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szdaily -> Movies -> 
Bumblebee
    2019-01-04  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

《大黄蜂》

Starring: Hailee Steinfeld, John Cena, Jorge Lendeborg Jr., John Ortiz, Jason Drucker, Dylan O’Brien, Peter Cullen

Director: Travis Knight

CHARM and sweetness were in short supply in Michael Bay’s “Transformers” films, but they’re the secret ingredients to “Bumblebee,” a likeable prequel that indulges in nostalgic affection for all things 1980s — especially the era’s music and movies. Making his live-action feature debut, “Kubo and the Two Strings” director Travis Knight does his best to balance clattering spectacle with a modest girl-and-her-robot tale. He’s assisted mightily by Hailee Steinfeld, who infuses this uneven action film with significant soul.

Set in 1987, “Bumblebee” stars Steinfeld as Charlie, an 18-year-old mourning the loss of her beloved father and desperate for a life away from her distracted mother (Pamela Adlon). She thinks she’s found freedom in the form of a beat-up old Volkswagen Beetle that she repairs, but she soon discovers that the car is actually Bumblebee, a heroic Autobot sent to Earth to set up a base for his fellow rebels, who are squaring off with the evil Decepticons.

Knight drapes “Bumblebee” in copious 1980s pop-culture references, and the movie itself plays like an extended homage to that most ’80s of films, “E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial,” which similarly was about a friendship between a young misfit and an adorable, skittish alien. Much like Steven Spielberg’s family classic, “Bumblebee” shines when it’s just the two central characters spending time together and learning from one another. Bumblebee can’t talk, but he’ll develop an ability to communicate through songs he locates across the dial of his car radio, and, in this robot Charlie, finds a confidant at a time when she’s still reeling from her dad’s death.

Character relationships have meant little in “Transformers” — despite Shia LaBeouf’s attempts to build a rapport with Bumblebee in the initial installments — but “Bumblebee” has a welcome warmth and light touch. It helps that Bumblebee possesses such an expressive face and lively blue eyes — he’s like a gigantic metal puppy — but even more impressive is Steinfeld’s heartfelt, touching performance.

Christina Hodson’s screenplay provides a predictable narrative arc for Charlie, but the Oscar-nominated actress makes the familiar beats feel genuine, even surprising. And Knight and his effects team convincingly create an environment in which Steinfeld and her CG counterpart seem to be sharing the screen; a crucial component considering that the characters’ growing bond and occasional slapstick silliness are the film’s emotional foundation.

Inevitably, Bumblebee introduces huge stakes as a pair of menacing Decepticons tries to hunt this Autobot down. (Additionally, John Cena plays a gruff American military officer who views Bumblebee as a threat that needs to be neutralized.) Whenever the film resembles Bay’s slick, high-octane monstrosities, “Bumblebee” loses its allure, quickly devolving into drab action sequences. It’s also during these moments that the film adopts the humorless, war-movie tone that always made the previous “Transformers” films such joyless cacophonies of violence and self-importance.

Thank goodness, then, that Knight has largely conceived “Bumblebee” for a younger audience, focusing on a cheerful coming-of-age story in a sci-fi setting.

But the movie’s generally genial demeanor isn’t this prequel’s only appealing upgrade. Where Bay’s movies often objectified its female characters, “Bumblebee” gives us a young woman who’s smart, vulnerable and nuanced. And as the smitten, nerdy classmate who ends up getting roped into this adventure, Jorge Lendeborg Jr. radiates geeky lovability that’s a nice match for Charlie’s wary but kindhearted vibe.

The movie is now being screened in Shenzhen.

(SD-Agencies)

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