Jun
17

More New TV Ads

Jun
16

Transformers Revenge of the Fallen clip

Jun
15

Transformers Revenge of the Fallen London Premiere

Jun
15

Michael Bay color grades across the Pacific

SANTA MONICA, Calif., June 15 /PRNewswire/ — In an unprecedented post production collaboration, Company 3 recently conducted a unique transcontinental color grading session between its Santa Monica facility and Digital Garden, its Virtual Outpost location in Tokyo, for the new film Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.

As Company 3 Founder/DI Colorist Stefan Sonnenfeld graded visual effects shots and other media in a DI Theatre in Santa Monica, Michael Bay, the film’s director who was in Japan for the film’s world premiere, was able to monitor the color grading work without any delay or color difference on a calibrated, high-resolution monitor — and give feedback to Sonnenfeld via a video conferencing system.

“We’ve consistently taken the lead in developing new creative, technical and logistical options to better serve our clients,” said Sonnenfeld. “The filmmakers we work with have incredibly busy schedules and we’re committed to helping them accomplish their work in the most efficient and convenient way possible.”

Although Company 3 frequently employs its proprietary remote collaboration technology for post production services on commercials, this marked the first time this technology was leveraged in Japan for a major feature film project with remote monitoring at 2K resolution. During the 90-minute session, Sonnenfeld graded more than a dozen visual effects shots which will be incorporated into the film for its U.S. release, as well as a series of television spots that premiered the following night during the national telecast of the NBA Finals.

“There was a lot riding on this remote session and Company 3 really came through — they knocked it out of the park,” said Mark Graziano, Senior Vice President of Post Production for DreamWorks, the producers of the film. “We got so much accomplished in a couple of hours — enough in one session for Michael Bay to sign off on launching domestic negatives that would service the bulk of the domestic release.”

“To watch Michael Bay in Japan and Stefan Sonnenfeld in L.A. work together through a high-end digital link was truly amazing,” added Andrew Williams, VP of Marketing for Paramount Pictures. “It was almost like the Pacific Ocean disappeared and they were sitting right next to one another working seamlessly on the last few shots of the film. A true step forward on the digital technology front and a real treat for the few of us that got to watch it happen.”

Digital Garden, the Tokyo facility receiving the remote color grading session, has collaborated with Company 3 on several commercial projects, but the monitoring requirements for a feature film are of a different order of magnitude and required special preparation. Several weeks prior to the session, Company 3 performed quality control sessions to assess the project’s feasibility. Company 3 Engineer Rick Girardi then traveled to Japan to fine tune the calibration of the high resolution monitor.

Despite the complexities of the technology, the session proceeded very much as it would have had Bay and Sonnenfeld been in the same room. “Michael and I have worked on many projects together and have an excellent rapport,” Sonnenfeld said. “The technology not only made it possible for us to work without being in the same physical space, it did so without getting in the way of the creative process.”

Source: PRNewswire

Jun
15

Michael Bay on the red carpet in Berlin

Jun
14

Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Berlin Premiere

View more photos of the Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Berlin Premiere.

Jun
12

Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen Seeing Ticket Sales Surge at Fandango

LOS ANGELES, June 11 /PRNewswire/ — With less than two weeks to go before its June 24 release date, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is already seeing brisk ticket sales on Fandango, the nation’s leading moviegoer destination. Currently, the film represents 21% of ticket sales on Fandango (as of June 11 at 9 am PT).

According to an ongoing Fandango survey of moviegoers planning to see Transformers 2:

“Fans are already scooping up tickets for Transformers 2′s opening week showtimes, especially for the IMAX screens,” says Ted Hong, Chief Marketing Officer for Fandango. “The movie is garnering some great Internet buzz, and filmgoers are clearly ready for another action-packed summer popcorn movie. With Transformers 2, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Ice Age 3, Public Enemies, Bruno, G.I. Joe and other highly-anticipated movies opening within a few weeks of each other, it looks like a banner year for the movies.”

Source: Fandango

Jun
12

New Revenge of the Fallen TV Spots

Jun
12

Bay accepts TF Honor in Japan

Nelson here…

Koujin Ohno–who is credited with inventing Transformers as we now know them–gave Michael an Optmus Prime statue to show his appreciation with what Michael has done for the franchise.

Jun
10

TF RoTF Japan Premiere Video Extended

Click on the image below to see more of the TF2 Japanese premiere.

Jun
9

Bay and Co. invade Seoul

Click here to view more photos of the Seoul premiere.

Jun
9

More TF RoTF Japan Premiere Videos

Click on the photo below to watch more of the TF2 premiere.

Jun
9

Optimus Prime tells Harry Potter to wait his turn

Nelson here…

Potter fans will have to wait their turn two extra weeks after the Half-Blood Prince premieres at the local cineplexes to see it on Imax. Why? Because Optimus Prime and company will be basking in the 4 week exclusive Imax limelight.

