OPINION

A Few Thoughts Regarding Next Summer's Transformers Flick

Written by Mark Buckingham
Published August 12, 2006

Some trailers and info have started to emerge about next summer's Michael Bay over-sensationalized Transformers movie, and while they're often far too vague to really be judged, I'm going to take a stab at it anyway. I was a little aghast at first at the idea of Optimus Prime becoming a longnose cab, but I withdrew some of my loathing and spite when I realized something. We're now staring down the barrel of 20+ years of Transformers evolution. Just look at this:


http://www.tfu.info/2002/Autobot/OptimusPrime/optimusprime.htm

That doesn't even include the original Generation One iterations, and already there are so many crazy redesigns and configurations there, I don't think the guy has an identity of his own anymore, not to mention that in Transformers canon, he's already died and been resurrected at least twice.

The problem is, the hardest of the hardcore fanbase (like me) are the people who were there from the beginning. However, those people are all grownups and parents and are having mid-life crises by now. So who's going to love this movie? The recent fans are kids, possibly the kids of the original fans who as kids themselves scoffed at Generation Two and the Minicons and all the other stuff that the purists scoff at. If the flick can actually find a happy medium and bridge the gap between the generations of fans without alienating either one, that'd be impressive, but is also a tall task for any writer/director.

Just look at the PlayStation 2 Transformers game in which Prime is a longnose cab. I didn't even bat an eye when I saw that, in part because the rest of the game was so well designed and gorgeous to look at. The character has evolved and that's just what he's become. 

Frankly, if they tried to go back and make a movie solely of Generation One characters and designs, they would make a cupful of hardcore TransFans orgasm repeatedly, but no one else would get it. The newer Transformers fans would say "That's not what Prime looks like," or "I thought Megatron was a tank not a piddly Walther handgun with, of all things, a SILENCER on it." This new generation would make the same complaints that we purists from the olden days are making about the new stuff.

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Mark Buckingham (not to be mistaken for the comic book artist) is an avid freelance writer, gamer, techhead, reader, movie watcher, pianist, and hockey player. Try to keep up.
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A Few Thoughts Regarding Next Summer's Transformers Flick
Published: August 12, 2006
Type: Opinion
Section: Video
Filed Under: Books: Comics and Graphic Novels, Gaming: PlayStation 2, Video: Action, Video: SF
Writer: Mark Buckingham
Mark Buckingham's BC Writer page
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#1 — August 14, 2006 @ 01:20AM — Ty

I fail to understand how anyone can have high hopes about this movie, considering the involvement of Michael Bay. Bay sucks, and Team America: World Police had it right when one character sings to the other that he loves her more than Pearl Harbor sucked.

#2 — August 14, 2006 @ 02:36AM — Mark Buckingham [URL]

I would never categorize my hopes as "high," but I understand that, should the project be taken seriously by the production team, it's still a tough job trying to please two generations of fans and all their different expectations.

Or it could just be a huge stinkbomb and irritate everyone. Who knows. I'm just waiting for some firm details on the story and some useful trailers before I get up in arms about it.

Bay was the director of The Rock, a movie I quite enjoyed. However, I have to wonder how much of that was due to producer Don Simpson, because since his passing, neither Bruckheimer nor Bay has made anything I'd want to see twice. And before anyone goes defending Bruckheimer with Pirates of the Caribbean, honestly, would that movie have been any good if not for the performances of Johnny Depp and Geoffrey Rush? I think not.

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