Arnold Schwarzenegger: 'I always hated politics'

Arnold Schwarzenegger has said he "always" hated politics and as a former Republican governor of California "never did what the party wanted".

Schwarzenegger told Sky News "politics gets in the way of good policy" but now, in terms of saving the planet, he is throwing his support behind environmentalist Greta Thunberg.

He recently offered to lend Greta an electric car so she could get around the US in as environmentally friendly a way as possible.

"Greta is fantastic, she's a child and here's children saying, 'when you screw this up with the environment it's our generation that's going to suffer', and I think that's a very compelling message and I think politicians are listening.

"Of course I will be as supportive of her as possible to try and get her message out."

Schwarzenegger is officially back in the latest Terminator: Dark Fate alongside actress Linda Hamilton, who reprises her role as the iconic action heroine Sarah Connor 28 years after she last appeared on screen.

Hamilton says it was not an easy decision to revisit the role.

She said: "I really thought I was done with Sarah and more importantly Sarah was done with me, because it had been so long, and that was actually the draw.

"That so many years had passed and that I felt I could use a very big paintbrush to fill in those years and take a look at Sarah today, and I knew it would be something new and therefore it intrigued me."

Linda smashed Hollywood stereotypes with her portrayal of Connor, a super muscular, fierce fighter who helped save the world.

She's again ripping up the rule book, doing it all once more as a woman in her 60s, but is keen to bat away descriptions as Terminator's true cultural icon.

She said: "We don't think about ourselves in that way - it's just about doing the best work that we can with the character and other people assign you with those labels - icon, legend, bad-ass - but I'll take them."

However, Hamilton's co-star Natalia Reyes, who plays a young woman whose experience mirrors that of Connor - hunted by a terminator from the future - says director James Cameron has always wanted to shake things up.

"Sarah Connor back in the '80s, she was like a really strong woman, a single mother," she says. "James Cameron has always changed the rules.

"It's the same thing now, this film also has Latino actors and we were just all trying to reflect what's going on in the world right now - the world is changing and Hollywood is changing."

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Mackenzie Davis, who stars alongside Natalia and Linda, says we shouldn't get too excited about the number of women on screen, because off screen it's a different story.

She said: "I think there just needs to be an effort everywhere and not just applaud when there's three women in this movie. I'm so glad I'm in it but there's lots of work to be done and there's lots more representation that can go on."

Terminator Dark Fate is released on 23 October