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INTERSTELLAR : A Spectacular Chronicle Of Journey Vs. Destination To Find Human's Destiny




          After I left the cinema, I couldn't help myself from repeating and repeating "THE MOVIE WAS REALLY GOOD!" to my friends over the phone. The movie INTERSTELLAR features black holes, theory of relativity, sacrifices, blight, fate, fifth dimension, social responsibility, empathy, love/human relationships, journey vs. destination, glory/succession, and Murphy's Law, which makes it hard to really pinpoint which genre this movie belongs to, ranging from familial love, to social conflict, to sci-fi madness.
         Earth has become a place where agriculture is the only way of human survival instead of high-tech inventions. Humans grow crops with the constant worry and fear of the dust storm that continues to threaten to end their supply of food. The people no longer believed that pioneer engineering can help save humanity. Our time on Earth comes close to an end and desperate and cosmically large measures have to be taken.
         A pilot-turned-farmer and father to his beloved daughter, Murphy (young Murphy played by Mackenzie Foy) and later played by Jessica Chastain), and his son, Tom (played by Timothee Calamet and Casey Affleck), Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) deciphered a series of lines mysteriously formed by the dust storm which led him into a secret NASA base. From there, he met his professor, Professor Brand (Michael Caine) and his daughter, Dr. Brand (Anne Hathaway). After some serious briefing, Cooper agreed to go on an interstellar voyage to search for another suitable planet to save the human race along with a Dr. Brand and a few other members from NASA. However, it did not really go well with his family. 
         Feeling somewhat reluctant to leave his family but also feeling responsible to save his family and the family of millions of others, the film team embarked on a journey to find a destination by all means. 
         The movie is directed by Christopher Nolan, who also directed other blockbuster movies such as The Dark Knight Rises and Inception, and has really blew away his audiences AGAIN with this one. Praises also go to Matthew McConaughey's outstanding performances with his pathos that really moves the heart of the audiences in moments of betrayal, hardships, anger, love, and regret. 
         While it is always quite a risk making a movie based solely on astrophysics concept, the storyline was very well written and the drama was brilliantly executed with great cinematography and digital surround sound that seems so real which constantly amazes audiences. 
         The concept on the other hand was actually less confusing and more thought-provoking which largely makes sense even to audiences who don't do sciences. It actually echoes some recollection of A Spacetime Odyssey. It might also excite many other scientists around the globe as the representation of the black hole in the movie is really something we never would've thought of. The team has really developed a comprehensible idea without changing the point of view too much to produce a very understandable, tactile imagery that could both be true and stranger than fiction.
          The casting of the film does seem quite jarring though. I'm not really saying that the casts ruined the entire movie, it's just that it's an weird combination of actors to team up in a rare occasion where all of them are astronauts dressed up in spacesuits with NASA written all over it. They just don't seem to fit with the whole idea of being saviors of mankind.
          The original soundtrack played throughout the movie by Hans Zimmer was however was blaring over the intense moments where the team slingshots through a black hole but was reserved at the less exciting parts of boring conversations. The music was too loud it drowned the most of the dialogues that explains about the theories of relativity and fifth dimensions. But I've got to say thumbs up for Hans Zimmer as the score really captures the spirit of the audiences to feel in the moment. It didn't ruin everything though; there are some silent moments which are really nice, illustrating the quietness of space
         Nolan really embraced this movie, making sure that everything is well defined, including details to fill up plot holes much to the film making moviegoers have come to expect from writer-director Christopher Nolan. Even though the movie was 169 minutes long, it really felt like a 4-hour movie. Despite that, the pacing of the movie is one of the things that keeps the movie going and most of the characters getting involved. The scenes alternate between what was going on in the outer space and what was going on back in Earth. Not to mention, the screenplay is much more spectacular than Nolan's previous blockbuster movie, Inception, which also features time travel.
        Overall, INTERSTELLAR really is a captivating story well-weaved with contents that are brilliant and unprecedented. Nolan really did a wonderful job of saving mankind. It is an emotional drama fused with intelligence and breath-taking visualizations filled with elements that keeps the movie alive. Totally incredible.


WE GIVE IT A 4.5/5 STARS!
        

About Time - What If Every Moment Came To Life With A Second Chance?


