Live-action film series
| Live-action film series: | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transformers (2007) |
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) |
Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011) |
Transformers: Age of Extinction (2014) |
Transformers: The Last Knight (2017) |
Bumblebee: The Movie (2018) |
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The live-action film series is an umbrella term that refers to the series of highly-successful theatrical feature films put out by Paramount Pictures beginning in 2007, along with the vast amount of toys, merchandise, and ancillary fiction created for it. The first five films in the series were directed by Michael Bay, and began with Transformers. The first of the sequels, titled Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, was released on June 24, 2009. The third film, Transformers: Dark of the Moon, was released on June 28, 2011. Though Bay claimed he would not be back for the fourth film, he was successfully lured back to the director's chair and Transformers: Age of Extinction was released on June 27, 2014. A fifth film, Transformers: The Last Knight, was released on June 21, 2017. Bumblebee: The Movie, a spinoff title set in the 1980s, is slated for release on December 21, 2018. A Transformers 6 was planned as the sequel to The Last Knight, due for release in June 2019, but it was since cancelled in Spring 2018 and the live-action films rebooted.[1]
In 2015, the studio hired Akiva Goldsman to oversee writing a series of spin-offs with Bay and producers Steven Spielberg and Lorenzo di Bonaventura.[2] Goldsman has gathered together writers Robert Kirkman, Zak Penn, Jeff Pinkner, Steven DeKnight, Ken Nolan, Art Marcum and Matt Holloway, Andrew Barrer and Gabriel Ferrari, Geneva Robertson-Dworet, Christina Hodson, and Lindsey Beer.[3][4][5][6][7] Of the nine proposed spin-offs, Spielberg saw potential in five of them: Barrer and Ferrari have begun writing an animated prequel set on Cybertron.[8] Kirkman departed after one day because of health problems,[9] and on August 2, 2017, after The Last Knight's disappointing performance, Goldsman also left the writer's room. [10]
The film series is partly responsible for the Chinese market's increasing domination of the US film industry: the first film made a then-whopping $37m there, attracting attention to the market and the local industry. Over the ten years since, the franchise made more and more in China, attracting more and more other companies to the market, and delaying The Last Knight caused a massive reduction of growth there! [11]
Continuities
- See also: Movie continuity
The live-action film series is a continuity family, and as such includes all continuities concerning closely related characters and settings. TFWiki has identified four primary timelines for the series:
- The main movie timeline consisting of the films themselves.
- The secondary IDW movie timeline consisting of the first three films, novels, comic books and various other elements that don't contradict each other.
- The Titan Magazines movie timeline, which began tying into the larger film-based continuity by IDW but eventually gave up. This continuity also follows events in a splinter timeline where Megatron won the battle of Mission City.
- The Sector Seven ARG timeline where the film series is a fictionalization of real events.
- Micro-continuities also exist in the form of video games, some toy bios, and certain comic story threads that are incompatible with each other.
The Transcendent Technomorphs refer to this continuity family as the Tyran universal streams.
Notes
- The live-action film series has thus far consistently used the code name "E7" for direction signs on all the movies' sets, as well as in various internal documents and files. More specifically, Revenge of the Fallen was code-named "E7²", Dark of the Moon was "E73", Age of Extinction was "E74", and The Last Knight was "E75". Why this ruse is being held up is anyone's guess; it's not like anybody should be fooled by this anymore in the internet age!
- Some proposals for spin-off films revolved around settings like Ancient Rome and Feudal Japan.[12]
References
- ↑ Transformers Cinematic Universe rebooted
- ↑ Paramount Enlisting Akiva Goldsman To Ramp Up ‘Transformers’ Output
- ↑ Deadline: ‘Transformers’ Spinoff & Sequel Scribes Set: ‘Walking Dead’s Robert Kirkman & More
- ↑ ‘Ant-Man’ Scribes Andrew Barrer & Gabriel Ferrari Join ‘Transformers’ Writers Room: Cybertron Pic In Offing?
- ↑ No Boys Club In ‘Transformers’ Writers Room: Christina Hodson, Lindsey Beer Join Brain Trust
- ↑ Akiva Goldsman Explains ‘Transformers’ Writers Room As Paramount Adds Scribe Pair
- ↑ ‘Daredevil’s Steven DeKnight Rounds Out ‘Transformers’ Writers Room
- ↑ ‘Transformers’ Writers Room Wraps: Akiva Goldsman Scripting ‘T5,’ Animated Film By ‘Ant-Man’ Scribes Barrer & Ferrari
- ↑ Collider: Robert Kirkman Reveals He Was Only in the ‘Transformers’ Writers Room for One Day
- ↑ http://www.slashfilm.com/akiva-goldsman-transformers/ Akiva Goldsman is No Longer Involved With ‘Transformers’
- ↑ Forbes: "'Transformers' Gears Up For Another $1 Billion Box Office Bounty"
- ↑ Daily Telegraph: Michael Bay's multi-million-dollar brainstorming session: inside the Transformers writers' room







