Transformers: Age of Extinction is fascinating. Not in a good movie kind of way. Not even in a bad movie kind of way (although, make no mistake, it is positively atrocious). It is fascinating in that it feels as if it were the result of an experiment to see what a diagnosed sociopath would turn out if asked to helm a summer blockbuster aimed at kids. What else to make of a scene where rotund, bearded good guy robot Hound (regrettably voiced by the great John Goodman) deems a caged alien creature “too disturbing to live” before blowing it to smithereens for shits and giggles? How else to interpret another scene where, in a bone tossed to Bundy Ranch sympathizer-types, a gaggle of government thugs storm onto the protagonist’s land and hold a gun to his daughter’s head, the camera lingering almost sadistically on her crying expression as she pleads for her life? Perhaps the more likely explanation than Michael Bay being a sociopath (although that is definitely still on the table) is that Transformers: Age of Extinction is the defeated product of the kind of cultural toxicity it serves to perpetuate by instilling mores of violence, ludditism, and medieval gender politics into minds young enough to internalize those messages. It’s all one big party for Bay, and he’s just considerate enough to bring the arsenic laced Kool Aid.
As if you or anyone care about the plot of this thing: Since the destructive battle of Chicago in “Transformers: Dark of the Moon,” all Transformers — both Autobot and Decepticon — have been being hunted by the government for fear of another city-wrecking battle. Enter Cade Yeager (snicker), the world’s most Bostonian Texan and a struggling inventor with a teenage daughter (who Bay misses no opportunity to skeevily objectify) and a farm about to be foreclosed upon. One day, he and his buddy find an old wrecked truck in a run-down movie theater that turns out to be, upon repair, Autobot leader Optimus Prime. Among all this, a CIA director (Kelsey Grammer) works with a hunter/Terminator robot named Lockdown to deliver Prime in exchange for an ancient doohickey called “The Seed” which will produce enough of the alloy Transformers are made of to produce endless manmade alien robots for the military.
For those of you still with me, no, none of this makes any more sense on screen than it does on paper, none of it is interesting, and none of it really matters in the scheme of things other than to provide the film with a headache-inducingly convoluted yet insultingly simple-minded set-up for the 40 minute action scene that exists for Bay to placate those in his audience (read: The majority) who are so numb to senseless mayhem, both in their entertainment and in the world in which they live, that they won’t give a second thought to the astounding collateral toll implied by his flashy special effects toy box tantrums which, for the record, remain as weightless and impersonal as they have ever been.
Perhaps even more irresponsible than Bay getting his jollies off on city-wide destruction is his choice to tie it in to his method of preaching an archaic and dangerous brand of anti-intellectualism that sees mankind punished for having the gall to dare and innovate. Having a callous boom boom spectacle designed to elicit awe from the unthinking act as retribution for attempting progress is bad enough on its own, but when it’s hit home by an arc that concludes with a once-ambitious character learning the valuable lesson that “some things shouldn’t be invented,” Bay and buddy-in-crime screenwriter Ehren Kruger’s regressive social agenda becomes as clear as day and the result, taken as a whole, is almost nauseating.
As if we needed any more evidence this film was made by people bent on preserving an alternately violent and apathetic social landscape, our heroes, The Autobots, come in the form of joyfully-destructive psychopaths who express little pleasure in anything but killing others of their race while still being held up by the film as protectors and vanguards of justice. It speaks to a deep-rooted collective nihilism when we scarcely blink an eye as the ones who serve as the noble in our youth-targeted media routinely display behavior similar to the helicopter gunner in “Full Metal Jacket.” Even more so when we cheer while they perform Mortal Kombat-style fatalities on others of their kind as they lay waste to city blocks without a second thought (from them or us). It’s all so very depressing to think about, which is probably why it condemns the very act of thinking at all.
