Review: Transformers -- Scott's Review
Filed under: Action, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Paramount, Theatrical Reviews, Dreamworks, Comic/Superhero/Geek, Remakes and Sequels, Games and Game Movies, War
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If Michael Bay's intention was to make a Transformers movie that would have the established fans peeing in their pants and clapping with nerdly glee, he's succeeded in fine form. If, however, Michael Bay's intention was to create an accessible sci-fi adventure movie that could bring in moviegoers who believe a "transformer" is something you stick into your fuse box ... he's failed pretty miserably. Hitting the screens with all the subtlety of a 50-piece drum set thrown down an eternal flight of stairs, Transformers should have been bankrolled by the fine people of Tylenol: Twelve random minutes of the flick are enough to give you a brain-bruising migraine.
But loud and mindless I can handle. Lord knows I'm a fan of enough empty vessels like Transformers. (Indeed, I'm even a Bay supporter sometimes. I adore The Rock, I consider Armageddon a blissfully guilty pleasure, and I'm one of the few who bothered to find some good things in The Island. The less said about Pearl Harbor and Bad Boys 2 ... the better.) The main problem (among many) with this massively moronic Transformers flick is that for all its sound and fury ... there's simply that nothing there. One can only sit through so many sequences in which giant animated dolls throw each other across the street before he wonders "Do I even care who wins this fight? And which one's the good guy again? I think he had blue stripes."
The plot is an amalgam of material found in the cartoon, the animated film and the comic book series, although all you really need to know is this: Lots of giant robots are searching for an ancient artifact that's hidden somewhere on Earth. Some of the robots like humans; others do not. Chases and explosions ensue. Lather, rinse, repeat.
Basically, for a mindless action movie, Transformers sure does spin its wheels before getting to the good stuff -- and then once the good stuff arrives you'll need a slo-mo button to figure out what the hell's going on. Except, of course, if you were raised on the Transformers cartoon, toys, comic books and video games. Then you'll not only know what's going on ... you'll know what's coming next. (And not necessarily in a good way.) Plus I find it very ironic (and more than a little sad) that the most entertaining component of the film is not the million-dollar robots or the elaborately chaotic action scenes: It's actually character actor John Turturro, whose services probably cost less than one CGI technician.
A very amusing Shia LaBeouf plays Sam Witwicky, a high school junior who desperately wants his own car. (He also has a large chunk of dreary back-story that deals with his late grandfather's arctic discovery ... a superfluous plot thread that adds little to the movie and actually vanishes from the plot entirely.) Sam's dad buys him a classic Camaro -- a vehicle that also happens to be a giant alien robot from another world. Then we get a whole bunch of arid nothingness that deals with a young hottie (Megan Fox), a clueless Secretary of Defense (Jon Voight), a bland pair of soldiers (Josh Duhamel and Tyrese Gibson), a hacker duo as unconvincing as they are uninteresting (Anthony Anderson and Rachael Taylor), and a wild-eyed secret agent (John Turturro) before we can get down to business: The action. And when it's all said and done, Transformers might deliver the action in quantity, but most definitely not in quality.
Written poorly and edited together in even worse fashion, the movie leaps around from place to place and character to character with not only a lack of logic, but practically contempt for the way a story is told. The interesting characters simply vanish for large periods, but the bland ones stay front and center. The narrative lurches forward in tiny dribs and drabs ... but only to make way for a generally unimpressive series of action set pieces. Plot threads and side characters are simply forgotten about. The movie is fetishistic about cars and weapons and sexy underage women, but it never once connects on a human level. I've played video games in which you somehow care about the characters -- something this movie never once allows you to do. Essentially it's Independence Day meets the Godzilla remake, only with giant boring robots instead of boring aliens or boring monsters. Flat, loud, flashy spectacle that's been fine-tuned and sanded down to appeal to the widest global audience possible. All in all, pretty generic.
But I can't lie: The final 20-some minutes of Transformers is all but packed to the robotic rafters with high-end mega-mayhem. The entire third act is practically one big massive action scene. Whether or not that's a good thing is up to the individual viewer, but I was thrilled to see this lumbering mass exhibit even half a pulse by that point. But Bay and his screenwriters clearly have no interest in the human side of the equation, which explains why even the quiet moments of Transformers feel vaguely "cyborg" in nature. When you're trying to wedge some actual human emotion into a flick that's not much more than the 15th permutation of a glorified toy advertisement, you're better off doing it with some sincerity -- or not bothering at all. The Incredibles has more heart and soul than Transformers, and while I certainly wouldn't walk into a movie like this looking for deep and soulful emotion, I didn't expect a flick that felt like it was MADE by robots.










