The Lego Movie and Transformers Movies Have Something In Common -- And It's Not Toy Tie-ins
I watched the Lego Movie last night, and I found it had something very much in common with the recent Transformers franchise movies -- and its not the fact that they both began as marketing platforms for toys.
I don't think it is too much of a spoiler to say that the Lego movie has all kinds of frankly absurd, sometimes nonsensical, plot lines and dialog (though it is surprisingly entertaining at times none-the-less). What you find out when the camera pulls back midway through the movie is that the first part of the movie is actually pouring from a little boy's imagination as he plays with his Lego blocks. We are watching a kid playing alone in the basement, making up stories with his toys.
The Lego Movie is the perfect way to understand the most recent Transformers movies. The Transformers movies don't make a lot of sense in terms of plot and dialog. But they make perfect sense if you think of them as Michael Bay playing with his digital toys. The Transformers movies are a little boy running around his room with a couple of action figures yelling "pew pew" and "kaboom", perhaps in front of the Megan Fox poster on the wall, with Michael Bay as the little boy. The $150 million in digital effects and some irrelevant live actors barely change this fact at all. (By the way, I have great respect for Bay being able to have fun with his toys and make a billion dollars in the process).