Friday, October 18, 2024

Netflix: Review of OUTSIDE: Freaked Father

October 17, 2024



It was in the middle of a zombie apocalypse. Francis (Sid Lucero) was driving his nurse wife Iris (Beauty Gonzalez) and their two boys Josh (Marco Masa) and Lucas (Aiden Tyler Patdu) towards his ancestral house beside a sugar cane farm. There, Francis found that his parents had already fallen victim to the zombie horde. Francis wanted to stay in the house, while Iris wanted to go further north to safety. 

This Netflix original Filipino film was written and directed by Carlo Ledesma, whose past filmography included horror thrillers like "Tunnel" (2011) and "Sunod" (2019). This was marketed as a zombie film, and to be sure there were some pretty nifty zombie effects. For me, the best one was when Francis saw his zombified mother (Bing PImentel) break apart at her waist. You soon realize, however, that the zombies are not the main source of horror. 

This was really more of an intense psychological drama that involved one nuclear family. The father Francis was disturbed by traumatic memories of his childhood under a sadistic father (Joel Torre). He had always lived under the shadow of his elder brother Diego (James Blanco), the golden boy of the family. He and Iris had also been experiencing a very rough patch in their marriage, with issues of fidelity had cast an oppressive pall on their family. 

As he had shown in several sinister characters he had portrayed in the past, Sid Lucero can really play a demented psycho very well. Lucero is really the heir apparent to excellent character actors like Vic Silayan and John Arcilla, who can portray all sorts of crazy from the most subtle to violently explosive. That "Christmas dinner" scene, with Lucero wearing a Christmas sweater serenely lording it over his cowering family, showcased this all too well.

Beauty Gonzalez is becoming the go-to actress for horror flicks, with "Hellcome Home" (2019), "In My Mother's Skin" (2023) and "Kampon" (2023) just before this one. As Iris, Gonzalez was really pushed to dramatic and horrific extremes way past what we have seen from her before. That scene when Iris saw Lucas with a bleeding arm showcased Beauty Gonzalez at her hysterical best, yet you know she was still fully aware and in full control of her wits. 

Director Carlo Ledesma and his cinematographer Cheung Shing-Fung created a lot of beautiful images, with excellent blocking, framing and camera angle choices and gorgeous overhead drone shots. The jump scares were well-executed, the best one being that shock scene of the wounded soldier (Enchong Dee) at the breakfast table. However, those very prolonged scenes of toxic family dynamics dragged the momentum down as a whole. 7/10


Thursday, October 17, 2024

Review of GUILTY PLEASURE: Legal Loopholes

October 17, 2024


Atty. Adam Lucero (JM de Guzman) and Atty. Alexis Miranda (Lovi Poe) were colleagues in the Atticus Law Firm headed by Atty. Rodrigo Guevarra (Johnny Revilla). They worked closely at work as teammates and were also intimate outside work as lovers. One day, when they were celebrating the victory of a major case won and promotions were announced, a surprising news was announced that shocked Alexis and broke up their relationship.

Six years later, Alexis was already the owner of her own law firm and had a perfect record of winning all her cases. One day, her services were hired by a rude and impertinent client Zachary Chua (Dustin Uy) who had been accused of rape by his "unofficial" girlfriend Madison Valencia. The plaintiff was being represented by a young lawyer from Atticus, Atty. Matthew Caliente (Jameson Blake), who once trained as an intern under Alexis.

This new film is directed by Connie Macatuno, whose recent films had all been steamy, sexy dramas like "Wild and Free" (2018), "Glorious" (2018), and "Malaya" (2020) which also starred Lovi Poe. Sex is also very much in the menu of "Guilty Pleasure," not much in the context of romance, but more in the realm of abuse, harassment, perversion, as well as sexual politics at work. There were two disturbing, potentially triggering scenes of rape shown.

A significant percentage of this film's 2-hour run time was spent inside a courtroom presided over by a female judge.  Understood that Alexis was trying to discredit the testimony of the victim, but it was not realistic knowing how her past history that practically mirrored Madison's. The verdict scene was too abrupt and unsatisfying. These scenes again could be very triggering to victims who have had this harrowing experience of reliving their rape in court.

The unprofessional decorum of the prosecution and defense lawyers outside the courtroom after the hearing was very upsetting to watch. How could a defense lawyer allow a litigant to talk to her after the trial, once even resulting in a hair-pulling incident? How could it happen that lawyers from opposing sides have blatant public displays of affection there in the corridors of the courthouse, in full view of everyone who even found this PDA cute and "kilig"?