Reader Comments (Page 4 of 26)
7-04-2007 @ 9:52AM
Crappy said...
Look. the first half of the movie was alright. When the bad acting of sector 7 agent kicked in along with the Hoover dam crap it fell apart. Some of the cgi was blurry which meant it was not completed. I think the writers did a horrible job balancing everything out at the end. I think the main character is way over rated and didn't fit the film well. Overall I give this movie a C-. I love transformers, don't get me wrong but Micheal Bay got to a point in editing the movie that he just stopped caring. Seeing transformers finally in a live action movie is great... seeing them in a Micheal Bay movie well... where was James Cameron when you need him. Your all going to see the movie, sequels, and spin offs anyways.. but just hope (for all our sakes) the directors chair changes hands next time around.
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7-04-2007 @ 11:15AM
tom taylor said...
saw the moive*** a total package movie**
anyone can see this movie,its for kids, adults, boyfriends and girlfriends*** everyone will ove this movie*** the writers and director did a perfect job** i you did not like the film, well maybe having a positive fun film that intstills values (just like the tv series did) is not in your capacity t comprehend** anyway the bottom line is lets ee how it plays out in the box office** i give it 5 stars***
when it blows the new rat movie (disney) out of the water at the box office*** we will see how much the transformers movie sucks*** TOO BAD IT DOES NOT SUCK AND THE BOX OFFICE WILL PROVE IT** AND I WILL LET MY 200,000 MY SPACE FRIENDS KNOW THAT THIS IS THE MOVIE OF THE SUMMER AND TO GO BUY A TICKET TO ENSURE IT REIGNS AT THE BOXOFFICE** AND SHOVES AN ENERGON CUBE RIGHT DOWN ALL THE HATERS TROATS****
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7-04-2007 @ 11:17AM
kevinand21 said...
I went see Transformers the night it came out and was blown away. This has to be the best movie I have ever seen. And for the ones who disagree, give us examples of movies that are better, or make one yourself that will top the charts and break records.
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7-04-2007 @ 11:47AM
Lil said...
My husband and I saw the movie yesterday...and I think this review is a tad harsh. I grew up with Transformers, but wasn't an avid fan. (I was a JEM girl myself...) The movie has some jaw droppingly awesome action sequences...and scenes that caused me to say, "Oh Wow" right out loud in the theatre. I can say sometimes the action was a little cluttered since the autobots all kind of look similar when they're fighting, but overall it was worth my money. Both my hubby and I walked out saying, "We're TOTALLY buying that when it comes out on DVD."
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7-04-2007 @ 11:46AM
tom taylor said...
**TRANSFORMERS CONTINUED** ACCORDING TO MY MY SPACE HITS** SEVERAL HUNDRED MORE GIG TO VIEW THE FILM TONIGHT** WHICH MEANS KA-CHING AT THE BOX OFFICE**
SCORE ANOTHER VICTORY FOR OPTIMUS PRIME** LIKE I SAID BEFORE IF ANYONE WHO SEES THE MOVIE AND DOES UNDERSTAND IT HAS IT ALL**ACTION**FUN**FAMILY VALUES** WELL I AM SORRY FOR YOU** TO THINK A ROBOT FROM ANOTHER WOULD SACRIFICE HIMSELF TO SAVE A PLANET AND PEOPLE HE HAS NO REASON TO CARE ABOUT* SHOULD TELL YOU SOMETHING** AND FOR ALL THE HATERS OF THE WRTIER AND THE DIRECTOR** ASK YOURSELF (ARE YOU PERFECT???) DID YOU SCORE 100% ON EVERY TEST IN HIGH SCHOOL??? CAN YOU WAKE UP AND SAY I AM PERFECT??? I THINK NOT** THE BOTTOM LINE** BECKY QUICK LIKES THE FILM (FROM CNCBC STOCK MARKET SHOW)
AND THAT IS GOOD ENOUGH FOR ME** SHE UNDERSTANDS ITS A MOVIE*** AND MOVIES ARE SUPPOSED TO BE FUN** AND THE TRANSFORMERS IS AND ALWAYS WILL BE FUN*** IN FACT LOOK FOR ME TOMMOROW NIGHT IN LINE TO SEE IT AGAIN** I WILL BE THE GUY WITH THREE GIRLS WITH HIM**
TRANSFORMERS RULE** THANKYOU TO THE PEOPLE WHO MADE THE FILM POSSIBLE***AND TO ALL THE PEOPLE WHO DON'T GET IT** (DONT HATE THE PLAYER HATE THE GAME)
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7-04-2007 @ 12:06PM
Corinne said...
