Transformers 2

Started by Sado221 pages

Transformers 2

=absolute shit.
i was so disappointed watching this yesterday in theatres. the storyline sucked, the horrible attempts at comedy were just painful, watching robots using "martial arts" was weird at best and the dialogues were clunky, odd to downright bad.
and througout the 3 hours of this movie we kept seeing one thing:
americans doing what they love, wanking their military powers 😐

the autobots need human's help to take down decepticans?
tank fire is dropping decepticans?
sam's parents get more screen time?

Spoiler:
devastator gets oneshotted by a gunship?

Spoiler:
megatron can't fighting prime anymore but he could in the last movie?

bad movie. horrible.

~Sado

I hear just the opposite from everyone.

And Giant Robots doing martial arts is full of Epic Win. I guess you don't like Transformers and any of its iterations because they brawl quite a bit in every single form. 🙂

I heard that 2 was like 1 except better in every way.

And humans helping and almost being essential to the Autobots success has been a lasting portion of the many Transformer's stories...so I won't be disappointed at all, me thinks. 🙂

However, I'll probably be sad about The Fallen...as I expect him to be epic, etc....He probably is...but not as much as I imagine.

And this thread will probably be moved to it's proper place.

The one thing I hate is everybody's Facebook status.

"TRANSFORMERS 2 ROCKED"
"TRANSFORMERS WAS SICK"
"TRANSFORMERS 2: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN WAS AWESOME....MF <3"

Originally posted by Neo_Version 7
The one thing I hate is everybody's Facebook status.

"TRANSFORMERS 2 ROCKED"
"TRANSFORMERS WAS SICK"
"TRANSFORMERS 2: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN WAS AWESOME....MF <3"

😆 😆 😆

Awesome.

See, Sado? I told you everyone was saying it was awesome.

It seems that you didn't like things about Transformers, in general, as the things you nitpicked are common in the real transformers stories....sort of. Humans help. Tranformers brawl.

yeah, well everyone said twilight was good too 😂

And humans helping and almost being essential to the Autobots success has been a lasting portion of the many Transformer's stories...so I won't be disappointed at all, me thinks.

not when they're dropping more decepticans than autobots its not.

~Sado
P.S. whats wrong with making it here? isn't this a movie thread? 😕

Sado's right, guys. Transformers 2 wasn't good, it wasn't sick or epic, it didn't rock and in a lot of ways it didn't even entertain.

Originally posted by Sado22
yeah, well everyone said twilight was good too 😂

not when they're dropping more decepticans than autobots its not.

Since humans figured out how to "drop them", it certainly is.

And twilight was good. 😐

Originally posted by Sado22
~Sado
P.S. whats wrong with making it here? isn't this a movie thread? 😕

There's a transformers section.

And, I agree....sort of. This is a movie forum. There will be subsections for all the different movie types.

This sub-forum is really the "everything else" place.

I love Roger Ebert's critique of Trasformers 2. He must have had a blast writing this:

"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" is a horrible experience of unbearable length, briefly punctuated by three or four amusing moments. One of these involves a dog-like robot humping the leg of the heroine. Such are the meager joys. If you want to save yourself the ticket price, go into the kitchen, cue up a male choir singing the music of hell, and get a kid to start banging pots and pans together. Then close your eyes and use your imagination.

The plot is incomprehensible. The dialog of the Autobots®, Decepticons® and Otherbots® is meaningless word flap. Their accents are Brooklyese, British and hip-hop, as befits a race from the distant stars. Their appearance looks like junkyard throw-up. They are dumb as a rock. They share the film with human characters who are much more interesting, and that is very faint praise indeed.

The movie has been signed by Michael Bay. This is the same man who directed "The Rock" in 1996. Now he has made "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen." Faust made a better deal. This isn't a film so much as a toy tie-in. Children holding a Transformer toy in their hand can invest it with wonder and magic, imagining it doing brave deeds and remaining always their friend. I knew a little boy once who lost his blue toy truck at the movies, and cried as if his heart would break. Such a child might regard "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" with fear and dismay.

The human actors are in a witless sitcom part of the time, and lot of the rest of their time is spent running in slo-mo away from explosions, although--hello!--you can't outrun an explosion. They also make speeches like this one by John Turturro: "Oh, no! The machine is buried in the pyramid! If they turn it on, it will destroy the sun! Not on my watch!" The humans, including lots of U.S. troops, shoot at the Transformers a lot, although never in the history of science fiction has an alien been harmed by gunfire.

There are many great-looking babes in the film, who are made up to a flawless perfection and look just like real women, if you are a junior fanboy whose experience of the gender is limited to lad magazines. The two most inexplicable characters are Ron and Judy Witwicky (Kevin Dunn and Julie White), who are the parents of Shia LaBeouf, who Mephistopheles threw in to sweeten the deal. They take their son away to Princeton, apparently a party school, where Judy eats some pot and goes berserk. Later they swoop down out of the sky on Egypt, for reasons the movie doesn't make crystal clear, so they also can run in slo-mo from explosions.

