Monday, June 29, 2009

Transformers' poised to gross $190 million by Sunday


It looks like scathing reviews aren't equaling bad buzz among regular moviegoers for "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen."

The Michael Bay-directed event film showed solid momentum at the box office on Friday, earning $36.7 million. Total domestic ticket sales after just three days are a booming $126 million.

If the big crowds that turned out Wednesday disliked "Transformers" as much as most critics, the movie's gross likely wouldn't have grown by 28% from Thursday to Friday.

Based on the most recent numbers and the estimates of executives who closely analyze box office, it appears that “Transformers” will gross around $190 million through Sunday at the U.S. and Canadian box office. That would be the highest five-day take ever for a film opening on a Wednesday by a very healthy margin.

It's now possible, albeit unlikely, that “Transformers” could beat the all-time biggest five-day performance of $203.7 million, earned last year by the “The Dark Knight.”

Up-to-date foreign grosses weren’t released by Paramount, which spent about $200 million to produce “Revenge of the Fallen.” But the sequel to 2007's hit took in $58.5 million overseas through Wednesday and will likely earn roughly about as much from international markets by Sunday as it does domestically.

Warner Bros.’ “My Sister’s Keeper,” the only other new film in wide release this weekend, grossed $5.1 million on Friday. That sets the modestly budgeted tearjerker up for a decent weekend performance between $13 million and $15 million, in line with expectations.

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Sunday, June 28, 2009

Transformers: Revenge Of The Fallen’ Director Michael Bay Declares: ‘I Am Number Four’




You would think that Michael Bay, director of this week’s hot summer blockbuster “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen,” would be taking advantage of some well-earned downtime as audiences flock to see giant fighting robots and s–t blowing up. Maybe he is. But that’s not all he’s doing.

Variety reports that Bay is in place to produce and possibly direct a book-to-movie adaptation of “I Am Number Four,” the first in a six-book sci-fi series. The deal is with Dreamworks; studio stakeholder Steven Spielberg is expected to be active “in a behind-the-scenes capacity, similar to the godfather role he has played in the ‘Transformers’ franchise.”

As if that’s not enough, a source also says that controversial “A Million Little Pieces” author James Frey is one of two authors putting pen to paper for the series. The New York Times reveals that someone who is “familiar with the project” credits Frey for conceiving the series. The Times article also states that a cover letter accompanying the as-yet-unpurchased manuscript bills “Number Four” as being the work of “an unnamed New York Times best-selling author and a young up-and-coming writer.”

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Millions adored the first chapter of the Transformers’ adventures and SheKnows has an inside scoop: Revenge of the Fallen lives up to every expectation.

From the beginning moments -- that in hindsight serve as a Transformers history lesson -- the film is full of surprises.

Transformers: Rise of the Fallen is a visual marvel

Shia LaBeouf is heading off to college to begin the next chapter of his character Sam’s life as fate has other ideas. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is barely 10 minutes old and immediately audiences are finally treated to a sequel that outdoes the original in every way.

Shia and family head off to college

Visually, Michael Bay’s latest epic is utterly amazing. Around every turn is a marvel for the eyes. This is not an easy task considering the keen awareness of audiences in the summer of 2009.

As Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen heads into the desert, two things happen.


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Sunday, June 14, 2009

TRANSFORMER THE MOVIE RISE OF THE FALLEN

The biggest movie of the summer is finally here, but that's the problem with Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen - it's just too bloody big. Epic, spectacular but unfortunately far, far too long; the film proves that when it comes to Michael Bay blockbuster movies, you can have too much of a good thing.

The first instalment of the sure-to-be-long-running franchise was a perfectly formed slice of funny, explosive, slo-mo mayhem that found a massive worldwide audience. For the sequel, it was clearly the director's intention to paint Revenge of the Fallen on an epic canvas. It's more of the same - a lot more.

Two years on from Transformers, the Autobots are still on earth, now allied with the US military, working together to protect the earth from further Decepticon attacks.

