
变形金刚1读后感该怎么写啊~~~跪求~~
神经
看变形金刚的英文观后感(70个词左右)急!!!!
Transformer is a good movie for both children and adults.It tells us the righteous will definitely beat the evil. Also, it's important to get together and help each other when we face challenges and dangers.High technology is widely used in this movie and this makes it so interesting and exciting. I like the movie very much.
变形金刚4的英语观后感,50词以上
《变形金刚4》:一首钢铁诗歌#变形金刚4:绝迹重生#其实是一首钢铁诗歌,人类自取灭亡的偏执愚昧与机器拯救地球的热情坚持一样疯狂,浩瀚银河的伟大包容与钢铁烈焰的激烈碰撞,形成变形金刚独有的温情。
时而空濛时而雄壮的音乐让影片充满律动,也让台词在彷如诗歌吟咏与激情呐喊中,绝迹重生,并寻找到人类情感的共鸣。
如果说#变形金刚4:绝迹重生# 改造更新正反派角色形象是对细节的加强,那么把镜头从城市拉进河谷森林,则是借由空间的放大增加气势的恢弘。
而麻将、鸟笼、石狮、牌坊、自行车、汉字等等中国元素的展现,代表影片对中国观众及巨大市场的迎合,在漂移金属披风的映衬下,中国文化随电影工业走向世界。
《变形金刚4:绝迹重生》除了人类班底更新,钢铁机器兵团也有力量补充,由威震天改造升级的惊破天,赏金猎人禁闭以及人类仿照大黄蜂自行制造的毒刺让狂派实力大增,而探长、十字线、漂移以及恐龙军团,更是让博派有了激荡人心的战斗力。
尤其新变形金刚的杀招,脸炮、折叠镰刀、风火轮……充满震撼效果《变形金刚》首部让人惊喜,青年汽车梦与保卫地球的强大反差保持了故事惊喜的持续,续集系列第2、第3两部则太过差强人意,深感故事力不从心。
《变形金刚4:绝迹重生》则让迈克尔•贝扳回一城,以中年人反击落魄生活的勇气与父女之情的温情,给暴烈的钢铁之战注入一丝成年人的悲怆与担此重任的坚毅。
《变形金刚4:绝迹重生》堪称电影高度工业化的巅峰代表作品,借由数字化的先进,可以完全无视空间束缚,将钢铁机器的破坏力发挥到极致,数字技术上的成功,则更注重制造和提升视听效果,让观影的愉悦感体现到最大。
在香港的一场“华丽”搏杀中,国产灾难片与之相比,显现犹如手工业者般的拙朴。
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看变形金刚的英文观后感(70个词左右)急!!!!
1Two things that should not be placed in close proximity of each other: Michael Bay and camera. It is almost unthinkable that anyone could make a boring movie of Transformers. But that’s just what Bay has done.Transformers is mind-numbingly boring, consisting largely of many, many minutes of annoying humans talking and talking and talking and … yes, you wish the Autobots would just break their self-imposed rule of not killing humans and just pulverize these puny beings on screen.It’s a big mistake to make the humans the main characters of the story. We all know how Bay is with characters – caricatures at best, racial stereotypes at worst. And that’s what we get here. Quite a few racial stereotypes and a bunch of bad actors hamming it up for no good reason, while Bay tries to inject extremely lame comedy into the scenes which are supposed to “establish” the characters.We came to see the robots, Michael Bay, so give us the fucking robots!But no, he teases us with a few transformations, glimpses here and there. And when the big moment finally comes – the arrival of the Autobots – we get … more talking with the puny humans!But later, we come to understand why this is so. It’s a story that gives humanity too much credit, that despite our tendencies for great destruction, we’re also very capable of great heroism. Right. And in the absolute worst moments of the film, it takes shots at the Iranians, the Chinese and the Russians, and goes for Bush-friendly lines like “Freedom is the right of every sentient being” or something to that effect. Not surprising, since this is the guy who made the awful Bad Boys II, which has its ending in, of all places, Guantanamo.And the action? I’m tempted to say “What action?” Nothing really happens until the last moments of the film, and the action is the usual disappointing bunch of blurry, shaky nonsense done further damage by choppy, steroid-enhanced editing. We came to see robots fight, but Bay gives us an absolute auto-wreck in which it’s hard to distinguish just who’s fighting who, or even what’s exactly happening on screen. But by the last half hour, my brain had gone into auto-pilot and my eyes had given up trying to follow the messy action. You can also fault that on the over-designed robots.At this point I must quote John Boorman, who coined the term “new brutalism” to contrast the new kind of action sequences that we now see much too often, consisting of fast cuts and action going out of frame, with the more classical style of action. In fact, I think if you were to time the action sequences in Transformers, each cut probably doesn’t last more than 1.5 seconds.It was Boorman who said the new brutalism “is a form of naivete, because it’s made by people who I think don’t really have a grasp of cinema’s history. It’s the MTV kind of editing, where the main idea is that the more disorienting it is, the more exciting. And you see it creeping into mainstream cinema more and more. You look at something like Armageddon and you see all the things that would have been forbidden in classical cinema, like crossing the line, camera jumping from side to side. It is a way to artificially generate excitement but it doesn’t really have any basis to it. And I find it kind of sad, because it’s like an old man trying to dress like a teenager.”I couldn’t agree more.This is a case of the trailer being much better than the film, and promising much more than what is delivered by the actual film. Bay should have learned something from the original cartoon series or even the animated film, at least in regard to what should be the focus of the story. Instead, he’s much too busy orchestrating military action and trying to make Jon Voight be in his most official and most Rumsfeld, while completely wasting a great talent like John Turturro. But then again, Bay has never been good with characterization and actors anyway.Maybe Bay should just stick to making military recruitment videos, since he’s so adept at magic-hour shots of military aircraft and personnel, moving in slow-motion or otherwise, making it all look so cool and stylish. There are so many of these shots in the movie that you might just begin to wonder if some of them are stock footage or scenes cut out from his other films that are recycled here. Even when it’s totally unnecessary, he slips some in with pulsing, official-sounding music.Let’s face it, Michael Bay is cliché, and cliché is Michael Bay. And what we have here is a cliché-ridden adaptation of one of the most beloved cartoon series that misplaces its concerns and completely squanders what could have been a timely live-action revival for Optimus Prime and gang. Instead, we get a yawn-inducing and overlong meditation on how great humanity is, so much so that powerful alien robots think we’re so worth saving that they’re ready to put their lives on the line for us.2There are two ways to review this movie. The right way is to look at it objectively, examining how the film is put together and picking apart the script by pointing out the gaping logical gaps present in it. I’ll be reviewing the film the wrong way, as a man who was once a little boy crying because Optimus Prime was dead. Now whatever is left of that kid inside me has had a wakeup call. The movie he’s been waiting twenty years to see is finally here; Optimus Prime is back from the grave and he needs my help.Transformers director Michael Bay has done the impossible. He’s created a wholly modern, action extravaganza while staying completely true to all the things that have ever been good about the Transformers. Alright maybe Optimus Prime didn’t need to have flames painted on him, but that’s such a minor detail in a movie with characters that are quite literally so big. Otherwise, Transformers is so much like the 80s cartoon many of us loved that it nearly forgets to be cinematic and becomes almost silly. Transformers is astoundingly goofy, but it knows it’s goofy and simply doesn’t care, which is why Bay’s film is so much giant freakin robot There’s no attempt to be serious. That’s not to say the movie doesn’t try to be as real as it can be, after all the goal here is to take giant transforming robots and put them believably in our world. It attempts to seem real, but never at the expense of the essence of what the Transformers have always been. Because of that, Transformers isn’t just dorky, it’s gloriously dorky. The film absolutely revels in how completely looney this premise is, and is all the better for it.Transformers wastes no time getting right to the incredible robot action we’re all hungering for, and rushes directly from the credits to eye-popping, rampant robot destruction. What really holds the film together though is that even when it’s knee deep in save the world, all out, brawling in the streets, giant freakin robot war, at the core of everything is the simple story of a boy and his first car. For a man, there are few things more powerful than the relationship he has with his first automobile, and it’s no different for Sam Witwicky (Shia LaBeouf).Once Bay wisely satiates our lust for effects sequences, he gets right to the heart of his story by taking us along with Sam and his dad as they go car shopping. Sam has worked and saved to afford a car, and is disappointed to discover that he can’t afford any better than a clunker. However, his clunker is no ordinary POS, it’s more than meets the eye. Sam’s relationship with his car, the Autobot Bumblebee