Just recently saw it.
Overall pretty good, not up to par with the originals but then again James Cameron isn't taking the lead (again). Still, this is way better than the crapfest T3 was, and it's nice how it doesn't really refer back to it. This is what Terminator 3 SHOULD have been. I liked the view of Skynet's human resources department, showing it for the horrorshow that it was meant to be.
Limited time and possibly limited access to Terminators explains why only three were sent back, and their relative order makes sense too (weakest terminator vs. the least prepared, least dangerous enemy).
Skynet no doubt had plenty of T-800's, but it only had one T-1000, so why not send it against the most prepared target? As for why it only sent two, perhaps time......skynet at that point had lost and probably was about to be taken off-line, but did this at the last second.
it would've been much better if they had maintained Skynet as a faceless villain but its not something that breaks the film.
Agreed.
One other thing I wonder is why does it appear that some of skynet's bases inner areas look like they were designed to be operated by humans? Maybe if this particular facility was built before skynet nuked the world that would be understandable, but really why design something to be friendly to human users when you hate them so much?
For that matter, he has forgotten the previous three films and is unaware that M4s and sidearms are not ideal for fighting terminators.
It was all he had. I guess hyperalloy was just being introduced when the movie started, and was limited to just the state of the art T-800's.
Secondly, how are there still scores of operational A-10s, Hueys, and Blackhawks? There was a nuclear apocalypse, so where exactly are the spare parts and fuel and munitions coming from?
It's only ten years after the nuking, and the US does have a large number of all these aircraft. The parts to maintain them are partly based on whatever parts were stockpiled by the military with the rest coming from canniblized aircraft. Fuel and ammo comes partly from pre-war stockpiles, and it is entirely possible what is left of other nations are feeding the resistance as much as possible (Russia alone is no doubt sitting ontop of huge amounts of fuel). Long term none of this will last, human industry was largely wiped out and so every vehicle that is lost is gone for good (which is why by the time the T1 flashbacks happen, 32 years into the war, humans have almost nothing except banged up POS cars and trucks plus whatever cannons they could salvage from skynet wrecks). I think we can expect a lot more basic guerella action in the future.