait to share this film with you all," she told the audience at CinemaCon, which is mainly composed of theater managers and owners and other companies showing the films. – AFP

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