Friday, August 01, 2008

TF2 more images of San Pedro

New Transformers 2 images have been posted on the Transformers Movie Live Action Blog. The images variously show Optimus Prime and Ironhide, the mysterious Ice Cream truck, the equally mysterious buggies and trucks bearing the name "NEST" somewhere on them, and a wide shot showing neon Chinese signs, similarly to those seen at Bethlehem Steel.







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Shia LaBeouf involved in a road collision


LaBeouf was arrested and charged with driving under the influence (DUI) after his truck flipped across a road and collided with another vehicle in Hollywood on Sunday.

The moviemaker Michael Bay has confirmed LaBeouf's injury has cost the movie some set-backs. Bay adds, "I spoke to him yesterday in the hospital. His two fingers are pretty mashed, but we're figuring out a way to shoot around it, kind of write it in the story."

Source Starpulse
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Sunday, October 07, 2007

Deleted scenes Not from IMAX VERSION!

Thought I'd give you a glimpse of some of the scenes that were deleted from the film
Gallery

Source TFW2005
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Friday, August 24, 2007

Transformers Movie Release Date on DVD and HD-DVD 10/16/07?


Reports are coming in from several sources that the release date for the live-action Transformers movie will be Tuesday, October 16th. Planograms for CVS Pharmacy stores indicate that the movie will be available that day.
...
ZonaDVD.com informa que Paramount les ha comunicado que las fechas del DVD, Blue Ray y HD-DVD en españa será el 22 de Noviembre

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Thursday, August 23, 2007

Don Murphy: Possible Strikes in Hollywood to Delay Transformers Sequel?


Rottentomatoes.com recently sat down with Don Murphy, the producer of this summer's Transformers Movie, and briefly discussed the possibility of a sequel to the film.

In the interview, Murphy says that a sequel would probably be delayed due to possible upcoming guild strikes involving actors and writers and that he doubts that they will have time to make much progress on the sequel before the screen actor's guild and the writer's guild strike next year.

read the full interview here.

By: Seibertron.com
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Sunday, August 19, 2007

IMAX release of Transformers

Nelson, of Michael Bay's official site, has posted the following regarding the rumored IMAX release ofTransformers: The Movie, in the news blog(Caution: Bay and Nelson have potty mouths...):

Giant [expletive deleted] robots are coming to IMAX!

Nelson here...

I contacted Michael and he has confirmed that Transformers will be arriving on IMAX theaters.

Stay tuned for details.

Allspark
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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Sequels good bussines

The Associated Press has published a new article talking about movie sequels. Here are some interesting quotes on Transformers, sequels/spinoffs:

"Transformers," which was based on the `80s toys and animated TV show, has grossed over $223 million in two weeks and seems destined for at least one sequel. Martin Levy, a marketing executive at Dreamworks (which co-produced the movie with Paramount), says: "It's a very logical thing to think that we can look forward to another one."
Source Superherohype.com

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Friday, July 13, 2007

Backstage of Transformers the Movie

Backstage of the Transformers the Movie by Fxguide.com.
The huge visual effects movie Transformers racked up the biggest July 4th single-day gross in boxoffice history. We speak to director Michael Bay and, for a something different, guest writer Robin Rowe looks in depth at the editing of the megahit blockbuster.

The huge visual effects movie Transformers racked up the biggest July 4th single-day gross in box office history, $26 million, beating the $22 million of Spider-Man 2 in 2004. By the end of the week Transformers stood at a whopping $153 million.

The furious cutting in the first few minutes of the film, from the huge alien robot attack on an American base in Qatar to Sam’s everyday life in suburbia, keeps the story pumping. Unlike Spider-Man 3, there’s no slowing down to have a Peter Parker character moping over breaking up with Mary Jane. Transformers is constant trills. The rapid MTV-style of cutting is just what everyone expects from a movie directed by Michael Bay.

Some of the most important actors in any giant robots film are, of course, the giant robots. The alien robots hide in plain sight by transforming themselves into ordinary-looking machines. The conversion process, from cars and planes to bipod robots, is mesmerizing and convincing. Director Michael Bay kept throwing the robots back to ILM demanding they look more real. He wanted the robots absolutely photo-realistic. The robots look amazing, whether flying through the air, burrowing through the sand, or running down the highway. While the robots had to be created digitally, Bay prefers using real tanks and airplanes over faking it using blue screen visual effects. The military gear is expensive and there’s lots of it, lots more than Apocalypse Now. It’s the biggest military coordination with a motion picture ever.

Producer Steven Spielberg, together with DreamWorks SKG and Paramount Pictures, acquired the rights to Transformers in 2004. In 2005, Paramount Pictures acquired DreamWorks SKG for $1.6B. The genesis of Transformers was a line of toys from Hasbro and a successful television cartoon series in the 1980s.

The film was shot anamorphic on film in 83 days of principal photography, not counting a few days of pick-ups. Some plate shots used 8-perf VistaVision. Editorial started around May 22, 2006, and principal photography ended October 4, 2006. The scale of the Transformers editing process is enormous, with three credited editors and two additional editors.

Editing with Michael Bay
Director Michael Bay is very hands-on, with a shared project with an “Experimental Cuts” bin open on a community Avid for use working with him. “I don’t know how to push buttons to make my own edit”, says Bay. “I’ll never learn to make my own edits because I don’t want to go there.”