Fom the Hollywood Reporter:

It appears investors might have noticed Monday that “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince” won’t arrive at Imax venues until two weeks after the film opens on regular screens.

Shares of Imax dropped 4% on Monday to $7.31 after a Wall Street analyst said the delay “should negatively impact Imax boxoffice results.”

“Prince” opens wide July 14. Although it opens on two Imax screens that day — one in New York and one in Los Angeles — it won’t get the wide Imax treatment until July 29.

The two-week delay is fallout from the decision by Warner Bros. to push “Potter” from its originally scheduled November 2008 opening. The new July opening overlaps with Imax’s monthlong window dedicated to Paramount’s “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen.”

Still, “Potter” contains 12 minutes of 3-D footage that moviegoers can experience only through Imax, so that could cushion the blow, Merriman Curhan Ford analyst Eric Wold said.

“There will obviously be some consumers that choose to wait for the Imax version with its 3-D scenes or will choose to see it for a second time, but we no not believe this will be enough to offset the negative impact from the move,” he said.

Source: THR

Jun
9

On the set with Michael Bay

Jun
8

International Press Tour

Nelson here….

Michael and crew will be on an international press tour that will take them to about nine countries in the next two weeks. Here is a shot of them eating at Nobu in Tokyo.

Jun
8

Revenge of the Fallen Japan Premiere Video

Jun
8

Revenge of the Fallen Japan Premiere Photos

View high-res photo

View high-res photo

Jun
8

Michael Bay update: Imax version "longer cut and more robot fighting"

Hey everyone,

In Japan today. After a month and half seven days a week most days going till midnight me and my crew have just about finished Transformers. I have never seen such a level of dedication from every crew member in a movie before.

Even today after the press in Japan and right before the premiere tonight, I have to sneak out to a digital house to approve the last few effect shots.

It has been a long hard road, but really fun one to travel. What you will notice that is strikingly different than Transformers 1, is the level of animation detail. The robot characters (42 in all), you really can feel empathy for them. What is also very different is the sheer scale of the movie. We have been very tight holding back much of the best imagery in commercials and trailers.

The way to see this movie is on IMAX. Never before has there been 4k rendered character animation shot on full IMAX 70 mm film. This is a first and the results are stunning. You will see Optimus Prime in a few shots where he is actually perfectly to scale on the IMAX 50 foot tall screens.

For IMAX, I created a slightly longer cut with more robot fighting. Four scenes were shot on IMAX cameras so the screen will fill the full IMAX screen for these scenes.

Haters beware.

Michael

Jun
4

Michael Bay: Making Movies, Enemies and Money

Dorothy Pomerantz, 06.22.09, 12:00 AM ET

At the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico, the sun can burn your skin in a quarter of an hour. The film crew of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, who have turned this unearthly landscape into a partially destroyed Egyptian village, are covered head to toe in floppy hats, long-sleeved shirts and boots to protect themselves. But not director Michael Bay. He leaps around the set like a little kid, in a short-sleeved Polo shirt.

“Fire in the hole!” An explosion goes off next to a crumbling house. Bay grins approvingly and darts to some fake rocks where stars Shia LaBeouf and Megan Fox are cowering in the face of yet another attack by robots from outer space. Over the course of the day Bay will film 63 shots, three times as many as on most sets. “I hear stories about directors waiting eight hours to shoot,” says Bay. “How can your game plan be so screwed up? If I ran a studio, I’d fire your ass.”

As well known for his blowups on the set as he is for explosions on the screen, Bay has made his share of enemies. One actor who worked as an extra on Pearl Harbor recalls how Bay accused another actor of thinking the attack on Pearl Harbor was funny when someone laughed after hours of sitting for a take. An executive says Bay got so enraged at an extra on the set of Transformers that he made him stand in a corner. Actress Kate Beckinsale told reporters Bay made her feel ugly on the set of Pearl Harbor. (Not true, says Bay. He asked her to work out more.) Bay is known for sometimes clashing with stars on the set, such as Bruce Willis in the 1998 film Armageddon. “He has a tendency to try to be a director and change actors’ lines,” says Bay. “I don’t think Bruce liked that I had a pair of balls.” He takes a similarly defensive stand toward the critics who have called his films “vile,” “brain dead” and “pandering.”

But audiences love him. Bay’s seven movies have pulled in $2.6 billion at the box office, putting him in the same league with James Cameron ($3 billion, including Titanic, the highest-grossing film ever, at $1.8 billion). That means something at a time when the movie business is going through its own action thriller, as studios run low on capital and people stop buying DVDs. (Although theaters keep half of ticket sales, the gross amount is a good proxy for the movie owner’s total revenue, which includes DVDs and other money streams.)

Bay brings his movies in on time and on budget, a rarity in Hollywood. Because his pay is largely based on the film’s profits (usually one-third of the take after the studio recoups its production and advertising costs), he’s got plenty of incentive to rein in expenses. “Michael makes me look good because he counts every penny,” says Jerry Bruckheimer, who has produced five of Bay’s films.

