Transformers: Rise of the Beasts

Steevy Maximus

Well known pompous pontificator
Citizen
That's good, the Sound of Freedom Movie is doing very well and that just got Armeica cinemas only and its making bank, despite mainstream Hollywood attempt at burying it, so its showing that people are hungry for good entertaining films these days and word of mouth is key to a movie sucess!
Not to trend into certain grounds, but…
Mainstream Hollywood didn’t try to bury anything. It is a low budget thriller that got lost in the shuffle of a corporate buy out (in this case, Disney’s purchase of Fox). When you are trying to balance the slate of films Disney and Fox had circa 2018, a $15 million thriller is NOT a priority when dealing with hundred million dollar films and franchises like X-Men and Predator.

As is, the film benefitted IMMENSELY from Angel Studios marketing to Patriotic and Faith based Conservative audiences. And I strongly feel that the noise raised by that demographic has brought more attention to the film than it would have otherwise received. Angel Studios leveraged that into a sleeper hit. Good for them, it’s great to see someone buck the rules and standards a bit. But I’m under no illusion that had this been released around 2019 by Fox, it wouldn’t have even been a blip on most people’s radar.
 

MrBlud

Well-known member
Citizen
That plus they probably didn’t want the :ahem: “distraction” of the film’s main star doing the rounds talking about andrenochrome and trying their damndest to legitimize and spread a whole other host of batshit insane conspiracy theories.
 

Spin-Out

i cant take it anymore im at my limit
Citizen
Starting to drift into P&R territory...
sound of freedom is a dogwhistle to Q*non whackos who think that the jews "liberal elites" are sacrificing Christian children and drinking their blood on the sabbath torturing and killing children to get high off of adrenochrome, which is impossible bc adrenochrome is not a hallucinogen. Q*non is repackaged blood libel.
 
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Sabrblade

Continuity Nutcase
Citizen
It is good to hear that ROTB just keeps on trucking even as its presence in theaters continues to wind down. And even though it's also been released digitally while still in theaters, too.
 

lastmaximal

Administrator
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
Part of me does wonder at why, because while I enjoyed it a lot it didn't seem like a really world-changing, thrilling thing to keep seeing again or tell friends to go see. But if you're already looking to go see a movie, it's a good solid choice and a comfy rewatch, so that much I get. Either way, I'm a bit surprised but very glad to see it going this long.
 

Spin-Out

i cant take it anymore im at my limit
Citizen
tbh i think part of it is the novelty factor of "yo, this transformers movie doesn't suck ass like the first five did" still hasn't worn off
 

Undead Scottsman

Well-known member
Citizen
It's a pure popcorn flick with none of Michael Bay's weirdness in it. I think it's kind of boring as the seventh attempt at a live action TF movie, but at least there's nothing in it that makes me go "Why is this is a Transformers movie."

No Bumblebee pissing on a dude
No camera shots ogling a 17 year old girl
No extended masturbation conversation
No government agent talking about how hot the 17 year old girl is
No dog humping
No camera shot practically up the female leads shorts
No robot humping
No Jon Turtorro ass-shot
No farting robots
No robot balls
No deep wang
No introducing the new female lead with shot of her ass in panties.
And most importantly, no diverting the movie to explain why the 20-year old secondary male lead is legally allowed to date the 17-year old daughter of the male lead.

Also the robot with the random accent at least isn't a giant stereotype, which is an improvement.
 

lastmaximal

Administrator
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
I think Bumblebee accomplished all that so well, for me personally, that I managed to go into this not even thinking about that. But I can certainly understand the vibe of waiting anxiously for the other shoe to drop and Bay writing to pop out from behind a corner and gross up the movie.

I think the closest this movie got to that was the "he's a robot, how is that racist" which was just a bit that dragged and wasn't particularly interesting to begin with, rather than something you'd cringe at having brought people to the theater to see. But yes, Wheeljack just being there and not a Hilarious Foreigner Walking Joke is a sure sign of one way the movies have moved beyond that crap.
 
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lastmaximal

Administrator
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
I agree.

A big part of that is also just how intimate the scale was. One central character with a meaningful emotional journey, which they were able to parlay into a lovely Iron Giant-ish arc with Bumblebee (aside: I'm weirded out by how little the full name is used in ROTB, although it's cute that Op uses his son's nickname more).

The worry (later dispelled) that such a packed cast and plot for the sequel would be a mess was actually the second thing I felt when it was announced. The first thing was sadness that this meant we would absolutely not get something as personal and striking as the Charlie/Bee dynamic and growth. Noah and Chris had a good story and it was smart to finally build up a Kid Appeal Autobot who could TALK and carry an arc for it, but it doesn't have as much room to really play given how many other things have to be going on. And there's even less room for Elena's character.
 

LBD "Nytetrayn"

Broke the Matrix
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
Bumblebee appears to have been an outlier, unfortunately. It wasn't high art, but it did feel like it aspired to be a bit more than a disposable summer movie.
Hence the December release? To make sure it's really not a disposable summer movie?

