Sweet merciful Grodd, I won't be able to sleep tonite with that image in my head.
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You know what's missing from that? A promise of a more coherent storyline and CHARACTER DEVELOPMENT FOR THE TRANSFORMERS!! *hff hff* I know it's important to have human characters in the movie for the general audience to relate, but at the same time they shouldn't hinder character development for the Transformers themselves. After all, in E.T. we had Elliott and the other children as an emotional anchorpoint for audiences, but they were still definitely able to empathise with the alien itself as a developed character. I'd like to see more Transformers being treated as actual characters rather than set pieces (or robotic creatures)... ya know, other than Bumblebee and Optimus Prime.Quote:
"What you can expect is more comedy than we've ever had before" di Bonaventura revealed. He also told us a little bit about character development. "You can expect bigger action sequences than we've ever had before and you can expect a different character through-line for our lead because he's a little bit older and Rosie's a little bit older - there's a maturity there that didn't exist before. He's moved on to a new stage in his life with a job, and that's an interesting rite of passage, so I think it has the emotional elements that people are expecting of the movie, but they've moved forward in time, if you would."
In terms of comedy... some of the movie's comedy was actually okay, but I know some of the funniest moments were improvised by actors, like Sam flexing his muscles while pointing at various features inside Bumblebee, or Sam and Judy's awkward conversation about masturbation. ROTF had some funny moments, like "there is no tighter shirt, we checked" and Leo tasering himself at the Smithsonian. But there were some pretty stupid comedic moments too like all the humping and that stupid narcissistic lecturer (although Michael Bay says he actually based that character on a lecturer he had at uni... still a really stupid character nonetheless IMO :/)
yeah I dunno how to take this promise of more comedy. Comedy can be used effectively in action films if done properly... I hope Bay learnt from his mistakes in ROTF and improves in TF3.
...or even scarier... seeing Shackwave's bits in 3D! Aaargh, virtual eye-gouge! :pQuote:
Originally Posted by Tallestblue
Here's a sneak peek for you (scroll down)...
Shockwave's Brown Eye (Copyright Dreamworks Studio)
http://img31.imageshack.us/img31/512...vebrowneye.jpg
Comedy, Starscream? This is bad coronation.
Wishful thinking there Gok...... splosions!!!! kabooom !!! Im guessing what he'll learn more is how to do stunt's and splosions with less casualty.....and also........... erm no, that's about it.;)
Okay mebbe Blue lantern rings should be given all around:D
I don't mind comedy, it's more that the type of comedy used matters. Roger Ebert, a known critic of Bay, mentioned humour as one of the positives in The Rock in his essay for why the film was being included in the prestigious Criterion Collection.
So it's not that more comedy will be a problem, it's if Bay will continue with the sexual "comedy" tone from ROTF. That said, Leo tasering himself generally got the longest sustained laughter I've ever heard in a theatre.
Yeah but that wasn't a sexual gag, like say leg humping. The gag is based on seeing this try-hard wannabe hardcore character fall victim to his own stupidity on his first real mission. Seeing karma in action can be funny. :D And even sexualised humour isn't necessarily a bad thing either. Like the masturbation joke in the first movie was pretty darn funny (although that didn't come from Bay - it was Shia LaBeouf and Julie White who came up with that joke during improvisation between takes ;)).
There's absolutely nothing wrong with having humour in the movies... so long as the jokes are done correctly. And I'm sure we'd all agree that there have been some good hits and terrible misses in regard to the humour in the movies (esp. ROTF).