Headless Knight
Civilian
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- Apr 18, 2001
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CFlash said:I know some of ya'll will complain about me starting a new thread... but after seeing this in today's news:
Calif. sues carmakers over global warming
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060920/bs_nm/environment_autos_dc_13
I thought a discussion about some of the topics the original Transformers touched upon and how this movie completely ignores them in a day and age where they seem MORE relevant (considering what's going on in the Middle East, the energy crisis, etc.) would be nice.
I know Transformers was not Capt Planet... but it can't be denied that the overriding theme of the original cartoon was Earth as a source of energy and Decepticons pillaging it (thus destroying it)... not the Quest for The Holy Grail.
Anyone else besides me think that Transformers the movie should... I dunno... be a bit more about something?
Apparently your obsession with the "natural resources" thing is blinding you from the fact that the "Holy Grail" you mention holds the key to the survival of a species. It's like, Decepticons get the Allspark = the Autobots are no more. The End. Finito. Kaputt.
That's as much "something" as the quest for energy in the cartoon was. It's two opposing forces fighting each other, where one wants to coexist and the other wants to dominate.
It's obviously simplistic, as in real wars you always have good guys and bad guys on both sides, but that's where the differences in appearance between the two factions kinda make sense: it's like they're from two different species. That we never had in our wars, because theres only one intelligent species on Earth.
I know it says on the script they were all part of the same bunch who lived happy and dandy on Cybertron and then the Decepticons decided to become evil and rule the Universe (or something), but if you believe in evolution that makes sense also. Maybe the lack of energy developed the Decepticon's behavior as a way to control the growth of the population (or something).
I know, I'm pushing here. But you know the subtext you are asking for would never happen in a Bay movie (or in any Hollywood summer action vehicle, for that matter). When it comes to ravaging natural resources for fuel, the USA* are the Decepticons of the world, and the guys pulling the strings surely don't want people thinking about that kind of stuff while they're sipping their cokes and munching on their popcorns and etc.
*I said the USA, not the American people, so don't take offense.
