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Episode details

Radio 4,26 Mar 2024,28 mins

I'll Be Back: 40 Years of The Terminator

Available for over a year

"It was the machines, Sarah...a new order of intelligence. Decided our fate in a microsecond: extermination." So says Kyle Reese, time travelling freedom fighter in The Terminator. Released in the perfectly fitting year of 1984, The Terminator was a low budget, relentless slice of science fiction noir, drawing on years of pulp sf to conjure a future nightmare of humanity hunted to near extinction by the machines it created. In 2029, just 5 years away now, Arnold Schwarzenegger's unstoppable cyborg killer is sent back to 1984 to kill Sarah Connor, the yet to be mother of humanities saviour to come. Fate, redemption & the destructive power of A.I. all made in the analogue age but still influencing the way many imagine our new age of Artificial Intelligence. Professor Beth Singler re-visits the making of the film with producer Gale Anne Hurd and explores its lasting influence. Forty years on, and the circular self-contained time travel plot of The Terminator has been cracked wide open letting out alternative timelines and delayed apocalypses: more films, a television show, graphic novels, comics, video games, theme park rides and even memes have spread versions of the original robopocalypse. More than that, the first Terminator has given us a vocabulary and a vision for the dangers of Artificial Intelligence. With the voices of Gale Anne Hurd, vfx guru Paul Franklin, Sean French- author of the BFI classic , AI researcher & writer Eliezer Yudkowsky & UCL's professor of science & technology, Jack Stilgoe. James Cameron extract courtesy of BAFTA. Producer- Mark Burman

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