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I LOVE Transformers, and just to see them on screen in any kinda way is great, but can any of you HONESTLY say that you could distinguish who was fighting who?
Phoenix_306 wrote:All i really wanna know though, and reading through all of the posts in all other forums, DO you REALLY like this movie?
Please. Please, please please please don't have a go at me over this thread. I just want to post my honest opinion as a TF fan, who yeah, wasn't a massive fan of the whole beast wars era, but gave armada and cybertron etc a go, plus the old G2 stuff, which i welcomed cause it was new TF stuff. Beast wars occurred during my 'sabatical'. Heh.
I mean, i'm 28 now, and probably a bona fide geek, and i couldn't wait to see my beloved bots on the screen. I hated the designs. I hated the stuff that was coming out about the script. But, i still went in with an open (soooooooo full of excitement) mind. By the time i left however, i just had this bitter taste in my mouth.
My problem is this. Op - BB - Ratchet - Jazz et al, they've all gone through loads of changes, but they've all had character. This movie seemed to bypass that.
I LOVE Transformers, and just to see them on screen in any kinda way is great, but can any of you HONESTLY say that you could distinguish who was fighting who?
I just feel really upset that a movie couldn't be made about our pasion, our bots, that would make them "real" personality wise. A bit of banter here and there, and not just make them into stereotypes - anyone who thinks Jazz brakedancing and saying "yo my bitches" is either clever or funny needs to take a serious look at themselves.
DesalationReborn wrote:If you don't get the purpose of camera close-ups and cuts, then of course the movie'll seem badly shot. Now, if you think about how the movie switched from a robot perspective as in the cartoons to human perspective to better identify with the audience, the camera perspective shifts to show that. It shows exactly how we'd see them-- the robots fill up our field of vision, so we only see parts of them in action, and we are left to feel like confused ants before this large scale battle of monstrous machines.
Rocky87 wrote:Please. Please, please please please don't have a go at me over this thread. I just want to post my honest opinion as a TF fan, who yeah, wasn't a massive fan of the whole beast wars era, but gave armada and cybertron etc a go, plus the old G2 stuff, which i welcomed cause it was new TF stuff. Beast wars occurred during my 'sabatical'. Heh.
That's one thing with which I disagree. Beast Wars was a phenomenal series that was extremely faithful to the TF universe, all while carving its own identity into that same universe.I mean, i'm 28 now, and probably a bona fide geek, and i couldn't wait to see my beloved bots on the screen. I hated the designs. I hated the stuff that was coming out about the script. But, i still went in with an open (soooooooo full of excitement) mind. By the time i left however, i just had this bitter taste in my mouth.
I think you simply anticipated a live action G1, and something tells me that you simply wanted to hate it because it wasn't an exact replica of G1. I, for one, loved the designs because they were real. They had realistic designs, movement, and placement. Rather than in the cartoon where they pop-out, these robots actually transformed.My problem is this. Op - BB - Ratchet - Jazz et al, they've all gone through loads of changes, but they've all had character. This movie seemed to bypass that.
It's not really accurate to compare the personality of a TV series character to that of a movie incarnation. While it isn't beyond the possiblity of a film to contain great character, we're talking about a twelve-to-one ratio of time that can be spent in character development.I LOVE Transformers, and just to see them on screen in any kinda way is great, but can any of you HONESTLY say that you could distinguish who was fighting who?
I can tell you exactly who was fighting who. I can point out which Autobot landed where. I can tell you which Decepticons lived and died.I just feel really upset that a movie couldn't be made about our pasion, our bots, that would make them "real" personality wise. A bit of banter here and there, and not just make them into stereotypes - anyone who thinks Jazz brakedancing and saying "yo my bitches" is either clever or funny needs to take a serious look at themselves.
You just crossed the "opinion" line there, pal. You're implying that something you didn't like is something that's unanimously poor in taste. You didn't think the line was clever or funny? Fine. But DO NOT question my--or anyone else's--judgment just to tote your own.
I will agree, however, that the jokes and gags were taken too far (the ion and ion being the worst) and Megan Fox was an annoying addition to the film. She wasn't "cast" for being a "good actress", she was pinned-up onscreen just cause she was hot. In that regard, the movie failed.
But other than that, I LOVED the movie, and declare it the best film of 2007.
DesalationReborn wrote:If you don't get the purpose of camera close-ups and cuts, then of course the movie'll seem badly shot. Now, if you think about how the movie switched from a robot perspective as in the cartoons to human perspective to better identify with the audience, the camera perspective shifts to show that. It shows exactly how we'd see them-- the robots fill up our field of vision, so we only see parts of them in action, and we are left to feel like confused ants before this large scale battle of monstrous machines.
wingdarkness wrote:I LOVE Transformers, and just to see them on screen in any kinda way is great, but can any of you HONESTLY say that you could distinguish who was fighting who?
I swear to God I had Eddie Gordo flashbacks from Tekken while watching many scenes in the movie...It seems to me like they just did a composite of Tiger (Gordo) fighting and made many of the TFs do that...
For those who don't know, Eddie Gordo is a popular character from the Tekken video game series whose techniques consist of a bevy of random flips and foot movements...ALot of the TFs just flipped around randomly in this style making it hard to see who was fighting who as you said (especially the final fight)...Add Bay's camera angles and yeah, hard to appreciate the fighting IMHO...
AbsumZer0 wrote:DesalationReborn wrote:If you don't get the purpose of camera close-ups and cuts, then of course the movie'll seem badly shot. Now, if you think about how the movie switched from a robot perspective as in the cartoons to human perspective to better identify with the audience, the camera perspective shifts to show that. It shows exactly how we'd see them-- the robots fill up our field of vision, so we only see parts of them in action, and we are left to feel like confused ants before this large scale battle of monstrous machines.
If that was the purpose I think it failed. If he wanted to show how enormous they are from a human perspective he could have used shots angled-up with heavy forshortening, lots of size references, and a fixed long-range perspective instead of the perspective of someone 10-feet tall running alongside and watching from a few feet away. It was like being an extremely nearsighted referee in a wrestling match.
DesalationReborn wrote:
Note that there were quite a few wide and pan-out shots-- the highway, the desert, Quatar, the dam, Sam's house-- just not in the city streets, where it's fighting in cramped quarters and any chances of a wide view without a view on the skyline is blocked.
DesalationReborn
Post Posted: Fri Aug 03, 2007 9:14 pm
If you don't get the purpose of camera close-ups and cuts, then of course the movie'll seem badly shot. Now, if you think about how the movie switched from a robot perspective as in the cartoons to human perspective to better identify with the audience, the camera perspective shifts to show that. It shows exactly how we'd see them-- the robots fill up our field of vision, so we only see parts of them in action, and we are left to feel like confused ants before this large scale battle of monstrous machines.
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