My Letter to Michael Bay
Dear Mr. Bay,
I’ll try and keep what I have to say brief, but I seldom see a film truly worth raising my voice about. In a cinema not too far from my place of residence, in small town called Florence, Kentucky, I witnessed what could possibly be this year’s biggest cinematic failure: Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. But not to worry, I realize the director alone is not at fault for a movie’s overall lack of coherent scripting, many more are to blame for the seemly awful delegation of such an important task. And who am I to point out such incompetence? I sir, am your biggest demographic. I represent a large area of numbers and statistics for this film, being both a white male, and in the eighteen to twenty-five range, living in a middle class family. So imagine the egg on my face when a beloved childhood cartoon, of which I and my family owned the publications and toys of, was turned into a post 9/11, allegorical piece of shit. Now, again, to say the entire movie was a flop would be quite incorrect, as the overplayed special effects and camp of the film were indeed present. I’m sure by sheer volume, the amount of money spent on this film will please your average viewer, as the shiny robots and flashy lights were impressive, assuming you’ve neither seen the first, nor grown up in a digital age of of the Matrix and Terminator.
I can’t, however, excuse the large and seemingly unexplained plot-holes that plagued this film’s dialogue, direction, and cinematography. Also, this film’s over-simplification of what is clearly our present actions in Iraq really detracted from the cartoon value the show once had. When such moments as a Decepticon knocking off an American flag from the Brooklyn bridge, or referring to violence in the area of Jordan as acts of “terrorism”, you’ve done your job in further cementing a nationalist, and very racist, backwards way of thought. Just as Captain America fought Nazis in WWII as a pro-American use of propaganda through the medium of comics, you’ve simply turned Captain America into American cars, and the Nazis of yesteryear into foreign citizens of a desert that happens to be occupied by our troops at this very moment, through a medium of film. Robots or not, you’ve manage to imply through the symbolism in this movie that Decepticons are both Un-American, and terror suspects. Playing right off the post-9/11 fear of Americans today, you rely on our people’s idea of terrorist irradiation, rather than the fear of human annihilation. Human Mr. Bay, not American, they are two very different things. And to deny the connection would be both spineless and asinine, as you sir, take another step to lower the value of the collective unconsciousness of America, further impressing the idea that the US acts as the sole peacekeeping force of the world, and that to be any other than US-born would brand you the label of suspected terrorist. I saw no help from other countries, I saw no global outreach to the issues at hand. And furthermore, I saw that your film’s writers had no objection to using the “we’ll just have to trust him” as a logical justification for wasting the military’s time and money, as well as mine.
But all is not lost, the man who was texting during the film’s duration seemed pretty into it, as did his buddies.
Sure, I could be brush off these comments under the guise that this was a children’s film to show a spectacle of human achievement in the fields of both computer rendering and where that meets human acting: not to mention badass robots fighting with missiles and rockets, but I ask of you sir, to make that film without the misguided and unjustified jabs at our current political debacle, and with a storyline of original thought. Why not show the Decepticons as being misunderstood purveyors of a dangerous commodity, and that by acting as a compassionate and globally forward thinking people, we can defeat a threat to the human way of life, not the American. Why not show the villains as they once were, masked evil geniuses with a pointy mustache, rather than a fellow human, who might just practice a different religion, pray to a different god, or speak another language. How about you add a female character to who can be appreciated for something other than physical assets. How about you and your team try replacing the the product-driven, money hungry message with something that can speak to multiple generations, and not that a worn-out stereotype is still the big box office blockbuster. Take pride in your work Mr. Bay, simply make a movie about fighting robots, and leave the subtle implications of terrorism in our world to the past. Remember, pure perfection comes not when more can be added, but when nothing more can be taken away.
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I’d like to hear your thoughts before I send it.
Filed under: Uncategorized | 3 Comments
Tags: Michael Bay, Transformers 2
well grammer isn’t my forte so i can’t help you there, but i think this is a beautiful letter. i agree completely that a movie about robots beating the shit out of each other should have no political ideas what so ever. the quote at the end is really powerful, being a fan of minimalism i couldn’t agree more. this letter will probably never reach Mr. Bay, but i applaud you speaking your mind.
Thanks Tyler. I posted this not to fish for compliments, but to genuinely hear what people think, and if my idea are overstated or over-the-top. I’m glad I hit the mark I thought I did. Also, I too have no expectation this will ever actually reach him, but I like to know I’m doing my part.
Beautiful. I think you couldn’t be any more right. Michael Bay did this is Cloverfield too. The entire movie the newscasters and innocent bystanders blame the problem on the terrorists. Bay sure has strayed from his days back in 98′ when he made Armageddon when you could just blame mother nature for our troubles. I don’t doubt that he’ll fuck up every other remake he’ll ever do. Like the birds. oh god…
Thanks Brad.