‘War Machine’ succeeds where ‘Transformers’ fails, by making the giant robot feel real


Netflix’s “War Machine” has just moved onto the platform in the final flex of spaceships from aliens versus humans. This time, however, there’s only one enemy to deal with – but of Cybertron, this killing machine is wreaking bloody havoc on Alan Ritchson’s 81 (he’s only known by this call sign in the film) and his team of Army Rangers in training!

The narrative setup is simple: There is one last mission for a group of recruits to complete before they become Rangers. However, they must complete this task without the use of any real weapons, and after being dumped in the middle of nowhere. It’s convenient for the purposes of the plot, but bad timing for them as a menacing ship from outer space lands in the same area. At first the recruits wonder if this is all part of the big test, but when the machine starts slaughtering them, the sole survivors realize something else is going on.

The military against a vehicle from another planet… It sure sounds a lot like “Transformers” moviesnow doesn’t it? Absolutely, and it’s no surprise that “War Machine” has drawn many comparisons to Michael Bay’s film adaptations of the popular Hasbro IP. Still — and brace yourself for the first red-hot movie of 2026 — “War Machine” does everything better.

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three military men argued in an office

(Image credit: Netflix)

Let’s be real here for a second: nobody cares about the human characters in “Transformers” (and given all the crap Shia LaBeouf has gotten himself into since leaving the series, probably even less now). Transformers shines when it focuses on the war between the Autobots and Decepticons, while the Earthling stuff feels like a side quest to get more XP to level up. Consequently, this translates to the wooden and cake characters that make up the human element of the films.

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