It was this or a picture of Enzo. |
I've talked about this a long time ago,
about respecting the rules of the franchise's universe you're working
in. Whether it be sparkling vampires or not understanding that robots
can have brothers, you always need to read up a bit and learn a
little bit about the story you're working on. It never hurts to at
least acknowledge that you're familiar with what came before, even if
you're not fond of it... Because that way, you avoid reboots.
Honestly, I am a huge opponent of reboots. In fact, I often find a
reboot to be the lazy coward's way out of a complex problem. When DC
comics relaunched last September, like a lot of people, I wasn't too
hot about it. I mean, while there are some books I absolutely love,
like Aquaman. (And I gotta admit, I've developed a bit of guilty
pleasure for 'My Greatest Adventures') But I'm not too sure if it was
worth losing a married Lois and Clark, as well as Stephanie Brown's
well deserved graduation to the pointy eared cowl.
He's basically be the same character from TF: Animated, but I have to admit, I'm very glad he returned in TF: Prime. |
If Frank can overcome THIS, then everyone else has no excuse. |
And that's one of the problems I've
noticed with out entertainment culture. We're too eager to scrap what
came before and start over again. It's almost like if we have one bad
story in the series, we think the entire thing is tainted, and needs
to be “re-done right” which is just crazy. If James Bond scrapped
the entire series every time he had a crappy movie... Hell, we would
have never gotten out of the Roger Moore films. Part of a long
established history of a franchise is the bad crap too. The
Punisher's had some great stories told over the years by Chuck Dixon,
Mike Baron, and Garth Ennis. He's also had some horribly stupid
pieces of crap that you cannot believe got approved, such as
'Punisher dies and becomes a vigilante angel' (which just wears off),
and 'Punisher gets a surgery to make him a black man' (which wears
off in three issues), and 'Punisher gets turned into a Frankenstein
monster' (which he's magically healed from.) Every franchise that's
worth a crap has these stories. For every 'Wrath of Khan', there's a
'Final Frontier'. We're human. No matter how good people like to
think we can be, eventually, we all tell an Episode II. Unless you
have severely screwed things up so badly that you can't even ignore
it like Highlander 2, the answer is never to restart it over. I'm a
firm believer in the theory of “Make that piece of shit shine.”
If you tell a crappy story, just
counter it with a good one. And that's how you do it. Some people
believe it's just easier to just trash it or start over again, and
while it's true it's easier... It's not better. Because no one really
likes sitting through the origin story over and over again. And
unless you have screwed things up to a level of giving Superman a
bastard child and making him a deadbeat father, it really is better
to just move on and tell a better story. 2008's Hulk movie was one of
the best ways I've seen this done. It didn't contradict the 2003
movie and still served as a sequel to it, but at the same time, it
didn't dwell on it either, making it a decent movie that stood alone.
Just don't dwell on the garbage... Move on and tell better. I think
it's why the current issues of the Transformers comics are so
amazing. Yes, it's following up on a massive cataclysm that came at
the conclusion of a rather lackluster run of stories, but they're not
dwelling upon it. They're just telling good stories. They even made
Drift cool. (Imagine my surprise at that!) Yeah, that almost two and
a half year run of lukewarm stories still exists, but it's in the
past now, and if they had rebooted the universe again, we wouldn't
have the stories we got now. It's like the old phrase of “why is
there evil?”
“Why are there bad stories?” So we
can appreciate the good ones.
3 comments:
I remember reading somewhere that TF:P and the past couple of (Non-movie) Transformers videogames are basically an attempt to make an actual, cohesive universal timeline.
It actually is part of what's call the "Aligned Universe" which consists of TF: Prime, the recent High Moon video games and TF: Rescue Bots. (Seriously on that last one.) And to be honest, it's actually my favorite of the universes created since the old Generation One days, and I think the reason why I liked it is that it didn't start with an origin all over again. We didn't have to sit through the whole "Robots come to Earth" story all over again. In fact, unless you're a real continuity whore like me, you could easily claim that Prime was either a continuation of the live movies. (A couple of friends actually thought it was.) Which treats TF: Prime like the Hulk movie. If you want to consider it a sequel, you can. If you want to think of it as it's own thing, it works perfectly.
Actually I thought Prime was a continuation of the movies as well, until I noticed that until the Kids only Fowler and his superiors knew they existed. Hard to pull that off after the events of the movies.
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