New 'Transformers' Movies in Works as Studio Looks to Revamp Franchise

Joby Harold and James Vanderbilt will write each respective movie

“Transformers” is probably the weirdest and craziest major movie franchise — an admirable thing if you’re an aficionado of action-heavy genre trash like I am. “Bumblebee” represents a departure from the Michael Bay movies, in that it’s generally calmer and more, well, normal. So how does the prequel stack up against the past decade of Bay’s robot madness?

  • 6. “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” (2009)
    Everything about this one is just … too much. And the Arcee (RC) Twins, a.k.a. the Racial Caricature Bots, are simply inexcusable.

  • 5. “Transformers: Age of Extinction” (2014)
    Michael Bay’s libertarian screed is amusing enough, but kind of frustratingly straightforward. We prefer when these movies wallow in paranoid government conspiracy theories.

  • 4. “Transformers: The Last Knight” (2017)
    Easily the most incomprehensible of the “Transformers” movies, but also the funniest — thanks in no small part to Anthony Hopkins having the absolute time of his life. It may also be the most visually striking of all of Michael Bay’s movies. 

  • 3. “Transformers” (2007)
    By the standards of this franchise, the first movie was the closest to being a “normal” film. It’s wonderful, but not quite excessive enough.

  • 2. “Bumblebee” (2018)
    It’s more chill, more coherent and generally more sane than the other ones. And, yes, it’s delightful. Hailee Steinfeld is a miracle for the way she’s able to conjure up all those emotions acting against a CGI robot.

  • 1. “Transformers: Dark of the Moon” (2011)
    The third movie, however, is exactly excessive enough, with a third act that’s just a solid hour of urban robot warfare. Plus there’s John Malkovich being weird and Frances McDormand as the requisite government stooge. To cap it all off, you’ve got the traitorous Leonard Nimoy-bot attempting to usher in the apocalypse from Trump Tower in Chicago — in 2017, no other “Transformers” movie feels that correct. 

  • How does Travis Knight’s prequel “Bumblebee” stand up against the Michael Bay robot epics?

    “Transformers” is probably the weirdest and craziest major movie franchise — an admirable thing if you’re an aficionado of action-heavy genre trash like I am. “Bumblebee” represents a departure from the Michael Bay movies, in that it’s generally calmer and more, well, normal. So how does the prequel stack up against the past decade of Bay’s robot madness?

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