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Rodimus Prime wrote:Thanks for clearing that up.
I didn't know the definition of "plot."
Yes, RotF had a plot, but it was terrible and didn't translate to film well.
Capt.Failure wrote:Rodimus Prime wrote:Thanks for clearing that up.
I didn't know the definition of "plot."
Yes, RotF had a plot, but it was terrible and didn't translate to film well.
I disagree. I thought the plot of the first film was the weakest of the series so far, with RotF's being better. RotF's plot was easily the more coherent and to the point of the two films, since the first film followed two plot threads of which one had little relevance past the second half (the less than spectacular "signal analasys" plot). It created needless clutter in the story.
SKYWARPED_128 wrote:IMO, the question of which plot is better than the other is purely a matter of tastes. A person's age, experiences and personality all contribute to what he or she prefers in a story.
ROTF DOES have a plot, of that's there can be no argument.
If anything, I think there were more plot elements in the story than it needed. Now this is just my personal opinion, but from the way Orci and Kurtzman were talking in an interview that I watched, they were trying to inject a lot of homages [the Fallen, OP's death etc.] into the story to the point where some of it felt shoehorned.
Capt.Failure wrote:SKYWARPED_128 wrote:IMO, the question of which plot is better than the other is purely a matter of tastes. A person's age, experiences and personality all contribute to what he or she prefers in a story.
ROTF DOES have a plot, of that's there can be no argument.
If anything, I think there were more plot elements in the story than it needed. Now this is just my personal opinion, but from the way Orci and Kurtzman were talking in an interview that I watched, they were trying to inject a lot of homages [the Fallen, OP's death etc.] into the story to the point where some of it felt shoehorned.
Agreed. I perfered RotF's plot over Transformer's. I'll probably perfer DotM's plot over RotF's. If the series has one uniform weakness plotwise it's the clutter you mention. My preference for RotF's plot comes from the fact that all those elements in the end contribute to the story, while the original film's either stagnate or go nowhere.
Again, just my two cents.
SKYWARPED_128 wrote:Capt.Failure wrote:SKYWARPED_128 wrote:IMO, the question of which plot is better than the other is purely a matter of tastes. A person's age, experiences and personality all contribute to what he or she prefers in a story.
ROTF DOES have a plot, of that's there can be no argument.
If anything, I think there were more plot elements in the story than it needed. Now this is just my personal opinion, but from the way Orci and Kurtzman were talking in an interview that I watched, they were trying to inject a lot of homages [the Fallen, OP's death etc.] into the story to the point where some of it felt shoehorned.
Agreed. I perfered RotF's plot over Transformer's. I'll probably perfer DotM's plot over RotF's. If the series has one uniform weakness plotwise it's the clutter you mention. My preference for RotF's plot comes from the fact that all those elements in the end contribute to the story, while the original film's either stagnate or go nowhere.
Again, just my two cents.
I agree, regarding your mention of the first movie's lack of consistent direction. Also, I do wonder how the Autobots knew to check on Ebay for the glasses because they couldn't possibly have known about Megatron's burning the Allspark's coordinates into Archibald's glasses in the first place.
That said, the glassed DID fulfill their role as a plot accessory, as it enabled Optimus to find the whereabouts of the Allspark. It also served to give Sam a reason to be involved in the whole plot. Otherwise, the Autobots would have no reason to send Bumblebee to "infiltrate" Sam's life [in order to retrieve the glasses and protect him from the Decepticons] and his character would have no reason to exist.
Ultimately, I think it was the hacker plot point that failed to deliver. It worked well in the beginning, but once we cut to the Hoover Dam, the Aussie girl and Glen served no particular purpose. After all, the damage was already done, and neither of them contributed their hacking skills to fix the problem. While they did hot-wire the PC to send a Morse code to the USAF[?], IMO it's not a very satisfying resolution.
In other words, they discovered the problem [which rightfully gives them a reason to be in the film,] but did nothing to solve it directly [which should have been their responsibility in the film.] At least have them figure out how to counter the virus Frenzy placed in the system, or even use it against Frenzy himself. IMO, Frenzy accidentally smashing his own head with the shuriken was funny, but it felt tacked on because the humans didn't contribute directly in his demise, which makes it weak as a resolution. One of the fundamental rules of good writing is that the protagonist[s] must always be the one[s] to solve the problem by themselves in order to create a satisfying resolution. Deux ex Machina aka the last-minute cavalry, and convenient coincidences create passive protagonists, which is never a good thing especially for action movies.
Heheh, sorry for making another technical long rant.
All in all, I still love both the first TF and ROTF. It took over twenty years for a live action movie of my favorite childhood franchise to be made, and plot be damned, I'm just grateful to see Optimus, Megatron, Starscream and Bumblebee on screen.
Capt.Failure wrote:The Deus Ex Machina thing strikes a chord wtih me when it comes to storytelling since alot of the time it's position as a negative aspect is subjective. In films by Michael Bay, Roland Emmerich, or other directors who are the butt of jokes they're seen as something bad, but when something by Jame's Cameron or Steven Spielburg has them it's no big deal (remember the son surviving in War of the Worlds? I got two words for you: BULL SHITE!!!).
From a non-film perspective, let's compare Dan Brown and H.K. Rowling. Dan Brown's stories use Deus Ex Machina all the time and he usually get's flak for it (I've called him the Michael Bay of authors for a reason). But every Harry Potter book (and by extension the movies) ends with Harry or someone pulling some new ability/plot token/etc out of their behind in the last five pages of the finale to win the day. Then Dumbledore shows up to explain how it worked, even though it's never been present as a factor of the story up until that point. Nobody complains about it because Rowling is a more respected author than Brown.
SKYWARPED_128 wrote:I hope I'm not reading too much into this, but just in case, let me make one thing clear: I've got nothing against Micheal Bay or any other director for that matter.
No matter who produces what film, if it's good it's good, and if it's bad, it's bad.I'm not saying that Bay was the only one to use Deux Ex Machina as a plot device. I've seen it used in quite a few other movies, and I despair of all of them. It's nothing personal against him.
Capt.Failure wrote:Rodimus Prime wrote:Thanks for clearing that up.
I didn't know the definition of "plot."
Yes, RotF had a plot, but it was terrible and didn't translate to film well.
I disagree. I thought the plot of the first film was the weakest of the series so far, with RotF's being better.
shamone wrote:maybe you could make this a weekly series
try Troll next, it might benefit you as well as the rest of us if you found out that description, as it is not someone who disagrees with you !
Capt.Failure wrote:The Deus Ex Machina thing strikes a chord with me when it comes to storytelling since alot of the time it's position as a negative aspect is subjective. In films by Michael Bay, Roland Emmerich, or other directors who are the butt of jokes they're seen as something bad, but when something by Jame's Cameron or Steven Spielburg has them it's no big deal (remember the son surviving in War of the Worlds? I got two words for you: BULL SHITE!!!).
From a non-film perspective, let's compare Dan Brown and H.K. Rowling. Dan Brown's stories use Deus Ex Machina all the time and he usually get's flak for it (I've called him the Michael Bay of authors for a reason). But every Harry Potter book (and by extension the movies) ends with Harry or someone pulling some new ability/plot token/etc out of their behind in the last five pages of the finale to win the day. Then Dumbledore shows up to explain how it worked, even though it's never been present as a factor of the story up until that point. Nobody complains about it because Rowling is a more respected author than Brown.
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