As usual, Lovi Poe looked beautiful, statuesque and smart, such great screen presence. Her wardrobe she was made to wear was proudly Filipiniana, but those butterfly sleeves and huge puffed sleeves tended to be distracting and over-the-top, very unrealistic for the courtroom setting or the law office. Her side plot concerning her father Renante (Soliman Cruz) was not really necessary, except to show off more facets of her dramatic skills. 6/10. 


  

Thursday, October 10, 2024

Review of THE WILD ROBOT: Mechanical Mother

October 10, 2024



Roz was the sole survivor after their cargo ship capsized on an uninhabited island. She was a robot programmed to obey and finish the task asked by its owner. She tried talking to the animals living on the island but to no avail. One day, she angered a grizzly bear who began to chase her. She stumbled down the mountain and landed on a nest of geese, breaking all but one egg. When the egg hatched, the gosling thought that Roz was its mother. 

This is not the first time that a film, live action or animated, tackled the topic about a mechanical robot with artificial intelligence who gained the ability to feel emotions.  Among the titles of animated films that come to mind include: "The Iron Giant" (1999), "Wall-E" (2008) and just last year, "Robot Dreams" (2023). All of these films had gained critical acclaim and a loyal fandom for their innovative and emotionally-sensitive treatment of the subject matter. 

The animation style was described to be a cross between classic Disney (particularly "Bambi") and Miyazaki (particularly "My Neighbor Totoro"), and this was quite evident. The color palette was deep and rich. The animal designs were very cute, from the sea otters who turned Roz on first, Fink the fox, mommy Pinktail and her baby opossums, peaking in that Noah's Ark situation with all the wildlife gathered together under one roof during a destructive storm. 

The roster of voice talents was stellar, led by Lupita N'yongo as the cool and calming maternal voice of Roz, Kit Connor as the "rebellious teen" voice Brightbill and Pedro Pascal as the cunning fox Fink, Roz's tormentor at first meeting who later turned out to be her closest friend. Other famous names like Catherine O'Hara, Bill Nighy, Mark Hamill, Vhing Rhames and Stephanie Hsu voice the more minor characters. 

This latest, and reportedly final, entirely-inhouse film of Dreamworks Animation was written and directed by Chris Sanders based on the 2016-2017 book series of the same title written by Peter Brown. The story may not exactly be completely new, but it had a heartwarming storytelling approach to how Roz developed what seemed to be "maternal instincts" towards Brightbill, and how he eventually recognized and acknowledged this as "love." 9/10. 




Review of MUJIGAE: Kopino Kismet

October 10, 2024



Rainalyn (Anna Luna) raised her daughter Mujigae (Ryrie Sophia) alone when she was abandoned by her Korean husband Ji-sung (Kim Ji-soo). When Rainalyn passed away, 5 year-old Mujigae was brought back to the Philippines by her grandfather Emong (Richard Quan) to live with him. His other daughter Sunny (Alexa Ilacad) had bitter memories about how her mother and sister left her behind years ago, found it difficult to accept her. 

This film was directed by Randolph Longjas, whom I've known previously from "Ang Turkey Man ay Pabo Rin" (2013) and "Star Na Si Van Damme Stallone" (2017). "Mujigae" actually had elements from these two films -- inter-cultural marriage from the first film, and ideals of motherhood from the second. Longjas had proven before that he had a knack for telling family stories effectively mixing comedy and sentimentality, and he does it again here.

Longjas and screenwriter Mark Raywin Tome wisely addressed and resolved Sunny's abandonment issues early on, giving more time for the relationship between auntie and niece to develop more fruitfully. He was able to raise the common problem of husbands and wives separating from each other in order to earn more money for a brighter future overseas, and present the long-standing effects of this break-up on the children they left behind.   

Alexa Ilacad's Sunny may have a damaged relationship with her father, but she had plenty of support from her elders Lola Lina (Peewee O'Hara), Lola Chayong (Lui Manansala) and Lolo Ipe (Rolando Inocencio) and friends at work, Marla (Kate Alejandrino) and Sushmita (Donna Cariaga). Ilacad worked very well in the ensemble, creating an authentic communal atmosphere which made Sunny's emotions connect with the audience more effectively. 

