Since 1984’sThe Terminatorhit theaters,viewers have been wondering why the franchise’s Terminators, and other time jumpers, have to be naked when they travel back in time. TheTerminatorfranchise does have an explanation for this time-travel rule, but that doesn’t make the trope less jarring when it crops up in a film or TV show. In the opening of James Cameron and Gale Anne Hurd’s originalTerminatorfilm, Arnold Schwarzenegger’s cybernetic assassin and resistance soldier Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) are both tasked with stealing clothes and weapons before he can pursue his target, Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton).

FromTerminator Genisysto the animatedTerminator Zero, the franchise’s naked time-travel rule is one that’s never broken. While the films and TV shows delve into some aspects of the franchise’s technology —Terminator Zerofinally explains time travel rulesin a digestible manner —the mainlineTerminatorstories don’t spend too much time dwelling on the details. However, spin-off entries, like theTerminator: Enemy of my Enemycomic books, mine theTerminatormovies and TV shows' unexplained happenings for content, and that includes the particulars of using time-travel machines, especially where Skynet’s Terminators are concerned.

Custom image of Terminator Zero and The Terminator

Terminator’s Time Travel Only Works For Things With A Living Tissue

The Terminator Franchise’s Time Displacement Equipment Needs To Interact With Living Tissue In Order To Generate A Bioelectric Field

While the silver endoskeleton of Schwarzenegger’s T-800 is incredibly intimidating, there’s a very practical reason that Skynet, the hostile AI bent on eradicating humanity, dressed its cybernetic assassins in synthetic skin. In theTerminatoruniverse, living tissue is needed to successfully travel to the past. As such, the T-800 models are composed of living tissue that’s grafted over a metal endoskeleton. Not only does the living tissue, also dubbed cyborg tissue, that coatsSkynet’s Terminator modelsallow the assassins to infiltrate the Resistance, butit grants them the ability to generate the bioelectric field necessary for time travel.

The same as real human tissue, Skynet’s synthetic flesh is able to bleed, sweat, and breathe, and, sometimes, regenerate and age.

Terminator (1984) Movie Poster

Although various entries in the ever-complicatedTerminatortimelinehave different origin stories for living tissue, it’s always the same end product. The same as real human tissue, the synthetic flesh is able to bleed, sweat, and breathe, and, sometimes, regenerate and age. This is key for Skynet’s espionage schemes, but also a must for activating theTerminatorseries' Time Displacement Equipment (TDE). In order for a TDE to operate, it needs to generate a bioelectric field by interacting with a living organism. That said,a TDE can only transport a living organism, or a subject ensconced in living tissue.

Terminator Just Did The Story I’ve Been Waiting To See Since The First Movie

Netflix’s Terminator anime brings a lot of new ideas to the franchise, including a storyline that I’ve always wanted to see in the movies.

Terminator’s Time Machine Rule Created A Massive Plot Hole

Skynet Could Easily Cover Other Weapons In Living Tissue Pods

TheTerminatorfranchise’s time machine rules, and the way the Time Displacement Equipment operates, opens up massive plot holes. If Skynet is able to transport Terminator units back in time by wrapping them in living tissue, the AI could, theoretically, do the same with other non-living objects. Bent on killing the Connors, Malcolm Lee, and other figures who will, eventually, present a threat toSkynet’s dominance, the AIsends plenty of cybernetic assassins into its TDEs. However,to really gain an advantage, Skynet should (and could) wrap advanced weaponry in living tissue, thus equipping its Terminators with futuristic tech.

TheTerminatorFranchise’s TV Shows & Movies

Best Places to Stream the TV Show or Movie (September 2024)

Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines(2003)

Netflix

Terminator

The Terminator franchise, launched by James Cameron in 1984, explores a dystopian future where intelligent machines wage war against humanity. The relentless pursuit of key human figures by time-traveling cyborg assassins known as Terminators is central to the narrative. John Connor, the future leader of the human resistance, is the core target of the malicious machines.