Editor Paul Rubell notes that Transformers is true to Michael Bay's style. “Lots of action, lots of characters, lots of improvised humor, lots of visual effects, and lots of running time in the first cut”. Editor Glen Scantlebury adds, “It takes a lot of hammers to beat Michael Bay's images into submission.” DreamWorks production head Adam Goodman says, “The massive scale of Transformers demanded editors with the experience and skills necessary to weave intense action, complex visual effects, and well-timed humor into a compelling story”.

Scantlebury has worked ten and a half months editing by the time they finish. “Alternative Edits?”, says Scantlebury. “What else would we be doing for ten months?!!” Rubell adds, “Sometimes it seems we do nothing but prepare alternate edits”. Scantlebury says, “Michael is in there every day pulling his selects by himself on ‘his Avid’ and slugging it out with us”. Bay says, “I like to see editors do their own thing first. The editor prepares his own cut. Then we’ll work on it for an hour or two. I don’t like to see the assembly. I just want to see scenes. My action takes a lot of cutting. I’ll do 60 to 70 set-ups in a day. Everything is very much in my head. There’s all this film. What do we do with it?”

Pre-visualization
“There’s an intense need for pre-visualization in the mind's-eye of the editor”, notes Rubell. “Cutting scenes in which actors are interacting with characters who aren't there is a challenge. There are action scenes with things being blown up by characters who aren't there.”

The art department spent a year working on the "modernization" designs of the robots, the sets for the film and concept art for the visual effects. Concept art and design development continued through the shoot and well into post-production. Scantlebury says, “Steve Yamamoto and Rob Dressel did great pre-visualations for Michael before he shot, and we'd use them to help us figure out what the hell was going on when the plate shots arrived for a VFX scene.” To get the timing right, Steve Yamamoto came back to pri-vis his animations on top of a couple of the most complicated live action plate shots, so the editors could get the timing right before turning them over to ILM, .

Michael Bay assembled his own team of independent animatics artists during pre-production. They designed many of the hero scenes and served as a guide to us for preparation and during the shoot. In the end, some shots follow the animatics very closely and some are entirely developed from spontaneous ideas on set and during post-production.

The Tools
Transformers uses six Meridian Avids on Unity with about 2 terabytes of storage. A Nitris is used for all screenings including their preview. There are three main edit rooms, a fourth system in a closet, the assistants have two systems, and director Michael Bay has one. There’s a Media Net hook-up used for daily transmissions between ILM and Bay.

“For 3d modeling ILM used mostly Maya, 3ds Max, Zeno and zBrush,” says Farrar. “For lighting and rendering we use Zeno with RenderMan and Mental Ray. For compositing it's all Shake along with our Sabre systems, and editing uses Avids.”
Five EditorsTransformers has three main title editors: Rubell, Scantlebury and Muldoon; two additional editors: John Murray and Todd Miller, plus an associate editor: Ken Blackwell. To have so many editors on a film may sound like the casual sex of editing, but there’s method to the madness. All the editors had worked with Bay in the past and have extensive visual effects experience. “There’s 1.2M feet of film,” notes Bay. “Speed-wise, it’s important to have an editing team to bounce ideas. A lot of times we look at it together. With an effects film you have to do ‘turnovers’ [given to ILM by first assistant Calvin Wimmer] that cost $100k per shot. You have to cull through footage fast. The only way you can do that is with multiple editors.”

There’s been a trend of assigning one editor to handle the visual effects side when editing big effects films. Superman Returns and Charlotte’s Web are some recent movies with two editors. “At any given time, there have been two editors on Transformers”, notes Rubell. “But, five editors have worked on the film.” Scantlebury says, “Michael often picked which editor he wanted to start a scene, but by the end Paul, Tom and I had contributed to almost every scene.”

Editing Decisions
“I watched the first episode of the [1984] TV series just to get a flavor”, says Rubell. “I didn't want to be influenced beyond that. None of the editors are fan-boys, so we were often taken to the Bay woodshed for cutting out some important reference to the original series. But, we were able to bring a more mainstream perspective to the story.” Muldoon says, “The movie is so much bigger that nothing from before in the TV show applies. The movie is huge.” Scantlebury says, “I didn’t look at anything from prior Transformers because nothing can help you
cut a Michael Bay movie.”

Rubell says his biggest inspiration for editing Transformers is…Citizen Kane. “The point is, good editing is good editing regardless of genre”, says Rubell. “Is the rhythm organic? Do the characters live? Are the story points being made? Is there subtext, and if not, can we create it? There's no such thing as a best take. There's a best speech, or a best line, or a best word, or syllable, or look, or turn. It would be nice if actor performance could always be the sole criterion. What's the other actor doing? What's the camera doing? What's the focus-puller doing? What's the weather doing?” Scantlebury says, “I select the edit based on best performances always…if it's in focus and you can cram a robot in there somewhere”.

Muldoon started by assembling a full-length guide cut using animatics. In the early stages of picture editing, the animatics were incorporated into the sequences with temp dialogue, music and sound effects. As plates were shot, the animatics were gradually replaced. At first, with no other guide and no time for feedback from Bay, the editors stuck as closely as possible to the storyboards. Later any idea was fair game. What was shot on set did not necessarily conform to what was pre-visualized. What was a 30-second animatic may become a 2-minute scene.

