'Transformers,' Michael Bay and the sound of awards season [Updated]
AWARDS SEASON
Hero Complex robot expert Yvonne Villarreal gives a listen to "Transformers" director Michael Bay and his sound team as they wave the flag for trophy time in Hollywood.
Imagine Demolisher and Optimus Prime wreaking havoc on the Earth as they battle -- but doing it in complete silence.
Not very thrilling, huh? The hunky pieces of metal in the "Transformers" films lose a lot of their thunderous power without all that sound. It's the clinks and whooshes and BOOMS caused by the massive appliances that complete the larger-than-life experience of the films.
Director Michael Bay recently joined sound re-recording mixers Greg P. Russell and Gary Summers, and supervising sound editors Ethan Van Der Ryn and Erik Aadahl to discuss the sound art (and science) of "Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" at the Cary Grant Theatre on the Sony Pictures lot.
“I have like 2,000 people — through their artistry — making my dreams a film,” Bay said. “The artistry of this sound group is just amazing. I love, love sound. It’s 45-50% of the movies.”
It’s a welcomed percentage. The acting by Megan Fox and Shia LaBeouf may not stir the soul of Academy voters, but the franchise's high-quality sound performance has made up for that. The first "Transformers" film was nominated for three Academy Awards in 2008 in the categories of sound editing, sound mixing and visual effects.
“All of our sounds are performing almost like actors,” said Aadahl, whom Bay described as the “secret weapon” of the films. “They’re just performing the scene through sound.”
From explosions and car chases to clinking metal and pounding footsteps, every piece of sound is carefully produced. “It’s like," Russell said, "painting with sound.”
Aadahl continued the thought: “It just takes a lot of playing around with different elements. With sound, we are completely unfettered by the laws of physics.”
And with a film bursting with auditory bombast, a mellow scene can be a welcome challenge. Take the Reedman scene from the second installment of the franchise. After Soundwave finds out the location of the All Spark fragment needed to revive Megatron, Ravage was dispatched to the island of Diego Garcia, where the human-autobot alliance NEST was stationed, to recover the shard. The shadowy robot infiltrated the base with microcons, a swarm of ball bearings. Thousands of the tiny spheres combined to form Reedman, a mantis-like figure.
It was a scene meant to “cleanse the palate” from the booming sound featured throughout most of the film. The volume was turned down to enhance the sound created by the energy sparks. So where did the inspiration for the muted, vibrating zing of the microcons come from? A couple of magnets. Spread an inch apart and tossed in the air, they meet to create a quivering sound that -- when amplified by a microphone -- resembles the chattering of insects.
“It’s all about thinking ‘How can we take organic things in the real world and twist them around to give them a synthetic edge?’ ” Van der Ryn said.
“Those huge things seem small in comparison to the small things,” Aadahl said. “We find the macro in the micro.”
So can we expect more thunderous sound in the third installment? Although the number of robots increased significantly from the first film for the second, the third film -- which will hit theaters in summer 2011, won’t be as robot-heavy and there will be fewer explosions, a tight-lipped Bay said after the Q+A.
“There will be a nice crescendo ending,” Bay said. “It gets much more into the robot character. The last time you kind of met a few of the robots; this time you’re gonna get a much cooler landscape.”
--Yvonne Villarreal
RECENT AND RELATED
Bay: "There's a lot of poison on the Internet . . . whatever"
Michael Bay talks about Shia LaBeouf's dark moods
PHOTO GALLERY: The romantic side of Bay's boy movies
Critics hate "Transformers" but it's not going to matter
Michael Bay's "Transformers" payday? $75 MILLION... and counting
"Transformers" screenwriters are having a summer to remember
"Transformers" and Michael Jackson -- the forgotten link
Bay: Ramon Rodriguez will have bigger role in the third 'Transformers'
What 2009 fanboys films now have a shot at best-picture nomination?
PHOTOS: Top and bottom, scenes from "Transformers 2: Revenge of the Fallen" (Paramount Pictures). Middle, filmmaker Michael Bay and a friend. (Ricardo DeAratanha/Los Angeles Times)
FOR THE RECORD: An earlier version of this post had an incorrect release date for the third robot movie.






Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
"... it is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."
- Macbeth
Posted by: David | January 14, 2010 at 06:30 PM
Summer of 2011, not this summer...
Posted by: A Rose | January 14, 2010 at 10:10 PM
Hopefully it'll be better than the garbage I went through last summer.
Posted by: JRM | January 15, 2010 at 10:07 PM
Transformers is turlly amazing movie,i like its effected and action.i waiting for this series next movie.
Posted by: Joliese Tan | January 16, 2010 at 01:42 AM
I liked the second Transformers better than the first for some reason. I don't know, I just don't really have a problem with Michael Bay movies, and I just really dig the Transformers series so far.
Posted by: Troy | January 16, 2010 at 05:45 AM
I can't believe people liked the second Transformers movie. It was absolutely atrocious and it's doubly awful that it made so much money at the box office. I guess that means that the world gets to look forward to another great film by Mr. Bay.
Posted by: Zach | January 16, 2010 at 10:53 AM
When will the teaser trailer?
Posted by: jose antonio verde taquiri | January 16, 2010 at 06:02 PM
Someone needs to lock Michael Bay in a room with a pistol with one bullet and Transformers 2 playing on a loop.
Posted by: Jared | January 17, 2010 at 06:22 AM
Even the best sound can't save a piece of crap like this. In fact, I want my nine bucks back.
Posted by: bobula | January 17, 2010 at 03:36 PM
I don't get how people hated Transformers 2 and liked the first one. Basically it was more of the same. A big robot movie. It's not supposed to be an Art film. I liked it much better than that crap Avatar. Dances With Wolves remake with ugly, cheap looking Blue CGI Monkey people? SUCKS!!
Posted by: David | January 17, 2010 at 10:17 PM
Unfortunately the colossal turd that was Transformers 2 has completely destroyed any desire I had to see a third movie.
The first one was silly but likeable; I think it got a lot of mileage out of the fact that they were able to pull off a Transformers movie. The second movie seemed to take everything that didn't work with the first, magnify it and multiply it by 10. It was loud, offensive, and insulting to the intelligence. What's worse, it made the first movie lesser because of it. The Macbeth quote nicely sums it up. Just because it isn't supposed to be arty doesn't mean it can't be good.
Of course, as bad as Transformers 2 was, it holds no candle to the horror that was GI Joe. I don't even want my money back. I'd pay double to get the time I wasted watching them back.
Posted by: Jim Jones | January 18, 2010 at 02:47 PM
revenge of the fallen was awful. screw sound. focus on making a movie that doesn't suck. The action scenes all happen so fast that the human eye can't even see what the hell is going on. It doesn't matter how good the sound is if you can't see what the hell is going on. damnit!
Posted by: david | January 18, 2010 at 09:17 PM
Hi i am tony michael bay its the best i like the movie he direct's :D:D i wan't to seee Transformers 3 :D:D i know it will be the best
Posted by: Craciun Antonius Tudor | January 21, 2010 at 12:01 PM
Transformers is one of the best movies of all times I think!
Posted by: Davinci Kalani | February 21, 2010 at 12:51 AM
Sure both Tansformers movies have great effects, sound and Megan Fox wearing something skimpy, but lets be honest here these movies though technically great really lack anything unique for a story. There more a commercial grab for money then anything else it's really disappointing
Posted by: The Wolf | April 02, 2010 at 12:40 AM