Can
a movie be so cool that it becomes boring? Before tonight I might
have said no way, but now I am certain that it is possible, for that
is exactly what happened in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.
For the first hour and a half or so I was mesmerized by the computer
graphics, sound effects and the rather wonderful fusion of action and
music, the few things Michael Bay is actually good at doing. And if
the movie ended right there I might be writing this review with a
slightly different timbre. Unfortunately, the last hour dug the movie
deeper and deeper into its own grave. Of course, like any Michael Bay
film, the dialogue, and subsequently the acting, were mortifying. As
well, the story seemed makeshift, and there were enough flaws to feed
the homeless of the world.
The
story is about some Energon source (whatever that is) on Earth that
could save Cybertron. The only issue is that, as a result of
harvesting the Energon, the Sun would cease to exist and life on
Earth would end. Apparently the Decepticons have been trying to
harness it for years, but were thwarted by primes (whatever they are)
in their previous attempts. But after stealing a fragment of the All
Spark, killing Optimus Prime, and reviving Megatron, The Fallen
(whoever he is), who looks like a Bionicle, has an opportunity to
find the device that will harvest the Energon. And this is where Sam
Witwicky (Labeouf) comes in. At the beginning of the movie he finds a
shard of the All Spark and starts seeing odd symbols everywhere he
goes. Turns out these symbols are a map to find the key that turns on
the device. The Fallen knows where the machine is, and Sam knows
where the key is, and kablamo, we have a plot, kind of.

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By
the way, the reason why I have those questions in parenthesis is
because there was no mention of any of those things in the first
film. It just seems as though they did not plan ahead when they made
the first movie. However, I will not get hung up on this point
because the movie is not about the plot, it is about the amazing
sounds, graphics and special effects.
Right
from the very beginning, when the stars for the Paramount logo fly
by, you can hear the sound effects. It is invigorating and pumps you
up for the movie ahead. On that aspect the movie does not disappoint.
The sounds are metallic and awesome. As well, the graphics are epic!
They are done on such a grand scale and pack quite the punch to the
gut (in a good way). Moreover, as stated above, Michael Bay does a
stellar job at combining slow motion action sequences with either
rock music or instrumental pieces. The only thing about this film
that came as a subtle shock to me was how funny it was. But that is
where the movie hits a wall, an impenetrable wall of suck.
First
off, the dialogue was horrendous. Every time someone spoke my body
started to convulse and I felt a strong urge to vomit. The acting
suffered greatly from this issue as well. I cannot honestly inform
you as to who was good or bad because it is hard to tell if someone
is acting well when the lines they are fed are utter garbage. I guess
if the actor/actress were amazing they would be able to do something
with it, which tells me that the actors in this film were average at
best. I think I honestly would’ve preferred this movie to be silent
except for the effects and music, as in no talking whatsoever. It
would have made the movie a bit more bearable, and probably more
logical as well.

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Furthermore,
flaws run rampant throughout this film. For example, if the shard of
the All Spark that the government has is so dangerous, why not
destroy it instead of keeping it in a facility waiting to be stolen?
Or why send out soldiers with guns to kill giant robots when these
men with bullets are mostly harmless against massive mechanical
aliens? The list goes on and on. But again, this movie does not
concern itself with cinematic excellence, only cool action and
effects, which it manages to screw up also.
Someone
told me that this movie was the teenage boy’s equivalent of
snorting cocaine off of a hooker’s butt, and, though I can see how
that is true, it is not fully accurate. It is more like snorting
cocaine off of a hooker’s butt, but you do it for so long that she
starts to get impatient. Eventually she gets mad and bites your
tongue in a fit of rage, and you commence to beat her in an attempt
to make her leave your tongue in its rightful place. Now your tongue
is bleeding profusely and there is a severely bruised hooker lying on
your floor. If you did not catch it, that was a Shamwow
reference.

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The
point is that the last hour of the movie just dragged on for too
long. It got repetitive and redundant. Every ten minutes you would
hear Agent Simmons (Turturro) say something along the lines of, “this
is my moment, this is what I was meant to do,” then it would switch
to Sam and Mikaela (Fox) trying to find a way to reach the Autobots
and soldiers, then to the robot battlefield, and back to the top
again in a seemingly endless loop. However, I am missing the most
annoying part of all; there was a plethora of slow motion sequences
sprinkled throughout this last hour. It was cool the first few times,
but then it became rather irritating.
I
would like to say that you should watch this movie if you want to see
a really cool action movie jam packed with amazing special effects,
but that would be misleading you because by the last hour you will be
looking at your watch wondering when this boring drivel will end. A
crying shame!
4/10