“Armageddon had a lot of visual effects as well”, says Muldoon . “But, I don’t think I’ve done a movie with so many effects. Scantlebury had previously done the big visual effects movie Tomb Raider in 2001. “The challenge with Transformers is trying to pick plate shots and imagine 3-D robots rummaging around,” says Scantlebury. “The robots have their own comic timing to go with the actors’ comic timing, an evolving interaction through animation stages down to the last ADR session.”

Dailies
Dailies were delivered to the cutting room digitized. The negative was transferred to D5 tape and down-converted to Digibeta. Audio was delivered as files, imported and synched in the Avid. The Digibeta tapes were recycled. The D5 tapes were later used for the Nitris. All media was backed up on Firewire drives. There were no traditional dailies screenings on the big screen, something Scantlebury says he misses. Internally at ILM, dailies are reviewed each morning by the supervisor, then selects are made and reviewed with the director. “Once Michael gave the ok to release dailies to the studio”, says Blackwell, “we sent the telecine house an EDL and they assembled the dailies tapes for the studio.”

“In terms of Michael working with editors,” says Rubell, “he's a very busy guy.” The editors had to maximize their limited access to him. “Michael likes the fact that we're self-starters and tireless searchers for a better moment, a better juxtaposition, whatever,” says Rubell. “Eventually, he'll sit at the Avid and pull selects for a given sequence, which invariably will revitalize it. He knows everything he shot, way better than we do. He has an artist's eye and a great sense of humor. So when we've got him, we hang in and just try to keep up with him.”

What’s a typical day? “Bay would call in the morning,” says Muldoon. He got to see Spielberg a few times for input. “Steven and Michael had already talked about it”, says Muldoon. “Steven would talk about one reel. Towards the end we talked about whole movie. Obviously, you always select edit on performance. Sometime you can choose on action. Shia is really great on acting. We do a lot of alternative edits just because we can, and sort out the best way to integrate. We have the animatic, but sometimes the actors are ad libbing. You end up with different scenes and different moments. Bay doesn’t usually do things in one take, but we used one take on the Masked scene because Michael said, ‘I want to hold on shots and really show the Transformers’.”

“Michael is a final-cut director and as such, he remains firmly in control,” says Rubell. “Having said that, he loves to entertain ideas from every quarter.

The Associate Editor
“Ken Blackwell received the controversial ‘associate editor’ credit as a way of acknowledging his creative contributions as picture editor, visual effects editor, music editor, assistant editor, and technical guru”, says Rubell. “Ken is a Zen master on After Effects”, notes Scantlebury, “and may even have a shot or two in the movie.”

“Paul and I were finishing Miami Vice when Transformers started shooting”, says Blackwell. “I started at the end of July once we were finished with Miami Vice, and Paul started a month later. I have an After Effects station, which was used to create hundreds of temp comps for screenings and editing. We export TIFF sequence files of any elements we need from the Nitris [in high definition and kept up to date by assistant Adam Kimmerlin] and import them into After Effects. This is an inexpensive way to get immediate results for ideas that come up in the editing room. You can show the director immediate results of an idea. It has saved us a lot of time over the years and helped sell ideas.”

The Visual Effects
There are about 630 visual effects shots in the film. There are 430 executed at ILM, 91 at Digital Domain, 70 at the Asylum and the rest are 2D clean up and fixes done by CO3, ISolve and Ken Blackwell. Technical advancements were made in environments, lighting, and simulation of physical effects and integration of CG characters in a real environment.

“ILM did the bulk of the 3-D robots,” notes Scantlebury. “Incredible work, given the pressure of turning in shots up to the last minute…hold on…we just ordered two more 3-D shots three weeks before final delivery. Digital Domain picked up the rest, including turning a soft-drink machine into a crazed aluminum
can shooting Robot.”

“Overall, the most challenging shot is OH020 which is a 360 degree descending camera move on Optimus that rotating around to reveal all four Autobots transforming in an alley”, says ILM visual effects supervisor Scott Farrar. “The shot was filmed in two separate camera moves from two separate rigs: a Russian arm mounted to a camera car and a 50-foot Technocrane. The plates were combined and blended. The 768-frame-long shot moves from an overhead medium close up on Optimus finishing his transformation, into an extreme close up of all the moving parts, then widening out to reveal our hero talent. Shia and Megan watch all four robots individually transform with their own unique style.”

Challenges in 5.1 Music Editing
Quicktimes for the sound and music department were output via a firewire connection from a DVCAM deck into Final Cut Pro. “At a certain point we were called upon to screen the movie repeatedly and without notice, with a 5.1 soundtrack,” says Rubell. “We had a 5.1 temp but were making complicated picture changes around the clock. There was no time to get back to the stage to update the tracks. So I conceived of a way to make changes and screen 5.1 out of the Avid. We mixed down the 24-track stems into their respective left, center, right, surround, and low-frequency families. We then group-clipped the individual stems with their mixdowns. We edited with the mixdowns, and when it came time to screen, we expanded back to 5.1 by switching the grouped mixdowns back to their component stems. We then mixed the stems down into a 5.1 configuration and exported that to the Nitris. It worked flawlessly, except that after a few weeks of endless group-clip switching my crew threatened to kill me. I was forced to shelve the system until Avid comes up with a way to globally switch, from mark-in to mark-out, the clips on a given audio track.”

Conclusion
“There’s no one editor who’s good at cutting everything,” says Michael Bay. “Paul is the uber story editor. Glen cuts the best action. Tom is the best at getting the humor timing.” DreamWorks production head Adam Goodman says, “There’s no better fit for the task than editors Paul Rubell, Glen Scantlebury and Tom Muldoon.”

