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Showing posts with label MOVIE REVIEW: TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION. Show all posts
Showing posts with label MOVIE REVIEW: TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION. Show all posts
Sunday, July 6, 2014
Cindy Prascik's Review of Transformers: Age of Extinction
Dearest Blog, after dodging the bullet last weekend, yesterday I decided to suck it up and see Transformers: Age of Extinction. It would be less than forthright not to admit that I went mostly because I'd heard Luke Evans' Dracula trailer was running before it, and because I wanted to see Jersey Boys again and don't like begging a ride for less than a double-feature.
Spoiler level here will be mild, nothing you wouldn't know from the trailers.
A down-on-his-luck mechanic lands in hot water when he buys a beat up old truck that's not quite what it seems.
I love Transformers and was genuinely excited for this sequel...until I heard it was over two and a half hours long. Despite almost universally negative reviews, I think Age of Extinction would have been quite a lot of fun at 90 minutes or even an hour and 45, but it does nothing to earn its Middle Earthy runtime.
A cast of familiar faces is unremarkable to either the good or the bad, though Mark Wahlberg is a definite improvement over the unlikable Shia LaBeouf, and I, personally, am always delighted to see Titus Welliver in a movie that does good business. The storyline doesn't hold any real surprises, and the dialogue is almost impressively stupid at times. Let's face it, though, dear reader(s), a Transformers movie is never gonna be about the people or the script, am I right?
It's about giant alien robots and big loud effects and maximum destruction. Age of Extinction does pretty well on all those counts, and, even at my most drowsy, I was utterly caught up in the big machines, if not so much in the daddy/daughter drama.
I elected to see this in 2D, not wanting to waste any more money on it than I had to, but it left me no doubt the 3D would be worth it.
Transformers: Age of Extinction clocks in at a very bloated 165 minutes and is rated PG13 for "intense sequences of sci-fi violence and action, language, and brief innuendo."
It has all the components for a great summer blockbuster, but instead it proves that the only thing that's really extinct in Hollywood is the art of editing.
Of a possible nine Weasleys, Transformers: Age of Extinction gets four and a half.
Until next time...
PS: No Dracula trailer. Curse you, cinema gods, for depriving me of big-screen Luke!
PPS: If you haven't seen Jersey Boys yet, go see it. If you have seen it, see it again!
Saturday, June 28, 2014
MOVIE REVIEW: TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION
The Transformers film series continues with this fourth entry from director Michael Bay and executive producer Steven Spielberg. Mark Wahlberg and Jack Reynor star. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, Rovi
Director: Michael
Bay
Cast: Mark Wahlberg, Nicola Peltz, Stanley
Tucci, Ken Watanabe, Peter Cullen
Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of sci-fi
violence and action, language
Release Date: Jun
27, 2014
Run Time.
2 hrs. 37 min
Genres: Action/Adventure
Review:
Transformers: Age of Extinction is going to have a lot of
batred shot it’s way most of well deserved.
It’s an over bloated mess that’s got way too many storylines at play to
make any of it cohesive. Had it stuck
with the most interesting angle, secret government agency taking out all
Transformers, it probably would have been one Bay’s better films. As is, it’s a absurdly log slog through
action set piece in between bits of story with more story followed by action
set pieces and more story etc… So is it even worth your time? Sort of.
As a superfan of the cartoon, I’ve found plenty to like in the previous
efforts even the Revenge of the Fallen.
The frustrating part about Extinction is that it fixes a lot of issues
from the previous films. The human side of
the story is actually bearable thanks to the addition of Wahlberg, Tucci and
Grammer. Mark Wahlberg is solid as the
lead even if it stretches the imagination that he’s some sort of genius
inventor. Kelsey Grammer is fairly solid
as the human villain, he poses a creditable threat throughout. Stanley Tucci proves why he’s a great actor;
taking a silly role and making it work. Another
aspect that’s much improved is that the transformers villain, Lockdown, is
actually interesting this go around, something they failed to do over 3 films
with Megatron. Additionally, the Autobots
at Prime’s side have some characterization that makes them likable and makes
this feel the closest to the animated series and any child of the 80s will get
chills when the dinobots makes their appearance. It’s the Bay oddity that this is probably his
best Transformers film even though it’s filled with the worse he has to
offer. Sadly, the animated Transformers
The Movie is still the best cinematic entry.
C
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