Director Michael Bay says the next installment of “Transformers” will grow up a bit. He’s promising USA Today that the emphasis in the film will move away from goofball humor and that there will be a more coherent story.
Last year’s sequel took a drubbing from critics and some fans. It made a ton of money at the box-office, but it wasn’t on many top ten lists at the end of the year.
“I’ll take some of the criticism,” says Bay, standing at a set built to resemble a dilapidated nuclear reactor. “It was very hard to put (the sequel) together that quickly after the writers’ strike (of 2007-08).”
Producer Lorenzo di Bonaventura says the rush strained the plot: “We tried to do too many things in the second movie, which didn’t give enough time in any one of them. We were constantly jumping to the next piece of information, the next place.”
Bay is not one for mea culpas, but he says he can do better. “This one really builds to a final crescendo. It’s not three multiple endings,” the director says.
Bay calls the second film’s villain, The Fallen, “kind of a (expletive) character.” The new movie’s foe is certain to make fans of the original ’80s incarnation smile: Shockwave, the robot cyclops-turned-laser-cannon, who became dictator of their home world of Cybertron after the other Autobots and Decepticons journeyed to Earth.
“One thing we’re getting rid of is what I call the dorky comedy,” Bay adds. So the twins, the two bumbling, slang-spewing robots? “They’re basically gone,” he says, though John Turturro returns for comic relief.
The new film features Sam Witwicky (LaBeouf) taking his first tenuous steps into adulthood while remaining a reluctant human ally of Optimus Prime. “Shia has this great line: ‘You know, I’ve saved the world twice, but I can’t get a job,’ ” di Bonaventura says.


















Oh I see, "Transformers 2" sucked because of The Writers Strike and while I think that's at least a some-what valid excuse it certainly doesn't explain all the other crap Michael Bay has directed in his career. Unless, there was some kind of Writers Strike when ever he directed a movie. If Michael Bay ever wanted to change careers, he could work for BP.
Writer strike, they are still wheeling out that crutch huh? I have to agree with Jason.
Tim