ABOUT TIME






Not sure of what the movie is all about though I have read the synopsis, I still insist on watching it because of Rachel McAdams (one of my personal favorite Hollywood actress). I honestly think that it’s going to be just another plain movie, but it turns out to be extremely AMAZING! And has affected me in so many ways especially on how I view my life.

Here how the movie goes. Tim Lake (Domnhall Gleeson) first introduces himself and his family members – he was always “too tall, too pale, and too ginger”; his father James, a former university professor who now spends his free time reading and playing table tennis; his mother characterized as unsentimental; his free-spirited sister Katherine or Kit Kat; and his uncle Desmond who suffers from Alzheimer.

One fine morning, Tim is asked to meet his father in the family’s den. James then tells him a big secret that only the men in the family who have reached 21 years old deserve to know. It is somewhat a secret that should be passed on from generations to generations in which the men in the family are all capable of travelling through time. Confused and speechless, Tim still asks his father on how the task can be accomplished – he needs to be in a dark place, close his eyes, clench his fist tightly, and think of the exact moment that he wants to go. Tim then goes to the cupboard in his room and does what his father asked him to do; flashes of images from the past start to appear, and he finds himself at the New Year’s Eve party.  As he is asked by his father about his plans on using this ability, he replies that he’d really like to use it to get a girlfriend. 

After summer, Tim moves to London to pursue his career as a lawyer. One evening, his friend, Jay, takes him to a restaurant in which customers are paired up with blind dates in the dark. That’s when he meets the love of his life, Mary (Rachel McAdams). Before they live for home, he manages to get Mary’s number. But, as he returns home, Harry (a family friend) is feeling upset over a failed performance at his play as one of his actors forgot the lines onstage. This triggers Tim to start the night all over again so he could fix the problems occurred during the play just to cheer Harry up. Afterwards, he calls Mary only to see that her number is no longer in his phone as he decided to restart his night not by going to the restaurant but to the play.   

The next morning, as Harry reads a glowing review of his play in the newspaper, what attracts Tim’s attention is indeed an ad featuring Kate Moss in which he remembered a conversation that he had before with Mary in the restaurant on how she is a huge fan of Kate Moss. Tim then hurriedly goes to the museum where Kate Moss’ exhibition is held and finds himself waiting for Mary as he believes that she will definitely be there. Since then, Tim and Mary become closer to each other. Their love relationship ends up with a perfect marriage and lovely children (Posy, Jeff, and Jo). Throughout the movie, a few other conflicts occur and worse of all will be when his father, James, is diagnosed with cancer.


The movie ends with a brief montage of the other characters (Rory, Harry, Tim’s mother, Kit Kat, Joanna, etc) enjoying their lives one day at a time.

NUDE SUNBATHERS
All to all, I can say that it’s a pretty classy movie with British accents along the way. Although the movie is amazing, you may also find yourself lost in one-third of the movie as it portrays a lot of flashback scenes. Nevertheless, the underlying message of this movie is really strong and solid that you may even cry at the end through the power of love that this movie brings to screen. 





WHAT A MOVIE! THIS DEFINITELY DESERVES 3.5 STARS/5 STARS


Iron Man 3 - Every Man Falls, What About A Machine?

IRON MAN 3 - EVERY MAN FALLS, WHAT ABOUT A MACHINE?


           Are you ready for some metal-clanking battle between full body heavy duty machinery suits versus hot-blazing superhumans? Then you should really get some time off and watch this thrilling adventure of Marvel’s Iron Man 3. Shane Black (the director) has done it again along with some other crash-and-burn action films such as “Lethal Weapon”, “The Last Boy Scout”, and “Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang” which also features Iron Man’s star Robert Downey Junior in 2005. The Iron Man franchise has a delightful attitude considering that all the Iron Man movies are more self-aware comedies than just some serious tight-faced dramas. The energy emitted by this film manages to get audiences talk about it long after leaving the cinema because of many of its memorable shots and beautiful filmography.

          There’s very little downtime between the exposition of the story and tense battles. Tony Stark narrates the first part of the movie where back in a science conference in Switzerland, 1999 a limping, wide-framed glasses guy, Aldrich Killian (Guy Pearce) approaches his partner who is a supposed botanist, Maya Hansen (Rebecca Hall) and tells about his proposal and how he’s been following up on her work. Killian introduces his organisation, Advanced Ideas Mechanics (AIM) while they were squeezed in an elevator, but Tony, as usual with his ignorant attitude, shoves him aside. Maya, however, was interested in collaborating with AIM.