Next for Paul Rubell is Tonight, He Comes, the story of a depressed super-hero who's hitting the bottle and flying into buildings (starring Will Smith, Charlize Theron and Jason Bateman). Tom Muldoon stays busy editing commercials at his post-production house NOMAD. Glen Scantlebury says next for him is “a vacation”.

Our world will be transformed on July 4 when aliens make Earth their final battleground in Transformers. Asked if there’s anything about Transformers that could forever change how future films are made, editor Glenn Scantlebury said, “If an Avid machine transforms into a robot editor, we're all in trouble”.

Interview wth Michael Bay
To get the inside story on editing Transformers, we we able talk directly with director Michael Bay, the three main title editors Paul Rubell (ACE), Glen Scantlebury and Tom Muldoon, associate editor Ken Blackwell, and ILM visual effects supervisor Scott Farrar in Los Angeles.

fxg: Why are your movies so successful?

MB:My grandfather said the only way to make money is to sell to middle America. He was in the jeans business, a stone washer. Armageddon to me is a comedy, an average Joe saving the world. A lot of my movies deal with heroism or becoming a hero.

fxg: Steven Spielberg says you’re the perfect director for Transformers. What does he mean by that?

MB:I have a visual sensibility. Steven has said I’m one of the better shooters out there, that I’ve got the best eye in Hollywood. It’s amazing to sit in a room with Steven Spielberg and get to say, let’s talk about this scene or that scene. I like bouncing ideas off him. In the edit room, Spielberg is slapping me on the leg. Why is he doing that? Transformers brings out the kid in everyone.

Executive Producer Steven Spielberg Producer Ian Bryce and Director/Executive Producer Michael Bay on set

fxg: Spielberg was working on Transformers before Paramount acquired DreamWorks. When did you come onboard?

MB:Three weeks after The Island. Steven Spielberg called. I said, I don’t know…

fxg: Steven Spielberg calls, and you say, I don’t know?

MB:I’ve been offered a lot of action movies. I wasn’t a fan of Transformers, wasn’t the right age to have been caught up in it. Hasbro sent me through Transformers school to learn all the characters and stories. I met with the writers. They didn’t want to show me the first script. We kind of threw that out. It was too kiddie. I said it would have to be cool for teenagers and fun for adults. Spielberg said it the best: "It’s about a boy buying his first car…that turns out to be an alien robot." That’s what sold me.

Hasbro sent me through Transformers school...

fxg: Why do critics give you a hard time?

MB:I asked a well-known critic over lunch, why do I get so much shit? He said, "You made too much success too early. We build them up to tear them down. And, we got bored going after Jerry Bruckheimer." Jerry taught me, don’t read the critics.

fxg: What’s a typical day for you?

MB:I have good days and bad days. I hang by the house, the pool. I read. I go to the office in Santa Monica where the edit bays are. Platinum Dunes is there.

fxg: How do you create your action scenes?

MB:The way I do action is the major beats. For a car chase, what are my big beats here? I use pre-viz. It’s put mostly in my head. I don’t storyboard the connecting pieces. I think storyboards are B.S. Crews don’t look at them anyway. I lay out a little road with Matchbox cars. You may think it’s silly. It’s important because you have stunt players, important they not crash into your event. I put the Matchbox cars on paper and say, right here at this cone you turn. For gunfights sometimes you can play act that on the set. You go to point B, C, then here, here. Storyboards take so many frames to show an action scene they don’t make sense. It’s better to walk it, talk it, or pre-viz.

fxg: Do you like to shoot?

MB:I like to camera operate. I won’t operate when the actors are acting. I need to see their eyes and too much is happening with the camera. I’ll put myself in dangerous positions to show my crew what we’re doing is actually safe. I started out wanting to be a DP…have a photo background. I can work with just about any DP.

fxg: Why did you become a director instead of a DP?

MB:I shot some student films. I’d ask, are you sure you want to do that shot? You don’t want that. Really…you don’t. This is a lame shot.

fxg: How do you decide what's the best lens and framing for a shot? Do you have favorite lenses and shots?

MB:Panavision designed some wide anamorphics for me, a 20, a 24. I used the 30 quite a bit, and the 35. They widened them out a bit, made them flatter for me. I was the first to shoot with the 3600 anamorphic, which was used in the desert for the planes flying in and for some of the car chase stuff.

I own the Arri 235 that I shot maybe a quarter of the movie with. It’s so small. It's a fun camera to shoot with. It’s been hot-wired for me. We build different rigs to do crazy hand-held stuff with it.

Shia LaBeouf, Director/Executive Producer Michael Bay and Josh Duhamelon the set

fxg: How do you get the best performance from actors?

MB:I work with actors quite a bit. I always hire improv actors. One of my strengths is creating funny on the set. I need actors who can roll with it. I create a tension on the set that you can see on the actors' faces.

fxg: How do you get the most of humor?

MB:I don’t know. Either you’ve got it, or you don’t. It’s all about timing. You need good sound to hear the joke. Pause for the laugh. Tom [editor Tom Muldoon] and I did the Got Milk campaign. You can’t rush it. I always like to work with actors who can ad lib. Nicholas Cage in The Rock, Shia LeBouf, Owen Wilson, Will Smith...they all have a great improv sense. Martin Lawrence. Comedy has a cadence. You must not break the cadence of a joke.

fxg: Why so many editors on Transformers?

