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The Transformers Movie Free Download Hd

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The Transformers Movie Free Download Hd


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Two opposing factions of transforming alien robots engage in a battle that has the fate of Earth in the balance. During the great Cybertronian War, the Autobots and the Decepticons crash landed on Earth. Millions of years later, geological activity revives the warring factions - the Decepticons want to strip Earth of its vast energy resources, and the Autobots seek to protect the inhabitants of Earth from that fate. And so an endless battle begins in a crucial race to find an energy source for their homeworld Cybertron. The Transformers were a line of toys created by Hasbro in the 1980s for sale in the US. The TV show was part of an elaborate marketing campaign to promote the toys. (Like G.I.Joe and others) SPINOFFS: This was the first in a LONG line of spin-offs including series like Transformers Energon, Beastwars, Transformers Armada, and others, including a live-action/CGI movie in 2007 (not to be confused with an animated movie that is consistent with this story line). Some of those other series use characters from this series, sometimes they are new characters. The live-action CGI movie bares no resemblance to the animated show. It features some new characters, some of which have the same name as characters from the cartoon, but are featured differently. There is very little continuity between the different series. Because this was the first it is informally called Transformers Generation 1. These series are incredibly popular in Japan but have dwindled in popularity in the US.

TECHNICALLY: It was an animated show filled with technical errors. Simple things like using the wrong voices for certain characters, painting a character the wrong color, or adorning a Decepticon logo to an Autobot character and vice versa. There were more serious technical glitches as well; including storyline problems like when/who created Megatron; one episode depicts him being built by the Constructicons, and one states that he created them. The first season of the show featured several robots, but the second season starting adding more without explaining where they came from. And other errors featured flashbacks to pre-Earth days but depicted the robots in Earth disguises even though they were not supposed to get those until they reached Earth. The list of errors is endless.

PLOT: The general plot of the story featured the peaceful Autbots battling the military Decepticons. In a war on their home planet of Cybertron the two factions depleted their supplies of energy and left in search of more sources so that they could claim their homeworld.

SEASONS: Before Season 3 an animated movie was released in theaters which advanced the timeline of the show to 2010, and hence Season 3 has been informally called Transformers 2010. Season 4 is not really a season, but a 3 part episode that could have continued the series in a new direction (like S3 did after S2) but the show faded away.

SALES: Currently (as of Mar 1 2008) DVDs of the show are difficult to find. New copies of the show from US sources are extremely rare. Most new purchases are Chinese imports.

2007 MOVIE: When The Transformers debuted in 1984, I was twelve years old. Of the four seasons it lasted, I generally like the second season the best.

One of my favorite episodes is the two-part episode titled "The Key To Vector Sigma." This was a significant episode because it was about the origin of a new group of Decepticons known as the Stunticons, as well as the origin of the Aerialbots. Because of their ability to perform an assortment of stunts, the Stunticons may very well be among the most dangerous Decepticons.

Another favorite episode of mind was "The Return Of Optimus Prime," because of the fact that Optimus Prime was brought back to life after being killed off in the 1986 movie. It was no secret that fans and small children reacted to his death very badly, and the backlash brought about his return. The episode clearly showed that there are some characters you just can't kill off. Optimus Prime was and is a beloved icon, and seeing him back to life was a welcome relief. The two-part episode was a great way to end the show's third season.

To this day, The Transformers is a cartoon show that I still cherish. Some laypeople tend to believe the misconception that Transformers was originally a Japanese animated series (or anime) that got exported to the US and subsequently dubbed into English. In reality, only the animation was outsourced to Japanese (and later Korean and Filipino) companies, the conceptualization of the brand and its story and characters, as well as the cartoon's writing and voice recording were all done in the US. Many later Transformers series were indeed of Japanese origin, and the action figures on which the brand was based had also hailed from Japan, but the original show was primarily an American product. A few people seem to be confused over whether Transformers started as a toy or a cartoon (or comic) franchise, and even people officially affiliated with the franchise, such as the infamous comic artist Pat Lee, have gotten the answer wrong.

What we regard as the Transformers brand today actually originated from multiple, often unrelated Japanese robot toy-lines -- Hasbro, the distributors of Transformers merchandise in the Western world, imported various transformable action figures from the Japanese toy manufacturers Takara, Takatoku Toys, Toy Box and ToyCo. Most of these "Pre-Transformers" came from Takara's Diaclone (which were in fact released under the titles Diakron and Kronoform in the US, albeit with little success) and Micro Change lines. Some received new colors for the Western market, and various action features were also removed for safety reasons, but the most vital change was giving each figure a unique name, a personality, special abilities, and tying all the unrelated toy universes together into a single large mythology. These were detailed on the character bios that the toys came with, and later on in the cartoon and comic series which were created to act as advertising platforms to the toy-line.

This also accounts for all the discrepancies between some characters' toy and animated appearances and why so many of the Transformers would grow or shrink when changing shape -- the toys of Ironhide and Ratchet had no heads because the original figures represented human-piloted robots with no distinct personality, likewise, Megatron, Soundwave and many other mass-shifters turned into small objects because they were originally envisioned as mini-sized robots. Even though the title of the cartoon series is only Transformers, both fans and people officially affiliated with the brand have taken up calling it, as well as the entire first series of Transformers merchandise, Generation 1, or G1 for short. This is a retronym, meaning the name was introduced to differentiate the first iteration of the Transformers brand from the later series. It came about when the second Transformers franchise, titled Generation 2 was introduced to the US in 1993, by which time the original series of toys, comics and animated series, and all the related merchandise had already stopped being produced in the US.

