
Terminator: Dark Fate
2019 · Directed by Tim Miller
Woke Score
CriticCritic Score
Audience
Woke
Critics rated this 22 points below its woke score. Among Woke films, this critic score ranks #80 of 88.
Representation Casting
Score: 85/100
The film centers three women as protagonists and specifically casts Latinx actors in key roles, including the future resistance leader. This deliberate casting strategy represents a clear commitment to demographic diversity in action cinema.
LGBTQ+ Themes
Score: 0/100
No LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or subtext are present in the film. The romantic elements that exist are heterosexual.
Feminist Agenda
Score: 80/100
The entire narrative architecture privileges female agency and capability. Women drive the plot, make strategic decisions, and possess superior combat skills. The film explicitly frames male characters as secondary to female protagonists.
Racial Consciousness
Score: 72/100
The film centers a Latinx female protagonist as humanity's future savior and features prominent Latinx supporting characters. However, the racial dimensions are primarily symbolic rather than thematically explored.
Climate Crusade
Score: 0/100
No climate-related themes or environmental consciousness appears in the film. The conflict centers on AI and temporal mechanics rather than ecological concerns.
Eat the Rich
Score: 15/100
While the film inherits the original Terminator franchise's skepticism toward corporate technology and military-industrial systems, this critique remains underdeveloped and secondary to the action narrative.
Body Positivity
Score: 0/100
The film presents conventionally fit action heroes without commentary on body diversity. No body positivity messaging is present.
Neurodivergence
Score: 0/100
No neurodivergent characters or themes are present in the film.
Revisionist History
Score: 35/100
The film retcons the original Terminator timeline, erasing the events of previous sequels. This narrative restructuring represents a form of historical revision, though it functions primarily as franchise mechanics rather than cultural revisionism.
Lecture Energy
Score: 65/100
The film frequently pauses to acknowledge its progressive commitments through dialogue and character moments that feel more expository than organic. Characters articulate their struggles and significance in ways that prioritize messaging over naturalistic storytelling.
Synopsis
Decades after Sarah Connor prevented Judgment Day, a lethal new Terminator is sent to eliminate the future leader of the resistance. In a fight to save mankind, battle-hardened Sarah Connor teams up with an unexpected ally and an enhanced super soldier to stop the deadliest Terminator yet.
Consciousness Assessment
Terminator: Dark Fate arrives as a film so committed to its progressive sensibilities that one can almost hear the strategic consultants conferring in the margins. The narrative places three women at the center of an action spectacle: Sarah Connor returns as a weathered warrior, Mackenzie Davis plays an enhanced soldier, and Natalia Reyes embodies the future resistance leader. The film does not merely include these women. It structures the entire narrative around their agency and capability, relegating male characters to secondary or supportive roles. Arnold Schwarzenegger's T-800 serves primarily as a tool deployed by the female protagonists rather than as the primary force of the story.
Yet the film's commitment to representation often outpaces its storytelling instincts. The dialogue frequently pauses to acknowledge the women's struggles and capabilities in ways that feel less like natural character development and more like explicit statement. We are meant to notice and appreciate the film's gender consciousness. The supporting cast includes Latinx actors in prominent roles, and the film takes care to center a female protagonist of Mexican descent as the future hope of humanity. These choices read as intentional in their progressive architecture, though they serve the narrative adequately if not seamlessly.
The film's attempt to dismantle traditional action movie hierarchies ultimately proves its greatest weakness as cinema. By centering female empowerment so deliberately, the film sacrifices the narrative momentum and character depth that might have made this more than a well-intentioned exercise in representation mathematics. The result is a movie that succeeds admirably at its cultural project while failing modestly as entertainment, a distinction that may matter less to those who see cinema primarily as a vehicle for progressive messaging.
Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm
Critic Reviews
“Whether Terminator: Dark Fate is the last chapter in this story or the first in an all-new franchise is, for now, irrelevant. The film works either way, bringing the tale of the first two films to a satisfying conclusion while reintroducing the classic storyline, in exciting new ways, to an excited new audience. It’s a breathtaking blockbuster, and a welcome return to form.”
“Easily the third-best Terminator film, which is more of a compliment than it sounds. It’s great to have Hamilton back in this role, but she’s ably matched by Reyes and Davis.”
“Tim Miller’s film deftly builds upon what worked in the first two James Cameron-helmed entities while bringing in a new host of characters and circumstances to challenge the course of humankind. While there’s definitely some frantic leap-frogging involved in terms of accepting why some characters have evolved the way they did, Terminator: Dark Fate ultimately succeeds in serving as both a suitable closing chapter for the original two films and a possible gateway to exciting new chapters ahead.”
“The plot makes no sense — time travel as multiverse Dada. Worse still, it renders meaningless the struggles that gave the first two films of the franchise an epic dimension. ”
Consciousness Markers
The film centers three women as protagonists and specifically casts Latinx actors in key roles, including the future resistance leader. This deliberate casting strategy represents a clear commitment to demographic diversity in action cinema.
No LGBTQ+ themes, characters, or subtext are present in the film. The romantic elements that exist are heterosexual.
The entire narrative architecture privileges female agency and capability. Women drive the plot, make strategic decisions, and possess superior combat skills. The film explicitly frames male characters as secondary to female protagonists.
The film centers a Latinx female protagonist as humanity's future savior and features prominent Latinx supporting characters. However, the racial dimensions are primarily symbolic rather than thematically explored.
No climate-related themes or environmental consciousness appears in the film. The conflict centers on AI and temporal mechanics rather than ecological concerns.
While the film inherits the original Terminator franchise's skepticism toward corporate technology and military-industrial systems, this critique remains underdeveloped and secondary to the action narrative.
The film presents conventionally fit action heroes without commentary on body diversity. No body positivity messaging is present.
No neurodivergent characters or themes are present in the film.
The film retcons the original Terminator timeline, erasing the events of previous sequels. This narrative restructuring represents a form of historical revision, though it functions primarily as franchise mechanics rather than cultural revisionism.
The film frequently pauses to acknowledge its progressive commitments through dialogue and character moments that feel more expository than organic. Characters articulate their struggles and significance in ways that prioritize messaging over naturalistic storytelling.