People in New York trying to help the cops find the shooter
For context, this is from terminator 2 where the protagonist is saved by his best friend in the first 30 min of the film by lying to a terminator cyborg from the future posing as a cop.
That's one of the biggest problems with the internet. People think that because they've seen something three of four times the entire world knows about it. Probably everyone on lemmy has seen that movie, but there are plenty of people who don't like science fiction or Arnold or action movies.
If you go by lemmy, Linux is more popular than Adele.
It's one of those movies that has had a cultural impact for decades after release. If you did watch it today you'd probably be surprised how many scenes you're familiar with from various media it's influenced and been parodied in since release.
Or maybe not. Cultural landscape has changed so much there isn't really a monoculture that can refer back to previous highlights/milestones within itself.
If you didn't catch the end of that time it may all be lost to you. Which doesn't matter, but the first two terminator movies are really good if you're into that kind of rhing. James Cameron before Titanic and Avatar.
Someone talked about seeing 'The Sting' for the first time. They couldn't believe that anyone in the audience didn't know all those cons, then realized that when the movie was made, all those gags were fresh.
I did, but then my family had this movie on VHS when I was younger and I've probably watched it like 100 times. It came on TV once when I was on the phone with my friend and I quoted all the lines just ahead of the TV. I bet that annoyed the shit out of her.
I was doing that the other day while my wife was watching Ace Ventura... Haven't seen it in probably 20 years, doesn't stop me... Your gun is digging into my hip...
I couldn't even tell that was a normal police badge, I'd assumed it was Battlestar, or some other old sci-fi I hadn't seen. Definitely not a memorable enough scene from a sequel to an old action movie
Looks like any of hundreds of movies from that time. It's been literal decades since I saw it, I was probably the same age my daughter is now. Once I read the reference I realized that I do recognize T1000, but I definitely don't remember that kid.