Because aparrently most ppl here have only seen a few episodes here and there, are taking wild misconceptions and innaccurate claims about the show and then saying Bay isn't embodying them.so what's the problem
(speaking thematically of course)
apart from fanboy nit picky details that is
so what's the problem
(speaking thematically of course)
apart from fanboy nit picky details that is
One is about sentient machines exploiting our planet's resources just like our cars, factories, light, need for electricity, etc do. The other is about sentient machines looking for a box that helps them reproduce. You tell me which one says more about the world we live in. Transformers, the cartoon together with the comic, just a put a face on the former.
But, Hunter Rider is right... to an extent. The "motivation," ultimately, is the same... "conquest," which is also the same cliched theme in all good-guy/bad-guy toons and movies as Dr. Evil would attest. What made Transformers different is that it spoke to the times both then and now in a fairly direct way.
(First off the comic rarely focused on the energy aspect. It focused heavily on the politics of the two factions and the relationship the Autobots/Decepticons had with the humans...both good and bad. There were figures like G.B Blackrock, Circuit Breaker, Joey Slick, the Mechanic, etc. etc. All of whom were intollocutors with the Transformers and had run-ins with their various members throughout the comic.)One is about sentient machines exploiting our planet's resources just like our cars, factories, light, need for electricity, etc do. The other is about sentient machines looking for a box that helps them reproduce. You tell me which one says more about the world we live in. Transformers, the cartoon together with the comic, just a put a face on the former.
And this movie (which I just saw) does not violate this point. It is a story about good versus evil, where evil wants something (the Allspark) that will make it more powerful.
It's in the User reviews thread...it got a 10/10.r u gonna post a review already?
(i'm seeing it friday)
So who else noticed Skywarp was in the film![]()
No you see planes, similar, but not the same as Starscream. One of which had a jet black nose and body with bright purple wings and fins.I must have missed that one, he wasn't the stealth bomber was he?
No you see planes, similar, but not the same as Starscream. One of which had a jet black nose and body with bright purple wings and fins.
No you see planes, similar, but not the same as Starscream. One of which had a jet black nose and body with bright purple wings and fins.
Right before the scramble the jets to the city you see an airstrip with a few Jets on it. I could have sworn I saw this clear as day, I'm gonna be looking even harder next time.What part of the movie was he shown?
Go find another message board to troll.Or it was the lighting.![]()
Right before the scramble the jets to the city you see an airstrip with a few Jets on it. I could have sworn I saw this clear as day, I'm gonna be looking even harder next time.
Go find another message board to troll.
No, but don't go into threads like "what was your favorite character" and say "none, they all sucked". Go find a thread devoted to pissing and moaning and post there. No one needs your negative ranting everywhere they turn. Sorry Bay excluded you from the party, but Good bye.Ahahahahahahaha. It finally happens. I call you out on something ridiculous that your mind made up and all you can do is yell at me. Classic.
I have the UK on computer file, but thanks for asking. All these things you bring up are great stories, but much like Inferno (X-Factor/X-Men) and Target: 2006, they aren't exactly fodder for movies. The characterization was great at times. And I think Simon Furman is a great writer, but he doesn't do Transformers introductory films, he does stories that appeal to long time fans with a deep knowledge of the toyline and it's characters. I honestly don't see myself watching "Bludgeon and Grimlock the Movie". That characterization you describe also is for the really hardcore Sci-Fi/fantasy/Transformer junky. Not for the average moviegoer. I don't think people could stand the deep introspective robots and appretiate them on the level I do, certainly not when you are setting up a war that's suppose to last three films.
But at the end of the day Wolverine needs to slash something. Simon Furman wrote melodramatic fanwank. Stuff that was fun to read, not particularlly groundbreaking comic writing, but good and solid stuff. However it was not the stuff of movies. It was almost soap operaish in quality. You honestly don't want to see a movie about Prime having to fight a half Ratchet/half Megatron creature or pondering surrender or trying to make peace. That was the stuff Furman wrote about, and usually his stories drew off of already established fan lore. Some of this stuff may work for sequels. But his stuff is generally too aloof for anyone but an established fan, and usually is only good when you want something to be character driven instead of action driven. I was never much for his Unicron attack, it didn't involve enough Unicron as the movie did.I disagree about how the audience might handle the characters. Case in point: I was on a train going home from work when I heard a group of 30 something women who were talking about how there was possibly going to be a Wolverine movie and I wound up getting into a conversation with them. It turns out they had no experience of the comics etc- only the movie and yet they loved the deepness of Wolverine. I mean this is a very good example of how the fear of the average moviegoer being dumber than a sack of spuds really isn't justified.