Movie Chronicles

Deluxe Sideswipe Video Review February 18th, 2009

A review of the deluxe Side­swipe toy:

Skids Bio February 18th, 2009

With images via TF08, we have a lit­tle descrip­tion about the Skids char­ac­ter (Green Chevy Beat/Spark):

Because he is slightly less hyper­ac­tive than his brother MUDFLAP, AUTOBOT SKIDS has always thought of him­self as “the smart one.” He likes to point this out at every oppor­tu­nity. While MUDFLAP zips around like a maniac, AUTOBOT SKIDS prefers to impress his supe­ri­ors among the AUTOBOT high com­mand by behav­ing in a way he thinks of as mature, which usu­ally involves talk­ing non­stop about any­thing that occurs to him.

Q&A from Toy Fair 09 February 18th, 2009

The Trans­form­ers Collector’s Club have tran­scribed (read: para­phrased) the Q&A ses­sion at Toy Fair 2009 where Michael Bay and oth­ers were quizzed about Revenge of the Fallen.

WC: Michael, the first movie was such an amaz­ing suc­cess how is Revenge of the Fallen going to be different?

MB: From learn­ing the mythos, to fig­ur­ing out how to make the robots trans­form on the big screen, the first movie involved a lot of dis­cov­ery. In addi­tion, it was a story about a boy get­ting his first car and find­ing his first girl friend. The sec­ond movie is a com­ing of age story, encom­pass­ing global issues, and bring­ing the robots to a new level. If every boy in the world didn’t want a Bum­ble­bee in his garage from the first movie, they will from the sec­ond. All of the robots in this film are super­hero tough. I’ll tell you I am very pas­sion­ate about this film.

LdB: Yes, in the first movie, boy gets car, boy finds girl, but this one really explores the idea of respon­si­bil­ity as Sam leaves for col­lege. He thinks he wants to lead a nor­mal col­lege life but finds out some of his deci­sions don’t work out so well for not only him, but also the whole world.

WC: Brian, can you tell us a lit­tle about your jour­ney mak­ing the new film?

BG: What I dis­cov­ered is what a great part­ner we have in Para­mount with this rich fran­chise. We have been blessed with a great set of team play­ers from both sides as this mythol­ogy is very diverse and only with a great team can you explore all these dif­fer­ent lay­ers. For exam­ple in one of the early pro­duc­tion meet­ings Alex and Bob (writ­ers) were won­der­ing if the robots would take an earthly form and what we all agreed that we wanted, was for kids to be look­ing at the cars in the park­ing lot, after they left the movie, won­der­ing if one of these cars just might be a robot in disguise.

WC: Tyrese, how does your char­ac­ter evolve in the new film?

TG: Well, I’ll be call­ing in more air strikes, and I am now a Mas­ter Sgt. There was a ton of pres­sure from the first movie to get it right but now the pres­sure in the sec­ond movie was to get it right, but with a sense of urgency, to get this back out to the fans.

WC: Michael, the first movie was such an amaz­ing suc­cess how is Revenge of the Fallen going to be different?

LdB: Yes, there was a lot of urgency. You know some stu­dios would have wanted Michael to shoot more than one movie at the same time, but that’s just not right for Trans­form­ers. Trans­form­ers has really evolved from movie to movie and is now on a much big­ger scale, but with more intimacy.

MB: For this fran­chise, you’re right, pro­duc­ing mul­ti­ple movies at the same time is not the way to do it. We lis­tened to feed­back from the fans, and were able to put a lot of that into the sec­ond film. This is a big­ger film with a great sto­ry­line.
WC: Brian, how does this film evolve the mythology?

BG: We all know that every­one is hun­gry for the next level of mythos, so we really want every­one to won­der what Revenge of the Fallen means.

LdB: It is a very deep mythol­ogy and most peo­ple just don’t know how deep it is.
MB: Yes, this film will sat­isfy all types of fans as I have included my trade­mark humor, more inti­macy with the humans and robots, and Moms will think it is safe enough to bring the kids back out to the movies.

TG: The humor often times is cre­ated on the spot. Some­thing hap­pens on the set and Michael lets us keep it in the film. I know I still get com­ments from kids about my “left cheek”. I don’t know if that will ever go away and that was a spon­ta­neous com­ment that just came out when we were film­ing the first film.

I’ll tell you what has really meant the most to me, are the com­ments I got from real Mas­ter Sgts in the mil­i­tary. Some of the guys that were in Afghanistan told me that when they explained to their kids that their job was just like what they saw me do in Trans­form­ers, it made “them cool to their kids”.

WC: Brian, tell us what this brand has meant out­side of the US.

BG: In my trav­els all over the world, I have found that the expe­ri­ence has been the same. Retail­ers have said that their response was incred­i­ble with the movie prod­ucts. In China alone in 2008, the brand grew in dou­ble dig­its. We found that the Trans­form­ers story con­tains uni­ver­sal truths that peo­ple all over the world regard­less of cul­ture seem to get .

After the pre­view was shown, Direc­tor Michael Bay spoke exclu­sively with Rik Alvarez of the Trans­form­ers Col­lec­tors’ Club.

RA: How did mak­ing this film com­pare to the first? How did the fans reac­tion to the first film change what you did in the sec­ond film?

MB: The fans are very vocal and we lis­tened. I worked very closely with the writ­ers in order to dive more deeply into the mythol­ogy. We really looked for ele­ments that have never been explored and we dis­cov­ered some story lines that we wanted to elab­o­rate. This is a com­ing of age story for Sam but we also wanted to delve much deeper into the per­son­al­i­ties of the robots. There is much, much more robot inter­ac­tion in this film. This film has many more per­sonal moments but will also appeal to the hard­core fans as it can be wicked at times.

