Once more I’m incredibly
late with a movie review of a Hasbro property.
Seriously, by this point
I should know better by now and make sure to see these things in the theater.
I figure since Transformers: Age of Extinction made over
a billion dollars, enough people have seen it that I don’t need to worry about some minor spoilers.
With a run time of two
hours and forty-five minutes, I talked myself out of finding a block in my
schedule to view it. That goes to show
how little I pay attention as the other Transformers films were only fifteen
minutes shorter. I never noticed because they flew by once the insane, shape
shifting, robotic destruction kicked into high gear; including the one they
threw the script together over the weekend before a writers strike.
This fourth installment
is the best since the first film. The
change of main actors has very little to do with that. Like any non-military
combat people in a Bay film, their interactions tend to range from “entertaining
if juvenile” to “annoyingly forced humor,” with occasional moments of combat awesome
thrown in.
On the positive side, Cade Yeager (Mark Wahlberg) is probably as close to Sparkplug as we’re ever going to get in these films.
On the positive side, Cade Yeager (Mark Wahlberg) is probably as close to Sparkplug as we’re ever going to get in these films.
Heck, CIA agent and Cemetery Wind founder Harold Attinger would make “Stinky Pete” smell like a rose.
Focusing solely on
previous human stars, I forgot to remind myself: Michael Bay is just as
consistent with the important parts of Transformers films as he is with the
portrayals of people. The man is an
artist when it comes to explosions, car chases, massive scale battles, and
practical effect laden, pulse pounding action.
Once it fiddles with the
human element for a bit, this one goes off the charts in the areas of Bay’s
expertise that make him the perfect choice for weapon laden vehicles that turn
into giant battle robots. (Or vice versa.)
Yes, the action is eye
poppingly glorious in all its fury.
For a mild example- there
are several scenes where massive ocean vessels are used as projectile weapons!
Yay!
Yay!
What sets this outing
apart, though, is the number of Transformers that get personalities and
featured acting scenes.
Like previous films,
most of the Decepticons are animalistic monsters, but at least this time
there’s a reason for it. They are sparkless Vehicon drones. It’s a shame they
went with the Transformium “liquid metal” advancement for the switches between
forms. One thing these films excel at is
making the mechanical transformations between states be believable.
Frank Welker finally is
used to voice a Decepticon leader.
YAY!
YAY AGAIN!
Can’t wait to see him
expanded in the sequel. (Remember, a billion dollars!)
The key robotic bad bot
this time around isn’t the Decepticon though, it’s Lockdown. He’s a bounty hunter working for the
“creators” of the Transformers. (Bayverse Quintessons? This I gotta see! Yes, they added to the
mythology again, without referencing any other aspect they put in from other
movies…I’m sure it will make sense eventually.)
He doesn’t care about the civil war we’ve watched for three movies, and also
doesn’t care about Earth. In fact he
doesn’t care about anything in between him and his quarry in his single minded
unquenchable focus. This means we get to
see a great deal of entertaining destruction from this generally soft spoken,
if deadly adversary. A bunch comes from
his animalistic hench car and hench wolf bots, but even more comes from
him. Unlike the way the other films
chickened out with Megatron’s and Shockwave’s transformations, either Lockdown
turns into a big freakin’ gun, or just turns his head into a slightly less big
freakin gun.
Either way, it’s awesome, and massively destructive.
Either way, it’s awesome, and massively destructive.
Oh, and his alternate Trans-Form
is a Lamborghini, adding a Cannonball Run
level of coolness on top of his already uber groovy face cannon and unflappable
bounty hunter personality.
As fun as the villains
are, the stand outs of this film are the Autobots. The battle scenes for most of the franchise
focused on the awesomeness of the amazing G. I Joe like N.E.S.T. team using the
Transformers as sentient armored units.
Due to the treacherous nature of humanity (Boo Hiss!) the ‘bots battle mostly
on their own this time, aided by only a few worthy allies.
More importantly, the
whole group of Autobots gets the time, dialogue and action scenes to develop as
complete characters.
John DiMaggio added the
same presence to the portrayal of Crosshairs as he did to Batman Brave and Bold’s Aquaman.
The magnetism comes not from “outrageous” bombast this time, but a
British accented, snarky cynicism draped over an inner heroism. The insane paratrooper combat skills didn’t
hurt either.
Bumblebee has become a
far more experienced and competent warrior throughout the films. He still maintains his guardian aspect
towards the humans, and they’ve gotten much more clever (and entertaining) with
his speaking only through satellite radio sound bites. (Which somehow also contains TV and movie
quotes, but it works so we’ll leave it.)