          Killian came back after many years trying to impress Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) with a projection of the inside of his brain. However Potts turned him down because she viewed his proposal of decoding the human’s DNA is highly weaponizable.

Iron Man 3 all boils down on Tony against an Osama bin Laden-esque terrorist guru known as the Mandarin (Ben Kingsley). He never grabbed Starks attention until his best friend ended up in a coma caused by a mysterious explosion, a message from the Mandarin. Tony swears revenge against the villain for injuring his best friend by giving him his home address during a short press attack. The Mandarin threatened to kill if the people of U.S. do not meet his demands. Tony later finds out that the Mandarin just turns out to be a paid alcoholic junk actor by Killian. This is one of those movies that builds on political cynicism whereby politicians and arm dealers consolidate power and make money, but doesn’t go beyond in detail just to keep the audiences in their seats.

Full of witty remarks and funny script lines, it’s a good way for audiences to get disconnected from the seriousness of the situation and the laws of physics for a while before getting back into its gravitational action. Sometimes, its violence stretches beyond the supposedly PG-13 rating with lethal gunplay and moments of wanton cruelty. To make accounts for his than


The plot hole of Iron Man is that Tony is the genius mechanic, but Jarvis did most of the job saving the world here. Compared to the previous two Iron Man movies, there’s a softer, more sensible new side of him, mainly because he is now with his girlfriend Pepper Potts. He felt sorry and regret for being selfish and stupid for putting her in harm’s way in which he did. She’s the damsel in distress. 


With help (sort of…) from Don Cheaddle’s “Rhodey” Rhodes, aka War Machine (re-christened Iron Patriot, both of them took down the Mandarin and saved the President. But that doesn’t stop there. While still being chased by other superhuman villains he has to face the ultimate villain behind all of this; Aldrich Killian who is actually the most superior of his invention. Killian threatens to do the same thing to Pepper as what he had done to all the other blazing superhumans, which he already did. And when Tony thought that she had just died from falling into a large fire, she suddenly came back to save him, turning things around at the very end of the movie.


Parts of the clips for the Mandarin were brilliantly edited and laid out, using flash-cuts of terrorists training and lots of brutal killing. Tony's adversaries are visually fresh but serve only as regular people with not much character to play. The movie also successfully include Downey’s anti-sentimental and hilarious character, he brings life to the movie. Cheadle has an easy-going authority character while Paltrow is strong and charming onscreen, which isn’t often enough.


The skydiving action sequence was a memorable moment in the movie and one of the greatest airborne setpieces in movie history. The graphics display and simulation captivates audiences with awesome upbeat music composition and selection by Brian Tyler. The theme of the movie is also articulated with about as much care. Storyline of the movie is mainly dominated by Tony and Rhodey, but Black did sprinkled some soft touches into it by the presence of Pepper in Tony’s life which has successfully provided the pathos when he had a touching conversation with Pepper that's filled with regret over bad roads she's taken. When Tony Stark's cliffside home is destroyed in the first attack — a moment prominently showcased in trailers — the audience gasps as if the film had shown a maniac slashing the Mona Lisa, and within this film's value framework, it does seem an obscenity.

To wrap things up, long-time fans of Iron Man will not be disappointed by this third instalment of the movie franchise. Viewers may find some scene settings to be inappropriate and beyond the PG-13 rating. However, this movie has a different approach on its message deliverance and feel compared to the other two previous instalments. Enjoy watching Iron Man 3!




THIS MOVIE COULD DESERVE 5 STARS BUT DUE TO SOME LACKING ELEMENTS, WE CAN ONLY GIVE IT 4/5 STARS





X-Men: Days of Future Past - His Past, Our Future


X-Men: Days of Future Past 


This is perhaps the most compelling of its sequel comeback... Well written and superbly acted, the movie features Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Ian McKellan, James McAvoy, Michael Fassbender and Jennifer Lawrence, all of whom deliver strong performances, including Game of Thrones’ Peter Dinklage.

The movie revolves between the dark past and ominous present, comprises of various settings and complex plots brilliantly. Bryan Singer dwells longingly on the young Professor Xavier (James McAvoy), who has to bear the fact that not only is he paralyzed, but also lost his trust of his friends and everything he held dear. The blue Beast (Nicholas Hoult) for some reason remains loyal with him, despite him being a complete douchebag and drunken alcoholic who wasted his time secluding himself from reality.