Ok...I seen the movie and whoever did that review should be shot. First of all the plot NEVER dropped. It kept getting deeper, hence "Secter 7" Dumbass. Second, it wasn't all loud it was alot of great, amusing, heart pumping, wicked bad ass fighting in the streets. Who wouldn't wanna see two big huge robots fight? The graphics were mouth dropping, the plot kept digging deeper until the shocking truth about "Sam's" grandfather. Which was absolutely awesome. The movie was soooooo great I'd see it 5 more times, even at a ridiculus $9.75 ticket price. And this is from a girl who never even seen Transformers growing up...Suck on this you sorry excuse for a movie critic!
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7-04-2007 @ 12:26PM
Screen Rant said...
Scott, don't listen to most of these comments, your review was dead-on. I can enjoy a mindless action flick as much as the next guy (Die Hard 4, for example) but after the first hour this thing was freaking awful. I almost left before it was over because I just didn't care how it would end, but I was going to review it on my site screenrant.com so had to sit through the entire thing.
Personally I tend to look at the spelling and grammar of comments defending this film and that pretty much tells me what I need to know.
Vic
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7-04-2007 @ 12:13PM
Stanley said...
I would have liked the movie if they had cut about half of the almost funny jokes, kept the characters the same as the cartoon (Bumble Bee was a VW Bug, not a freakin camero, and Megatron was a plane.) Did megatron ever turn into a plane? NO. A gun. Gun. Galvatron turned into a plane, and megatron isn't Galvatron in this movie. sigh. And wasn't Sams dad a mechanic? Not some sissy whining about his lawn? I took a visual survey after the movie. All the people my age (30) were disappointed. The late teens and early 20's kids were excited. I guess Hollywood did it again! Mindless junk.
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7-04-2007 @ 12:16PM
Stanley said...
To Corinne: The reason you liked it is because you didn't watch Transformers growing up. I am happy for you, because most of us who did are dissapointed.
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7-04-2007 @ 12:56PM
Jay Thomas said...
I think Mr. Weinberg's assessment was a bit unfair. Yes, the movie is packing ten pounds of action into a five pound bag. Yes, the human elements are perhaps played down a bit. But to say that "it never once connects on a human level" leads me to wonder what his teenage years were like and if he has any children.
I am a 26 year-old young man who grew up with Transformers among many other things. I have two daughters who are one and two years old. Highschool wasn't so far back that I don't remember being the awkward boy trying to impress the pretty girl. Perhaps my point of view isn't widely shared, but I sincerely doubt it is unique.
A few minutes into the movie, right when I could tell that Blackout was going to attack but wasn't sure how major a character Sergeant Lennox was going to be, my heart nearly broke. Movies don't always play the way you think they will, and the thought that this young man, though I knew little about him, may die before ever meeting his daughter disturbed me greatly. Maybe I'm a softie, but having kids will do that to you.
I nearly died laughing during the sequence when Bumblebee, as yet unrevealed to his new owner, was trying to help Sam get some play with the hot young woman by breaking down and making romantic radio selections. C'mon Scott, you never had trouble with the ladies? And Sam's mother deciding upon an impromtu talk about his "fun time" - classic teenage embarassment nightmare.
I'm not going to claim that Transformers is the heart-warming movie of the summer, but it connected just fine for me, and just enough. Though I'll agree that many of those plot points dropped off later in the film, who cares? The action was hardcore, and wondering whether or not history would repeat itself with another incarnation of the death of Optimus Prime was a least a little suspenseful. And, at the end of the day, what's wrong with a little old fashioned, popcorn chompin', mindless fun?
As for the comment "The interesting characters simply vanish for large periods, but the bland ones stay front and center." Who is and isn't interesting is purely a matter of personal opinion and what is attractive to the individual viewer. Obviously we know who Scott sides with, but it's the height of arrogance to try to decide who is interesting or not for everyone else.
Of course Transformers played to the fans. What else do you want them to do? If they just wanted to make a giant robot movie they could have done so without licensing Transformers. It's a movie by fans, for fans, but one that can be enjoyed for the popcorn action elements alone even if you grew up without Transformers. If that's the case, what do you care? You're either utilizing a bedpan, aren't far from one, or lacked a television in the 80s. And if you simply weren't interested in Transformers and had no love for movies that lack a dissertation on the comparable difficulties of the human condition - why would you see the movie?
Bottom line: Not every film is going to be Magnolia or American beauty - thank God. Pass the popcorn and keep it down, or go back to watching your soap operas. I'm trying to watch the big one with blue stripes beat the crap out of the one that looks like a tank.
