
Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D (2014) Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D Blu-ray delivers truly amazing video and audio in this exceptional Blu-ray release The fourth installment of the blockbuster franchise based on the Hasbro toy line. Autobots must escape sight from a bounty hunter who has taken control of the human serendipity: Unexpectedly, Optimus Prime and his remaining gang turn to a mechanic, his daughter, and her back street racing boyfriend for help. For more about Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D and the Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D Blu-ray release, see published by Martin Liebman on September 17, 2014 where this Blu-ray release scored 4.5 out of 5. Director: Writer: Starring:,,,,, ». Transformers: Age of Extinction 3D Blu-ray Review Bigger and better in 3D. Reviewed by, September 17, 2014 Director Michael Bay brings a grace to cinematic madness much in the same way a director like does, but usually without so much gloom and terror mixed in and on a significantly larger and more audience-friendly and mass-appealing scale. Bay's atmosphere and skill with the camera -- his uncanny ability to find that perfect angle and position the action just so for a dazzling display of technical know-how meets real life meets the fantastical -- always produces guaranteed results, but results that may be tiring audiences. Download Mxit For Samsung Galaxy Ace.
Now on his fourth Transformers movie, Bay's signature filmmaking style and his signature franchise continue to dazzle in a bubble, but the movies are growing old. The franchise was so exciting when it. It was fresh and impactful, not necessarily the direction hardcore fans in their 20s and 30s who grew up with the toys and the wanted but a spectacle of epic proportions that has only been topped by in the series and this latest masterpiece of technical wizardry in particular. Yet the movies feel heartless and soulless, like the spark has been ripped from their chests. They show signs of greatness beyond the eye candy and deluge of pristine audio flowing into the ears, but they've really become technical highlight reels worthy of popcorn munching and practically nothing more.