He's Not
Toying Around
ACTION. VISUAL EFFECTS. 'TRANSFORMERS' SOUNDS LIKE A
MICHAEL BAY PIC. IT DIDN'T AT FIRST, THOUGH.
By John Horn / Times Staff Writer
May 6, 2007
THE "Transformers" concept is simple: In the blink of an
eye, some innocuous thing — a car, for instance — morphs
into an alien-whupping killing machine.
Director Michael Bay has undergone his own transformation,
and while it's hardly as dramatic as what happens in his
new movie, his turnabout does suggest that he is about to
have a much sunnier summer than his last time around.
When Bay was previously putting the finishing touches on a
summer movie, he wasn't having that grand a time. The year
was 2005 and the movie was "The Island." Bay was battling
with DreamWorks over the movie's advertising campaign, but
the ads were only a part of the problem. Moviegoers didn't
seem to know what the movie's title meant (there's no
island in "The Island") and the $125-million anti-utopian
drama was opening on the heels of three box-office hits:
"Wedding Crashers," "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory" and
"Fantastic Four."
"The Island" was routed. It sold just $35.8 million worth
of tickets in its entire domestic release, and while "The
Island" performed better overseas — grossing more than $124
million — it was Bay's first flop. After an uninterrupted
run of solid and whopper hits ("Bad Boys," "The Rock,"
"Armageddon," "Pearl Harbor" and "Bad Boys II"), Bay's
winning streak was in tatters.
Still, he went back to work three weeks after "The Island"
opened and closed. Rather than make a smaller, more
personal movie as he has long talked about, he jumped into
another huge and challenging summer movie, with two of the
same screenwriters — Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci — who
penned "The Island," and he was returning to DreamWorks,
the same studio behind "The Island" (and which is now owned
by Paramount Pictures).
Bay didn't have a screenplay or a cast, but a July 4
release date had already been set and it was looming. He
wasn't all that familiar with Hasbro's Transformers toys.
And he knew he'd be following massive sequels to "Pirates
of the Caribbean," "Spider-Man" and "Shrek."
But Bay believed he could make a "Transformers" movie work.
"I just thought," he said, "it could be something new and
different that I could do well."
It was a certainty he didn't always feel.
SERIOUS? FUNNY? BOTH?
"Why should I do this movie?" Bay found himself asking, not
once or even twice. He asked it repeatedly, both of himself
and his collaborators: Kurtzman and Orci, and producers
Steven Spielberg (who came up with the idea to make the
film) and Lorenzo di Bonaventura.
"My friends would say, 'Why are you doing that movie? Is it
animation? Is it a cartoon?' They didn't get it," Bay said.
(The toy line previously anchored a 1984 animated TV series
and a 1986 animated movie.) But the more time Bay spent
with the toys — he even attended Hasbro's Transformers
school — the more the movie's themes coalesced.
Bay, with a sometimes feared reputation for being
demanding, always envisioned "Transformers" not as a toy
movie but as a live-action spectacle loaded with visual
effects. Yet he wasn't as certain about the film's
narrative and emotional hook. "Our take on it was it's
about a kid finding his adulthood through his first car,"
Kurtzman said.
That kid is Sam Witwicky (Shia LaBeouf) and the car his dad
(Kevin Dunn) buys him is a 1977 Camaro. Like many machines
in the film, the car leads a double life. When an alien
Transformer attacks a U.S. military base in Qatar, an
intergalactic war between the good Autobots and not-so-nice
Decepticons is launched. Before long, Witwicky and what his
car turns into are drawn into an epic battle.
The robots are of course fantastic, but the warfare is very
real; the U.S. government supplied planes and assistance to
the production. "If you are fighting alien robots, you need
the American military helping out," Bay says.
Di Bonaventura says even with that straightforward story
line, Bay faced another challenge. Was "Transformers" going
to be serious? Funny? Or both? "The hardest thing to do
with a franchise is to find the tone," he says. As a rough
cut showed, the film alternates between PG-13 action and
old-fashioned, Americana humor more reminiscent of a
Spielberg movie.
From the beginning, the producer says, Bay had strong ideas
and wasn't any less opinionated because of "The Island's"
performance. "You don't want filmmakers second-guessing
each decision they make," Di Bonaventura says. "I think
people will be surprised by the movie. There is a
spectacular amount of heart and humor in it."
The studio likes what it has seen and is already developing
a "Transformers" sequel script.
Through it all, obsessed fans watched the production
closely. Bay says someone even hacked into his home
computer to try to steal the "Transformers" script. While
the director did share some production details with
enthusiasts, he also used his blog
(www.michaelbay.com/blog/newsblog.html) to snipe at some
Web critics. "This is by far the most action I have ever
put into a movie — I have 12 huge set pieces," he wrote in
one posting. "Boy, I get tired of these lame crybabies on
the Net."
A DIFFERENT MOOD
Still, Bay's mood working on "Transformers" was measurably
brighter than it had been just before the release of "The
Island" in 2005. With the opening just a few weeks away,
the director knew that film was in trouble. As he finished
an "Island" color-timing session with an editor, Bay seemed
exhausted, eager for the whole experience to be over.
In the back of his mind he knew the film wasn't going to be
a blockbuster, but he still hoped it might somehow crawl
past $100 million in domestic theaters. A conference room
at Bay's Santa Monica offices was filled with Transformer
toys, those robotic-looking action figures that can twist
and turn into new configurations — cars, rockets, weapons —
but back in 2005, they were hardly his priority.
Two years later, the mood at his offices was much more
upbeat. Sure, Bay was a little worried that the most recent
horror movie made under his Platinum Dunes genre label,
"The Hitcher," had sold a fraction of the tickets sold by
the label's earlier remakes, "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre"
and "The Amityville Horror" ("We're trying to figure out
where that business is going"). Yet production was picking
up at Digital Domain, the special-effects house Bay and
investment firm Wyndcrest Holdings purchased a year ago.
Bay had some work left to do on the $145-million
"Transformers" and was awaiting the completion of several
special effects shots. The studio wanted him to cut the
film's running time by a few minutes and Bay wanted to
tweak its ending, but most of the hard labor was behind
him. He had just screened 28 minutes of it to an
enthusiastic audience of theater owners in Las Vegas. In a
few days, he would travel to Phoenix for another test
screening, where the film scored even better than
"Armageddon."
The director says he spent no time at all ruminating over
any possible lessons "The Island" could have taught him.
"You know, I think the movie works," he said. "But I never
thought it was going to be a smash. On 'Armageddon,' I had
a feeling — a gut feeling — that there was something big."
His enthusiasm for "Transformers" is more tempered. Bay
realizes his latest film is no easy sell, particularly
since it's one of the few non-sequels to hit the screen
this season.
"We are still the underdogs," Bay says. "Big time."