Of course, one assumes if you put in the same hard work, you get the same results, so I went straight back into training really hard and it’s like, “Oh my god, you need hormones to put muscle on!” So just starting with the basic cosmetics of the character and all of the things that I had to sort of include in my new reality as Sarah Connor. HAMILTON: It’s not like riding a bike, I’ll tell you that. What was it like fully diving back into Sarah? Were you immediately able to slide back into it or was it a process? And I don’t think the movies that came after it really explored that in a clean way like I believe we are, with true consequences, and it makes perfect sense for Sarah to be the one to face those consequences since they were her choices to begin with. And Jim had this lucky break that he only broke that rule at the end of Terminator 2 when Sarah destroys Cyberdyne, it’s the first thing that happened that hadn’t happened before, and so it was going to change the future - but no one knew how. This will be more clear when you see the movie, but the first two movies really deal with time as a loop, what’s happening is the same thing that happened before and everybody is fighting to ensure that happens again.
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MILLER: But you know what, I honestly believe this would be the best version of the movie after the second one. I never saw this coming, which made it that much more interesting. I kept saying, “Yeah, yeah, if I’m in one now it’s like the geriatrics era.” Which is actually kind of true. HAMILTON: It was many, many years of just being sure that it was done, that I was done. Had you assumed that you were done playing Sarah?