worthitorwoke.com
Another Transformers Movie? Michael Bay’s Returns
Here we go again. Paramount Pictures has announced that Michael Bay, the maestro of explosions and chaotic editing, is returning to direct a new live-action Transformers movie—his first since 2017’s Transformers: The Last Knight. The news, which broke on June 27, 2025, has been met with a mix of nostalgia and exhaustion from fans and critics alike. While Bay’s bombastic style defined the franchise’s early box office dominance, the prospect of yet another entry in this overstretched series feels less like a revival and more like a tired encore for a band that should’ve left the stage years ago.
Let’s be clear: this isn’t entirely about Bay. The man’s films are what they are—visual spectacles that prioritize pyrotechnics over plot, coherence, or character depth (13 Hours notwithstanding). His five Transformers movies, starting with 2007’s original, raked in a staggering $4.3 billion globally, with Dark of the Moon (2011) alone crossing the $1.1 billion mark. But even those dizzying numbers couldn’t mask the diminishing returns. By The Last Knight, the franchise hit a low with $605 million and a critical drubbing that made even diehard fans wince. Bay’s return, reportedly spearheaded by his own pitch to Paramount last year, feels less like a triumphant comeback and more like a desperate grab for relevance in a franchise that’s been running on fumes.
The Transformers series—now seven live-action films deep, plus the recent animated Transformers One—has long overstayed its welcome. The first film was a novel spectacle, introducing Optimus Prime and the Autobots to a new generation with CGI that, at the time, felt revolutionary. The sequels, though? A blur of incomprehensible action, cringe-inducing humor, and plots so thin they’d make discount paper towels jealous. The 2018 Bay-produced spinoff Bumblebee was a brief bright spot, scaling back the chaos for a more grounded, character-driven story. But let’s not kid ourselves—Bumblebee was merely okay, a low bar that somehow became the franchise’s peak. Since then, Rise of the Beasts (2023) tried to blend Bumblebee’s heart with Bay’s excess and still only mustered $441.7 million, a far cry from the billion-dollar glory days.
Scene from 2018’s Bumblebee
So why are we here again? Paramount’s under pressure to keep the Transformers IP alive, with a 2029 deadline to retain the franchise rights. Bay’s return seems like a calculated move to recapture the box office magic of the early 2010s, but it’s hard to shake the feeling that this is a solution in search of a problem. The studio’s also juggling other projects, including a Transformers/G.I. Joe crossover and a live-action film from Transformers One director Josh Cooley. That’s potentially five new Transformers-related projects in development, which sounds less like a creative renaissance and more like a studio throwing everything at the wall to see what sticks.
Fans on X aren’t exactly buzzing with excitement either. Some have called out Bay’s track record of “cringe humor” and “weak stories,” while others lament the choice of writer Jordan VanDina, whose resume hasn’t inspired confidence. The sentiment is clear: the Transformers franchise, once a cultural juggernaut, feels like a relic of a bygone era, clinging to relevance in a cinematic landscape that’s moved on.
plot? character development? no. just autobots yelling in 4K
— Debayo (@debayo_xx) June 27, 2025
Michael Bay is the worst director in Hollywood.
— TheTyrannicalTweetr….. (@dubdc40) June 27, 2025
At Worth It or Woke?, we’re all about asking whether something delivers value or just panders to tired trends. Another Transformers movie, especially under Bay’s explosion-heavy helm, leans hard into the latter. The franchise peaked with Bumblebee’s modest charm, and even that wasn’t enough to justify more sequels. With eight films already in the can, do we really need more robots smashing each other amidst incomprehensible CGI chaos? It’s not about Bay’s sometimes lack of thoughtfulness as a director—though his style often feels like a sledgehammer to the senses—it’s about a franchise that’s been milked dry. Let’s call it what it is: a cash grab, not a creative necessity.
Verdict: Not Worth It. The Transformers saga needs a permanent recharge, not another trip to the salvage yard. Save your Dramamine for something fresh.
Sources: IMDb, The Express Tribune, ComicBookMovie.comThe post Another Transformers Movie? Michael Bay’s Returns first appeared on Worth it or Woke.