AceDiamond said:
Onmi said:
People watch Transformers for one reason, the same reason we watched it as kids.
GIANT FUCKING ROBOTS.
Okay here is how you do a Transformer movie, you have ONE token human, he is there to be the team pet and then the robots beat on each other over a MacGuffin.
At some point robots combine and it will be awesome and *SPOILER* In the end the good guys win and Megatron swears vengence against Optimus Prime AGAIN and if were lucky Unicron can show up. but better save that for a third movie.
Nah Unicron will either be a massive unicycle or a giant cloud of nanobots.
Hell I'm not even a big transformers fan but even I get the point of it. GIANT ROBOTS. not Shia LeBoeuf trying to get some.
Damn right. But if they just give me HotRod as Rodimus Prime, I'll forgive them for EVERYTHING.
harhol said:
First, they had just two weeks to hammer out a 20 page outline that would serve as the pre-production guide, and then after the strike had finished, they had only three months to get the script finished.
It shouldn't take two people working full-time anywhere near three months to finish a script for an action movie. Look at The Wire for example: the second season began airing nine months after the end of the first. Twelve hour-long episodes of almost constant talking written by one person, which then need to filmed and edited. All done in the space of nine months. The Transformers script will probably be half the length of one episode of The Wire and there were two people working on it.
And a fortnight to do a twenty page plot outline? Again, I would imagine this is a typical time frame.
You don't really start writing a script for a series if you have no clue where it's going, the writer probably had a good idea of what to put down for the first and second season before it ended, maybe before it began.
He would have had longer than nine months, and if he did just have that, it would have been more likely he had the idea in his/her head rather than pulling ideas out of his/her arse.
Plus maybe they really want this to be good, or maybe they are bad writers, or have a severe case of writers block, but either way this is going to be a feature film. I banged out a feature film script in two weeks but no way in hell I consider that to be screen worthy.
If you're given two weeks for a pre production outline and three months to do a film script people want to see in the cinemas, on the side of other projects, also factoring in redrafts it's going to be tough.
Also a fortnight would probably be typical, maybe a month, but again it wasn't the only thing they were doing. The first draft most certainly won't be the last.
EDIT: Either way, the Writer's Guild sure as hell wasn't striking during the first movie, so I have no hope for this one.