Wednesday, 2 July 2014

If this doesn’t kill you...it might torture you!!!

Walking into the theater, holding those fragile 3D glasses mildly tight in my fists, controlling my anxiety to look back at the screen which has already begun the “age of extinction” saga, searching for my seat under the dim low-battery Smartphone screen-light; I finally settled in my seat with determinedly crossed fingers- not to fall as a bait for the disturbing ‘Micheal Bay’ian grand destructive celluloid franchise. Habitually all the beginning s of Bay’s stories are very effective, so is this one but I missed the transformers tittle on screen which bothered me a bit. Leaving those petty unhappy things aside I was engrossed in to the story world which begins in the suburbs of Texas. Story unfolds gradually, letting the audience realize that Auto-bots which were always the personification of humanity and altruism were actually put on a hunt to make them extinct from the planet earth by the pseudo-patriotic corporate minds. Fancy cars as in NFS-most wanted, race here and there with the laudable camera angles hunting down the human-friendly Auto-bots, holding their hands with other malignant alien troops.
                                            Mark Wahlberg (who plays Cade Yeager), a struggling scrap collector, a confidently wannabe investor, an over protective dad of a hot teenage daughter appears fighting every battle possible to make the ends meet and make his daughter’s university dream a mere reality. One interesting part about the characters in this movie is they appear fresh, fresh enough at least from the regular stuff that Bay had been showcasing past few years in this Robotic franchise. You don’t find a practical flirty dad, a crazy mom and the tiny Chihuahua who desperately tries to fuck every possible thing in this universe (lol). Bay has succeeded to an extent in cooking up the ‘Armegeddon’ic flavor in this attempt of his.
                                         After the mere introductions, the story begins when Mark finds a scrapped truck which is later realized to be a transformer, precisely Optimus Prime. The whole family which is now chased for fostering an anti-nationalist, a no longer wanted hero (Optimus prime) by the sycophant CIA agents, slips away in all the directions possible to evade the deadly hunt. Best thing that one would admire in this installment was that the director’s vision was clear; graphics were crisp and neat (when compared to the haze ones in the “dark of the moon” at least). Micheal Bay seems to realize that too much of the unnecessary extravagant graphics can spoil the beauty, content and the flavor of the film. He now uses the CG in a clever manner, particularly speaking about a scene when a car transforms to a robot he doesn’t concentrate on its transformation, rather he jumps into another scene quickly with transforming BGM playing behind which reveals deliberately that the car is not a car anymore.
                                               So the Autobots are now fighting for their existence from humans and the other alien counterparts -“creators”. Apart from the regular alien combats director has taken an unusual sci-fi turn introducing the hilarious Stanley Tucci (as Joshuva), who played an alter ego of Steve Jobs, with the similar physique and posters all around his office showcasing the neo-revolutionary metal instead of an ipod or an iphone. The luxuriously complicated idea of cloning the transformers, programming, transforming metal seems odd but it opens new gates for the plot to traverse in intrigued directions. On a whole the story races further when the Galvatron, a new age cloned transformer from Joshua’s company KSI, goes wrong and retains the character of the badass Megatron. So humans, creators (aliens) and megatron on the darker side where as Autobots and the Yeager family on the brighter end deliberately fighting for the existence of humanity, forms the crux of the story which sequentially leads to the destructively choreographed solid 1 hr climax set in the streets of Hong Kong. One thing I would really appreciate Micheal Bay is that he restricted himself from making a purely insensible destructive climax; he rather tries to make it fairly a digestible one with more human involvement. Previous installment “Dark of the moon” tends to fall on the darker side because of it’s over usage of graphics and unwanted catastrophes which would be a pain in the eyes and something else too while watching. As the saying goes “too much of anything is bad”, Bay tends to trim every unnecessary CG work in this film.
In the course of trimming down the fancy yet trivial CG work, he greyed out on the human emotions, where the dad- daughter relations goes in haze and stands out unwanted in the never ending fiasco. The drama doesn’t drive well in the last hour of the movie which would probably excite kids and other action lovers. It certainly pricks every movie lover very deeply and remains to be one of the unapologetic mistakes often committed by Bay. Director cleverly leaves many open ends in the plot, making his work extremely comfortable in taking off with the next part in this critically humiliated franchise. Cinematographer has done a wonderful job in this film, which becomes a crucial part upon earning some respect from the viewers.
As the end credits rolled, popping the leftover tomato cheese popcorn into my mouth , I urged myself out of the theater with mixed feelings, one appreciating the director upon his learning from the previous mistakes whereas disappointed for making the fresh ones undeniably.
                                                On a whole Transformers stands out to be a mildly destructive, poor on drama,  rich in CG and relentlessly another pain in the ass installment of the franchise which would possibly never have an EXTINCTION.

Go if your kids force you or if you are this crazy fan of Robo-wrestling else stay back at home if you are a skinflint, Bay might rob you for sure.

*************** A generous 2 star (**) for this movie for making me happy for a while, "if this doesn’t kill you it might torture you" ****************