The story centers on the character and one’s decisions – Jennifer Lawrence's Mystique – which results in major consequences for her actions, while Magneto (Michael Fassbender), also has to decide his own path... in which both end up in some relatively weighty performances.


Packed with lots of adrenaline-rush actions, X-Men: Days of Future Past has some outstanding story arcs – it started with an amusing prison break led by Quicksilver (Evan Peters), followed by tons of action which takes place in the apocalyptic future, where mutants ceased to exist. Unfortunately, the future is tragically underdeveloped, in which their lives and deaths are essentially frivolous. The movie is awesome and unique on its own because of the rare instances that Singer projects in ensuring that the three major parts of the timeline (present to past to future) link well together into one movie.

X-Men movie buffers may be disappointed by the fact that Wolverine isn’t much of a badass, with the exception to the first few moments early on in the movie. Considering the absence of his adamantium, he’s been downgraded to only his bone claws, without his usual superior metal claws, the story just gets more interesting. And finally, the big climax isn't nearly as thrilling as you'd expect. It would’ve been a good one if there are more plot-twist scenes added into the movie since X-Men movie buffers are looking forward to be on the edge of their seats throughout the journey of this anticipated movie. 




Though it isn't as good as X2: X-Men United, this movie has somehow successfully prepared X-Men for a future reborn, and sets the stage for a new wave of mutant goodness for years to come.


WE CAME TO A CONCLUSION TO GIVE A 3.5/5 STARS


The Maze Runner - Get Ready To Run

THE MAZE RUNNER




The movie started off with a thrilling ride in an ascending elevator. Without any recount of his memory, Thomas (Dylan O’Brien) wakes up to his senses of being in the elevator together with supply containers marked WCKD.  As the elevator reaches the top, a door above him opens widely, revealing the sky with the presence of some young boys and men (Lord of the Flies) swarming him. Confused, Thomas immediately runs, disregarding them, but stops when he suddenly realizes that he’s trapped in a confined glade surrounded by huge brick walls.  There’s nowhere to run to, baby. 

Gally (Will Poulter) subdues and convinces Thomas of the serenity of the situation that he is in to stop him from running through the opening of those peculiar high walls.

Alby (Ami Ameen) and his consigliere Newt (Thomas Brodie-Sangster) introduces Thomas to the glade community and explains how things work there, about the elevator, and the existence of such isolated community known as Gladers. Apparently, all of them experience the same thing – they can’t seem to remember anything but only their names which only comes up after several days.  Each boy is assigned with different tasks, ranging from farmers, to builders, and runners (routined to run through the maze at certain time restrictions). If you’re trapped in the maze overnight, you’ll die in the fangs of the Grievers. What’s more interesting is that the maze CHANGES EVERY NIGHT!

One night, Thomas is caught in a dream of full brief images of a woman’s presence (Patricia Clarkson) saying, “Wicked is good”.

Over the days, Thomas tries hard to fit himself into this whole strange community to survive. However, the ultimate starting on turn of events was when he’s attacked in the woods by one of the lost Runners, Ben (played by Chris Sheffield) while given the task to go dig up fertilizer. Ben, who was stung by a Griever said to him while they fought, “This is all your fault. I saw you.”

As the story develops, viewers will be engrossed with the exhilarating run into the maze, anticipating jump scares at every turns and corners of the maze, being chased by the merciless Grievers. Thomas’ curiosity has given them hope that they can escape the maze and find a way out. Just when things are doing well, the elevator brought up a girl (Kaya Scodelario) with no supplies inside, but only a note in her hand saying, “She’s the last one ever”. She then recalls her name as Teresa and she somehow knew Thomas’ name because of some connection that they had before they were sent to the Glade. It turned out that both of them were colleagues who worked for WCKD.

The protagonist started a revolution to free themselves from the Glade. And so, the Gladers are divided – half with Thomas whereas another half stayed behind with Newt. They immediately ventured into section 7 and found what seems to be the entrance connecting the Glade to the people in charge of controlling the Maze. After keying in special codes, they managed to get through the door and escape the Griever which was chasing after them. The group walks through a hallway and reached into some laboratory that was recognized by Thomas from his dreams and vague memories. Bodies of dead scientists were found lying on the floor and a video started to play.