Ryrie Sophia gave a very delightful lead performance as Mujigae, you'd never think this was her first feature film, and a title role at that. She was very fluent in delivering her lines in both Korean and Filipino, confidently trading lines with her veteran co-stars. Longjas was able to keep her from overdoing the cute routine, so that she never came across as annoying. She deserves more movie projects so that her promising acting talent can be further honed.

Kim Ji-soo (or simply Ji Soo) was a popular K-drama actor, best known in series like "Strong Woman Bong Soon" (2017). In 2021, he got involved in a bullying scandal which led to a derailment of his career. Lately, he has been picking up the pieces by guesting on Filipino TV series like "Black Rider," and now this film. He has not lost his touch in acting. His portrayal of the repentant absentee father Park Ji-sung was very sincere and touching. 

Overall, I liked the flow of the story, its cross-cultural focus and its well-timed emotional swell at the climax. I liked its generally positive and heartwarming tone, and how the characters were likable despite their flaws. A disappointing aspect of this film was its very dim lighting, particularly in the scenes shot inside Sunny's room and Emong's workshop. These scenes were so dark, we barely even saw the actors' faces, which was quite a shame.  7/10



Wednesday, October 9, 2024

Vivamax: Mini-Reviews of KISKISAN, SALSA NI L, TAHONG

October 9, 2024

KISKISAN

Director: Bobby Bonifacio, Jr.

Writer: Byron Bryant

After her father died, Adelle (Rob Guinto) lived on their rice farm and mill with her Auntie Luring (Tabs Sumulong). One morning over breakfast, she announced that she was planning to get married to her boyfriend Rener (Juan Paolo Calma), the guy who operated the mill (the titular "kiskisan"). Her sister Bea (Apple Dy) came home from the city for a vacation and brought her friend Cheska (Skye Gonzaga) along. Things get busy from there. 

Bobby Bonifacio had directed a number of good Vivamax films, like "Bula" (2022) and "Haliparot" (2023). Byron Bryant had written a number of good Vivamax films, like "Reroute" (2022) and "Langitngit" (2023). However, this particular Bonifacio-Bryant collaboration was utterly beyond disappointing. This was practically a hollow shell, with no meaningful story to tell, just a series of boring sex scenes strung together.  1/10


SALSA NI L

Director: Rodante Y. Pajemna, Jr. 

Writer: ER Astrologo

Lovely Cruz a.k.a. L (Christine Bermas) operated a dance school on the promenade beside the Jones Bridge along the Pasig River with her friend Zinia (Jonica Lazo). To earn more money, she also joined dance competitions with her favorite dance partner Lucas (Sean de Guzman), a friend she kept on the friendzone. One day, L began receiving expensive gifts of jewelry from a wealthy secret admirer, who turned out to be Allan (Jeffrey Hidalgo).

Christine Bermas and Sean de Guzman are both among the more talented actors in the Vivamax pool. Unfortunately, this shallow story they collaborated on was so pitifully beneath their dramatic abilities. Their sex scenes felt cheap and exploitative, especially for Bermas. Their ballroom dancing was dull and unimpressive, certainly not the type people will pay for to watch or get lessons from.  Jeffrey Hidalgo went all-out here as middle-aged stud. 2/10


TAHONG

Director: Christopher Novabos

Headwriter: Maya Diaz

Writers: Philip Doria, Melnar Arquillo

18 year-old Mira (Candy Veloso) and her father Moises (James Lomahan) earned a living farming mussels in their small seaside village. She had a boyfriend Goyo (John Mark Marcia) who helped her do her work, among other things. Their settlement was to be demolished for land reclamation. Then, her father had a stroke. Desperate, Mira went to the center to ask help from lusty barangay captain Douglas (Emil Sandoval) and his kagawad Talia (Salome Salvi).

The story aimed to have social and environmental significance by tackling the issue of unjust demolition of homes to give way to reclamation of land from the sea. However, these political issues just fell on the wayside when the narrative took a sharp turn and became of story of exploitation and rape. Veloso did try her best to portray the poor Mira, but she was still too new and raw an actress to take on the role with more conviction. 3/10. 



Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Review of JOKER: FOLIE À DEUX: Pernicious Partners

October 6, 2024




While awaiting trial for the murders he had been accused of committing two years ago, Arthur Fleck was incarcerated in Arkham State Hospital, where he was bullied by guards like Jackie Sullivan (Brendan Gleeson). While his attorney Maryanne Stewart (Catherine Keener) hoped to get him acquitted by reason of split personality, the district attorney Harvey Dent (Harry Lawtey) argued that he was completely sane when he killed his victims. 

