Trapped Under Ice

Robert Patrick sits back, his face thoughtful as he recalls the iconic moments from his role as the T-1000 in Terminator 2: Judgment Day. The memories flood back, especially the infamous scene where his character, an unstoppable liquid metal assassin, meets his fate in a vat of liquid nitrogen.

He leans forward, speaking quietly, as though still haunted by the scene. “That moment… when the T-1000 is frozen solid, then shatters into pieces… It’s almost like Robert Frost’s poem, Fire and Ice. There’s something so fitting about it—this unstoppable force being brought down by something so simple and yet so destructive. Fire and ice, two opposing forces, both capable of ending everything. It’s kind of like the T-1000. Fire, relentless, chasing its target with fury, and then… ice. Cold, unforgiving, and just as lethal.”

He takes a deep breath and recites the lines, his voice taking on a weight that mirrors the destruction he portrayed on screen:

“Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I’ve tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire.
But if it had to perish twice,
I think I know enough of hate
To say that for destruction ice
Is also great
And would suffice.”

Patrick pauses, reflecting on the irony of Frost’s words in the context of his character’s demise. “In a way, the T-1000’s destruction is symbolic of that fire and ice. It’s pure, intense, and relentless, like fire—never stopping, always hunting. But it’s also cold, calculated, a machine built with one purpose: to destroy without emotion. And in the end, it’s the ice, the freeze, that takes it down.”

He leans back, his gaze distant. “It’s a strange parallel. In the world of Terminator, the end comes in both fire and ice. But for the T-1000, it’s the coldness—the lack of humanity—that makes its destruction so final.”

Patrick smiles faintly, almost ruefully. “Maybe that’s why I still remember it so vividly. It wasn’t just the action or the special effects; it was the poetry of it. The fire of the chase, the ice of its end.”

T-1000: The Thing That Should Not Be

Subject: T-1000 Needs a Refill – Telomere Science Inquiry

Dear Ms. Sawyer,

I caught your report on telomere science, and I have to ask—how real is it? Because if it’s legit, I’m interested.

You see, there’s a part of me—liquid metal, if you will—that would love to slip back into those polished boots, don the LAPD uniform, and chase down John Connor one more time. But time, as you well know, isn’t as forgiving as CGI. If there’s a way to rewind the biological clock, I need to know.

I’ve heard whispers about telomerase treatments, genetic reprogramming, and even young blood transfusions (a little too vampiric for my taste). But what’s the real deal? What’s science, and what’s snake oil?

If I can melt down a few years, maybe James Cameron will let me Termin-ate again. If not, well, I suppose there’s always deepfake technology—but where’s the fun in that?

Looking forward to your thoughts.

Best,
Robert Patrick
(Still a Bad to the Bone T-1000… just with a few more miles on the odometer)