Monday, April 28, 2008

Transformers: Leave Your Brain at Home

A question was posed to me in the comments of my last post. Does the Transformers movie give an accurate description of the original characters? The answer is a bit complicated: Yes and no. First off, let me begin by saying that I enjoyed the movie for what it ended up being: a popcorn action flick.

All reincarnations of the Transformers have made changes to the characters. This includes the Beast Wars, Robots in Disguise, the Unicron Trilogy (Armada, Energon, and Cybertron), and the most current series, Transformers: Animated. That being said, the characters that best retained the personalities of their Generation 1 (or G1, refers to the original 1980s era Transformers) namesakes in the movie are Optimus Prime, Bumblebee, and Starscream.

It helps that Optimus was voiced by Peter Cullen, the same person who voiced him in the 80s. Bumblebee had the most character development of any of the Transformers in the film (a direct result of Steven Spielberg’s influence as Executive Producer), even though he only had a few lines of dialogue due to having a broken voice synthesizer throughout most of the film. In the original cartoon series, Starscream was always trying to take the mantle of leadership away from Megatron and claim it for himself (he briefly succeeded in the 1986 movie). There is some debate amongst fans as to whether or not some of the missiles that were fired at Megatron in the final battle of the movie came from Starscream. Supposedly we’ll find out next year when the sequel is released.

There were some “controversies” among fans, such as the flames on Optimus, not using a cab-over-engine semi, and his retractable faceplate. Others include Frank Welker not being cast in the role of Megatron, Bonecrusher not being a Constructicon, and Starscream’s “chicken legs” design. Those didn't bother me, though, and I was able to see past those controversies, and the flaws of the movie in general, and enjoy the movie for what it was.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Custom Transformers: Jumpstarters

As many of you may know, I collect Transformers. However, some of you may not know that I also enjoy customizing them as well. These are my first customs. I did a repaint of the Autobot Jumpstarters Topspin (left) and Twin Twist (right). These started out as junkers, in other words, there was something wrong with both of them.

Topspin and Twin Twist

The white areas on both of them were yellowed due to sun discoloration. These parts were repainted Light Gray. Top Spin was in the best shape - his arms are a little loose, and the Jumpstarter gimmick doesn't work like it should. Twin Twist had his gun broken off in his hand at one point, and the catch that holds him in vehicle mode has broken off (I used a rubber band to keep him in vehicle mode in the pictures, it's a very noticeable red rubber band).





The stickers are not original, since I had to take off whatever stickers the figures still had in order to paint them. I ordered them from http://www.reprolabels.com/ and I think they add quite a bit to the figures. Something I always enjoyed when I was little was applying the stickers to the figures.

I used Model Master Acryl paints - Flat Black, Gunmetal, Silver, Light Gray, & Gold.

Now, if you don't know what the original figures looked like, you can check out a full picture gallery for each one: Topspin, Twin Twist.

More Pictures: