Transformers One review: "A cut above most of its predecessors"

Optimus Prime in Transformers One
(Image: © Paramount Pictures)

12DOVE Verdict

A visually striking and inventive overhaul of well-oiled IP that suggests animation was the right path all along. Autobots, roll out!

Why you can trust 12DOVE Our experts review games, movies and tech over countless hours, so you can choose the best for you. Find out more about our reviews policy.

The last time an all-animated Transformers opus was in theaters - 1986’s The Transformers: The Movie - it gave us kids’ TV cartoonery, a power-rock soundtrack and Orson Welles voicing the world-eating Unicron. Four decades on, Hasbro’s robo-chameleons get a shiny new upgrade in Transformers One, a CG-animated prequel set on their home planet Cybertron that reignites the spark that’s so often been conspicuously absent from the franchise’s live-action entries. 

Doing away with humans helps, instead Josh Cooley’s (Toy Story 4) film concentrates on the hitherto untold origin stories of the heroic Optimus Prime and his evil nemesis Megatron. Introduced to us initially as mining bots Orion Pax (Chris Hemsworth) and D-16 (Brian Tyree Henry), the dynamic duo start off as friends who dream of more than digging for Energon in the bowels of an orb whose surface is off-limits to drudges like them. 

A chance to elevate their station comes when their august overlord Sentinel Prime (Jon Hamm) holds a road race (on self-laying road reminiscent of the rail tracks from Aardman’s The Wrong Trousers) for the entertainment of the masses. The fast and furious frenzy that ensues makes for an exhilarating Ready Player One-like set-piece - albeit one that doesn’t do Pax and ‘D’ much good, forcing them to seek another route to the planet’s mysterious exterior. 

Their quest sees them forging wary alliances with their by-the-book supervisor Elita-1 (Scarlett Johansson) and a blabbermouth we’ll come to know as Bumblebee (Keegan-Michael Key, annoying). Yet it also exposes secrets that shake their reality to its core, sowing the seeds of enmity that will eventually divide them.

To say Transformers One is a cut above most of its predecessors perhaps isn’t the wildest compliment, given the nadirs those blockbusting behemoths reached in the Michael Bay-directed era. But it earns that laurel regardless, its trio of scriptwriters deploying familiar Star Wars tropes (the Anakin/Obi-Wan rift, an expositional hologram) and a rug-pulling reveal to engineer a storyline that feels both dramatically satisfying and emotionally engaging. 

Flashes of knowing humour sweeten the deal (like the ‘Paging Dr. Ratched’ bulletin we hear on a trip to sick bay), while the sonorous baritone of Laurence Fishburne’s reanimated oldster goes some way towards excusing Peter Cullen’s AWOL vocals. And if the battle finale eventually succumbs to the franchise’s customary bombastic overkill, it at least makes you care a little about who’s doing the fighting.


Transformers One is released in US theaters on September 20 and in UK cinemas on October 11. 

For more, check out our guide to how to watch the Transformers movies in order.

Freelance Writer

Neil Smith is a freelance film critic who has written for several publications, including Total Film. His bylines can be found at the BBC, Film 4 Independent, Uncut Magazine, SFX, Heat Magazine, Popcorn, and more. 

Read more
Transformers
How to watch the Transformers movies in order (release date and chronological)
Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt in The Electric State
The Electric State review: "Although this may be their most visually stunning movie yet, it looks like the Russos are yet to find their footing outside of the MCU"
Millie Bobby Brown in The Electric State trailer
The Russo Brothers and The Electric State cast talk the Netflix movie's "stunning" VFX – and say the graphic novel's creator is "fully supportive" of the movie lightening the tone
How to Train Your Dragon
How to Train Your Dragon director's "test screening" comments about the animated movie have proved controversial with fans
The Fantastic Four: First Steps trailer
The Fantastic Four: First Steps trailer proves the Marvel movie will be like nothing we've seen before in the MCU – and I couldn't be happier
Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX still of protagonist Machu
I beg of you, learn nothing more about the incredible new Gundam anime beyond the fact that you should learn nothing more about it
Latest in Action Movies
The Fantastic Four: First Steps cast assemble
Fantastic Four star says the Marvel movie "will go down in history" for rejuvenating the MCU, "in the same way the Guardians of the Galaxy and Black Panther hit"
Ben Affleck in Air
Ben Affleck isn't in The Odyssey, but he plans to visit the set anyway to watch Christopher Nolan work: "He's one of the greatest filmmaking architects to ever live"
Ben Affleck in Zack Snyder's Justice League
Ben Affleck reflects on the "excruciating experience" playing Batman in the Zack Snyder movies: "A lot of it was misalignment of agendas, understandings, expectations"
Wanda in Doctor Strange
Scarlet Witch star Elizabeth Olsen is one of the first Marvel actors to say she's not in the next pair of Avengers movies
Ant-Man and the Wasp Quantumania
Paul Rudd is still thinking about that one Thanos and Ant-Man fan theory: "I often wonder, though, could he really have stopped Thanos in that way?"
Street Fighter
Almost a year after losing Talk to Me directors, Sony's Street Fighter movie has been pulled from the studio's release schedule
Latest in Reviews
Zombicide box featuring stylized art of survivors fighting zombies
Zombicide 2nd Edition review: "Like a zombie flick brought to tabletop"
Razer Handheld Dock with Steam Deck sitting on cradle, pink and yellow RGB lighting on, and Alienware monitor in background with Tomb Raider Trilogy gameplay on screen.
Razer Handheld Dock review: “Your Steam Deck will ride shiny and Chroma"
Photographs of the Agricola board game in play
Agricola review: "Accurate representation of the highly competitive and often unstable world of agriculture"
Photos taken by writer Rosalie Newcombe of the Shure MV7i microphone, within a pink and white themed room.
Shure MV7i review - convenience and excellence rolled into one superb sounding package
Key art for Atomfall showing a character in the English countryside looking at a nuclear plant some distance away
Atomfall review: "This isn't British Fallout – it's something much better than that"
Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro 75% gaming keyboard with purple RGB lighting on a desk setup
Razer BlackWidow V4 Pro 75% review: "a niche luxury"