In the video, a woman from Thomas’ dreams identified herself as Ava Paige and told them that the world outside was engulfed by a global devastation called the Flare. All the boys sent to the Glade was a part of an experiment – their brains were monitored as to find a cure for the destroying outside world. In the background, there was a massacre going on, killing the scientists before Paige shoots herself in the head.

A moment after, a door suddenly opens, and Gally shows up with a gun, threatening to kill Thomas. Unfortunately, Chuck jumps in front of the bullet and Gally gets stabbed. Just then, a group of guerrillas from the video rushes in and takes the kids outside to waiting helicopters, marking what seems to be the end of the thrilling movie.

But shockingly, the movie doesn’t end there as Paige shows up, alive and wiping fake blood off her head, saying that the kids have taken the bait. More kids survived than she anticipated. THE MAZE WAS A SUCCESS!!!

All in all, the movie was a very entertaining movie that deserves to be on top of The Hunger Games movie franchise. With lots of fresh faces and newcomers, the pathos were well portrayed by the cast of The Maze Runner. It is also infused with unpredictable storyline and constant suspense, the movie is sure to keep viewers on the edge of their seats.

The upbeat and agitated rhythm of the background music helps to elevate the surrounding emotion and the feel of the environment, allowing viewers to be in the moment. 



WE FROM MOVIE DUST GIVE THIS MOVIE 4/5 STARS!


The Dictator : Wouldn't it be fun to be him?

          
THE DICTATOR : WOULDN'T IT FUN TO BE HIM?



          The Dictator follows Cohen’s next creation, General Admiral Aladeen, a showboating and semi-retarded dictator who loves his power and would do anything to make sure democracy never comes to his state of Wadiya, an oil rich nation located in North Africa.  When the United Nations begins taking a closer look at Wadiyan affairs and sees that it may be building atomic weapons, taking the advice of his Head of Secret Police and Chief of Secruity, Uncle Tamir (Sir Ben Kingsley), the Supreme Leader decides to take a trip to NY to address the UN.  It is in NY where, under the orders of his uncle, he is kidnapped and his body double takes his place in order to open Wadiya to the world.  With the help of an exiled Wadiyan scientist named Nadal (Jason Mantzoukas) and a feminist and owner of the Free Earth Collective, Zoey (Anna Faris), General Aladeen will do what he must in order to prevent democracy from reaching his country.


          What separates The Dictator from Borat and Bruno is that this film is totally scripted and everything, for the most part, is planned, where as the first two films were like improvised documentaries.  It’s nearly impossible to tell what Cohen is improvising during the film and what is actually scripted but, believe you me, he covers the complete range of comedic ground.  The jokes range from beyond offensive to simple toilet humor and everything in between, even though the movie itself is a political satire of sorts.  Hell, there will even be moments of silence because some of the jokes just aren’t funny and the picture can actually get slightly boring.


           As expected, some of the jokes are extremely offensive, especially for residents of NY, but those were actually my favorite particularly because you could literally feel the audience dividing with some people laughing at how far Cohen was willing to go while others were scoffing in anger.   It was something I’ve never really experienced before and it just shows how, with Cohen, nothing is sacred.  All I ask is that you pay attention to the smaller details, especially the music, because he and director Larry Charlesmake sure everything has the Wadiyan touch.  For example, you’ll hear their version of Dr. Dre’s The Next Episode, which is hilarious.


          It’s no surprise that Cohen steals the show but I was taken aback by how good Anna Faris held her own against his dominating presence.  I think the fact that she looked like a teenage boy trying to battle a dictator made her much more fun to watch.  Sir Ben Kingsley was also good but he just wasn’t that funny, I think his role could have been played by someone else and it would have had the same effect on me.  Jason Mantzoukas was great as the ousted scientist, the one scene he has in the helicopter with Cohen is absolutely priceless despite its subject matter.
                                         
          Overall, The Dictator is nowhere near as sidesplitting as Cohen’s previous endeavors but it still is pretty funny and will have people in shock from how far he goes.  Not only that, the film is actually pretty smart in the way it boldly attacks politics and how it bashes American ways right in your face.  For old fans of Cohen you’ll enjoy his latest but will want more, for new fans you can expect to be shocked, appalled and will probably die of laughter.