Taking a cue from the name Generation 2, fans started calling the original Transformers franchise "G1", and after a while, the term was officially picked up by the people at Hasbro and Takara -- it is now recognized as the official name of the Transformers franchise that ran from 1984 to the early '90s. Some fans tend to assume that G1 only refers to the first two seasons of the American Transformers animated series, and that G2 is the name of its third and fourth seasons. This is a misconception -- G1 refers to the entire Transformers animated series, and more.

Likewise, with regards to Transformers fiction, G1 has also became the name of an entire so called "continuity family", which encompasses multiple different but related story sources, all of which take place in the original Transformers universe. This means that the various American and Japanese spin-offs, such as Toransufômâ: Scramble City Hatsudôhen (1986), Transformers: The Headmasters (1987), Toransufômâ: Chôjin masutâ fôsu (1988), Transformers: Victory (1989), Transformers: Zone (1990), Beast Wars: Transformers (1996), Beast Wars Second: Chô seimeitai Transformer (1998), Bîsuto uôzu chô seimeitai Toransufômâ supesharu (1998), Beast Machines: Transformers (1999), and Chô semeitai Transformer: Beast Wars Neo (1999), as well as a multitude of comics, storybooks, radio plays, posters and even video games are all technically G1 stories, despite often belonging to different franchises (in a commercial sense), and despite most of them being contradictory.

In a nutshell, Generation 1 is both the name of the original franchise in the Transformer brand, and of an entire fictional universe that has multiple different but related continuities.

Part of the confusion between the terms Generation 1 and Generation 2 probably comes from the Generation 2 animated series, which in reality wasn't a different show, just various episodes from the original 1984 Transformers cartoon with a new intro and with added CGI animation. The series' animation was primarily produced by the Japanese-situated Toei and the South-Korean AKOM, although at least two other studios are also suspected to have animated a number of episodes.

Season 1 has been done entirely by Toei.

Of the 49 episodes of the second season, 39 have been animated by Toei, with the rest being either productions of AKOM and a rumored studio from the Philippines. Since AKOM was practically notorious for their low animation quality, three of the season's episodes (City of Steel (1985), The Core (1985) and The Autobot Run (1985)) are generally believed to be their work due to their bizarre, simplified drawing style and error-prone animation. However beyond an instance of production coordinator Paul Davids mentioning it, nothing is known about the Filipino animation studio, not even its name, which has lead some to suspect that Davids might have been misremembering.

Season 3 was divided between Toei (13 episodes) and AKOM (16 episodes), while Call of the Primitives (1986), widely regarded as the best-animated episode of the series, and recognizable for its more "anime-like" art style, was probably handled by Tokyo Movie Shinsha.

The 3-episode fourth season was animated by AKOM. Both the stories and characters of the Marvel The Transformers comic series and the Sunbow Transformers animated TV show are based on the same general outlines, but the two approached the source material from different perspectives, and as the two series progressed, they just got more and more different. Thus, while both are technically part of the Generation 1 universe, they represent diverging continuities.

Even some of the characters are portrayed vastly differently in each variation of the fiction -- for instance, Sunbow's Shockwave is Megatron's blindly loyal but often pathetic and blundering underling, who's also tasked with guarding the planet Cybertron; whereas Marvel's Shockwave is an unrelenting and highly capable, intelligent warrior who fights against Megatron's rule on Earth, only accepting his leadership when he deems Megatron's plans more logical than his own. The characterization of the Dinobots is also famously different.

Due to this, and to the comics' penchant for featuring (generally) more serious and mature storylines with a stronger emphasis on the robots' conflict and on character-driven drama, many fans tend to prefer them over the often more juvenile and "campy" approach adopted by the animated cartoon. On the other hand, the cartoon is more famous by far. Modern iterations of the Transformers therefor tend to take inspiration from both. The series only received 3 "real" seasons and a 3-episode 4th season. Season 5 was made up of various episodes from the previous seasons and The Transformers: The Movie (1986) reedited into episode-long segments. These added up to a total of 20 episodes.

The novelty of "season 5" came from the new beginning and closing scenes that they've added to the episodes. These served as a framing story, in which of Powermaster Optimus Prime (who did not appear in his Powermaster body in the series proper) told tales of the Transformers to a young child named Tommy Kennedy. Recap narration by Prime (sill done by Peter Cullen) and occasionally Tommy would kick-off and conclude the episodes, presenting many of the the highlights from the Transformers cartoon. The new bits were live-acted -- Tommy was played by Jason Janson, while Optimus Prime during his closeups was realized as an enormous animatronic model with a movable head, mouthplate, eyelids and pupils, and a giant hand in which Tommy sat. Both were replaced with stop-motion puppets in full-body shots. Many Transformer characters in the series seem to "lose" or "gain" parts during transformation. The most famous example is Optimus Prime's trailer, officially called his Combat Deck -- whenever Optimus' main component (called Brain Center in early media) transforms from truck mode to robot mode, the trailer simply "retracts", pulling out of the screen or simply disappearing between shots. When he turns himself back into a truck, the trailer loyally "drives up" to him out of nowhere and reattaches itself to him. This is never given an explanation, which is why it has caused so much theorizing in the fan-base. The disappearing trailer is indeed one of the biggest mysteries of Transformers lore.

The real reason for this phenomenon is of course that this is a cartoon show meant for children, and the creators simply didn't consider explaining such technicalities important. However some media did offer a number of possible explanations. a5c7b9f00b

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