Posted on 06/29/2007 4:35:39 PM PDT by SandRat
WASHINGTON, June 29, 2007 Under the cover of darkness in the nations capital last night, servicemembers from all branches deployed into theater -- the movie theater. About 600 military personnel and family members attended a sneak preview of Transformers, the summer science fiction action-adventure film set for national release July 3.
Audience members cheered as virtuous Autobot transformers fought in concert with their U.S. military allies against the depraved Decepticons, while the clash between good and evil played out in stunning images and bone-rattling sound.
That was without a doubt the best movie I have ever seen, Army Staff Sgt. Mario Youngblood, dressed in his combat uniform, said as he emerged wide-eyed from the theater. The soldier, who grew up watching the early animated version, said the film did justice to the Generation 1 Transformers of his youth.
Transformers features servicemembers from various branches fighting side-by-side in the thick of the action, depicting joint military operations.
Obviously, the military has never fought giant robots, and hopefully we never will. But the way this film is structured, if we ever had to do it, this is probably how we would do it, said Army Lt. Col Paul Sinor, a public affairs officer with that services Office of the Chief of Public Affairs.
During one battle scene, members of a joint special operations force are attacked by a Decepticon in the desert of a Middle Eastern country. Using a common cellular phone, the Army commander on the ground dials the Pentagon and tosses the phone to his Air Force combat controller, who directs an Airborne Warning and Control System aircraft to their position. Operators on the AWACS then call in AC-130 Spectres and A-10 Thunderbolt II aircraft for air support.
Go, Air Force! an audience member yelled when an AC-130 began firing on enemies with its side-mounted artillery guns. Yeah, Navy! belts out a sailor upon seeing a team of destroyers cutting across the shining sea.
This battle scene illustrates netcentric warfare, the modern military strategy aimed at connecting command centers to airborne control systems to warfighters around the globe.
Liaison officers like Sinor worked with director Michael Bay to ensure the U.S. militarys portrayal -- its core values in addition to its tactics, dialogue and uniforms -- looks and feels authentic. As a testament to the militarys fondness for technical titles, servicemembers refer to the transformer robots as Non-Biological Extraterrestrials, or NBEs.
Try to keep up with the acronyms, one of the films characters says during an intelligence briefing.
The resolute secretary of defense, played by Jon Voight, gives a nonverbal plug during the film to America Supports You, a Defense Department program that connects military members to a civilian support network. The lapel of the Defense Secretarys suit jacket is affixed with a pin bearing the ASY logo.
(Bay) did the Hollywood part of the film, we did the military part, and it was a very cohesive, very easy way of doing things, said Sinor, who has worked with Bay previously on films that include The Rock and Armageddon.
Defense Department officials allowed Paramount Pictures to film at Air Force bases in New Mexico and California, and to rent military equipment such as the CV-22 Osprey and F-22 Raptor, which made their big-screen debuts in Transformers. F-22s run about $25,000 per hour, according to the rental scale established by the department.
You cant go to Tanks R Us and rent a tank or a destroyer, Sinor said. If you need that in the movie, you have to come to the military.
The film promoters, who last night treated guests to free popcorn and soda, stood outside the theater doors after the film, asking for audience members reactions in an exit poll fashion. The feedback was overwhelmingly positive, and one servicemember remarked about the Hollywoods portrayal of the military, This is the first time they got it right.
The special effects are definitely going to draw the younger crowd, and then theyll be able to see just how the Air Force operates, said Air Force Chief Master Sgt. Mike Gasparetto after the film.
Gasparetto, a career field manager for Air Force Recruiting Service, said moviegoers will get a chance to see some of his services more exciting missions.
I think it will be a great branding tool for the Air Force, to let the folks know that the Air Force does more than just move people around in aircraft, he said. Hundreds of airmen appear in the film as extras, and nearly a dozen others have speaking roles.
The military cooperating with the entertainment industry puts a more personal side on what the military does, he said. Were not just about protecting the nation, although that is our primary job. This film shows that we have a human side to us while we are there to protect and help wherever needed.
kickass!
Everyone I know with a Y chromosome, ages 6 to 86, can’t wait to see this movie. The special effects in the previews are spectacular.
Megatron Bump!
Sounds like a great movie. A real surprise from Hollywood, to actually portray us (and the Transformers, can’t forget them) as the “good” versus the “evil.” Years ago, my then-10 year old nephew stayed with me for several weeks. He was a big Transformers fan and we watched the cartoons together. I still remember one of the Transformers saying about a beautiful setting: “That is very pleasing to my optical sensors.” LOL!
Starscream BUMP! Although a coward, he was more advanced technologically & strategically than Megatron.
SWEET!....
Where’s the Army in all this?
Or did AF/Navy get the goods and leave Army/Marines with more poop-sticks?
Don’t know
Ok, well... I’m holding you accountable if I dont see GroundPounders and Treads!
;)
Loafing around the company dayroom reading PS Magazine, in line at the chow hall, or out cleaning latrines, if I remember my dad's outfit correctly.
B-Chan
Former MM3, USS ENTERPRISE, CVN-65
(Army Brat)
Not at my pay-grade.
Sure, at your paygrade. If you are above mine, I’ll claim it’s boss’s fault.
If you are below mine... “Damn Private!”
I’m Retired from the Army so they don’t want to hear from an old Trooper.
My brother JUST called me and asked if my sons (13 & 9) were available next Friday...he needs an excuse to go see this movie, and my kids get the benefit! I didn’t even know it existed until about 30 minutes ago! Too funny...
OK, that's probably the most bizarre factoid of the day. Why is a 250 million dollar aircraft with a relatively small number in service for rent to filmmakers at all?
(Unless the F-22 is really a 30 million dollar aircraft and the rest of the money is being diverted to black projects, as I've suspected for a while...)
Can you say “SKUNK-Works?”
Hey, at least they weren’t living La Vida Aqua!
Go out on a cruise for 6 months, watch a few jets take off, count the dolphins, and wait for the next mail chopper to fly in your playboys! (and that’s the hardcore Navy) The rest of them just sit in the bay, waiting for Army guys from po-dunk bases like Fort Story to come by for some medical attention or good food.
The Air Force and Army sent up some liaison officers from San Antonio. They briefly explained that everything on the base was open to the use of filmmakers. The low level stuff was free and things like tanks and jets were available on cost basis. Their only real concern was that nothing in the project would be used to disparage the military.
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