WE WOULD DEFINITELY GIVE THIS MOVIE 4/5 STARS



Transformers 4 Age of Extinction - Is This The End of The Autobots

          IS THIS THE END OF THE TRANSFORMERS  ?


 Firstly A Trip Down  The Memory Lane,

THE TRANSFORMERS SERIES 

           The "Transformers" series so far is, by far, one of the strangest giant franchises in production. I've reviewed all of the films, and I think they are genuinely worthy of examination, not only in the context of Michael Bay's career, but also within the framework that the films have created for these stories. The first film is probably the easiest one to like. It was a fairly clever concept to hang the entire thing on the story of a boy and his first car, which just happens to turn out to be an intergalactic warrior robot who is part of a war that has found its way to Earth. The film is really, really busy, and the story tries so hard that it gets irritating, but it benefits from a handful of solid comic performances and a sense that there is something awesome about these giant shape-shifting mechanical creatures. The second film…
… man, the second film. What can you say? It's a product of the Writer's Guild strike. It went into production without anything like a coherent screenplay. It's jazz as performed by a 14-year-old boy who has porn running on his laptop while playing "Grand Theft Auto 5" on a bigscreen TV. It's wildly stupid. It's got a few solid fight scenes and Shia LaBeouf is doing exactly what they paid him to do again and Megan Fox looks irritated by most of the film except for when she's running for her life from on-set pyrotechnic eruptions. Then she just looks terrified.
          "Transformers" is, in my opinion, the single best brand/IP that Hasbro ever created in-house. I know saying words like "brand" and "IP" is gross, reducing art to things that can be stripped for parts, but this is a toy company first and foremost. When Hasbro took the Diaclone and Micro Change toy lines and mashed them up into one pretty cool thing, they created something they could not possibly have envisioned. They launched Japan's first real toy and commercial invasion, and it basically got a hold of the imaginations of the kids who watched the TV show in America in a particularly vivid way, and it became a kid-level phenomenon.
          Until I walked into the giant Cinema in Space U8, Shah Alam, I hadn't really given this film any thought. Even as someone who liked the last one, I'd barely paid any attention to what they had in mind for this film. Overall, I think this is a big step in the right direction. It's visually just as wild as the last few Bay films have been, with the director pushing ILM to their breaking point. It is amazing to me that Bay keeps finding a way to somehow make this these things even bigger than they already naturally are, but he is a man whose career can be seen as a series of escalating aesthetic decisions. He knows that these films exist largely to give fans a chance to watch giant robots beat holy hell out of each ether, and on that front, boy, does he deliver.
          I'll say this for the script by Ehren Kruger… there are some big new ideas that this film tries, and they suggest some pretty radical new directions for the series if they pursue those ideas. The film begins several years after the events of "Dark Of The Moon," and the US government appears to be hunting down all remaining Transformers. Autobots. Decepticons. Doesn't matter. We've decided we want all of them off our planet, for good, and there's a fairly brutal scene at the start of the film where Ratchet is torn to pieces by a team of black ops soldiers led by Savoy (Titus Welliver) and assisted by the mysterious Lockdown (voiced by Mark Ryan), a Transformer who seems to be unlike any Transformer we've met so far in the series.
Peter Cullen as Optimus Prime
          Seeing how even the good guys are being treated, it makes sense that any other Transformers left on the planet are in hiding. That includes Optimus Prime (played as always by Peter Cullen), who was ambushed and almost killed. He's been trapped in truck mode, damaged almost beyond repair. That's when he is discovered and purchased by Cade Yeager (Mark Wahlberg), an amateur inventor who is facing financial ruin. He has a side business of refurbishing junk, and when he buys the truck, he has no idea what he actually is. It's only once he does some work on the core unit that seems to fuel the truck that he realizes what he's found. Both his daughter Tessa (Nicola Peltz) and his business partner Lucas (T.J. Miller) advise him to turn this renegade robot in to the government, but Cade isn't so sure. By the time he's made his mind up, it's too late. Optimus has been tracked down by Harold Attinger (Kelsey Grammer), the guy behind the black ops team. They descend on Cade's farm and are prepared to kill him to find out where he's put Optimus Prime. Optimus can't have that, of course, and when he fights back, it puts Cade and his daughter and Lucas and even his daughter's secret boyfriend Shane (Jack Raynor) in harm's way.