The new Transformers movie (the second full-length feature in the series) cost $195 million to make. But Bay estimates it would have cost $10 million more if he hadn’t partnered with General Motors and the U.S. military to get free cars, helicopters and battleships. By keeping the budget (relatively) low on the first Transformers flick, in 2007, he was able to increase his share of the movie’s $708 million worldwide gross, earning $80 million from the film. So what if those product placements make his movies look like long commercials? “People say it’s whoring out, but it’s not,” says Bay, 44. “Advertising is in our lives. It’s unavoidable. To think you can’t have it in a movie isn’t real life.”

One of his first jobs out of school (he majored in film and English at Wesleyan University) was directing commercials. By the time he was 26 Bay had created ads for Coke, Levi’s and Budweiser and a memorable Chevy ad showing a new line of cars being released into the wild. He learned everything on the job-rigging lights, focusing a lens, ordering around big egos like the professional athletes he shot in his Nike ads.

Bruckheimer offered Bay his first directing job in 1994 on Bad Boys, a movie about two Miami cops chasing drug thieves. A great break, except the script was so bad that Bruckheimer’s partner, Don Simpson, threatened to take their names off the movie before the first shot. Bay sat down with his stars, Will Smith and Martin Lawrence, and hammered out some bits to make the movie funnier and started shooting. “We had no support from the studio,” says Bay in his airy Santa Monica office. “I wanted to make it exciting enough that it would make its money back.” In one of the last scenes, Smith was supposed to punch out the bad guy. But the day of the shoot was rained out, and there wasn’t enough money to bring back the crew. So Bay put up $25,000 of his $125,000 fee to shoot the scene. The movie, made for $20 million or so, went on to bring in $140 million at the box office globally.

“I didn’t get points on that,” says Bay, referring to the chunk of the profits big players get from a movie. “I had to beg to even get my [$25,000] back.” The experience made Bay smarter about negotiating deals. He took fees on his next two films, The Rock and Armageddon, but by 2000 he decided he wanted to be more than a director for hire and insisted on part ownership. For Pearl Harbor, a $140 million (production cost) movie, he declined upfront pay in favor of a 50% split of what remained after the studio recouped production and advertising costs. The film grossed $450 million; Bay pocketed $40 million. He leaned on the military, saving untold millions by using World War II-era aircraft carriers and battleships.

On the Transformers set in New Mexico, a handful of military personnel stand by at all times to help Bay strategize his attack scenes. “We need to see a commitment from the filmmaker that it’s going to look real,” says Lieutenant Colonel Gregory Bishop, the U.S. Army’s entertainment liaison. “Fighting alien robots isn’t realistic, but if we did fight alien robots, this is the way we’d do it.” Bay’s deal: free tanks, Humvees and rocket launchers as long as they’re being used in training exercises. If soldiers are training on an Apache helicopter, Bay can film it for free. Because the Transformer robots turn into cars, Bay was also able to get freebies from GM-as he had earlier, when the auto company contributed flood-damaged cars for Bad Boys. “I gave them glorious deaths,” says the director.

Bay has developed an equally strong relationship with Hasbro, the maker of Transformer toys. At first Bay wasn’t sure about the idea: Would it be live action? Animation? What about fans who were sure to criticize every little decision? He was convinced by a trip to Hasbro headquarters in Rhode Island, where he was educated in the complicated mythology of the battle between the Autobots and the Decepticons. “He had this idea that everything is more than meets the eye,” says Brian Goldner, Hasbro’s chief executive. “You could look at almost any vehicle and believe there’s a sentient being under there.” Bay certainly believed the payback. His deal with Hasbro is second only to that of George Lucas, who gets an estimated 15% royalty on all Star Wars figures. Bay gets an estimated 8% on Transformer toys tied to movies.

He has also brought his common touch to small horror movies and, soon, videogames. In 2003 he launched Platinum Dunes, a production company that specializes in revamping 1970s classics like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and The Amityville Horror. Bay hires young directors, who make the films for under $20 million each. Most earn back their budgets on opening weekend. As the producer, Bay gets an average 8% of the studio’s net on each film.

Then there’s Digital Domain, a visual-effects house started by James Cameron that Bay bought in 2007 with his business partner, John Textor. The company had fallen on hard times because of executive infighting, so they were able to pick it up for $35 million. Textor hired several effects wizards from George Lucas’ Industrial Light & Magic with the idea of producing superrealistic videogames. Digital Domain broke new ground last year with the Oscar-winning special effects in The Curious Case of Benjamin Button.

Bay sees a day when videogames will be stored on servers, instead of played on home consoles, to offer theater-quality visual effects. “The game companies want directors to work for them, but they don’t want to pay them,” he complains. “We want to make it more like a movie studio-where everyone gets a piece of the action.” That’s how to get more action.

Source: Forbes

Jun
4

Revenge of the Fallen Wallpaper

Nelson here…

Here are wallpapers for your computer courtesy of the LG Nest site.