Even Michael Bay had to admit thatTransformers: Revenge of the Fallenwas kind of “crap.” The Writers Guild of America strike of 2007-2008 saw the guild seeking increased residuals on DVD sales, in addition to compensation for new media.The WGA strike lasted 14 weeks in total and would impact the writing of several major projects. For example, Daniel Craig has spoken of the strike’s impact onQuantum of Solace, where the cast had to work with a barely finished script that was badly in need of a punch-up.

Other movies impacted by the strike includeTerminator SalvationandX-Men Origins: Wolverine, which both felt like a series of setpieces loosely stapled together by a thin narrative. Now, theTransformersmovie franchisehas never been renowned for its quality storytelling, but even by the modest standards of the series,Revenge of the Fallenwas lambasted for its terrible comedy, weak story, and for emphasizing noisy actionover just about everything else; the sequel sits at 19% onRotten Tomatoes.

Skids and Mudflap in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

Why Michael Bay Says Revenge Of The Fallen Wasn’t Good

Bay and Shia LaBeouf were honest about Fallen’s many issues

Michael Bay’s movieshave never been critical darlings, but it can’t be denied that he’s one of the most distinct action filmmakers of the last 30 years.Bay has had a couple of duds during his career, butRevenge of the Fallenmight just be his worstmovie period. It indulges all his worst impulses (obnoxious humor, quick cut action, too many side characters, etc) and is a numbing slog to sit through. Bay was refreshingly honest aboutTransformers: Revenge of the Fallenback in 2011, where during anEmpirechat (viaTHR), he outlined why the sequel didn’t work.

The real fault with [Transformers 2] is that it ran into a mystical world. When I look back at it, that was crap. The writers’ strike was coming hard and fast.It was just terrible to do a movie where you’ve got to have a story in three weeks. I was prepping a movie for months where I only had 14 pages of some idea of what the movie was. It’s a BS way to make a movie…

Optimus Prime Standing With Weapons Drawn In Transformers Dark of the Moon

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallenwas rushed into development following the huge success of Bay’s original.Instead of delaying the sequel’s release when it became clear the strike would impact its development, Bay and his team of writers had to press aheadwith the project. They developed the screenplay working from a treatment that was submitted just before the strike began, and this accounts for how messy and unfocused the final product feels.

Star Shia LaBeouf didn’t likeRevenge of the Fallenmuch either, stating “When I saw the second movie, I wasn’t impressed with what we did. There were some really wild stunts in it, but the heart was gone." It speaks to how critically reviled theTransformerssequel was that Bay and LaBeouf were so willing to throw it under the bus soon after its release. Making a great movie is difficult under the most ideal of conditions, but having to do it without a solid script and with intense time pressure all but guarantees a disappointing final product.

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Dark Of The Moon Got Transformers Back On Track

The third Transformers was a big improvement on Revenge of the Fallen

Its 35% Rotten Tomatoes ratingmay not say much, but Bay and LaBeouf followed through on their promise thatTransformers: Dark of the Moonwould be better. It still had some of the same issues as its predecessor, including a bloated runtime and forced comedy, but it also felt less sloppy and sewn together. It should be noted thatdespite being panned on arrival,Revenge of the Fallenstill reached over $836 million worldwide(viaThe Numbers).

The second film might have made even more, if not for the toxic word of mouth that spread following its release. This is borne out by the factDark of the Moonmade a cool $1.1 billion during its theatrical run in 2011. It’s not that the third film is a particularly masterful piece of cinema, but it was way more fun and the action was allowed to breathe a little. It was also pitched as the final part of a trilogy, so audiences who had invested in Sam’s (Shia LaBeouf) story wanted to see how it would play out.

Transformers Textless Poster

Bay’s Transformers Were Mostly Critical Flops But The Franchise Is Turning It Around

The RT meter for the Transformers saga is a wild ride

Indeed,Dark of the Moonproved to be Sam’s final appearance(for now), and the series soon moved in a different direction. It has soft rebooted itself several times, though the financial performance of 2024’sTransformers Onesuggests audiences might be growing weary of the property. Despite being regarded as the series nadir,Revenge of the Fallenisn’t even the worst reviewed; Bay’s fourth and fifth outings,Age of ExtinctionandThe Last Knight,beat it with 18% and 16% respectively.

2007

57%

2009

19%

2011

35%

2014

18%

2017

16%

2018

91%

2023

51%

Weirdly, it seems the better reviews theTransformersmovies get, the lower the gross becomes.Transformers Onewas almost universally praised and nabbed an impressive 89%, but that did little to pull audiencesinand get them to the theater. It’s unclear what the nextTransformersmovie will be, but the franchise has proven too successful (AKA profitable) for the studio to fully give up on it.

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

Cast

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is a 2009 science fiction action film and the sequel to Transformers. Directed by Michael Bay, it follows Sam Witwicky, played by Shia LaBeouf, as he is drawn back into the conflict between Autobots and Decepticons due to mysterious symbols affecting his mind.

Transformers

Transformers is a multimedia franchise consisting of movies, TV Shows, video games, and comics. The franchise centers on a race of humanoid robots called the autobots who must protect Earth from the Decepticons. Some of the most popular characters include Megatron, Optimus Prime, and Bumblebee. In 2007, the first live-action movie in the franchise was released starring Shia Labeouf.