RA: Spe­cial effects soft­ware and cam­era tech­nol­ogy have made advance­ments since the first film. How has this empow­ered you to fur­ther real­ize your vision for Revenge?

MB: The devel­op­ments in tech­nol­ogy have allowed us to have the robots show emo­tion. This is a robot movie and this new tech­nol­ogy allows us to explore a greater depth of per­son­al­ity from these characters.

RA: No other direc­tor has the kind of rela­tion­ship that you have devel­oped with the US Mil­i­tary. What piece of hard­ware did you get access to that are you most excited about for this com­ing film?

MB: It’s like I have a direct line to the Pen­ta­gon. This is the first movie where actual F16’s have made a bomb­ing run on a movie set and coör­di­nated with spe­cial effects explo­sions. We were on a work­ing nuclear sub­ma­rine and work­ing air­craft car­rier. The mil­i­tary loved the first movie. It really helped with recruit­ing and pro­mot­ing a pos­i­tive image for them. Now they are happy to do just about any­thing they can for my films. We also found out that in Afghanistan the Buffalo(s) (Bonecrusher vehi­cle from the first movie) have all been nick­named dif­fer­ent Trans­form­ers char­ac­ters by their per­son­nel. We also worked with tanks fir­ing real rounds and you have not lived until you have heard an actual tank fir­ing. We have so much access — I am appre­cia­tive and excited about all the mil­i­tary vehi­cles we use.

RA: Film­ing at the pyra­mids must have been amaz­ing! What were the great­est chal­lenges you faced?

MB: This is the first time in 30 years that any­one has filmed at the pyra­mids and the first time ever any­one has filmed from the top of Petra. Steven filmed Indi­ana Jones and The Last Cru­sade from the base of Petra. It took 21 very heavy heli­copter loads to get all our gear to the top. We had all the access we wanted in Egypt as we found out that the head of Egypt­ian Antiq­ui­ties Dr. Zahi Hawass is a big Trans­form­ers fan and was very help­ful. We also filmed in the desert where Lawrence of Ara­bia was filmed. Very chal­leng­ing conditions.

RA: We know you love to blow things up in your movies, what is your favorite thing to blow up or demolish?

MB: Well, I don’t have a favorite, as I like to blow up a lot of things. The most expen­sive thing I’ve blown us was a $50 mil­lion dol­lar house that no one would buy in Bad Boys II.

RA: Is there any­thing else you would like to tell the fans about this great new movie?

MB: Fans should know that I really want to sat­isfy them by mak­ing an even bet­ter movie than the first one. Tonight was just a taste of what is to come. Not a scene shown was a “money shot” from the film. I really want to keep them a secret to give every­one a great sur­prise this sum­mer. Oh yes, and all the pre­views you have seen so far, you won’t get a bit of the final story from the trail­ers. The final movie will be so much more than what you “think” you have seen in the previews.

Thanks to Has­bro and Para­mount for allow­ing us the oppor­tu­nity for this sneak peek into the pro­duc­tion of Revenge of the Fallen! Watch for this movie com­ing to a the­atre near you June 24, 2009!

The Fallen Toy Video Review February 16th, 2009

Peaugh is back, this time with a video review of The Fallen, show­cas­ing its Cybertron­ian Jet alt mode for the first time:

Audi R8 named Sideways February 16th, 2009

More pic­tures from the Toy Fair this week have revealed the pack­ag­ing for the Audi R8 toy, a CG face and a name… “Side­ways”, not Sideswipe — not at all confusing.

Source: TForm­ers

High Resolution Trailer #2 Screenshots, The Fallen & Arcee February 16th, 2009

Now that our 1080p high res­o­lu­tion trailer is out on Yahoo, it’s time for 70 odd high res­o­lu­tion screen­shots that pick out the key parts of the trailer:

The Fallen

Arcee

Screen­shots

Official Transformers 2 Trailer #2 February 16th, 2009

UPDATE: Final Trans­form­ers 2 Trailer released in HD (30th April 2009)
See also our in depth analy­sis of the trailer with high qual­ity screen­shots of all the key scenes, robots and Megan Fox.

Orig­i­nal Post

View it at Yahoo Movies or below via YouTube:

Devastator toys, All constructicons revealed, Skids and Mudflaps Robot modes February 14th, 2009

With the 2009 toy fair comes images of new Revenge of the Fallen toys. So far we have two ver­sions of the Dev­as­ta­tor toy (one being a sim­pli­fied FAB ver­sion), all SIX alt modes of the con­struc­ti­cons, names for each of them (Ram­page, Scav­enger, Scrap­per, High­tower, Long Haul, and Mix Mas­ter) and images of Rampage’s robot mode, Skids and Mud­flap robot modes and toys (these are the Chevy Beat and Chevy Trax). The gallery fur­ther down also includes boxes for some of the toys, show­ing CG ren­der­ings of their heads (e.g. Demol­isher, Ram­page Bull­dozer, Side­swipe, Skids, Mud­flaps). There is also a rac­ing game enti­tled ‘Dev­as­ta­tor Show­down’ which shows a ren­dered ver­sion of Dev­as­ta­tor try­ing to eat Skids.

Dev­as­ta­tor, Constructicons

Com­pare with con­cept rendering

High­tower (the crane), Long Haul (dump truck), Mix­mas­ter (cement mixer), Ram­page (bull­dozer), Demol­isher or Scav­enger (exca­va­tor, names seem to con­flict), Scrap­per (loader)

Skids and Mudflaps

Other toys

Sources

Trans­form­ers Club, TForm­ers, TFW2005, TheAllSpark

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