MB:There’s 1.2 million feet of film. Speed-wise, it’s important to have an editing team to bounce ideas. Started with Tom Muldoon, then Paul Rubell became available, then Glen Scantlebury. There’s no one editor who’s good at cutting everything. Paul is the uber story editor. Glen cuts the best action. Tom is the best at getting the humor timing. A lot of times we look at it together. With an effects film you have to do ‘turnovers’ that cost $100k per shot. [That is, turnover scenes to ILM for visual effects.] You have to cull through footage fast. The only way you can do that is with multiple editors.

fxg: How do you like editors to work?

MB:My action takes a lot of cutting. I’ll do 60 to 70 setups in a day. Everything is very much in my head. There’s all this film. What do we do with it? I like to see editors do their own thing first. I have a low budget film company [Platinum Dunes] to help young filmmakers. The editor prepares his own cut. Then we’ll work on it for an hour or two. I don’t like to see the assembly. I just want to see scenes.

fxg: How hands-on are you as an editor?

MB:I don’t know how to push buttons to make my own edit. I will never learn to make my own edits because I don’t want to go there. I make my own selects.

fxg: What’s your advice for editors starting out who wants to edit for you or someone like you?

MB:A good way is to start is as an assistant. Roger Barton was an assistant, became third editor on Bad Boys. Jim May is another, working at Platinum Dunes. Along the way doing sides jobs. If I have a big show I let an assistant try it. Platinum Dunes does movies you’d never show your mother…Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Amityville Horror, The Hitcher. [And, The Birds for 2009.]

fxg: What’s next?

MB:I want to get into the game business. I bought 500-employee Digital Domain. I’m totally immersed in it. Sometimes I’m a control freak beyond control freaks. I try to keep people in top game, something I learned under Jerry Bruckheimer. It’s who you surround yourself with. I’ve worked with people for years. Once people know your sensibility it’s very easy to work.

fxg: What’s happening with Nuke and Digital Domain?

MB:I bought The Foundry in England, too. We’re taking all our software there. They’ll hot-wire Nuke. It needs add-ons and stuff. I brought some guys over from ILM.

fxg:You hired away guys from ILM while they were doing the effects for your movie?

MB:One of the guys was running ILM and another was their head tech guy. They were still nice about doing my movie. They’ll always get some of my business. I don’t use one sole source.

fxg: In general, are movies as good as they used to be?

MB:Things are more real now, more photo real. Look at the 70s and the 80s. Visual effects opened up a whole new world. Maybe there’s over-saturation. We’ve almost seen everything. In the 70s, Steven Spielberg invented dinosaurs. Now he’s hitting me in the leg. Why? Because he’s never seen robots doing that before. It’s hard to tell a fresh story now.

fxg:Do you have a special personal project you’d like to do?

MB:I have a Pulp Fiction type of story called Pain and Gain, a little 35-day shoot if I could find the time. They keep giving me these big action features.

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Monday, July 09, 2007

Transformers the movie 19 of July in Peru

In Peru is confirmed date 19 of July 2007 for the opening of Transfomers The Movie .
Se confirma la fecha 19 de Julio 2007 para el estreno de Transformers the Movie en Perú.

Where to Watch and Download Transformers Cartoon Episodes Online, And Other Shows.
Thanks for comment!

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Monday, July 02, 2007

Before It's Too Late for the Transformers soundtrack

Formally known as "Fiction" by the Goo Goo Dolls. The movies.

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Monday, June 25, 2007

Yahoo: Transformers Trailers & Video Clips (16 videos)

16 videos in one Click: Movies Yahoo
Transformers Clip: Doughnuts

Optimus attack Transformers Clip-7

Bumblebee Robot Japanese- Transformers Clip-6

Transformers Clip - Blackout- My ladies

Interview to Megan Fox backstage Transformers the game.

NEW Transformers Clip - Desert Credit card

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Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Michael Bay in Yahoo Movies

In video movie interviews Yahoo Movies Michael Bay to char it on Transformers the movie.
...
En video entrevista para Yahoo Movies Michael Bay charla sobre Transformers the movie.
Michael Bay dijo que escuchó de la red “absolutamente poco”
Reconoció que el bosquejo inicial se escapó pero escuchó sobre todo los comentarios sobre las ilustraciones de los transformers.
¿ Por qué las llamas en Optimus? Porque él quizo las llamas.
Sobre los fans que dicen que él está arruinando su niñez:
“No pienso que arruiné su niñez. Si ahora miras atrás las historietas, parecen realmente anticuadas. Mi estilo es que tuve que hacer ver a estos robots en verdaderas situaciones de la vida real.”
- “Optimus Prime tiene 10.108 porciones todas se mueven y son interactivas. Un modelo muy complejo que dan una acción en vivo muy verdadera.”
- Ingeniería: Hablaron de partes que discutían si era alienigena o terrestre. También sobre cómo está caminado “cosa-pájaro” para Starscream.
Modelos tridimensionales usados para determinarse cómo podría moverse y empalmes que no podrían corregirlos.
- AKA usado para los sistemas de robots que es porqué Frenzy fue etiquetado Soundbyte durante este tiempo.Me gusto Frenzy porque él era “vicioso.”
- Optimus y Bumblebee son favoritos de Bay.
En cuanto al comentario sobre las historietas originales, tengo que agregar. Tengo todas las sesiones en DVD. Para el final era dificil conseguirlo a través. Algun gusto más sofisticado ahora contra entonces pensé. Beast Wars para mí, especialmente sesiones 2 y 3 eran lo que realmente estaba a la altura de lo que deberia escribir y de ejecutar en los transformers. Que los escritores de la película utilizaran claramente la serie original como una fuente de inspiración es parte de la razón por la que tenemos grandes esperanzas en esta película.