As far as ROTB goes, it just gave me what I wanted: live action Transformers action on the big screen that's visually easier to follow than a stereogram.

And, I mean, Bumblebee did that, too, but on a much smaller scale.

Also: Maximals!
 

PrimalxConvoy

NOT a New Member.
Citizen
I think Bumblebee accomplished all that so well, for me personally, that I managed to go into this not even thinking about that. But I can certainly understand the vibe of waiting anxiously for the other shoe to drop and Bay writing to pop out from behind a corner and gross up the movie.

I think the closest this movie got to that was the "he's a robot, how is that racist" which was just a bit that dragged and wasn't particularly interesting to begin with, rather than something you'd cringe at having brought people to the theater to see. But yes, Wheeljack just being there and not a Hilarious Foreigner Walking Joke is a sure sign of one way the movies have moved beyond that crap.
I think the bit about "You were inside me!" was a bit creepy...
 

Sabrblade

Continuity Nutcase
Citizen
It's a pure popcorn flick with none of Michael Bay's weirdness in it. I think it's kind of boring as the seventh attempt at a live action TF movie, but at least there's nothing in it that makes me go "Why is this is a Transformers movie."

No Bumblebee pissing on a dude
No camera shots ogling a 17 year old girl
No extended masturbation conversation
No government agent talking about how hot the 17 year old girl is
No dog humping
No camera shot practically up the female leads shorts
No robot humping
No Jon Turtorro ass-shot
No farting robots
No robot balls
No deep wang
No introducing the new female lead with shot of her ass in panties.
And most importantly, no diverting the movie to explain why the 20-year old secondary male lead is legally allowed to date the 17-year old daughter of the male lead.

Also the robot with the random accent at least isn't a giant stereotype, which is an improvement.
You forgot...

No excessive city destruction that would make both Man of Steel and Batman v. Superman blush
No masses of human casualties being blasted into piles of flaming skulls
No cheerful comic relief human sidekick being maliciously fried into a petrified corpse that the camera views in close-up detail, and then continues to linger on for way too long afterward
No random human civilians being blown into gross puddles of puss
No fully-visible onscreen vomiting



If anything, the most legitimately "weird" thing about this movie is that it actually killed off Bumblebee early on and let him stay dead for the majority of its runtime. Sure, we knew it couldn't kill him off permanently, but the fact that it even tried, and then sidelined him for most of it, is probably the best kind of "weird" we could have asked for.
 
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Haywire

Collecter of Gobots and Godzilla
Citizen
In my opinion, Bumblebee did the "boy and his car" story better than the first TF live-action; Sam hocks stuff on ebay to get cash and scams his teacher into giving him grades so his daddy will buy him a car, then doesn't even lift the hood or even seem to try to work on it.
Conversely, Charlie has to get Bee running with parts scavenged in a junkyard to even earn the right to take Bee home, then continues to pour herself into fixing him after getting him home. (That Bee is also something of a substitute for the car she was going to restore with her dad makes it more significant.)
I think RotB's story, rather than "boy and his car" seems to be more about family having each other's backs (not dissimilar to Earthspark), and the movie shows how that definition of family starts to broaden out beyond superficial differences between the various groups. It wasn't a perfect movie, but I definitely liked it more that most of the Bay films.
 

Sabrblade

Continuity Nutcase
Citizen
In my opinion, Bumblebee did the "boy and his car" story better than the first TF live-action; Sam hocks stuff on ebay to get cash and scams his teacher into giving him grades so his daddy will buy him a car, then doesn't even lift the hood or even seem to try to work on it.
Conversely, Charlie has to get Bee running with parts scavenged in a junkyard to even earn the right to take Bee home, then continues to pour herself into fixing him after getting him home. (That Bee is also something of a substitute for the car she was going to restore with her dad makes it more significant.)
When you put it that way, AOE did "boy and his car" better than the first movie with Cade working to fix up Optimus. 😜
 

Donocropolis

Olde-Timey Member
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
If anything, the most legitimately "weird" thing about this movie is that it actually killed off Bumblebee early on and let him stay dead for the majority of its runtime. Sure, we knew it couldn't kill him off permanently, but the fact that it even tried, and then sidelined him for most of it, is probably the best kind of "weird" we could have asked for.

I'm guessing that was because BB had been the face of the franchise for so long that they didn't want people wondering where he was for most of this film while they were focusing on other characters. With him dead, he's "out of the way" for the majority of the film while still getting to have his big damn hero moment at the climax.
 

Sabrblade

Continuity Nutcase
Citizen
I'm guessing that was because BB had been the face of the franchise for so long that they didn't want people wondering where he was for most of this film while they were focusing on other characters. With him dead, he's "out of the way" for the majority of the film while still getting to have his big damn hero moment at the climax.
It's still (wonderfully) surprising that Corporate Hasbro allowed them to take such a bold route.

I mean, killing off Optimus has been done to death (pun intented). But killing off Bumblebee? That is rare.
 


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