One day, Fleck met Lee Quinzel (Lady Gaga). She introduced herself as a girl who grew up in Arthur's community who got locked up at Arkham after she burned down a building of her abusive father.  She confessed her fascination with Arthur, while Arthur's fantasies all featured Lee duetting with him in various music video scenarios, with songs ranging from "If My Friends Could See Me Now" to "(They Long to Be) Close to You."  

Tood Philips' first "Joker" (2019) was both critically-acclaimed (won the Golden Lion at the Venice Film Festival) and a massive box office success (the first R-rated film to earn $1B). It was the first DC film ever to be nominated for the Oscar for Best Picture. Its star Joaquin Phoenix bagged the Oscar for Best Actor.  Because of this massive success, the hype and excitement for its sequel was very high, which is not always a good thing.

Joaquin Phoenix still had his bizarre Arthur Fleck / Joker dual personae all there. He was totally immersed into this character, transformed in both physical and psychological aspects. Even his singing voice had that weird timbre. Lady Gaga was an effortless fit for the role of Lee Quinzel, a character she seemed born to portray. Gaga's versatile singing voice saved the song numbers, but the concepts of these vignettes were too deranged.  

It was not difficult to see why this film was not as liked by critics and audiences than the first one. The musical genre was not a good fit with the psychological drama being told, as the "clown-themed" song choices felt random and forced.  The dour and depressing story of this pernicious partnership just plodded on and on, until the ending ended all doubts whether Arthur Fleck was actually the nemesis of Batman we thought he was or not.  6/10. 


Thursday, September 26, 2024

Review of MEGALOPOLIS: Coppola's Cornucopia

September 26, 2024



Architect Cesar Catilina (Adam Driver) was undertaking an ambitious project of recreating the city of New Rome with Megalon, a revolutionary versatile material which he himself invented, and turning it into a sprawling Megalopolis. The incumbent Mayor Franklyn Cicero (Giancarlo Esposito) totally hated Cesar for destroying the old city, but his daughter Julia (Nathalie Emmanuel) had fallen in love with her father's nemesis. 

More than the story or the stars, there is a significant buzz surrounding "Megalopolis" because of the filmmaker who wrote and directed it -- Francis Ford Coppola. While "The Godfather" (1972) and its sequel (1974) had already elevated Coppola's name on the Hollywood firmament, his filmography also included "The Conversation" (1974), and "Apocalypse Now" (1979). He was active up to the 1990s, but since then, he had nothing of note anymore.

After a hiatus of 13 years, Coppola finally decided to release this passion project of his this year, which started as an idea that had been percolating in his head since 1977. The story had a grand scale of a Roman epic. The characters had names derived from Roman history, like Catiline, a soldier who staged a coup against Cicero in 63 AD, and Hamilton Crassus, Cesar's wealthy uncle, named after Crassus, once "the wealthiest man in Rome."

For the positives, Coppola went all out in the technical aspects -- the lush and brilliant cinematography by Mihai Mălaimare Jr., the opulent and ostentatious production design by Beth Mickle and Bradley Rubin, the costumes by Milena Canonero that had both retro and futuristic vibes, and special visual effects to complete the illusion Coppola was going for. The rich and vibrant aural backdrop was provided by musical scorer Osvaldo Golijov.

For the negatives, Coppola wanted so much to happen such that the whole thing did not flow like a logical narrative. Characters show up, events happened, yet they were dropped just like that. Adam Driver brooded too much to play Cesar, and his chemistry with Julia was flat. Old man Crassus (Jon Voight) and his bride Wow Platinum (Audrey Plaza) were more interesting. Vengeful cousin Clodio gave Shia La Beouf many outrageous moments to play. 6/10. 


Wednesday, September 25, 2024

Review of THE SUBSTANCE: Bargain for Beauty

September 25, 2024



Award-winning actress turned television fitness guru Elisabeth Sparkle (Demi Moore) just turned fifty.  She heard that her slimy boss Harvey (Dennis Quaid) wanted to replace her with someone fresher. Desperate, Elisabeth accepted a mysterious offer to buy a chemical called the Substance which can bring out the most perfect version of herself. Right after Elisabeth injected the single-use Activator into her vein, Sue (Margaret Qualley) was born. 