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Friday, June 01, 2007

Review of Filmcoyote in comingsoon of Transformers the movie

Comingsoon publishes review of Filmcoyote which it has seen the advance of the film for specialized means, in a concise summary we will say that him taste and did not disappoint, the details of which speak are those that we see in the trailers and emphasizes the humorous side of the film, a Optimus detail tries to hide themselves twice behind a house being greater than she. The review in English:

Hi all, the filmcoyote here again.

Anyway, mentioned having seen Transformers in the 'trailer that shows a lot' Talkback and a couple of Talkbackers said elaborate. It's a slow afternoon so what the hell.

Background: I was born ass-end of the 70s (this is going somewhere I promise) so hit the Transformers toy craze at the perfect age (see). Loved the cartoon, toys and 86 movie at the time but haven't revisited them as an adult. My trepidation of seeing a live action movie of Transformers did not come from a flames on Optimus/Bumblebee's not a VW bug stand point but just from a who the hell gives a rat's ass stand point. Michael Bay, meh, liked Rock and Bad Boys, hated Armageddon, laughed my ass off through Pearl Harbor (I expect not the intended reaction) so wasn't really bothered either way by him.

But I think my biggest issue was fogy syndrome. I have started to think I'm getting too old to enjoy cinematic lunacy fully. I was bored by 300, found myself complaining about characterisation in Spider-Man 3 and X-Men 3 (can't believe that would even have occurred to me as a kid) and was stunned that even Johnny Depp did nothing forme in Pirates 3. I wondered whether it was all the constant CG, that I yearned for the good old days of the Schwarzenegger 80s! When life was simpler. I felt this might have been confirmed when the John Rambo trailer got me as excited as a school kid two weeks ago.

Transformers proved me wrong. Characterization? - Where? CG? - Everywhere! But I really enjoyed it. It made me feel like I was 10 years old again. I don't think a summer movie has made me feel that way since The Matrix.

Let me elaborate. I will not lie to you, is Transformers a great movie, brilliantly written, completely devoid of a feeling of big-screen toy-advertisement? No, it isn't.

Are all the robots a great design? Well, this will split people I'm sure but Megatron sucks for sure. Have they picked great actors doing it for the art? Ha, Turturro's manicness and Voight's phoning in leave you with a sense of them dancing around their paychecks off screen with glee.

There's also this little robot (kind of the equivalent of Ravage and Laserbeak in the cartoon) that is played for comic effect that is incredibly irritating. But somehow - maybe because I had no expectations and with so maybe sequels these days expectations are hard to silence - I got past all these flaws and just enjoyed it for the sheer entertainment. And damn is it entertaining.

The film wastes no time getting down to business. That much touted helicopter transformation that trashes the army base present in some sense since the first trailer is the first scene of the whole film. In fact it moves back and forth between kick ass action (usually involving army guys and Decepticons) and the "human" story (Shia, Megan) nicely for the first 40 minutes or so.

The film has nods to the cartoon (a VW bug sitting next to Bumblebee in the used-car lot, the corny more than meets the eye line comes up at least twice, the cartoon transforming noise is in there) but is mostly its own thing.

The "human" more comedic side is actually pretty good. Often these days films can't get the balance of these things and they feel forced in and just make you wish they'd get back to big fuck-off robots battling (which is why we're there anyway). I think the reason they get away with it is LaBeouf. I had only seen him in Holes and Bobby prior to this and hadn't understood why there was such a buzz on him but his comic-timing is superb. He is just so effortlessly likeable. It's like Tom Hanks in Big, Will Smith in Independence Day, Michael J Fox in Back to The Future, he's effortless and gives a great performance.
And the reason I think this is why these bits work is simple: it's not the script - I know this because there's also another "human" story involving "sleeping throught the movie" Jon Voight and a bunch of tech geeks. And these bits are painful.

There's this one Aussie actress (if she warrants the term actress) who is almost as wooden as Keira Knightley. None of the actors in this section can do anything with the banal dialogue they are given, they simply don't have the talent. Thankfully there's not much of them. Shia just brings the whole thing to life, he is a true joy to watch and i look forward to other films he's in. Megan Fox is of course also in most of his scenes and she's fine. She is not bad at all and she's gorgeous but any reasonable actress her age could have done just as well. Shia is working on another level from those around him.

The print I saw had no score just temp tracks from The Rock, American Beauty and something else I couldn't place. I hope the real score is great because the American Beauty bits (which kicked in everytime Megan and Shia appeared on their own) were really distracting.

But what you want to know is robots, right? We've all seen the designs and for me they work fine. They are a bit busy but they have a sense of the real to them. Realism no. This is a movie about giant fuck-off robots, there's no room for realism but in a way they make sense, it feels right that they are what they are. As for what the Transform into, this is explained away in a Bumblebee scene when we see him as a beat up car scan another car and instantly upgrade to look bad new. The reason he's not a VW? That's not what he scanned. So essentially all these robots could become anything. The only thing they never really explain is why all the Decepticons seem to be able to fly while none of the Autobots can. Maybe, they just don't chose to.