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7-04-2007 @ 1:00PM
Tony said...
I read a lot of people comments.. I want you to know that a childhood dream became a great reality...I thought there would be a Gi Joe movie before they could ever do a Transformers. I just want to say Micheal & Steven. Make another one!!! In the Land of cartoons, video games and comic books becoming movies
This is on my Top List of DVDs this holiday year. If you feel like I feel, here's a secert for ya. What movie in 2008 will make you remember; (Up,up,down,down,left,right,B, A start...hint hint!!! TRANSFORMERS HANDS DOWN GETS A 10!!
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7-04-2007 @ 7:37PM
IronHide said...
Transformers - A Michael Bay Film.
That right there killed it for me. I grew up with all the transformers trappings but after seeing this film and how much for all the BS that was fed us about how they were answerable to the fans and would do the franchise right, it sucked. The robots weren't actors, they were more along the lines of props or story vehicles (pardon the pun). The talentless hacks(calling them writers is too kind) emphsised the teenage love story instead of using the transformers to tell the story. In case Mr. Bay and the writers didn't realize, the name of the movie IS "The Tranformers" not "Sam Gets the Chick and Saves the World." Disgusted for shelling out $14 (luckily for matinee x2, I went home and watched "More than Meets the Eye (parts 1-3)" and "The Transformers 20th Anniversary Edition". I hope that the sequel really takes our opinions and feedback to heart, because I feel if done right, it could have been a real Summer Blockbuster.
Old Ironhide
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7-04-2007 @ 1:08PM
Jay Thomas said...
What does the code for 30 lives in Contra have to do with Transformers? *wink*
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7-04-2007 @ 1:12PM
tom taylor said...
THIS IS FOR THE OHI0 STAE GUY** WHO GAVE THE NEGATIVE COMMENTS ** WHO LOVES TO ANALYZE MOVIES** WELL ANALYZE THIS*** IT WILL BE NUMBER ONE AT THE BOX OFFICE AND YOU HELPED IT IDIOT** THE MONEY YOU PAID TO SEE WILL HELP GET IT THERE *8 SO I SAY THANKYOU TO ALL THE HATERS OF THE FILM** CAUSEIN ORDER FOR YOU TO HATE THE FILM YOU HAD TO HAD TO SHELL OUT MONEY TO SEE IT** IDIOTS** SO THANKS AGAIN FOR HELPING PUSH THE FILM YOU HATED TO NUMBER ONE AT THE BOX OFFICE** AND TO STEAL A LINE FORM DX IF YOUR NOT DOWN WITH THE TRANSFORMERS WE GOT TWO WORDS FOR YOU **SUCK IT*** OHIO STATE GUY AND ANY OTHER HATER OF THE FILM** AND REMEMBER THERE ARE TWO TYPES OF PEOPLE IN THIS WORLD PEOPLE ON MOVIE SCREENS AND PEOPLE WHO PAY TO SEE THEM** AND YOU OHIO STATE GUY**
YOU PAID TO SEE THEM** LOSER*******
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7-04-2007 @ 1:12PM
Stanley said...
Life Force was much better than Contra!
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7-04-2007 @ 1:29PM
Stanley said...
Tom, what do you care about how much the movie brings in? Are you an investor?
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7-04-2007 @ 1:37PM
Frost said...
Finally a movie worth the price of admission. Well done. If you grew up watching the cartoon and playing with the toys, you can really appreciate this film. Well done.
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7-04-2007 @ 2:01PM
dwight bennett said...
i just saw the transformers and i must say it was very entertaining . do you hear that folks ....entertaining . i believe thats the point everyone seems to be missing . i fought to stay awake during spider man 3 , but this movie more than makes up for that . the action , the comedy , the special effects and the story blended well . now one thing did bother me about this movie . In the animated version megatron always kicked optimus primes ass . oddly enough the same holds true in the real world lol
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7-04-2007 @ 2:49PM
Travis said...
I saw it last night and frankly, it wasn't written by William Shakespeare to be sure.
Nor was it performed by actors that truely care about their craft and have spent time seriously training to be convincing in their roles.
I'm just pulling your chain, Transformers was THE movie of the summer! I got everything I came to see, cool robots just like a remember from childhood, non-stop robot-on-robot action, and a smokin' hot Megan Fox! What was it missing again?
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7-04-2007 @ 10:55PM
Q said...
Transformers was never about human relationships, it was about alien robots disguised as common earth vehicles and household items. They talked and acted like humans, and had some human friends, merely a connection to the planet a reason to care enough not to destroy it or keep it for themselves.
It was a giant commercial to sell Hasboro toys, and a way to market Japanese cars to kids.
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