is what connects this movie to the audience. The film takes the same formula that has worked so well in other car movies, and applies it to Sam and Bumbelee. In many ways, Bumblebee ends up being a lot like Herbie the Love Bug crossed with shades of Steven Spielberg’s . Sam develops a strong attachment to his beat up little Camaro, long before he discovers it’s more than four tires and a radio. When he does, because of an old war injury Bumblebee can only speak using beeps and by changing radio stations. That too works wonderfully, only deepening their relationship as Bumblebee stands up to protect Sam and the two struggle to communicate with one another. Sam’s relationship with his car is brilliantly written, even better directed, and it’s the super glue that holds this gigantic summer blockbuster tightly together when things go mad in a flurry of one-liners and special effects.Because this is a Michael Bay film, Transformers mixes in the parallel storylines of other characters embroiled in Earth’s sudden alien robot problem. The film cuts between stories, one minute we’re following Sam as his car gets him caught up in a battle that’s way over his head, the next it’s a group of government geeks trying to decode a strange alien signal, the next a group of soldiers under attack from an unknown and evil, alien force of mechanical beings with the ability to disguise themselves as everyday items. Eventually everything collides together and the film’s three separate factions join up with the Autobots, an alien robot force for good, to kick some Decepticon butt. Still, the film is smart enough to ensure thatl Sam’s story remains at the center and heart of the film no matter how big it gets.Just because this is a movie about a boy and his car doesn’t mean it skimps on robot action. In that way, the film plays out almost exactly like the old cartoon series. Sam, for all intents and purposes is just like the humans in the cartoon, a guy who befriends a group of alien beings known as Autobots and helps them fight the good fight against their enemies the Decepticons. One the film gets going there’s barely a frame that doesn’t have some sort of Transformer in it. That might seem like a given, but so many movies of this ilk end up going cheap on the big effects pieces, either to save on budget or in some misguided attempt to heighten the reality of what’s happening. Transformers says screw that and gives you Optimus Prime and his friends hanging out, talking, and fighting the good fight to defend mankind. Occasionally fight sequences suffer but Transformers knows you’re here to see robots thrash the hell out of each other and never shies away from laying that on thick. Bay shows his robots in perfect hero poses with blinding sunlight streaming over their shoulders and Optimus talks about loyalty, duty, and freedom like he’s just stepped off an Autobot recruiting poster. In another movie it would be ridiculous, in Transformers it’s the sort of thing you’ll feel welling up in the pit of your stomach.If there’s any problem with the film, it’s that at 140 minutes it runs slightly long. I’m not proposing that they should have cut back on robots, but some of the movie’s more irrelevant moments involving characters other than Sam could have been truncated without much negative impact. That’s not to say they aren’t entertaining, when the movie’s not wowing you with spectacle it’s pretty good at being flat out funny. At 140 minutes though, Bay could have dropped a few things. Jon Voight has far too many lines, Anthony Anderson seems to serve no real purpose, and though John Turturro is hilarious as the head of a secret government organization, it wouldn’t have hurt the film to have less of him.Minor length issues aside, Transformers is a truly great summer blockbuster. As an action movie it’s a huge success; with awe-inspiring effects, tremendous set pieces, a sexy style, and jaw-dropping things which you have absolutely never seen before in any other movie. As a nostalgia trip for the kids who were sitting next to me in 1986 the last time these characters were in theaters, it’s an even bigger hit. Like many old school Transformers fans I was incredibly skeptical about what Bay was doing. Much of the early information leaked out about the film just didn’t seem right. We were wrong to