The internet is filled with facts, both true and otherwise. In Film Trivia Fact Check, we’ll browse the depths of the web’s most user-generated trivia boards and wikis and put them under the microscope. How true are the IMDb Trivia pages? You want the truth? Can you handle the truth? We’re about to find out.
Claim: Bluesky user @bigfatdaddy writes, “When Terminator became a hit, Arnold wanted to provide his voice for the dubbed German release, but it was determined that his rural Austrian accent was too hillbilly. I only want this confirmed, not debunked.”
Rating: We’re sorry to disappoint, but this is inconclusive and likely untrue. While plausible, it’s highly unlikely that this story would happen to two different members of the Terminator cast.
Context: English-speaking internet users are fascinated by Arnold Schwarzenegger speaking German, particularly in The Terminator. German actor Thomas Danneberg, who recorded dubs for numerous actors with distinctive voices, including Sylvester Stallone and Nick Nolte, provided voiceover for the Deutschland version of the film, which only fuels interest. Social video sites are filled with clips of the Austrian bodybuilder, real estate tycoon, and former governor speaking the language. But if this story about The Terminator were true, it’s highly likely that Schwarzenegger himself would’ve told it in plain English.
Schwarzenegger sounding too much like a farmer to record the German-language dub of Terminator is one of those factoids that’s been bouncing around the internet for almost 20 years. It likely sprang from a 2009 episode of the British panel show QI.
On the series F episode “France,” host Stephen Fry quizzes the panelists, “Why do Spaniards lisp when they speak?” The most common answer, that the king had a lisp and his subjects were mimicking him, is false. “If it were true, then they would lisp all the time, but they don’t,” Fry says, “except there are very small areas where they lisp on the ‘S’ as well, but that’s considered very bumpkinish in Spanish. So, it’s just one of those stories that’s got around that isn’t true at all.” Something between “very bumpkinish” and “isn’t true at all” triggered panelist Hugh Dennis’ memory.


