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Actually, man, Arnold played a different character in all 3 films, so really the doc is the only one. :lol

One could argue that the "living tissue" or organism element that surrounded the various Terminator models was from the same gene/clone pool. Especially, seeing how the skin itself didn't change properties at all during the movies Arnold was in; the only thing that changed was the Endo portion.
 
One could argue that the "living tissue" or organism element that surrounded the various Terminator models was from the same gene/clone pool. Especially, seeing how the skin itself didn't change properties at all during the movies Arnold was in; the only thing that changed was the Endo portion.

:lecture:lecture:lecture DNA would've been identical in the living tissue.
 
:lecture:lecture:lecture DNA would've been identical in the living tissue.

arnold looked different though in each movie. first one, he looked creepy, weird, and ghoulish...second, he looked nicer, less weird, more awesome, and still creepy...third one, he looked the same, but with more plastic surgery...
 
arnold looked different though in each movie. first one, he looked creepy, weird, and ghoulish...second, he looked nicer, less weird, more awesome, and still creepy...third one, he looked the same, but with more plastic surgery...

Clones are rarely 100% identical. Star Wars is a good example of the Clones being based off of Jango, but tweaked to perform differently (ARC Trooper, Airbourne, etc). They still all looked like Jango and retained most of his primary traits, though.

Skynet could have tweaked some small traits here and there, but they should still be running off of the same primary DNA strands. I see your point, but Arnold thru the three movies had more aestetic similarities than differences.
 
This is a good watch .............

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This clip reminded me why I love this movie so much.
Thanks for posting. Firing all those weapons looked like so much fun and seeing Arnold decked out in the final battle damaged makeup was amazing.
 
arnold looked different though in each movie. first one, he looked creepy, weird, and ghoulish...second, he looked nicer, less weird, more awesome, and still creepy...third one, he looked the same, but with more plastic surgery...

Would living tissue not age?
 
I like to think that the T-800 skin would not only age, but that it would age quickly. Though we know from T2 that the wounds will heal, in T1 the wounds actually started to rot and draw flies. The guy in the hall commented on the fact that it smelled like there was a dead cat in the room.

The purpose of the skin is to help Terminators infiltrate, but once inside, they just open fire until the objective is complete or they are taken down. The skin would most definitely take damage and need to be replaced after any mission. For that reason I would think the skin isn't designed to last long.

The power cell of a T-800 lasts for 150 years, but the probably doesn't last long despite what T2 might have suggested.

My opinion.
 
Here is what a aged Terminator would look like.

clint-eastwood.jpg
 
eastwood = actor

arnold = action star

eastwood & arnold = lots of badass films = holllywood icons....:lecture
 
I like to think that the T-800 skin would not only age, but that it would age quickly. Though we know from T2 that the wounds will heal, in T1 the wounds actually started to rot and draw flies. The guy in the hall commented on the fact that it smelled like there was a dead cat in the room.

The purpose of the skin is to help Terminators infiltrate, but once inside, they just open fire until the objective is complete or they are taken down. The skin would most definitely take damage and need to be replaced after any mission. For that reason I would think the skin isn't designed to last long.

The power cell of a T-800 lasts for 150 years, but the probably doesn't last long despite what T2 might have suggested.

My opinion.

Doubtful. Remember, we know from T2 that the skin heals. If it aged too fast, that would knock down the healing properties and would make them all but useless at infiltration after getting even the slightest scratch.

No doubt. But if a comparison must be made, I fear Arnold just doesn't belong in the same discussion as Clint. He is the epitome of bad-ass.

I'd beg to differ. Clint had the "Arnold" roles of his time. The No Name trilogy or Dirty Harry series are perfect examples. I'll be interested to see what roles a post-governor Arnold seeks out.
 
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