Just two extra scenes would go a long way. A scene showing Ultra Magnus having any flaw at all, and a scene showing Hot Rod having any quality the Autobots can't obviously get elsewhere.
One could argue that Ultra Magnus' "I can't deal with that now!" line was meant to convey that he's really not cut out for leadership.Just two extra scenes would go a long way. A scene showing Ultra Magnus having any flaw at all, and a scene showing Hot Rod having any quality the Autobots can't obviously get elsewhere.
Isn't that basically the case with every new film series whose first film is an origin story? Like, Batman Begins followed the failure of Batman & Robin, and could be considered a prequel to its two sequels before said sequels existed. Man of Steel followed the lukewarm reception of Superman Returns, and could be called a prequel to the other DCEU films before the DCEU was a thing. Or for an example where the reboot wasn't that long after its predecessors, The Amazing Spider-Man came just a few years after the failure of Spider-Man 3, and would become the prequel to The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Or even more similar to TF One, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse came out during the run of Tom Holland's MCU Spider-Man films and was its own new origin story that paved the way for Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse and Beyond the Spider-Verse.On the other hand, if people figured out that this appeared to have nothing to do with the live action films, that just meant it was a prequel to a story they haven't seen.
Isn't that basically the case with every new film series whose first film is an origin story?
Really?
I mean, it's not Golden Era Disney quality animation or anything, but "far from a well animated movie"?
I apologize, I was really meaning Animation Errors within the movie, not the quality of the artwork. I should have been more clear.And while the animation sometimes has some rough spots, it looks good to fantastic for most of the movie.
And then people complained when the MCU version skipped itSpider-Man is a funny example, because I remember audiences whining loudly about being asked to sit through his origin a second time.
Truer words have never been spoken.Honestly, "ignore the loudest fans" isn't a half bad piece of advice to any studio making franchise films.
The problem is always that "the fans" aren't actually a hive mind that all want the same thing. 20% of the fans don't want to see a new Spider Man without showing his origin. 20% of the fans have seen it plenty of times and don't want to see it ever again. 60% of the fans don't really care that much either way. No matter what you do, the 20% that you piss off are gonna be the loudest on the internet, but it doesn't really affect the real world much.