We got another one. This time it's not an episode or a movie, but rather the Japanese-exclusive promotional VHS that was released to hype up TFTM's release in Japan.
Transformers: The Movie - Apocalypse: Matrix Forever
No need for me to take any notes on this one since it's just a collection...
Yeah, I'm probably gonna be backing off the voting this year since the choices are kinda... meh.
For the Thirteen, the odds are pretty heavily skewed in favor of only a small few since so many of them are real non-entities, while for the different toy options several of them haven't even been...
It's like that perfect missing piece between the Galaxy Rangers pitch and the very first "Day of the Dumpster" pilot.
In fact, there was actually a third version of said MMPR pilot episode, one filmed between the first version above and the final version that aired on TV. The director of...
Cybertron not being gold
Alpha Trion being old
The Matrix having a skewed mold
The list of errors in that FFOD flashback scene just keeps finding more to be told.
Yes. As cheesy and literal as that sounds, the cartoon made it very clear (especially in "The Rebirth") that a Golden Age on Cybertron was signified by the planet's energy-rich gold coloration.
Cybertron is also supposed to be in the middle of its Golden Age when Alpha Trion is in ownership of the Matrix, yet the planet is certainly not colored gold in that part of the FFOD flashback.
The wiki has a MEGA archive of every chapter in its original Japanese form, but only a small handful of chapters have actually been translated in English (and some by a translator who made some rather questionable translation choices). The wiki's archive has all of those few, too.
What you...
Since we now have access to the episode's full script, we can see that the scene specifically called for the "War Dawn" version of Alpha Trion to appear (see Page 44), meaning the use of the more aged version was indeed a mistake on the animators' part.
I recognize you're pointing out the Deadpool expy-ness, but due to differences in writers, SG Drift's personality ended up shifting away from a Deadpool homage to instead make him act more like an outlandish Samurai stereotype as if portrayed by a stereotypical weaboo.
But again, Legends was able to be so simple about it because it took place in a world where the characters had diagetic access to information that was non-diagetic in all the other worlds.
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