It was alright!
Kind of gave me “GI Joe Retaliation” vibes, in that, while not as “good” a film as its prior release, it was, fundamentally, more FUN to watch.
That’s not to say it doesn’t have flaws. The REALLY strong first half kind of collapsed in the second half to accommodate the robot fighting action. Gave me the vibes that they had a strong character driven movie at first, until producers stepped in and said “more robots, MOAR BAYSPLOSIONS!”. The Maximals ARE under-utilized. The film squandered many moments where they could have transformed to add new context to action sequences, particularly in regards to Optimus Primal, whose classic “jump jets”, would have fit perfectly in battle against Nightbird or added to a particular scene in the climax. I was also a bit baffled as to why the film kept avoiding putting the Maximals in better context.
They fled the future to Earth’s past to prevent Unicron from getting the key and jumping across space and time himself.
I don’t know WHY that explanation seemed so difficult to put in. Most of the attempts to garner an emotional response tended to fall flat, largely due to the fact it’s a well the prior films were FAR too eager to dip into.
However, while Bumblebee was a MASSIVE leap forward, falling a few steps back STILL puts it above any Michael Bay sequel (and, arguably, the first film itself). The film tried its damndest to straddle the line between the pros of Bumblebee and prior Bay films. It might not have always succeeded, but it still put forward an admirable effort. The Transformers themselves are fine, with Davidson’s Mirage being FAR less obnoxious than I feared. While many characters didn’t have much character development, there was a very clear effort to making each visually and audibly distinct. Primal, Airrazor, Arcee, Scourge and Nightbird, in particular managed VERY strong impressions. And I applaud Director Caple in getting, EASILY, the best Optimus Prime performance of the franchise. The soundtrack was on point, with some of the hip hop/R&B selections giving me early 90s vibes in ways I did NOT expect. The orchestrated work is a step above from Bumblebee, too. Seeing Jablonsky contribute was a wonderful touch. While I felt the Maximals were under-utilized, they WERE used decently enough. Certainly FAR more than how the Dinobots ended up being treated by the films. The action sequences were well done. Not much to say, but they were clear and decently done with a clear “structure” the Bay films have tended to forget.
Probably the biggest lesson learned from Bumblebee was in keeping the film “accessible”. Aside from Bumblebee and its PG rating, RotB is the most family friendly of any of the films. There were no learning shots of the female body, the language is easily the mildest of the PG-13 entries (and most of that was on the soundtrack, not the dialog), the single bit of “body humor” was quick and mild. The most “offensive” joke was an exchange between Wheeljack and Noah concerning accents and Spanish. Which was still LEAGUES below some of the stuff the Bay films did. At no point did I feel the film fall into cringe, or see lackluster jokes drag on, or see frat boy caliber humor.
It was wonderful to watch a Transformers film and NOT feel embarrassed at a crude joke or abrupt F-bomb (they are allowed ONE in a PG-13 film!) in a theatre with kids. Speaking of, it seemed like the kids present DID enjoy the film! Hopefully, the big ending stinger will pay off to something tangible in the coming years.
So, is it a good film? As a fan, I’m an easy mark. It’s not as objectively good as Bumblebee. But going back to my prior comparison with GI Joe, I DID enjoy myself just as much. It’s a nice, breezy two hour runtime. It keeps a brisk pace and doesn’t waste your time. I feel this is a solid “restart” to the grander Transformers film franchise, though it remains to be seen if the powers that be can maintain at LEAST this level of quality.
I was SO expecting a Primal Prime Jets thing to happen too! Dang the missed opportunity.
I hope the kids still find the Maximals interesting enough to get their toys, even if they don't/barely transform.
Thinking back, a good way that fits the plot to show how cool the Maximals were would be to have them actually fight the Autobots. Would have helped Airazor (which I thought was a good part to add drama in). There was already a Prime vs Bee thing in the other TF movie (holy cow, I forget the name, The Last Knight?). Either the Maximals go out of control (go wild) so the Autobots cure them or the Autobots go berserk so the Maximals 'tame' them spiritually to keep it thematic. Either way shows off the strength or abilities of the Maximals.
A great day for combining three of my favorite things.
As for the movie itself? My succinct, spoiler-free review is that it is easily my favorite of the live-action films.
Is it the best movie? I'm not a film critic, and heck, if I went back, I might even give the nod to Bumblebee as being a "better" movie, but I feel like this one just delivered more of what I want. It might even be Peter Cullen's best live-action work as Optimus.
Though why the kid was talking about beating Bowser on GB I can't tell you. None of the Super Mario Land Games had him, and the sound effects that played when he first came in were not from the GB games.
1) There is no firm date for Beast Wars, but yes it is definitely a separate universe from Rise of the Beasts that goes without saying.
2) Not necessarily. In US continuity BE future is 300 years after the "end of the Great War" which doesn't necessarily have any connection to Victory. In Japanese continuity things are more connected, but also filled with a million retcons and retro-insertions and again is definitely its own continuity.
3) No. The Bay movies couldn't even set each other up in any coherent way and are full of contradictions and discontinuity there's zero reason to expect that to change.
-ZacWilliam, you would be hard pressed to put the live action films in continuity with each other beyond a tenetive release sequence it's foolish to try and connect them to anything beyond that.
I was pleasantly surprised by this film, as I was by Bumblebee before it (which this seems to be a follow-up to?). And I'm assuming all the pre-Bumblebee stuff is a separate continuity?
While I enjoyed the very first Bay TF film back in the day (for what it was, anyway), I haven't been able to enjoy any of the follow-ups on any level other than their being so god-awful, offensive and loud that sometimes they're hilarious (Anthony Hopkins hamming it up, etc). But the characters themselves, Autobot, Decepticon and human alike, all became repugnant and indistinguishable over the course of the series. Prime was a dangerous psychopathic war criminal who preferred wearing the faces of his slain opponents to finding a peaceful solution.
This movie, though, was blissfully quiet in comparison. Restraint was employed in the direction of the action sequences and you could always tell what was going on, the human characters were easy to empathize with and didn't just end up being burdens tagging along with the Autobots for no particular reason, and the TF characters were also likeable. I very much liked the idea of a younger, inexperienced Prime being influenced by the peaceful philosophy of the more advanced Maximals. Even the villains in this were a refreshing change from the generic bullshit Decepticons we always got in Bay films led by a Megatron who never seemed to have any clear plan or purpose other than to blow things up and growl (and half the time you never even knew why he was still alive after being killed). Scourge had an actual personality, and each of his underlings had nice, distinctive designs.
I really hope this movie does well and Paramount decides to give Steven Caple Jr. a chance to finish his trilogy. I very much appreciate the ways in which he's changed the style of live-action TFs with this film.
So, far everything I'm hearing is posstive, I plan to try and see the film on my next day off, when some of the rush has died down and I got a better sense of what the general view is from REAL people, can't trust the sites like RT or IMDB, because they been croupted by the big companies and would rather alter the naratives to try and make themselves look good despite the fact the films they seek to protect are likely trash fires!
Indeed. My wife and I were discussing that part after, and the most reasonable assumption is that Tatanga is so obscure that if they'd gone for accuracy, they might as well not have even made the reference at all.
...which, for the record, I hate. Boo on you, Nintendo! Super Mario Land was great! DO SOMETHING with it!!!
I was disappointed in the movie, the Maximals could have transformed more, it was a blink and you miss the transformation. Airrazer never even attempted, and she had the most screen time and dialogue. I don't know about the villains, it seems like the Decepticons from the other movies were alot scarier than the Terrorcons. Maybe I am just desensitized to big scary robots now.
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