Sunday, March 09, 2025, 6:01AM |  30°
MENU
Advertisement
Mark Wahlberg as Cade Yeager in "Transformers: The Last Knight."
2
MORE

Movie review: Latest ‘Transformers’ is more, more, more

grochon

Movie review: Latest ‘Transformers’ is more, more, more

Michael Bay is the kind of filmmaker who always has understood machines better than people. In his films, chrome hurtles through space with a sensual weightiness; the clangs and thuds of metal against metal send a frisson down the spine. “Transformers: The Last Knight” does not stray from this formula, except that it is more; it is the most. It’s shinier, louder, crazier; it’s a fidget spinner jacked up on steroids.

'Transformers: The Last Knight'

Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Laura Haddock, Anthony Hopkins, Isabela Moner, Tony Hale, John Turturro.

Rating: PG-13 for violence and intense sequences of sci-fi action, language and some innuendo.


But while Mr. Bay whips up an impressively frenzied, machinated opera, the humans are another story — they’re not even an afterthought. That has never been more apparent than in this finale of the five-film franchise about alien robots inspired by a cartoon from the ’80s.

The plot is a series of increasingly baffling events, proceeding from the Dark Ages of England, to outer space, to modern day Cuba, to Chicago, to South Dakota, then back to England in the space of the first 25 minutes. That relentless pace never, ever lets up for the 2-hour-26-minute running time. Watching it feels like hanging on to a bucking bronco for dear life.

Advertisement

“Transformers: Michael Bay Presents Game of Thrones in Space” does offer the sometimes pleasant, often nauseating, sensation of tumbling your eyes and brain around inside a washing machine. This swirling melee of crashing auto parts gets tiresome in the third hour, when it’s nearly impossible to determine which way is up, whether we’re underwater or in space, and which robots are fighting which other robots.

It’s hard to imagine anyone reading, let alone writing, the script and believing that it made any sort of sense at all. Aside from the absolutely insane plot — it would be a fool’s errand to attempt to describe it — there isn’t any character development. Only Optimus Prime is given a proper arc, and he disappears for the middle hour of the movie. Standing in for wit and humor is a pastiche of meaningless pop culture references, tooted by Bumblebee’s scanning radio voice or chirped in a proper British accent by new transformer butler Cogman.

Unfortunately, the many credited writers also decided to attempt a poorly executed gesture at girl power through the characters of Vivian (Laura Haddock) and Izabella (Isabela Moner). Vivian is an accomplished professor who is badgered by her mother and colleagues about her love life, and costumed as if she’s in the video for Van Halen’s “Hot for Teacher.” Izabella is a scrappy orphan mechanic who fulfills the daughter role for Cade (Mark Wahlberg). Although she’s only 14 and declared a “little girl,” Mr. Bay’s camera can’t help but leer at her, too.

Advertisement

​​​

 

“Transformers: Robot Dementia” could have been a camp masterpiece if not for the misguided humor, misplaced self-seriousness, and jokes that become increasingly, uncomfortably sexist. Only Tony Hale and John Turturro seem to know what a silly movie they are in, and they commit fully, especially Mr. Hale as an epically stressed out NASA scientist. Star Wahlberg seems to be in a “Saturday Night Live” sketch about himself — you half expect him to tell a Decepticon to “say hello to ya motha for me.”

This is Mr. Bay’s world, and when faced with the end of the world, there’s only one message to be gleaned from this supposed finale of the “Transformers” franchise: The Mack trucks and the muscle cars will outlive us all.

First Published: June 21, 2017, 4:00 a.m.

RELATED
Comments Disabled For This Story
Partners
Advertisement
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Justin Fields, right, takes a snap as quarterback Russell Wilson (3) waits his turn during warm-ups before an NFL football game against the Los Angeles Chargers in Pittsburgh, Sunday, Sept. 22, 2024.
1
sports
Gerry Dulac: Steelers' QB answer could go beyond Justin Fields and Russell Wilson after all
United States Postal Service VMF Manager, Aaron D. Thorne talks with another USPS worker during a job fair at the Pittsburgh Kilbuck Post Office on the North Side, March 7, 2025. The Kilbuck office will be hosting USPS job fairs every Friday until they fill all open positions.
2
local
Amid talk of changes at U.S. Postal Service, Pittsburgh-area residents descend on North Side for job fair
A generic view of a basketball going through the hoop during practice prior to the game between the Brooklyn Nets and the Dallas Mavericks at the Barclays Center on March 1, 2013, in New York City.
3
sports
Uniontown-Meadville PIAA first-round playoff game ends in brawl
Ambassador of Panama to the United States, José Miguel Alemán Healy, discusses Panama’s role in regional affairs, cultural diplomacy, and the strengthening of U.S.-Panama relations at the Latin American Cultural Center on Saturday, March 8, 2025.
4
local
Panamanian ambassador, in Pittsburgh visit, says he's relieved over resolution of canal issue
Forever 21, a one-time hot destination for teen shoppers that fell victim to its own rapid expansion and changing consumer tastes, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2019.
5
business
Fast-fashion retailer closing stores, laying off employees in Pa.
Mark Wahlberg as Cade Yeager in "Transformers: The Last Knight."  (grochon)
"Transformers: The Last Knight."  (Paramount Pictures)
grochon
Advertisement
LATEST ae
Advertisement
TOP
Email a Story