The deformation process of Transformers is also clearer and smoother than the first episode, with richer details, which is an improvement. I didn't watch the second episode, it should be continuous improvement.
So it was two and a half hours of ping-pong-pong to exhaust all the onomatopoeia. Even I think it's a waste of time to explain the story, just start the game. All the actors are soy sauce (John Malkovich, you picked the wrong movie again), except for the heroine. Only her status is the same as that of the King Kong. Because machines and beauties are the ultimate fantasy of men. (The beauty had no choice but to run wildly through the ruins in high heels.) A
common scenario in elementary school classrooms: the teacher asked the students to role-play the text, and the boys were particularly excited when they encountered the text with a fight or quarrel. They will read the dialogue casually, and then fight intently. They know that if they don’t read the dialogue, the teacher won’t let them fight in the classroom justifiably, so the dialogue should be perfunctory, but of course they are really only interested in fighting. In a sense, the production group of "Transformers" is still psychologically at the level of elementary school boys.
(Can't help but sigh in my heart: boys!)
It's a pity that this episode doesn't even have the cute humor in the first episode, only deliberate gags.
In fact, it's pretty good. There is a drama school and a technical school. They each develop their own genre to the extreme. It is also a blessing for the audience and there are many choices. It's just that after sitting for two and a half hours, I really feel that my whole body is stiff. I won't watch this series again, it's not my dish.
I like the scene of the moon landing at the beginning. I also like the madness behind to tear Chicago into pieces. Crazy enough. This film is crazy. The producers are crazy, and the fans are crazy. (In my dictionary, madness is not a derogatory term.)
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