The thing on here the other day about the trailer with Bumblebee's voice - not Bumblebee's voice. Bumblebee doesn't talk - his voice unit was damaged in a war - and he communicates through his radio. Peter Cullen is great as Optimus Prime but, maybe it's just me, but he didn't sound much like he did in the cartoon. I don't know why they bothered getting Hugo Weaving in for Megatron. For a start Megatron's barely in the film - he's in maybe the last 20 minutes - and it could be anyone voicing.

The thing that really had me awed though is the transformations. When one of the robots transforms mid movement is looks incredible. Barricade (a Decepticon police cruiser) is first to do it, chasing Bumblebee and Shia in robot form and transforming into his car form in mid-stride. There are more instances in the non-stop action finale - the best of them being Starscream mif-flight transformation to land in robot form and enter a fray. These are the moments that really took me, that transported me back into my 10-year-old self. I got so excited by it. As I say I probably haven't been genuinely excited by watching a blockbuster since The Matrix. It was a feeling I remember having for Jedi as a kid, Batman and T2 as a teenager.

I'm not saying Transformers is as good as T2 but it was a real surprise. It has plot weaknesses and some shakey performances but it is hugely entertaining both in the frequent battle set pieces, whether human vs robot or robot vs robot, and in the Shia LaBeouf moments. Even some of the comedy (Optimus trying to hide behind a house he's twice the size of) worked for me (although my friend this scene a little over the top). But that's just it, like the first Pirates movie it is the over-the-topness combined with great set pieces and superb special effects that make it so enjoyable and help you see past the flaws. I'm sure those more invested in the 80s show will have issues with things I either didn't notice or don't get (why is flames on Optimus a big deal? - though I get the Optimus mouth thing, that was weird) but then that's like comic-book movies to me, I never read them so I don't care if Venom's a great or sucky character in Spider-Man I just want to be entertained for a couple of hours.

Transformers did that for me. Best of this years crop so far (not that the disappointing Spider-Man 3, dull At World's End or abyssmal Shrek the Third set the bar high mind you!) by a long way.

...
Comingsoon publica una reseña de Filmcoyote que ha visto el adelanto de la pelicula para los medios especializados, en un resumen escueto diremos que le gusto y no decepcionó, los detalles de los que habla son los que vemos en los trailers y resalta el lado comico de la pelicula, un detalle Optimus trata de ocultarse detras de una casa siendo dos veces más grande que ella.


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Saturday, May 19, 2007

Transformers the Movie: Others images of captures

First captures of the trailer, in which we can see new images of the personages of Transformers,
With respect to the trailer:
This structured good and sees the work of Michael Bay when having already in hand a more reliable material. We did not imagine the two hours that must last the film to that rate, but is a sample of a time of action outside the common thing. Ever since Sam and his father travel to buy the new car, the camera is in movement does not stop until arriving at the salesman of used cars, the movement of the radio of Bumblebee and the Credits of Paramount and Dreamworks. Continue the action with the flight of Bumblebee and the arrival of meteorites or spaceships (what it comes first), the first transformation of Bumblebee that take the sound of “old school” and that still is not let see well completely, the images show a very high Bumblebee, justified by the dimension of the others transformers (it see the comparison between Jazz and Megatron) and the face of surprise of Sam (Shia has a natural surprised interface as a child). Continuous the presentation of Megatrón congealed with the other face of surprise of John Voight and the attack of Blackout to the military base of Qatar. Up to here it criticizes it of fans to commented the “Americanada” of the film, I think that pears cannot be requested him to the elm tree, coming from Michael Bay and all the production behind him. The exciting part begins after the first minute, the military infrastructure is and Starcream becoming to arrive from a place at another one. With the voice of the news speaking of a Aliens technology civilization. Starcream does not shine bad, but it is not related to the semi-leader of decepticons that represents in its image an airplane battle that is transformed into a “Young ambitious robot”, the wide shoulders and the monkey position is not own of the Starcream that i am see. I do not have left clear who leaves the swimming pool Megatron or Iron hide, the attack of Scorponok and the transformation of Optimus Prime already see in other advances. As of minute thirty, the voice in off with the images of the attack between skyscrapers begins that had not been seen until now. Blackout again using his elises as revolving blades are it gives fear, Scorponok I would like to see transformed it, pestered Bumblebee and Ironhide shooting. All this in 20 seconds, the rest the appearance of Megatrón offering to him a beating to Jazz, that seems tiny in comparison with the leader of the Decepticons. Finally Bonecrusher sliding, transformed Optimus Prime and the fight between Blackout and Optimus. In order to see more only we have left to go to the movie.
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Primeras capturas del trailer, en las que podemos ver nuevas imagenes de lo personajes de Transformers,
Con respecto al trailer :
Esta bien estructurado y se ve el trabajo de Michael Bay al tener ya entre manos un material más solvente. No imaginamos las dos horas que debe durar la pelicula a ese ritmo, pero es una muestra de un tiempo de acción fuera de lo común. Desde que Sam y su padre viajan a comprar el nuevo auto, la cámara está en movimiento no se detiene hasta llegar al vendedor de autos usados, el movimiento de la radio de Bumblebee y los Creditos de Paramount y Dreamworks.Retoma la acción con la fuga de Bumblebee y la llegada de los meteoritos o naves espaciales (lo que venga primero), La primera transformación de Bumblebee que integra el sonido de la "old school" y que todavía no se deja ver bien completamente, las imagenes muestran a un Bumblebee muy alto, justificada por la dimensión de los otros transformers (vease la comparación entre Jazz y Megatron) y la cara de sorpresa de Sam (Shia tiene una interfaz de niño sorprendido natural). Continúa la presentación de Megatrón congelado con la otra cara de sorpresa de John Voight y el ataque de Blackout a la base militar de Qatar. Hasta aquí la critica de los fans a comentado la "Americanada" de la pelicula, pienso que no se le puede pedir peras al olmo, viniendo de Michael Bay y toda la producción detrás de él.
La parte trepidante se inicia después del primer minuto, se muestra la infraestructura militar y a Starcream transformandose para llegar de un lugar a otro.Con la voz de las noticias hablando de una Avanzada civilización alienigena. Starcream no luce mal, pero no se relaciona con el semi-lider de los decepticons que representa en su imagen un avión de combate que se transforma en un "Joven robot ambicioso", los hombros anchos y la postura engorilada no son propios del Starcream que conociamos. No me queda claro quien sale de la piscina Megatron o Ironhide, el ataque de Scorponok y la transformación de Optimus Prime ya vista en otros avances.
A partir del minuto treinta, empieza la voz en off con las imagenes del ataque entre rascacielos que no se habían visto hasta ahora. Blackout usando sus elises como cuchillas giratorias es atemorizante, Scorponok nuevamente me gustaría verlo transformado, Bumblebee acribillado e Ironhide disparando. Todo esto en 20 segundos, lo restante la aparición de Megatrón propinandole una paliza a Jazz, que parece diminuto en comparación con el lider de los Decepticons.Por último Bonecrusher patinando, Optimus Prime transformado y la lucha entre Blackout y Optimus. Para ver más sólo nos queda ir al cine.


