Transformers: Symptom or Disease?
posted June 25, 2009 5:15 AM
So yesterday morning I was immersed, as is my wont, in the great comforting warm bath that is the Arts and Leisure section of the New York Times, when I encountered a review -- by the redoubtable Manohla Dargis -- of the latest Transformers flick. I'm not, by nature, a person consumed with envy, but reading this I had perhaps the most profound Wish I'd Said That Moment of my adult life.
Fans of the film, Dargis correctly noted, probably come in several categories. For example --
-- those who collect toys and liked [Shia] LaBeouf in the last Indiana Jones movie. Or those who fantasize about having sex with [Megan] Fox while shooting guns, a vision that distills the auteurist ambitions and popular appeal of the movie’s director, Michael Bay....And make no mistake: Mr. Bay is an auteur... Mr. Bay’s subject — overwhelming violent conquest — is as blatant and consistent as his cluttered mise-en-scène. His images, particularly during the frequent action sequences, can be difficult to visually track, but they are also consistently disjointed. (And proudly self-referential: the only director he overtly cites is himself, with a shot of the poster for his movie Bad Boys II.)
The French filmmaker Jacques Rivette once described an auteur as someone who speaks in the first person. Mr. Bay prefers to shout.
Heh heh.
In any case, as somebody who's long been on record as saying that the four most terrifying words in the English language are "A Michael Bay Film," I will nonetheless force myself to endure this latest one strictly for science, and I'll get back to you after I recover.
But in the meantime, if you're gonna make big budget action movies based on 80s kids cartoons developed from a line of toys, I think somebody at a major studio is missing a good bet.
Yes, I definitely want to see Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors: The Motion Picture.
JATWW (the toys were by Mattel) ran five days a week early in the morning during 1985; I used to watch it while dragging my sorry ass out of bed before going to work, and for whatever reason -- my overindulgence in certain controlled substances the night before or the show's essential incoherence -- I never was able to figure out what the hell it was about. Something involving killer mutant plants and a villain named Saw Boss, I think, but to this day I'm not sure. And what any of that had to do with futuristic motorcycles is still beyond me.
In any case, I just discovered that the show was created and written by none other than J. Michael Straczynski, the great auteur behind Best Sci-Fi Series of All Time Babylon 5, and more recently Clint Eastwood's underrated Changeling. I have also learned that Straczynski has a script in the drawer for a JATWW feature film that was shelved in the 80s; obviously, it's time for JMS to dust it off and shoot it with the most expensive CGI effects money can buy.
With Shia LeBouef as Jayce, obviously.
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Steve Simels has written about music and movies for Sound and Vision magazine (formerly Stereo Review) since the early 70s. He has also contributed to Entertainment Weekly, TV Guide and the Wall Street Journal. He’s the author of “Gender Chameleons: Androgyny in Rock n Roll” (Arbor House, 1985), and blogs at PowerPop.blogspot.com. His ambition in life is to play the Leslie Howard role in a remake of “Petrified Forest.”

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geor3ge said:
See, now I won't rest until Chia Pets get the Joel Schumaker treatment.
June 25, 2009 6:11 AM
Cousin Kevin said:
I don't know which surprises me more -- that Straczynski did the show or that somebody other than me remembers it.
June 25, 2009 7:23 AM
dan mcenroe said:
Jayce and the Wheeled Warriors? **** that.
CAVITY CREEPS. Now that has blockbuster written all over it.
June 25, 2009 7:38 AM
Hawkone said:
1 Megan Fox is just a body no talent
2 Shia is no longer that interesting to watch
3 Devestator was destroyed by Bay in my eyes
Other then that it IS a Bay film so expect a crazy ride of of non-stop action with cheezyness.
I loved it.
June 25, 2009 9:24 AM
aptom565 said:
It seems obvious that for critics and journalists like the one that wrote this article here all books are the same and it doesn't matter what is written in them just because they are all books. That is the point being made here, which is quite wrong and silly.
Comparing a classical animated series (or better yet anime since originally the animation was created in Japan) like Transformers from the '80s to other animated series products of the time without knowing the differences and find out why so many adults like Transformers it's a pretty naive and unfair statement to make. Also the comparison should be made with other classical sci-fi series of the time that have at least some similar elements, like Robotech(Macross+Southern Cross+Mospeada original Japanese anime series) for example.
There is no difference if the source material is a book or a sci-fi anime series, many Transformers episodes were written by sci-fi writers at the time. I don't see the reason why those writing Star Trek episodes should be considered better than those writing Transformers ones when during the years series like Star Trek got so many cheesy and silly episodes badly written and tv series got canned due to that.
June 25, 2009 11:32 AM
Steve Simels said:
re: aptom565 --
Now who can argue with that?!?
:-)
June 25, 2009 11:37 AM
Geoff Miles said:
Mr. S. Snivels!
Please, go to the "Zabriskie Point" review. I have a bone to pick with your tired intrepretation of the film.
Thanks, friend.
June 25, 2009 9:55 PM