Transformers: Age of the Primes toyline discussion 10/27 Update: First look at Megatronus the Fallen

lastmaximal

Administrator
Staff member
Council of Elders
Citizen
I, a longtime Hot Rod/Imus fanboy, have taken too long to respond to this because of... (Wild Gesticulation) EVERYTHING.

But here goes.

I largely concur with LordGigaIce's observations. I've long been sick of the anti-Hot Rod pushback, which tends to be loudest and dumbest from people who never grew up beyond their 80s childhoods (there are some for whom the most cited part of an old toku show is when one of the heroines would show her undies in a high kick). Like, whether Hot Rod is even directly mentioned or not, the One Joke kicks in. This has endured through the decades, because again, these people peaked a long damn time ago and are forever trying toretend it's still a plateau and not a puddle.

But, y'know. What do you expect.

I do remember a lot more sympathy and more complex reading of Hot Rod and the Rodimus era coming in the quieter post G1 years, when more reflections and metadiecourse on the shows and characters were the norm. This has since been reflected in more recent writing, with Furman continuing to flesh out Hot Rod and Roberts leaning into the character's flash (almost like the Lego Batman movie basically weaponized all the Batman memes).

But I have also encountered... Not quite the Poochie situation, certainly not that metaphor. But just... Apathy, and a tendency to assume by default that Rodimus Prime must've sucked, from non-fans. (Most recently when OSW Review compared Dale Torborg's WCW ring gear to Rodimus Prime, whom they did not recognize and just guessed as "a shit Optimus Prime?") I've never encountered the "he was a boardroom creation made to appeal to kids" angle, which seems like a more contemporarily-cynical approach of reading-into something.

But I have encountered assumptions that he MUST have sucked, because, well, he was such a momentary experiment that was yanked offstage incredibly quickly and never substantially foregrounded again for the next 30 years.

This much I can understand, and I can't begrudge-- he HAS been treated like this in the franchise's history. Especially in the west, where it's not so much a succession of Autobot/Cybertron leaders as Japan had; it's just been "Optimus died, Rodimus showed up, then they got rid of him and put Optimus back and then never changed back, so he must have sucked. I [a younger non-fan] have never even heard of him." And there's little that would shake that; I mean, the dude is very much Of His Era aesthetically, and even now that teal and ink are currently cool again and the 80s/90s nostalgia aesthetic is still a bit en vogue, a bright maroon car covered in loud flames and ostentatious chrome outgrowths is a hard sell. And the character is far from G1 Optimus' Big Good Robot Dad, instead being Regional Manager Jim Halpert at best without the family and with more moping.

So while I'll always dismiss "wah he killed Optimus" whinging, I actually bedgrudgingly get non-fan out-of-context apathy.

But he's still my guy.

It's weird, really. I WAS one if those traumatized by all the death (ffs, Prowl's burning-from-the-inside) and the loss if Optimus Prime especially. But the narrative... worked for me, as I was at just the right age to identify directly with characters designed for me to identify with. I rooted for him, wanted to see him prove himself, wanted him to make up for getting Prime killed. And that design, boy, you had to be there, and I was there. I was there for it and always will be.

His tenure as Prime I mostly saw in bits from the cartoon, but I liked what little comic stuff I came across later. Here was a complex leader who believably chafed at the more politically and procedurally demanding schtick of his era, all while carrying the insecurity that came with the circumstances of HOW he became leader. But just as this was being steered and navigated, well, never mind that, we can bring Optimus back.

I'm glad to have seen more of him in recent years, reinterpreted as an ancient exile leader in Energon (idk what the dub did with THAT later on), showing a momentary flash of coolness and leadership in Animated, being a key weirdo fixture in IDW (not wild about Roberts' concept sometimes, but I love the flashes of depth and complexity he gets, and I will ALWAYS love that this too-cool-for-school himbo dbag asked for a group hug so he could thank his squad for traveling with him) and palling around with fellow kid appeal bois in Cyberverse.

I hope there's always a place for him somehow, even as his turbo-revving ways have been repurposed for Young Optimus and/or Bumblebee.
 