The battle scenes are bewildering. A Bot makes no visual sense anyway, but two or three tangled up together create an incomprehensible confusion. I find it amusing that creatures that can unfold out of a Camaro and stand four stories high do most of their fighting with...fists. Like I say, dumber than a box of staples. They have tiny little heads, although Jetfire® must be made of older models, since he has an aluminum beard.

Aware that this movie opened in England seven hours before Chicago time and the morning papers would be on the streets, after writing the above I looked up the first reviews as a reality check. I was reassured: "Like watching paint dry while getting hit over the head with a frying pan!" (Bradshaw, Guardian); "Sums up everything that is most tedious, crass and despicable about modern Hollywood!" (Tookey, Daily Mail); "A giant, lumbering idiot of a movie!" (Edwards, Daily Mirror). The first American review, Todd Gilchrist of Cinematical, reported that Bay's "ambition runs a mile long and an inch deep," but, in a spirited defense, says "this must be the most movie I have ever experienced." He is bullish on the box office: it "feels destined to be the biggest movie of all time." It’s certainly the biggest something of all time.

Originally posted by =Tired Hiker=
I love Roger Ebert's critique of Trasformers 2. He must have had a blast writing this:

"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" is a horrible experience of unbearable length, briefly punctuated by three or four amusing moments. One of these involves a dog-like robot humping the leg of the heroine. Such are the meager joys. If you want to save yourself the ticket price, go into the kitchen, cue up a male choir singing the music of hell, and get a kid to start banging pots and pans together. Then close your eyes and use your imagination.

The plot is incomprehensible. The dialog of the Autobots®, Decepticons® and Otherbots® is meaningless word flap. Their accents are Brooklyese, British and hip-hop, as befits a race from the distant stars. Their appearance looks like junkyard throw-up. They are dumb as a rock. They share the film with human characters who are much more interesting, and that is very faint praise indeed.

The movie has been signed by Michael Bay. This is the same man who directed "The Rock" in 1996. Now he has made "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen." Faust made a better deal. This isn't a film so much as a toy tie-in. Children holding a Transformer toy in their hand can invest it with wonder and magic, imagining it doing brave deeds and remaining always their friend. I knew a little boy once who lost his blue toy truck at the movies, and cried as if his heart would break. Such a child might regard "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" with fear and dismay.

The human actors are in a witless sitcom part of the time, and lot of the rest of their time is spent running in slo-mo away from explosions, although--hello!--you can't outrun an explosion. They also make speeches like this one by John Turturro: "Oh, no! The machine is buried in the pyramid! If they turn it on, it will destroy the sun! Not on my watch!" The humans, including lots of U.S. troops, shoot at the Transformers a lot, although never in the history of science fiction has an alien been harmed by gunfire.

There are many great-looking babes in the film, who are made up to a flawless perfection and look just like real women, if you are a junior fanboy whose experience of the gender is limited to lad magazines. The two most inexplicable characters are Ron and Judy Witwicky (Kevin Dunn and Julie White), who are the parents of Shia LaBeouf, who Mephistopheles threw in to sweeten the deal. They take their son away to Princeton, apparently a party school, where Judy eats some pot and goes berserk. Later they swoop down out of the sky on Egypt, for reasons the movie doesn't make crystal clear, so they also can run in slo-mo from explosions.

The battle scenes are bewildering. A Bot makes no visual sense anyway, but two or three tangled up together create an incomprehensible confusion. I find it amusing that creatures that can unfold out of a Camaro and stand four stories high do most of their fighting with...fists. Like I say, dumber than a box of staples. They have tiny little heads, although Jetfire® must be made of older models, since he has an aluminum beard.

Aware that this movie opened in England seven hours before Chicago time and the morning papers would be on the streets, after writing the above I looked up the first reviews as a reality check. I was reassured: "Like watching paint dry while getting hit over the head with a frying pan!" (Bradshaw, Guardian); "Sums up everything that is most tedious, crass and despicable about modern Hollywood!" (Tookey, Daily Mail); "A giant, lumbering idiot of a movie!" (Edwards, Daily Mirror). The first American review, Todd Gilchrist of Cinematical, reported that Bay's "ambition runs a mile long and an inch deep," but, in a spirited defense, says "this must be the most movie I have ever experienced." He is bullish on the box office: it "feels destined to be the biggest movie of all time." It’s certainly the biggest something of all time.

I find Roger Ebert's reviews and opinions to be out of of alignment with reality, much too often to be a legit movie critic.

I don't understand how he made it is a movie critic...

Siskel and Ebert both reviewed ID4 as bad...and then it solds millions of tickets. 😐

If he knew anything of Transformers, half his points would fail.

I only have one thing to say from me and the group of 7 people that I went to see it with.

It was BADASS!

Please use the Transformers Forum to discuss the movies. Thanx.

Closed.