Cybertron has fallen and the Autobots are escaping the robot Decepticons. Autobot Bumblebee is sent to Earth to find a new
base of operations for his fellow Autobots. After an encounter with Decepticon Blitzwing, BUmblebbe has his voice box torn
out and his memory damaged before he decides to hid in the shape of a Volkswagen Bug. He is soon found by teenager Charlie
Watson (Hailee Steinfeld) who is suffering from the loss of her father and resents her mother for remarrying. Charlie finds
Bumblebee in a junkyard and takes Bumblebee home (unaware that there is more than meets the eye to her new car). Soon she
discovers her car is a robot and they embark on a journey together to help Bumblebee (with the Decepticons striking a deal
with the US military).
BUMBLEBEE has a sense of nostalgia for me as I grew up during the 1980s and I have to say this entry in the TRANSFORMERS
franchise is the closest to the cartoon. The 1980s soundtrack (including the song which is a nod to the TRANSFORMERS animated
movie) strikes the perfect chord with me as a fan that grew up on the original cartoon and reading the Marvel Comics series
(which oddly was better than the cartoon and definitely the animated movie which doesn't age well). It has well developed
characters and it is refreshing to see a TRANSFORMERS movie without the juvenile humor which populated each of the Michael
Bay directed movies. I think BUMBLEBEE is so good because it has a different scriptwriter and director from the other five
movies. Christina Hodson nails the difficulty and awkwardness of being a teenager while making it a great movie for the
entire family without it being a movie where the boy and girl might not get together (as it would distract from the central
plot). Travis Knight directs this fun and funny story about a teenager girl and her robot. BUMBLEBBE works as a prequel
to the Michael Bay TRANSFORMERS movies and I don't miss the characters from the other movies at all, but it would have been
great to have a cameo from the government guy from the first three movies. If future installments in the TRANSFORMERS franchise
can be like this, sign me up for each and every movie. BUMBLEE is at least better than the last four TRANSFORMERS movies
and may even be better than the first movie too (but that is to be decided after I watch it again when the movie comes to
blu-ray).
This review is (c)1-24-2019 David Blackwell and cannot be repeated without permission. Send all comments to feedback@enterline-media.com
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