Imagenes posteadas en Comic xx

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Thursday, May 17, 2007

Trailer final Transformers The Movie

The awaited trailer already is in Yahoo, surprise like so that nobody went ahead Paramount to him gave the exclusive him to Yahoo.com.
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El esperado trailer ya se encuentra en Yahoo, intespectivamente como para que nadie se le adelante Paramount le dió la primicia a Yahoo.com.
http://movies.yahoo.com/summer-movies/Transformers/1808716430/trailers/31

Trailer emitido en filipinas con unas pocas escenas extra:
http://www.cybph.com/archives/296


Fuente: Transformers Hispanos.

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Saturday, May 12, 2007

Transformers has been nominated for the MTV Movie Awards

Transformers The Movie has been nominated for the MTV Movie Award�s �Best Summer Movie You Have not Seen Yet�.
Make your choice and vote online
You can also text MOVIES to 22422 from your cell phone.
Tune-in on June 3rd to see if Transformers takes home the Golden Popcorn.
Roll out.
...
Category: The Good Stuff Download
Transformers The Movie es nominada a mejor pelicula del verano en MTV movie Awards. Se puede apoyar la nominación por mensaje de texto palabra MOVIE al 22422 de tu teléfono celular (ONLY USA).
Tune-in on June 3rd to see if Transformers takes home the Golden Popcorn.

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Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Transformers Clips


New images promo

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Mark Ryan is Transformers: The Movie Ironhide

Mark Ryan has updated his home page with word that he will be in the upcoming Transformers Movie as the voice actor for Ironhide. He also confirmed that he will be voicing Ironhide in the Activision game as well as Hoist in the game! You can check out the statement and talk with other fans about it by clicking here!
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Mark Ryan ha puesto al día su Home Page diciendo que él estará en la próxima película de los transformers como la voz de Ironhide. ¡Él también confirmó que doblará a Ironhide en el juego de Activision así como en el lazamiento del juego! ¡Puedes comprobar en el link la declaración y hablar con otros fans sobre ella chascando aquí!
Source: Superherohype

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Friday, May 04, 2007

Megan Fox in Transformers The Movie

Firts pics of Megan Fox in Transformers The Movie.


(source) http://www.superherohype.com/forums/...46640&page=434

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Thursday, May 03, 2007

SPOILERS: Primera review de peli

Post de Deszaras_X en Transformers Hispanos

A continuación un extracto de la review de AICN sobre el screen test de trfs movie realizado hace poco, cabe destacar que este screen test sacó la mas alta valoración en la carrera de Michael Bay, no era muy dificil pero algo indica.

0) Optimus prime pateando culos se ve genial.

1) Las flamas en Optimus se ven genial. Pezones en Batman = truño, flamas en optimus = cool.

2) Los ROBOTS en general son SORPRENDENTES.exepto Frenzy la mayoria de los robots se unen muy bien al mundo real.

3) Los labios de Optimus se ven pésimo.

4) Shia Labuof esta notable en el papel Sam Witwicky. un acierto en cuanto a casting.

5) Megan Fox , el tipo no esta seguro si era ella o no pq paso el rato viendo un par de tetas y un culo, - puro sexo (dios te bendiga Michael Bay). la verdad importa un carajo como actua, cumple su papel a la perfección.

6) El elenco secundario lo hace mejor de lo q se espera. Turturro esta bien como cabeza del sector 7. Las chicas de seguro amaran a tyress y josh. Bernie mac y Anthony Anderson son muy graciosos en sus pequeños roles.

7) Accion…en serio, ustedes NUNCA han visto algo como esto. Puedes odiar a Bay, pero este es el hombre que logro un apocalipsis de robots gigantes.


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