tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5314474708646498103.post67505272393392791..comments2022-12-30T04:51:03.116-07:00Comments on Andrew Bud Adams: Teenage Mutant Ninja TurtlesUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5314474708646498103.post-86784249474096042642014-03-30T09:55:13.028-06:002014-03-30T09:55:13.028-06:00Thanks for the feedback! I guess I didn't trea...Thanks for the feedback! I guess I didn't treat the Bay/Transformers concerns as seriously as I should have, probably owing to my inexperience with that franchise (any version of it, in fact, because I didn't play with those toys as a kid). I did see all those films once, but I'd forgotten if they were "sexxed up, overly violent, and crass" (although, now that you mention it, I do remember a lot of masturbation jokes). My impression was that they are most commonly derided for putting more emphasis on action than story, which, in all honesty, is not something I expect kids to worry about as much. I assumed that it's the older generation struggling with the Transformations movies, not the younger. But I agree that we, as parents, ought to be concerned if those other, less appropriate elements come creeping in.<br /><br />So I see your concerns, and while there may not much separating Transformers from Turtles, I still think there's room to hope that the latter won't repeat all the same mistakes as the former. For example, unless I'm wrong, all of the human characters in Transformers had to be made up, allowing more "creative freedom" (perversion?) through a romantic subplot, etc. I don't think that's a likely in the Turtles film, where the main cast consists of characters we already know. I could definitely be wrong, though!Andrew Bud Adamshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12150287331130816055noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5314474708646498103.post-64462423619476375722014-03-29T11:23:53.421-06:002014-03-29T11:23:53.421-06:00So here's the concern: the Transformers reboot...So here's the concern: the Transformers reboot did exactly the thing you implicitly express concern about regarding the TMNT movie. The valid question here is, "what will my kids think about this iteration?" It's not about paying homage to OUR childhoods, but giving a new generation the kind of imaginative, immersive experience we remember. But Bay's Transformers failed at that. It's so sexxed up, overly violent, and crass it can't possibly appeal to children in the way the cartoons or movies appealed to us. All the "cheesy, crazy, not-to-be-taken-too-seriously stuff" is largely gone from these modern adaptations, leaving us instead with shallow, feckless experiences that are all-to-soon forgotten and replaced by the new, memorable series that we, as adults, largely have yet to embrace. Will we see our kids, in 20-25 years, lamenting how some hack director has ruined their childhood with a live-action adaptation of Phineas and Ferb? One wonders...<br /><br />Thus, your impression is not wrong on it's merits. It's the suppositions on which it rests that leave room--gapping chasms, in fact--for the tripe that may be the new TMNT movie. Will it do for the current generation what the previous adaptations have done for us? Based on recent experience with Bay and Fox, my money is on not. Joel Schumacher and his nipple-laden dynamic duo are more memorable, ironically so, than Bay's Autobots and Decepticons. I want my kids to love these things, in their own way, like I did. I just don't see that happening with this team.<br /><br />But it would similarly be folly of me to suggest that I won't see it. It's TMNT, man! I have to see it. It is, as you say, inevitable.Riskhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17653838571793437813noreply@blogger.com