Michael Bay, the director of five “Transformers” movies and numerous ads for Victoria’s Secret, would like you to know that he’s also a very creative person. The filmmaker, who can frame the shit out of both American flags and explosions and sometimes both at the same time, isn’t just a guy who knows where to put the camera, but he conjures imaginary realms and worlds. Well, at least according to himself, as the director explains why Marvel and DC Films are something he wouldn’t be down with doing.
“I wouldn’t want to, it’s not my thing, it’s just not my gig,” Bay told press this summer on the set of “Transformers: The Last Knight” (via Collider). “I don’t ever wanna take someone like a third of something or second of something. I gotta do my own thing, ’cause the most fun is when a real director creates the world. You know, you talk to Ridley Scott, one our favorite things to do is to create the world. Steven Spielberg, create the world. That is what it’s about.”
Okay, it’s a fair point — Bay probably doesn’t want to step into a cinematic universe where many of the creative choices have already been predetermined. But let’s not pretend “Transfomers” is breaking the boundaries of imaginary. Those movies are basically our world, just with robots running wild all over them, and Bay choreographing one big action sequence after another. There’s no reason why he couldn’t take a standlone-ish DC Film, for example, and still direct it in his distinctly Bayhem-ian manner. And frankly, perhaps that would be kinda cool, and a nice change of pace, because we’ve seen what he can do with Autobots and Decepticons seventeen different ways.
Thoughts? Would you want Bay in the Marvel Cinematic Universe? Let us know below.
Which fool asked this of Bay? Only the most rabid Bay fan would think he’s a good match for those IPs. Hell, many of us who are Transformers fans were rightfully dreading his take on the property and have written off that side of the IP. I doubt very much that Marvel or DC will run out of quality candidates to helm their movies to the point where they’d bring aboard the likes of a Michael Bay or Brett Ratner. (Wellll… I guess we’ll see how things go with the DC movies…)