doubt. For you adults and the kid inside who was there back in the 80s cheering Prime on, this movie is like a rallying cry to your inner child. You’ll want to leap through the screen to stand at Optimus Prime’s side to fight the good fight against Megatron. For your kids, to whom the Transformers are now entirely new, this will be without a doubt the greatest movie they have ever seen. Don’t let them miss it.There are two ways to review this movie. The right way is to look at it objectively, examining how the film is put together and picking apart the script by pointing out the gaping logical gaps present in it. I’ll be reviewing the film the wrong way, as a man who was once a little boy crying because Optimus Prime was dead. Now whatever is left of that kid inside me has had a wakeup call. The movie he’s been waiting twenty years to see is finally here; Optimus Prime is back from the grave and he needs my help.Transformers director Michael Bay has done the impossible. He’s created a wholly modern, action extravaganza while staying completely true to all the things that have ever been good about the Transformers. Alright maybe Optimus Prime didn’t need to have flames painted on him, but that’s such a minor detail in a movie with characters that are quite literally so big. Otherwise, Transformers is so much like the 80s cartoon many of us loved that it nearly forgets to be cinematic and becomes almost silly. Transformers is astoundingly goofy, but it knows it’s goofy and simply doesn’t care, which is why Bay’s film is so much giant freakin robot There’s no attempt to be serious. That’s not to say the movie doesn’t try to be as real as it can be, after all the goal here is to take giant transforming robots and put them believably in our world. It attempts to seem real, but never at the expense of the essence of what the Transformers have always been. Because of that, Transformers isn’t just dorky, it’s gloriously dorky. The film absolutely revels in how completely looney this premise is, and is all the better for it.Transformers wastes no time getting right to the incredible robot action we’re all hungering for, and rushes directly from the credits to eye-popping, rampant robot destruction. What really holds the film together though is that even when it’s knee deep in save the world, all out, brawling in the streets, giant freakin robot war, at the core of everything is the simple story of a boy and his first car. For a man, there are few things more powerful than the relationship he has with his first automobile, and it’s no different for Sam Witwicky (Shia LaBeouf).Once Bay wisely satiates our lust for effects sequences, he gets right to the heart of his story by taking us along with Sam and his dad as they go car shopping. Sam has worked and saved to afford a car, and is disappointed to discover that he can’t afford any better than a clunker. However, his clunker is no ordinary POS, it’s more than meets the eye. Sam’s relationship with his car, the Autobot Bumblebee is what connects this movie to the audience. The film takes the same formula that has worked so well in other car movies, and applies it to Sam and Bumbelee. In many ways, Bumblebee ends up being a lot like Herbie the Love Bug crossed with shades of Steven Spielberg’s . Sam develops a strong attachment to his beat up little Camaro, long before he discovers it’s more than four tires and a radio. When he does, because of an old war injury Bumblebee can only speak using beeps and by changing radio stations. That too works wonderfully, only deepening their relationship as Bumblebee stands up to protect Sam and the two struggle to communicate with one another. Sam’s relationship with his car is brilliantly written, even better directed, and it’s the super glue that holds this gigantic summer blockbuster tightly together when things go mad in a flurry of one-liners and special effects.Because this is a Michael Bay film, Transformers mixes in the parallel storylines of other characters embroiled in Earth’s sudden alien robot problem. The film cuts between stories, one minute we’re following Sam as his car gets him caught up in a battle that’s way over his head, the next it’s a group of government geeks trying to decode a strange alien signal, the next a group of soldiers under attack from an unknown and