Yeah, if the next license holder fancied adapting this into a mini series I'd definitely buy it, it would be a neat What If.
The thing that ultimately surprised me most from all this unearthing of older apocrypha is mostly that they were raring to go with a movie before the first episode of the G1 cartoon even aired. Like before they even knew they'd be out of whatever Japanese shape changing vehicle robots, they were like "make us some new characters, also kill off Optimus". Before tv watching kids even knew his name. Like damn, that's some commitment that they knew they had a big seller on their hands.
Funny enough to me I had always interpreted the vintage TV spots touting the film as "two years in the making!" as just hyperbole because the show had been running for two years at that point, not that the film literally was being workshopped in that very same timespan.
The Heritage Auctions material in 2010 tells us that he started work on GI Joe The Movie immediately after his second TFTM script. According to Buzz Dixon when he was interviewed in Marvel Age in late 1986, the process went thusly: Ron Friedman wrote an outline, Hasbro didn't like it and with every revision he then did, it just made the problem worse. Then Steve Gerber was brought in off story-editing the main series to try and fix the problem. That didn't work either, so they looked to Buzz, who said "Let's just start over". So the Joe movie was effectively taken away from Friedman. He would be sent drafts and make his revisions, but it was definitely Buzz Dixon's framework.I guess we need to see if we can find similarly early scripts for Hasbro's other 'The Movie' projects.