Sabrblade

Continuity Nutcase
Citizen
I'd like to forget. It is really embarrassing that anyone at IDW thought that Deviations issue needed to happen.
Yeah, there were a million other ways to do that concept of "What if Optimus survived TFTM?" without needlessly bashing Hot Rod at the same time.

It would have been far more creative for Deviations (or, hey, even for TFTM itself!) to have simply had Optimus retire from Autobot leadership once Hot Rod was revealed to be the true chosen bearer of the Matrix, and become Rodimus's second-in-command and chief advisor.

The Diaclone toy that would become Ultra Magnus could have even instead been sold as an upgraded armored version of Optimus, representing the form he took on after stepping down to become Rodimus's sub-commander (maybe named "Optimus Magnus" since Rodimus would be the new Prime). While this would have removed the new character of Ultra Magnus from the equation, the new toy would have still been sold (preferably in its original, more-Optimus-like Diaclone colors) in stores at the time. It also would have paralleled Megatron getting a new upgraded toy of his own as Galvatron (and kinda Hot Rod upgrading to Rodimus).

Like, start the movie as normal, up until the attack on Autobot City, where instead of Ultra Magnus it is now either Springer or Blaster who is in charge and gives the other Autobots the orders that Magnus gives in the movie proper. Then, when Optimus arrives, after saying his "No matter the cost," line, he would turn to the others exiting the shuttle and ask if his new armor is ready to go. They would give it to him, and he would say, "then let's transform..." (transforming to truck mode, his new trailer would attach to him) "... and roll out!" Cue the Stan Bush song.

Optimus drives through the city, guns blazing from the missile pods on his new trailer, blasting Decepticons left and right as he transforms, leaps into the air, and continues to blast his way to Megatron. The two leaders then have their iconic fight, but with Optimus revealing to Megatron his brand new battle armor, showing Megatron that he means business this time. When Hot Rod interferes, however, he does not grapple with Megatron, but instead trips and winds up landing between the two and inadvertently taking Megatron's gunshot meant for Optimus. Megatron laughs maniacally that this unexpected direct hit of his. Enraged at Megatron shooting Hot Rod in the chest, Optimus pummels, Megatron like he did in the movie, sending the Decepticons into retreat. However, Optimus still took some heavy damage, and he collapses as he tries to reach for the fallen Hot Rod.

Instead of a death scene for Optimus, we get a scene of both him and Hot Rod on repair beds, both being repaired by Perceptor. Seeing a light glow through a blast hole in Optimus's chest, Hot Rod inquires about it. Optimus opens his chest and shows him the Matrix, telling him about the prophecy of one using it to light their darkest hour. Optimus momentarily stirs from the pain of his injuries, and accidentally drops the matrix. Hot Rod reaches for it and catches it, having his glowing moment that foreshadows what is to come later, and gives it back to Optimus, who places it back inside his chest.

When the Decepticons later attacked Autobot City again, Optimus and Hot Rod are back to working order, and Optimus basically takes the role of Ultra Magnus from here on out, going in one shuttle with the others while Hot Rod, Kup, and the Dinobots take the other.

By the time of the battle on Junkion where Magnus tried and failed to open the Matrix, it would be Optimus in his new armor who tries and fails to open it. And just before getting blasted to pieces just like Magnus did, Optimus's final words to Galvatron would be something along the lines of "You may finish me here today, Galvatron, but there is only one who can use the Matrix!" And also just like Magnus, the Junkions would rebuild him, and give his body a new coat of blue and black paint; this would be how he gets the color scheme of the Diaclone Powered Convoy cab.

The rest of the movie then plays out with Optimus in the role of Ultra Magnus. After Hot Rod reveals himself to the others as Rodimus Prime, Right after Kup says "I knew you had potential, lad," Optimus would say something like "So did I, Kup. So did I." The movie would end the same, with Rodimus giving his speech, and Optimus now standing beside and slightly behind him, showing his full endorsement of the new Autobot leader.

As for Robert Stack, either he would simply be absent from the film, or he could play Springer, with Neil Ross still voicing him in season 3 and 4 (Springer and Magnus's voices always sounded similar to me in the movie).
 


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