         There is a reason that Attinger is willing to help Lockdown murder every last Transformer, of course, and that reason may be tied up with the work being done by a brilliant and slimy inventor played by Stanley Tucci. He's been working with samples of the metal that was recovered from the bodies of the dead Transformers, including the ruined husk that used to be Megatron. He's convinced that he can now build brand-new Transformers, giant robots that he will be able to control. He needs more raw material, though, if he's ever going to really build an army, and Lockdown promises to give him something called "The Seed," which should terraform a huge expanse of any surface on Earth into pure Transformanium.
          Boy, does all of that feel silly to type. This script is constantly throwing exposition at the audience, and since this thing runs a full two-and-a-half hours, that means there are new ideas being introduced all the way through. I haven't even gotten into the new Transformers who are introduced, like Hound (John Goodman), Drift (Ken Watanabe), or Crosshairs (John DiMaggio). I haven't talked about Lockdown's ship, where there is an alien zoo of creatures he's picked up all over the galaxy. I haven't mentioned the biggest new idea in the film, Lockdown's assertion that there is a race of Creators who have decided to reign in the free will of Optimus and the other Transformers, making Lockdown a bounty hunter looking to collect a reward. There is so much going on here that it's sort of exhausting, but that's a feature of these films at this point. They are overkill personified, and if you're expecting anything less than that, you haven't been paying attention.
          I think the giant scale action in this one is amazingly staged once again. There are few filmmakers alive who would even try to stage things on a scale like this, much less make it look like something that's sort of effortless. Bayhem just keeps getting better, and he really puts Wahlberg and Pelts and Raynor through the wringer. It feels like he's trying to tap into the same sort of protective parent vibe that so many people love from "Armageddon," and Wahlberg is indeed very earnest as Cade, a man with a name that could only be in a Transformers film. He's game for any of the giant action scenes that Bay throws at him, including a fight on the side of a Hong Kong apartment building that is one of the most clever series of gags in the entire series.
          The human story is, unsurprisingly, somewhat labored. But we're spared that weird and icky sense of humor that led to the four-hour subplot in the last film about Ken Jeong and the men's room or John Malkovich on what appears to be a bad ecstasy trip. Tucci's the snide comic relief this time, and he does it very well. There is a lot of the film that is genuinely funny because of Tucci and his reaction to being right at ground zero for this intergalactic war. With a streamlined plot, this could have easily been an hour shorter, and I don't think anyone would complain.
          Oh... and did I mention robot dinosaurs? And the prologue where we learned what actually killed the real dinosaurs? Because there are robot dinosaurs. And it is insane.
          It just keeps getting better and better at bringing the robot characters to life, and there are so many of them now that I'm blown away at just how photo-real they are. This is that same cutting edge that Bay has tried walk with each of these movies, and he demands so much of the visual effects team here that I'll happily overlook a few shots that simply don't work in terms of realism. This is a film that is overstuffed with amazing images, many of them incoherent on a narrative level, but so remarkable that I simply can't get upset about how weird the story is.
          Ultimately, these are still just vehicles for the sale of more toys, and Hasbro is poised to clean up once again. My own kids have fallen in love with this series, and I can tell you exactly what they love about it: all the goddamn robots. They don't care about anything else. Each new Transformers film could just be two solid hours of new robot characters walking out and introducing themselves, then jumping into an ongoing fist-fight, and my boys would be perfectly happy with it. It feels to me like "Transformers" is, in many ways, one of the least cynical of the major franchises currently in progress because Bay knows that he's selling a product here, and he sells it with all the slick that he can muster. It is no accident that Bay is a TV commercial maestro. He is very good at selling, and "Transformers: Age Of Extinction" will indeed gets it hooks in deep in its target audience, and toys will fly off shelves, and the series will rake in another mountain of money both domestically and abroad. What I'm really curious about is whether or not they're going to pick up the surprising story threads introduced in the film's final moments when they make the next movie, because it suggests a film that would be utterly unlike anything else in the series so far.
         Whatever the case, "Transformers: Age Of Extinction" more than delivers on whatever promises Bay makes to an audience at this point. Giant robots. Giant mayhem. Destruction on a global scale. You know what you're in for if you buy a ticket, and Bay seems determined to wear you down with the biggest craziest "Transformers" movie yet.

Congratulations to the Transformers Series ! You received 3.5/5 stars!



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