evil, alien force of mechanical beings with the ability to disguise themselves as everyday items. Eventually everything collides together and the film’s three separate factions join up with the Autobots, an alien robot force for good, to kick some Decepticon butt. Still, the film is smart enough to ensure thatl Sam’s story remains at the center and heart of the film no matter how big it gets.Just because this is a movie about a boy and his car doesn’t mean it skimps on robot action. In that way, the film plays out almost exactly like the old cartoon series. Sam, for all intents and purposes is just like the humans in the cartoon, a guy who befriends a group of alien beings known as Autobots and helps them fight the good fight against their enemies the Decepticons. One the film gets going there’s barely a frame that doesn’t have some sort of Transformer in it. That might seem like a given, but so many movies of this ilk end up going cheap on the big effects pieces, either to save on budget or in some misguided attempt to heighten the reality of what’s happening. Transformers says screw that and gives you Optimus Prime and his friends hanging out, talking, and fighting the good fight to defend mankind. Occasionally fight sequences suffer but Transformers knows you’re here to see robots thrash the hell out of each other and never shies away from laying that on thick. Bay shows his robots in perfect hero poses with blinding sunlight streaming over their shoulders and Optimus talks about loyalty, duty, and freedom like he’s just stepped off an Autobot recruiting poster. In another movie it would be ridiculous, in Transformers it’s the sort of thing you’ll feel welling up in the pit of your stomach.If there’s any problem with the film, it’s that at 140 minutes it runs slightly long. I’m not proposing that they should have cut back on robots, but some of the movie’s more irrelevant moments involving characters other than Sam could have been truncated without much negative impact. That’s not to say they aren’t entertaining, when the movie’s not wowing you with spectacle it’s pretty good at being flat out funny. At 140 minutes though, Bay could have dropped a few things. Jon Voight has far too many lines, Anthony Anderson seems to serve no real purpose, and though John Turturro is hilarious as the head of a secret government organization, it wouldn’t have hurt the film to have less of him.Minor length issues aside, Transformers is a truly great summer blockbuster. As an action movie it’s a huge success; with awe-inspiring effects, tremendous set pieces, a sexy style, and jaw-dropping things which you have absolutely never seen before in any other movie. As a nostalgia trip for the kids who were sitting next to me in 1986 the last time these characters were in theaters, it’s an even bigger hit. Like many old school Transformers fans I was incredibly skeptical about what Bay was doing. Much of the early information leaked out about the film just didn’t seem right. We were wrong to doubt. For you adults and the kid inside who was there back in the 80s cheering Prime on, this movie is like a rallying cry to your inner child. You’ll want to leap through the screen to stand at Optimus Prime’s side to fight the good fight against Megatron. For your kids, to whom the Transformers are now entirely new, this will be without a doubt the greatest movie they have ever seen. Don’t let them miss it.
变形金刚3观后感300字左右
今天,我到影院看完了长达155分钟的3D大片。
影片中令人炫目的“变”深深地震撼了我。
霸天虎军团的变形能力强,他们能发射一种红光,红光照射到任何一种物体上(人除外)都会变成那种物体的样子,霸天虎军团就是靠这种能力来监视汽车人与人类的。
汽车人不发射红光,但在必要时,他们就能变成一辆汽车。
汽车人轻轻地跳一下,快速的变成一辆汽车。
在汽车状态撤离的时候,车盖里就会伸出来几杆枪,来狙击敌人。
擎天柱变成的厢式车、大黄蜂变成的、恐龙变成的、变成的救援消防车……带我走进了变化多端的世界。
假如现实生活中也有这种机器人,只要飞机一有故障,他们就可以飞上去,将飞机拖住,不让飞机坠毁,保护乘客的安全,减少不必要的伤亡;只要一发生堵车,他们就可以在空中指挥快速疏通道路…… 影片带给我惊险、刺激和震撼,我非常喜欢这样的特级影片。
“变形金刚5”的英文怎么说
“变形金刚5”Transformers 5
求作文 观变形金刚3有感 800字 急急急急急急急急急
观有感一群汽车人帮助着地球人赶走了敌人,一群汽车人为了地球人奉不顾身……的诞生留给了人们很多的眷恋
瞧,擎天柱正在与进行生死对决;看,正保护着Sam不被霸天虎伤害。
勇敢、正义和敢于同命运抗争的Sam和汽车人们踏上了驱逐霸天虎的旅程
这个电影以阿波罗号登月为题,讲述了一个不为人知的秘密:那次登月实际是汽车人‘方舟’号飞船撞击月球表面,让宇航员探索月球‘方舟’号飞船,这鲜为人知的秘密只有5个人知道,Sam就是其中的一个。
而霸天虎将把这五个人全消灭了。
幸存者只有2个,Sam就是一个。
擎天柱带走了御天敌却遭到了的叛变,无知的人类以为把汽车人送走便可以救助地球,谁知竟然和联手想把所有的地球人变成奴隶。
Sam和汽车人心存勇敢的打击了霸天虎的嚣张气焰。
但御天敌的背叛是不可饶恕的,最后,擎天柱舍出一只手臂杀了和御天敌,获得了完美的胜利。
影响最深的那一段,是在大楼上人类举着火箭炮追击能量柱的一段,Sam与卡莉和大伙儿分开,却惨遭霸天虎的袭击,最后Sam把霸天虎的眼睛射瞎了。
多么勇敢、多么正义的Sam啊