The Substance could really make dreams of youth and beauty come true albeit with a twist. However, it came with very strict rules to make sure that balance was kept between the new self and the old self. The instructions emphasized that there was only one being, even if new self and old self were practically doing things to destroy each other out of selfishness and jealousy, respectively. This made for a gripping internal tug-of-war of taking control. 

This audaciously shocking body-horror film was written and directed by French filmmaker Coralie Fargeat, in only her second feature film after her acclaimed debut in 2017 with "Revenge." Fargeat did not shirk from showing exaggeratedly disgusting scenes of graphic gore and grotesque deformity to drive home her satiric points against ageism in show business and the extremes aging stars resort to in order to maintain their beauty and fame.

Demi Moore gave a brave fearless portrayal of fading star Elisabeth, in a role so wild and out of  her comfort zone. Elisabeth was a physically-tough and emotionally-taxing character which can earn Moore an Oscar nomination for Best Actress (and even win, like Elisabeth did).  This role of Sue will most likely be Margaret Qualley's star-making breakthrough. Her sexy Sue was akin to a Frankenstein's monster who got caught up and blinded by her fame. 

Because the script was so well-plotted, it was not difficult to see why Fargeat won the Best Screenplay award at the Cannes Film Festival where it made its world premiere. Since then, it had also won a number of audience choice awards in the film festivals, despite being dark and disturbing. Audiences appreciated how Fargeat really went all out crazy for this, in the process also paying tribute to horror classics, like "Freaks," "The Shining," and "Carrie."

The version we watched during the commercial run is shorter by about 3 minutes from the original version. This means that a number of scenes had been deleted in order to satisfy the criteria of the MTRCB for R-16. Whatever those supposedly objectionable scenes were, we may never see them anymore and that's a shame.  However, Fargeat's dark message against Hollywood's superficial bias for youth and beauty still hits its target very hard. 8/10


Tuesday, September 24, 2024

Review of NEVER LET GO: Survival Situations

September 24, 2024



Nolan (Percy Daggs IV) and Samuel (Anthony B. Jenkins) lived in an isolated old cabin in the woods with their protective Momma (Halle Berry). They believed that they were the only survivors of an apocalypse, so they had to keep themselves safe from an unseen being she called the Evil. She made sure that the three of them were always connected to each other with rope. While Samuel steadfastly believed his mother, Nolan began to have doubts.

The isolating situation that trapped Momma and her boys in their house started four years ago. It seems that the filmmakers meant to create a scenario that will resonate with an audience who just emerged from a crippling pandemic with quarantine precautions meant to keep households apart from each other. This film delivered an all-too-familiar atmosphere of suffocating anxiety we all shared recently, given our common experience as a planet. 

The far-reaching influence of a mother on her sons is also given much emphasis in this film. As children, our mother is our very first teacher. Everything our mother said was gospel truth to us as we were growing up. We would never dream about going against our mother's lessons and her wishes. Here, the two boys believed all the stories their mother told and all the rituals their mother taught them to do. At least, until critical thinking eventually sank in.

When I started to watch this movie, it gave me the apocalyptic vibe of "Bird Box" (2018) where a mother was trying her best to keep her children safe from the monsters that threatened to kill them all. It briefly became a horror thriller, as the music turned creepy and a grotesque monster was made show its face. Later, it settled into a tense and stressful psychological thriller, when a character's deteriorating mental health became more and more apparent.   

Halle Berry can really portray these women in harrowing situations very well, and the two child actors who play her sons also step up to an impressive level of acting performance. Director Alexandre Aja allowed the story to twist around itself, but never really revealed the real score in the end, which can be interesting, but also quite frustrating. Anyhow, the scene most viewers remember surely had more people looking away than those with a human victim. 6/10



Friday, September 20, 2024

Vivamax: Mini--Reviews of UHAW, PALUWAGAN, PILYA

September 20, 2023

UHAW

Director: Bobby Bonifacio, Jr. 

Writer: Bobby Bonifacio, Jr. 

Rejoice (Ataska) was a lounge singer in a bar, where she performed her original songs. She was married to tattoo artist Marcus (Itan Rosales), who owned the Gemini Link tattoo parlor. One day, after a steamy session of lovemaking, Marcus suddenly collapsed with a severe headache and fell into a coma. When Rejoice checked his mobile phone, she discovered that Marcus had another woman in his life -- Astrid (Angeli Khang).

