Marvin
Avenger
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2003
- Messages
- 19,564
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 31
Ehh... talk about Sam all you want... his characterization is not what I was concerned with...
It's the lack of character development with the title characters other than Optimus and Bumblebee... which, IMO, were still very minimal.
The point was shouted from the roof tops of mothers houses all over middle america. "Transformers is a film with no character(s)...blah blah...just action.." in this very thread if I cared to look for it.
The truth is that the film has lots of it, if it weren't for only the blinder effect of the "fans"
Ya'll made an overeaching statement, it's being opposed. Maybe ya'll will specify next time.
As for the other characters, they're present but not all that much screen time is given to the study of them nor is any complexity. However I do know bumblebee's character from watching the film. And I can see where he's coming from when making alot of his decisions. For example, why I wonder did he let himself be captured to save sam? Would he do it again? Would he betray optimus? Enough characteriztion to get through a story.
However, would bumblebee betray optimus to save Sam? That would be a complexity I would like to see studied, but I'm not going to fault the film for not pleasing my personal needs.
I could see that, the voice was there... but I couldn't really admire him... whereas in the 1986 movie he epitomized what I envisioned an Autobot leader should be.
See Griffith Observatory scene.
See forest scene
See hanger scene
See many scenes where he speaks and acts like the optimus prime of fable.
what you people seem to incur is that Optimus narrates the movie and then makes a speech at the end of the film before the credits and that's that.
He said and acted the way he did in the show, in fact the films have layered that with how optimus deals with human politics and if anything I understand the character moreso.
but that's me, and the other is you.
characterization in itself I suppose.