If some studio or production company wants to do it, I'd probably buy it... used... if I found a cheap enough copy. I'm not supporting any petition that thinks the atonal sound slop in that "trailer" is worth hearing, though.
Facebook is my guess. That seems to be where the usual suspects for this kind of thing are. The same crowd that unabashedly and unironically loved Machinima's Prime Wars Trilogy cartoon.I wanna know where these Transformers fans demanding an extended cut actually are.
People kept asking that to Hasbro for several years every year at whatever conventions Hasbro made appearances at, and they always kept saying no.I think a G1 Season 4... er, 5... er, 6? Would be a better bug to try and plant into Hasbro's ears, and has a better chance of actually happening. (Basically picking up after Rebirth.)
Jazz, Grimlock, Bumblebee, and Starscream all got new toys in 1989 as the Classic Pretenders, so any potential continuation would have an excuse to use those four prominently again. Same with Powermaster Optimus Prime, having been released in 1988. And then Action Masters in 1990 went all in on bringing back the 1984-1985 cast. Those last few years saw Hasbro finally realizing the value of keeping around the most iconic characters.A “proper” post-Rebirth continuation SHOULD feature toys of 87-88. Pretenders, Powermasters, Sparkbots, second gen Masters, etc. But in doing that, you eliminate a TON of fan favorites like Shockwave, Grimlock, Blaster, Soundwave, Jazz, even Starscream would be a guest or cameo, at best.
That’s because Filmation was cheap AF and focused on the figures. They DID manage to hit 1985 and a few 86 figures before production shifted to She-Ra for 1986I don't know about He-Man. 90% of what was on the shelf by the time the series was over never showed up once in the Filmation cartoon.
And technically, Optimus Prime was still available in 1986 and 87 as a mail awayJazz, Grimlock, Bumblebee, and Starscream all got new toys in 1989 as the Classic Pretenders, so any potential continuation would have an excuse to use those four prominently again. Same with Powermaster Optimus Prime, having been released in 1988. And then Action Masters in 1990 went all in on bringing back the 1984-1985 cast. Those last few years saw Hasbro finally realizing the value of keeping around the most iconic characters.
I think you yourself put it best when you wrote this:And technically, Optimus Prime was still available in 1986 and 87 as a mail away
But that’s part of the issue I raised: When you say “Post-Rebirth”, how far post are people talking? Because, again, an “authentic” season 4 or 5 SHOULD feature toys of that time frame, which doesn’t include a LOT of those fan favorites (at least not until a theoretical season 5 or 6).
And if you aren’t going to go that hard into authenticity, why even limit yourself to following the Sunbow continuity (such as it is)? When DiC started producing GI Joe cartoons for 1989, the ONLY bit of continuity they held was the Cobra Commander transformation and Serpentor’s leadership. And by the time of the regular season in 1990, they gave no flips and ignored any prior continuity.
My feeling was that, over the course of the unproduced fourth season, Galvatron would have become increasingly marginalized in favor of Scorponok. You can see something similar with the second season of GI Joe: over the course of the regular episodes, Cobra Commander and Destro were increasingly rare in appearances in favor of Serpentor and Dr. Mindbender (the current toys). Given the typical television “season”, the fourth season would have likely featured the appearances of some 1988 toys early (The Seacons, Cassettes and Quickswitch are most likely, IMO).
The hypothetical 5th Season would have started with the introduction of Pretenders and Powermasters. Scorponok would have continued as the “big bad”, likely supplemented by the Decepticon Powermasters and Doubledealer as “core villains”. By the end of the season, we’d have likely seen the initial appearances of the Micromasters and possibly the appearance of the Classic Pretenders, or at least the characters planned to be so (which likely would have made Starscream a dominant villain).
I dunno about that. There was a fairly large amount of characters that never got a figure until much later in the line and many who never got a figure at all.That’s because Filmation was cheap AF and focused on the figures. They DID manage to hit 1985 and a few 86 figures before production shifted to She-Ra for 1986
I feel that is a two fold thing: I’ll easily grant that the writers for He-Man often aspired to be MORE than just a toy tie in, BUT, it also feels like Mattel wasn’t as interested in building that “core continuity” until the show became hugely popular.I dunno about that. There was a fairly large amount of characters that never got a figure until much later in the line and many who never got a figure at all.
Several episodes had villains that had nothing to do with Skeletor and had no figures. Same with allies.
I think to say all the cared about was pushing toys is a misrepresentation