Drift brings the awesome
from two directions. First, he’s a
triple changer, with the same forms (car, helicopter, and robot) as Springer
from the old G1 Cartoon. However, the conservation of mass and parts rule that
these movies have tried to follow from the beginning stays in full effect making
all of his transformations extra wicked.
Second the Samurai Decepticon convert is voiced by Ken Watanabe. The actor not only brings the dignity and
gravitas that belongs with an ancient and honorable warrior, but also has the
comedy chops to expertly poke fun at those same expectations on occasion.
My personal favorite of
the newcomers is Hound, upsized from his G1 Jeep to a Medium Tactical Vehicle.
(That’s an army truck for those of us who don’t speak military.) John Goodman provided the voice and I’d expect
inspired the mannerisms and attitude.
The potbellied, bearded, cigar chomping grizzled warrior was covered in
oversized weapons that all looked like scaled up versions of standard guns and
explosives. Think the surgery scene in King Kong Escapes but with
grenades. His one liners and violent
antics highlighted every moment he was on screen.
Dinobots!
I think that about
covers it for them, but to be clearer.
Giant freakin’ robots
that turn into oversized metal dinosaurs and lay waste to the evil Decepticon
army.
They only showed up for
the final battle, but they brought the awesome by the boatload. The only way they could have been better is
by veering away from the franchise norm of having them only capable of growls
and roars. There is no film that could
not be improved by dialogue like the classic:
“Me Grimlock say you
wrong, and you ugly too!"
Or the erudite debate:
Or the erudite debate:
"Me Slag say you full of beryllium baloney!"
"Me Grimlock say you full of cesium salami.”
Off course, I’ve left
someone off, but that’s because I’m saving the best for last.
Let me put it this way:
Grimlock is an enormous
robotic Tyrannosaurus Rex that breathes fire, commands three similarly
impressive associates and kicks the butt of (or just plain eats)
almost every foe he meets.
almost every foe he meets.
And Optimums Prime out
awesomes him in every scene they share.
This is the Autobot
commander as we’ve never seen him before.
Betrayed by humanity, and pushed too far by the villains, he’s at a level of pissed off unreached in over
thirty years of toy, cartoon, comic book and movie appearances.
Much like Superman, or
The Doctor, there’s a darn good reason Prime keeps that part of his personality
in check most of the time.
Once he’s healed himself
out of his battered, if G1 Inspired, initial appearance - he becomes virtually
unstoppable. He also makes the G1
Transformation sound when growing his new Autobot logo.
YAY! The only times he’s on the losing end of a conflict is due to his inherent heroism, even at his most enraged, leading him to choose protecting others over himself.
YAY! The only times he’s on the losing end of a conflict is due to his inherent heroism, even at his most enraged, leading him to choose protecting others over himself.
The fact that most of
the civilians he protected this time around were significantly less annoying
helped a bit too.
Optimums Prime leads his
troops from the front, inspiring them all the way, and facing the major
opponents head on.
And he says, “ROLL
OUT!” SQUEEEEEE!!!
(Granted he says it to
troops that don’t roll, but I don’t care.
SQUEEEEEE!)
There is little wonder
why he has been called, “The greatest fictional leader in history.”
By…um…someone…award
winning writer and artist Wendy Pini…I think.
Sadly the internet has
failed me and I can’t remember which DVD extra it was on.
Oh well. I believe it, anyway, wherever it came from.
Moving on.
I seriously believe that
once Peter Cullen retires, Optimums Prime should as well. Bring in Ultra
Magnus, or Rodimus Prime, or something.
There are iconic voices that reach a level of unquestionable perfection
for a character, and those should not and cannot be replaced.
Hopefully, this will
teach me the “see the giant shape changing robot movie in the theater”
lesson. After all, watching this one
caused me to marathon view the first three the next day (a convenient rainy Sunday), and then
rewatch Age of
Extinction the following night I showed a couple youtube clips to my daughter before heading Up the Lake for the weekend. She was so excited she:
1) Made up six groups (thirty total) of her own Transformers.
2) Asked me to pull out my More than Meets the Eye comics - a who's who like index of Transformers.
3) Insisted we watch Age of Extinction as soon as we got home, then asked when the sequel comes out, and if we could watch the G1 cartoon when we finish one of the DVD series we're currently working through.
That's my girl!
1) Made up six groups (thirty total) of her own Transformers.
2) Asked me to pull out my More than Meets the Eye comics - a who's who like index of Transformers.
3) Insisted we watch Age of Extinction as soon as we got home, then asked when the sequel comes out, and if we could watch the G1 cartoon when we finish one of the DVD series we're currently working through.
That's my girl!
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