Transformers: Age of Extinction is the symptom of a culture that’s given up. Given up on demanding anything from their entertainment other than flashing lights and loud noises, given up on discerning what kind of ideas their next of kin assimilate as they sit slack-jawed in front of an ideologically poisonous mess such as this, and given up on the charade that they have any pretense of standards as thousands of parents, children, and arrested adults flock to the latest shiny piece of corporate product designed exclusively to instill brand loyalty. With “Pain and Gain,” Michael Bay convinced many he was chronicling the burning of Rome. If anything, Transformers: Age of Extinction simply cements the fact that he’s content to sit back and throw gasoline on the fire.
'Movie Review: Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014)' have 18 comments
June 27, 2014 @ 11:39 pm JohnFader
Scathing review. I had no intention to see this but now I feel I have to to see if I agree with your points of irritation.
June 28, 2014 @ 12:13 am Denny Olson
My expectations for this were never that high but now after reading this they’re squashed entirely.
June 28, 2014 @ 12:27 am Rent to Own
It’s a Michael Bay flick. He doesn’t make statement pieces, he makes loud, expensive rubbish.
June 30, 2014 @ 8:23 pm El Tren
This is truth.
June 28, 2014 @ 12:45 am vDom
At nearly three hours in length it was too long but I still enjoyed it.
June 28, 2014 @ 1:32 am Spartan_King
Mike, you make valid points, Bay is a chauvinistic ass and Hollywood is morally bankrupt. There is still entertainment value to what they do though. I thought their Age of Extinction was an over-the-top stupidly fun movie. That doesn’t mean I buy into their mindset, it just means sometimes I need to see an over-the-top stupidly fun movie.
June 28, 2014 @ 5:56 am PWG
Needed more dinobots.
June 28, 2014 @ 10:15 am McMillican
Reboot time. This was not a good movie even by the most charitable of standards.
June 28, 2014 @ 11:24 am Rhino
A better name for this movie would have been Age of Pathetic Product Placements. Bay has outdone himself this time with product endorsements and blatant commercialism.
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Now excuse me while I rush out to buy a Beats Audio Pill Speaker.
June 28, 2014 @ 1:41 pm JasonG
I can let pass Bay’s crass exploitation but I can’t forgive his bastardizing of my beloved Transformers.
June 28, 2014 @ 4:56 pm me2
Is it the best of the franchise? No. But no matter how you cut it it’s cool to watch giant robots blow shit up.
June 28, 2014 @ 7:00 pm paco
For the record, they lay waste to city blocks in Beijing and kill a lot of their ‘innocents’. Better there than in New York or Chicago or San Francisco again.
June 28, 2014 @ 10:19 pm General Disdain
I was going to delete this comment but figured it may be best to leave it so people can see what a stupid statement looks like.
June 29, 2014 @ 12:44 pm K9
Congratulations, you are a troll for your country.
Movie sucked by the way. Nothing more than an assault to the senses.
June 30, 2014 @ 6:22 pm Mike Kowzun (@MikeKowzun)
Author’s note: I should point out that I don’t mean to sound like a reactionary, but when a film comes out that sports sexism, far right paranoia, an agenda of anti-research, and action scenes that claim the lives of (AT LEAST) hundreds of innocent bystanders, framed gleefully, I think that’s gross.
I think it’s even more gross that a movie this hateful and regressive is marketed under the guise of good ol’ family blockbuster fun.
July 1, 2014 @ 9:11 pm Techxan
Look at it this way: It’s a cautionary tale of what could happen if the planet were under attack by giant war robots.
*under intense stress most men would exhibit mysogynistic behavior
*war mongering paranoia would most certainly prevail
*anti-research = anti-science. During a possible extinction event people would look to religion for answers/salvation
*millions of innocents would be lost
July 9, 2014 @ 11:59 pm Mike Kowzun (@MikeKowzun)
You confuse the explicit narrative of the film with its implicit meaning and messages, which is how films and literature comment and, by extension, assume a stance on our culture.
July 29, 2014 @ 9:51 am Techxan
I’m not confusing anything. My remark was tongue-in-cheek however, I don’t believe Michael Bay represents anything greater than his own maladjusted ego.