TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY Future Shock Film Week at FOMO Cinema Tbilisi
Friday 22. May at 22:00 - Saturday 23. May at 00:17
FOMO Secret Cinema, Tbilisi
FOMO Cinema Presents: Future Shock
A week of rogue machines, unstable realities, artificial intelligence, cybernetic bodies, corporate paranoia, cosmic dread, and a very cranky robot policeman.
This program traces a century of cinema asking the same uncomfortable question: what happens when human intelligence develops an Artificial Intelligence it can’t fully control?
The answer, judging by this week’s films, is never good.
THE TERMINATOR and TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY can also be booked together as a discounted TERMINATOR Film Double. Watch Cameron build the nightmare in 1984, then expand it into one of the defining blockbusters of the 1990s. Two films, one future war, and a reminder that Skynet doesn’t take Fridays off.
James Cameron | 1991 | USA | 2h17m | Presented in the original English audio with English subtitles
TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY is the only film I can think of that takes the killer from the first film and turns him into the father figure for the sequel.
Years after the events of THE TERMINATOR, Sarah Connor is no longer an ordinary woman caught in the machinery of the future. She’s a prisoner, a mother, and the only person who fully understands what’s coming. Her son John is now the target. Skynet sends a more advanced machine to kill him, while the resistance sends back the same model that once hunted Sarah, this time programmed to protect.
The reversal is the film’s great move. Schwarzenegger’s Terminator becomes both weapon and guardian, while Linda Hamilton’s Sarah Connor arrives almost as a sister figure to Ripley in Cameron’s ALIENS: hardened by trauma, physically transformed, and forced into action because nobody else understands the scale of the threat. Cameron was never afraid to place women at the centre of action cinema, and between ALIENS and TERMINATOR 2 he helped popularise the female warrior archetype that would shape blockbuster filmmaking through the 80s and 90s.
The production lore still matters because the spectacle genuinely changed cinema. The T-1000’s liquid metal effects helped push digital visual effects into a new era, but Cameron never lets the technology become the whole point. The chase sequences, practical stunts and industrial locations keep the film physical. It’s huge, but it still feels heavy.
I’m including TERMINATOR 2: JUDGMENT DAY in this week’s FOMO FUTURE SHOCK program because it gives Skynet’s future war its most popular form. The phrase “judgment day” entered the culture as shorthand for the impending 'singularity'. The film turns AI apocalypse into family drama, action cinema and mass entertainment, then somehow makes all three work.
FOOD AND DRINK POLICY: FOMO Cinema Lounge Bar opens 1 hour before the first screening of the day and closes at 02:00,.serving a wide selection of beer, wine, cocktails, and non-alcoholic refreshments including coffee and tea, as well as fresh hot popcorn! Outside food is allowed in the bar but not in the cinema. No alcohol from outside allowed. All guests are invited to arrive early and stay late!
LOCATION: FOMO Secret Cinema, Bazari Orbeliani, Tbilisi. A five minute walk from Liberty Square metro.
HOW TO FIND FOMO: Enter Bazari Orbeliani via Atoneli St above Carrefour and take the stairs on your left to Level 1. Signage on the door. You can also check our Instagram story highlights for a video showing exactly how to find us:
https://www.instagram.com/stories/highlights/17933106294029235/
FOMO Secret Cinema • Bazari Orbeliani, 0105 Tbilisi, Georgia