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Transformers III • Dark Of The Moon • Spoilers
Just got back from the 3D screening of Dark of the Moon. I think I need a night's sleep to fully process my thoughts but here are some quick hitters:
- Flat out, it's a more palatable version of Revenge of the Fallen. It has plenty of the same shortcomings but the spectacle is ratcheted up about 1000 times. I don't think I've ever seen relentless action like this.
- If this was Michael Bay and his creative team's best effort to make a great film then these guys really can't craft a cohesive narrative to save their children's lives.
- I'm convinced Steven Spielberg had more to do with the first film's success AS A MOVIE than did Michael Bay. There's an old saying down in Tennessee that goes like this: Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice - well - you just can't fool me again. Maybe I was teased by the potential greatness of this franchise after TF1, but Bay instead took TF in a direction that asked me to turn my brain off entirely. Action for the sake of action I can enjoy. This wasn't the universe TF1 promised though and for that these two sequels were nothing short of disastrously disappointing. If you couldn't see the Spielbergian influence all over TF1 and the sense of wonder that came along with it then I guess ROTF and DOTM will sit just fine with you.
- See it in 3D. Some of the sequences are mind blowing. That said, I'm already numb to this magic trick (along with the kajillions of dollars worth of VFX on display).
- Intercutting between historical footage and staged material so seamlessly might be Bay's most inspired work as a director.
- The movie starts strong and confident. Then 4 or 5 minutes go by and it becomes a parody of itself for about an hour. No robot balls or robot pee, but the terrible robot highjinks are replaced with try-to-hard embarrassing human comedy moments and almost none of them are entertaining.
- With so many smart, talented people on set and in the meeting rooms did anyone - ANYONE - stop to say: "Mr. Bay, why is this interesting? Is this needed? What's the point of this? How do these plot elements connect to form a compelling narrative? Why the fuck is Ken Jeong in every movie?" Absolutely nobody has the balls to tell this guy like it is. He's a megalomaniac on set surrounded by a bunch of yes-men and nobody has the heart or gusto to tell him that what he's doing is fucking stupid half the time. Megan Fox was onto something there. Spielberg clearly didn't give a shit about influencing Bay after the first film's success and it shows on screen. The bearded one got his wish: he got his Transformers franchise and the ultimate example of the law of diminishing returns.
- Rosie model-girl is a terrible actress. Worse than Megan Fox. She's sexy but I'm watching a sci-fi genre movie; I'm not exactly in the frame of mind to be constantly bombarded with shots of her ass nor do I get a hard on from seeing her framed against a backdrop of utter chaos.
- The final third felt like a cross between Terminator Salvation and Battle LA. I don't know how much I like this idea in a movie about alien robots that turn into cars and planes. I don't know about the rest of you, but the magic of this entire brand was that it wasn't like every other alien/sci-fi story; it had a special gimmick that made it cool. When that gimmick is reduced to a footnote by the story then I can't really differentiate between Transformers and Terminator.
- Why was Shockwave in the movie aside from the need to sell a Shockwave toy? Answer: there is no reason. He's utterly pointless and they didn't even try to work him into the plot.
- Soundwave was under used. So was Starscream. So was every decepticon. None of them had any character. Even Megatron was an afterthought. There's one very good robot moment when **SPOILER** Ironhide is killed, but that's about it. I wasn't even that pumped by Optimus even though he has by far more action time than in either movie. Guess why? Because the script doesn't have him do or feel anything unless it's to move the plot forward. He was more of a hero in TF1, now he's just a pawn for action.
Listen, one could go on and on about this movie whether it's the insane action sequences in Chicago (they're all pretty amazing in a "I don't know why any of this is happening but it's awesome" sort of way) or the mess (and I mean mess) of a script but the more I think about it the less I feel there is to say.
You all know what this movie is about because most of you have seen Revenge of the Fallen. Is it better? Yes it is. Is it the best of the series? It would be an insult to the disabled to say you'd have to be retarded to think that. In the same way ROTF wasn't a real movie, it was just a mish mash of scenes and spectacle thrown on screen, DOTM is simply a better version of that.
EDIT: Why do robots that can transform into aircraft need to be piloting Terminator-like aircrafts themselves?