Showing posts with label terminator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label terminator. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

Happy Groundhog Day with alternate history 80's TV shows starring Punxsutawney Phil

Happy Groundhog's Day!

Did you ever wonder just how many days are depicted in the movie Groundhog Day? Catch up on the seer of seers, prognosticator of prognosticators, the groundhog, Punxsutawney Phil's's predictions for the year. It's six more weeks of winter.

Did you know that PETA wants to replace Phil with an animatronic groundhog? I for one would like to be the first to welcome our robotic groundhog overlords.

Now some alternate history 80's TV shows starring Punxsutawney Phil...

And so, Punxsutawney Phil finds himself leaping from Groundhog's Day to Groundhog's Day, striving to put right what once went wrong, and hoping each time that his next leap, will be the leap home.





(Ten years ago / In 1972), a crack commando unit was sent to prison by a military court for a crime they didn't commit. This groundhog promptly escaped from a maximum security stockade to the Punxsutawney underground. Today, still wanted by the government, Punxsutawney Phil survives as a soldier of fortune. If you have a problem, if no one else can help, and if you can find them, maybe you can hire... The Groundhog-Team.


The Groundhog is wanted for a murder he didn't commit. Punxsutawney Phil is believed to be dead; and he must let the world think that he is dead, until he can find a way to control the raging spirit that dwells within him...


(Quantum leap, Incredible Hulk, A-team)

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

The timelines of the Terminator

i09 has saved me the trouble of figuring out the many different timelines created by all of the jumping back in time in the Terminator movies and series. I took a crack at compling when the various Judgement Days are in Postponing Judgement Day - Terminator style, with an obligatory graph.

The writers at io9 have figured on at least 10 different timelines developed from before the first Terminator movie through T2 and T3, the series and the upcoming Terminator movie.

Given the thesis of their arguements - that every jump back in time creates a new timeline - I would contend that they are really many, many more than ten timelines. The next question is how flexible history and the timlines are and do you believe in the Great Man Theory of history or a people's history approach. Do men make the times or do the times make the men and how large do the changes made by the time travellers in the terminator movies and series have to be to change the course of history?

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Postponing Judgement Day - Terminator style

The advent of the new chapter in the Terminator saga, The Sarah Connor Chronicles had prompted someone to ask me the other day, just exactly when is Judgement Day, the burning of the world to come when the computer Skynet becomes self-aware, declares war on mankind and launches the world's nuclear arsenals to protect itself.

I know that it had been postponed a few times as movie time caught up with real time, in an effort to keep the movie series current. Conveniently, the characters in each movie and the series also spend a lot of time trying to postpone Judgement Day as well, typically by killing the people or the machines that would be the source of Skynet. In fact postponing Judgement Day is the theme of franchise. Let's see how they do:

In Terminator there is no mention of the actual date of Judgement Day, just that there is one. That's too bad, it might have answered some questions. More importantly Kyle Reese goes back in time to protect Sarah Connor, mother of the future hero John Connor. Conveniently Kyle impregnates Sarah with John.

In Terminator 2: Judgement Day the good terminator tells Sarah Connor that Skynet went online on August 4, 1997, learns at an exponential rate and becomes aware at 2:14am on August 29,1997 and then launches a nuclear war to prevent humans from tuning it off. The rest of the movie has them trying to kill the scientist at Cyberdyne that creates the technology for Skynet in the first place. That technology came from the leftover chip from the terminator from the first movie. Who made Skynet? Skynet made Skynet.

In Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines it appears that the success of the previous movie has postponed Judgement Day 7 years to July 4, 2004. The same day that Skynet is hooked up to the net is the day it starts the war. It seems that Singularity happens.

The new TV series, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles is supposed to happen in a parallel universe to the movies, but also has a postponed Judgement Day from the third movie. It's Judgement day is set at April 21, 2011, two days after Skynet goes online. Of course that whole series is about preventing that and fighting the multiple time traveling robots sent by Skynet with some help from time traveling humans sent by future John Connor. In the series the Connor family with a helpful Terminator jump over Sarah's death and the previous version of Judgement Day. Maybe John caused that 2004 one but didn't when he skipped it in the series.

I suspect that the date of Judgement Day has more to do with the release date of the movies or series that with any preventative activity on the part of Sarah Connor. A graph shows Judgement Day receding away from the present with a close call of only a year away for T3: Rise of the Machines on 2003. I have helpfully added a line representing the asymptote of Judgement Day occurring on the release date of the movie or series. We seem to have gained a three year head start with the series. Let's see how long they can keep it up.



The pictures are from the recent series of Craftsman ads which built human anatomy from Craftsman products. The results look like Terminators to me. Perhaps Craftsman is building Skynet and the Terminators? Sarah Connor better get over there and stop them!