Bonifacio was able to craft a serious, well-written Vivamax-style love story of devotion and sacrifice. The star of this feature is Ataska, not only in drama acting, as well as in singing, guitar, and songwriting. Her emotional songs gave the film its beating heart. Fans of Rosales need not worry that his Marcus being comatose practically the whole film. He still had a lot of action going on in flashback scenes.  Despite being top-billed in the poster, Khang generously lent her star power in a significant supporting role. 6/10


PALUWAGAN

Director: Roman Perez Jr. 

Writer: Ronald Perez Jr.

Marites (Shiena Yu) introduced a "paluwagan" system to the women of a remote mountain village. They all invest P20 a day for a week, and one brought home the pot of P1000 on Saturday. For a twist, the woman with P1000 could choose to buy the carnal services of the hunk Hector (Victor Relosa) for 2 nights and a day. This week, it was turn of Julia (Micaella Raz), who was unsatisfied by her husband Itong (Chad Solano).

The plot was quite complex for Vivamax standards, even needing a helicopter wreck in one scene. Director Perez and his DP Albert Banzon was able to bring out the lushness of the green mountain forest setting, with some impressive-looking overhead drone shots.  The atmospheric musical score by Dek Margaja for the sex scenes was very lush as well. On the debit side, the acting of the female ensemble was garish, and Relosa's wig was ugly. 5/10


PILYA

Director: Dustin Celestino

Head Writer: Maya Diaz

Writer: Steve Sanchez, Matt Teves

Lively Dahlia (Dyessa Garcia) and stuck-up Jules (Cess Garcia) were best of friends. When a liberated foreign student Nessa (Dani Yoshida) transferred to their class, she quickly became close with Dahlia, much to Jules's annoyance. Professor Mr. Lopez (Chester Grecia) was the object of schoolgirl fantasies. One day, when Nessa was asked by Mr. Lopez to stay behind to discuss her failing marks, a nasty rumor about them began to spread around the school. 

Cess Garcia did quite well in her recent films "Kapalit" and "Linya," and she does fairly well here as well, but as the mousy Jules, the make-up crew made her look plain and sullen. Chester Grecia gave his best to play a dignified English-speaking professor and somehow pulls it off. The story about how malicious rumors spread was a serious one, but unfortunately, Celestino had a quota of sex scenes to fulfill, and rushed the ending.  5/10


Thursday, September 19, 2024

Review of TRANSFORMERS ONE: Foundations of the Franchise

September 18, 2024



The planet of Cybertron used to be led by a magnanimous group of robots called the Primes. One day, they were all killed in a great war with invading aliens called the Quintessons, and an important item called the Matrix of Leadership had gone missing. Since then, it had been a well-loved leader named Sentinel Prime who led the city in the search for the missing Matrix, without which the city's essential energy supply Energon had been very scarce.  

There were bots who did not have a cog which could enable them to transform. They became mine slaves whose main duty was to mine Energon out.  One day, an adventurous miner bot named Orion Pax was able to arrange things so that he and his best friend D-16 would be able to join the big Iacon 500 race. He did this to prove to their city that miner bots like them were capable of so much more than expected, even if they cannot transform. 

The Transformers franchise began from mecha robot toys to an animated TV series and comic books in 1984, and an animated feature film in 1987 (this present one being only the second of such released in cinemas). It also had a live-action feature film series starting from "The Transformers" (2007), and seven more, the latest one being "The Rise of the Beasts" (2023). Admittedly, my knowledge of the Transformers were mainly from these live action films, not the cartoons.

This new animated feature by Paramount Animation and Hasbro Entertainment reintroduced us to the younger, more foolish versions of Optimus Prime and Megatron before they had their iconic names. We also meet future Autobots like Elita One and B-127 (a.k.a. Bumblebee), and Decepticons like Starscream and Shockwave. It told the story how their epic rivalry began, but I personally thought it was a bit simplistic (unless more details will be revealed later). 

The superstar voice talents made this a very entertaining watch -- Chris Hemsworth as Orion Pax, Scarlet Johannson as Elita One, Brian Tyree-Henry as D-16, Keegan-Michael Key as B-127, and Jon Hamm as Sentinel Prime. Laurence Fishburne lent his deep voice to the elder Prime Alpha Trion, who held the key to the real story.  The artwork and animation of those complex, frenetic race and fight scenes were sleek, fluid and thrilling. 8/10.