From 7f304bc602bafa16b78f8672bebbb7442f8c01d0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Rebekah Eady Date: Mon, 1 Sep 2025 01:24:11 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] --- ...ne-of-Schwarzenegger%27s-Bleakest%2C-most-Violent-Films%27.md | 1 + 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+) create mode 100644 Sabotage%3A-%27One-of-Schwarzenegger%27s-Bleakest%2C-most-Violent-Films%27.md diff --git a/Sabotage%3A-%27One-of-Schwarzenegger%27s-Bleakest%2C-most-Violent-Films%27.md b/Sabotage%3A-%27One-of-Schwarzenegger%27s-Bleakest%2C-most-Violent-Films%27.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..d66542f --- /dev/null +++ b/Sabotage%3A-%27One-of-Schwarzenegger%27s-Bleakest%2C-most-Violent-Films%27.md @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +
I owe Arnold Schwarzenegger. Cinematically speaking, he shaped part of my youth and set the gold standard for what male muscles should look like. For a while, I was deeply interested in guys who wore leather and rode Harley-Davidsons (preferably a Fat Boy, like Schwarzenegger rode in T2). In my heart - despite the dud that was "Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines," his misguided career as The Governator, and a string of post-politics movies that range from mediocre to bad (please don't mention "The Expendables," ever) - I supported the man because, well, I was indebted. And now, "Sabotage." Schwarzenegger is trying something new here: He's not playing a muscle-bound, good-hearted guy with a permanent Iron Curtain accent, but instead John "Breacher" Warton - a grizzly, unrepentant brute with a license to kill anyone as long as they deal drugs. Breacher heads the best, most ruthless unit in the Drug Enforcement Administration and, like their boss, these guys all have nicknames wedged between their first and last names, often representing a favorite weapon or style of killing. The more noteworthy ones include "Monster" (Sam Worthington), "Grinder" (Joe Manganiello) and "Sugar" (Terrence Howard) \ No newline at end of file