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Not only did Terminator: Genisys (which is celebrating its tenth anniversary) not save the Terminator saga, it pretty much killed all longevity or goodwill for the Terminator brand name. In 1991, T2: Judgement Day broke box office records; 24 years later, Genisys solidified that it was “hasta la vista, baby” for the Terminator movies.
What Went Wrong With Terminator: Genisys?

Terminator: Genisys was a doomed enterprise from the start. After all, Genisys was not unlike fellow summer 2015 legacy sequel Jurassic World, providing the first sequel to a saga that had spent over a decade in dormancy. In between 2001’s Jurassic Park III and 2015’s Jurassic World, two theatrical Terminator sequels hit movie theaters while The Sarah Connor Chronicles played out for multiple seasons on the Fox network. If you wanted more Terminator, chances are you could get satisfied long before Genisys crept into theaters.
The final film, though, did not help muster up enthusiasm for what was a boondoggle project from the start. Genisys was an utterly terrible blockbuster devoid of personality or fun that filled up the screen with endless tiresome sequel teases. It also tried too hard to mimic past Terminator movies, including recreating scenes from the initial two Terminator installments. At least 2009’s Terminator: Salvation shifted the saga into a previously unexplored time period; Genisys was just redundant in every sense of the word.
The Genisys marketing campaign at least provided some truth in advertising by providing infamous indicators to viewers that this wasn’t a production worth getting invested in. The final Genisys trailer drew controversy for revealing a third-act twist that Jason Clarke’s John Connor becomes the movie’s nanobot-possessed villain. It was a shockingly unconfident promotional maneuver that spoiled a tremendous storytelling surprise on a massive marketing canvas. Genisys was already giving away its crummy storytelling impulses in the trailers โ a sign to all moviegoers to stay far away. They did so in droves, as Genisys became the first Terminator sequel to make under $100 million, domestically.









