New 'Transformers' fails to energize the saga

With the "Transformers" franchise clearly at a crossroads, its latest protectors have turned to their deep bench of characters. But just adding more robots won't transform this tired series.

"Transformers: Rise of the Beasts" returns the franchise to its galaxy-wide self-importance after taking a nice detour with 2018's smaller "Bumblebee." There is a new cast of animal robots and a very evil enemy in the planet-eating Unicron, but they're not used right and the movie limps from fight to fight.

Directed by Steven Caple Jr., using a screenplay by Darnell Metayer, Erich Hoeber, Jon Hoeber and Josh Peters based on a story by Joby Harold, "Transformers: Rise of the Beasts" is a big swing that seems to portend a multi-film arc nestled in time after "Bumblebee" and before the first live-action "Transformers" movie.

The problem with "Transformers: Rise of the Beasts" is the same problem faced by all of the installments: Balancing the humanity with the metal. "Bumblebee" got the ratios right by bringing the machine down to size.

But a wide gulf between the humans and the giant space robots immediately appears in the new movie, with Optimus Prime being his classic, anal drill sergeant self - "If we are to die, then we will die as one," he'll intone. As the movie stutters on, the robots seem to soften only when the beasts show up for the last third - they mourn, get angry, feel protective, love even.

The filmmakers also have tried to bridge the divide with none other than Pete Davidson, who voices the juvenile robot Mirage, a wisecracking, fist-bumping silver Porsche 911 with a less rigid way of expression: "Don't mess with my boy!" and "Prime, you got to learn how to relax, my man."

The special effects are astounding but sometimes...

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