Meanwhile, the boy at the centre of events last time around - Shia LaBeouf's Sam Witwicky - is trying to forget that he discovered a robot alien race, and is instead worried about starting college, and holding onto his ridiculously hot girlfriend Mikaela - (played by a hotpant-clad Megan Fox).

Unfortunately, as Optimus Prime solemnly intones, "Fate never calls on us at the moment of our choosing." The Decepticons are on the move again, with the very ancient and very evil Transformer - The Fallen - masterminding a diabolical plan to destroy the Autobots and the Earth itself and secure the future of his race. Soon our planet is once more a battleground for these ancient robotic foes to wage war.

It's a fine set-up that is forcefully established in the movie's superb opening hour. Bay masterfully zips between events at Cybertron (the Transformers' homeworld), Sam's opening day at college, the drama on a variety of military bases, and throws in several robot-on-robot battles for good measure, all at a breakneck pace that leaves you breathless.


We have Sam's fantastically funny relationship with his barmy parents, now trying to cope with their darling son leaving home. One hilarious set-piece that sees his mother accidently eat a chunk of marijuana on Sam's first day at college had the audience in stitches, and confirms Mr. and Mrs. Witwicky as the two most likable characters in the franchise.

The Beef himself is also obviously born for the role as their son. He has less to do this time around, but still manages to convey the kind of awkward, geeky charm that makes us (just about) believe that Megan Fox might be into him. He's the latest in a long line of little heroes who ends up excelling in the face of epic and dangerous circumstances.

It is also clear that Bay has refined and improved his technique when it comes to directing action since the first Transformers. Many found the robot-on-robot fighting in T1 over-edited and made even more confusing because they took place in unclear backgrounds (i.e. a smashed-up downtown LA) - often you couldn't even tell which Transformer was fighting which.

Bay has - to an extent anyway - cleared this up in ROTF, with more lingering tracking shots, cleaner environments and establishing framing. He's undoubtedly helped by what we're sure is a truly astronomical special effects budget, which sees the denizens of Cybertron - at the request of fans - given far more screen time than before. He can simply afford to show more 'bots this time around.

Indeed the film reaches its pinnacle with one such action set-piece that takes place in a forest - a brilliantly crafted sequence that is kinetic, emotional and genuinely thrilling. Unfortunately however, it is a climax that comes only an hour or so into the movie - the remaining 80 or so minutes just never quite scale the same heights.

That's the one BIG problem with ROTF; the movie stops dead halfway through, and then spends the rest of its overlong run-time building up a head of steam again, painstakingly setting up the eventual climax.

ay takes an age meticulously manoeuvring all the film's protagonists into place for a vast, epic confrontation in the middle of the Egyptian desert. But by the time this all-in royal rumble between the Autobots, Decepticons and US Army finally arrives, you are too numbed, exhausted and inured to actually give a damn about the outcome.

Don't get us wrong, we love Michael Bay and the particular grab-bag of delights only he can bring to blockbuster movies; huge explosions; quick, intense dialogue; lingering , pornographic shots of both girls' asses and military hardware. 90 minutes of Bay-ness makes for a thrilling flick, but if the clock starts ticking past the two hour mark and beyond, it all becomes just too much; your mind and senses need a rest.

Bay could have cut 40 minutes from the bowels of Transformers 2, and it would have been a far more effective movie. Unfortunately, the director fell into the same trap with Pearl Harbour and Bad Boys II - each filled with spectacular moments, but both becoming bloated, arduous cinematic experiences that ultimately outstay their welcome.

s this issue going to place the franchise in any kind of trouble? Of course not; ROTF will make gazillions, and it still deserves to. The team behind the Transformers movies have hit upon a formula that mixes E-number-fuelled Saturday morning cartoons with '90s-style military action movies, and it works in a spectacularly un-ironic, gloriously juvenile way.

It is just kind of inexcusable that with such a ridiculously enjoyable formula, viewers of ROTF still spend the movie's final half hour nursing a numb head and arse, and willing the noise to stop. Transformers 2 proves that sometimes less is more.

"Ican't wait to watch this movie!"

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