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IDW Transformers: ReGeneration One Heft 99 Script

Simon Furman hat auf seinem Blog das Scriptzum IDW Comic Transformers: ReGeneration One Heft 99 veröffentlicht.

UPDATE – Hi all, I’ve been advised that this ship date (which I’m pretty sure I saw reported as the 19th earlier) has slipped to the 26th of Feb. So you got your Script (W)rap a week early!

“And so, the end is near.” Uh-huh… the honest-to-gosh, accept no substitutes penultimate issue of Transformers: Regeneration One is upon us. This week (Wednesday 19th February) sees the release of Transformers: Regeneration One #99, and what is truly the beginning of the end. We’re almost at the last hurdle, the reveal of the true force behind… well, a ton of stuff, both in Regeneration One and a clutch of the 80 issues that preceded it. But first, there’s a pretty monumental obstacle to overcome in the shape of Senator Jhiaxus and his new Cybertronian Empire. At this point, if you want to avoid even the very vanilla spoilers herein, cease and desist reading immediately. Otherwise, prepare for a truly desperate last tilt against impossible odds, as Rodimus Prime (surrender or no surrender) looks to scupper Jhiaxus’s plans for universal conformity and order. Elements in the mix that could just give him the means and opportunity for such a counter-offensive (elements Rodimus is not even aware of himself as we join the action) are a somewhat clandestine rearguard action set in motion by Kup (last issue) and the enduring/looming presence of Underbase, the collective pool of Cybertronian knowledge and experience that appears to have transcended its apparent destruction/death (in issue #50). What (or who) exactly lives on in the very heart of Starscream? And what can even it do against a foe that is legion? Also, because even all that is never enough, we learn more about the fate of Spike Witwicky (and the phenomena known as Zero Space), the Primordials reach an… evolution(?)… and the surviving humans bring out the big guns. And the true enemy is revealed. PHEW! And just for good measure, CRIKEY! Even I can’t bear to watch… (Look out for a full preview of the issue soon… I’ll update as and when that’s live and viewable).

Diskussion: hier!

TFSource - Newsletter






Great News Sourcefans!

We've restocked some great items like Make Toys - Green Giant, Reissue Commemorative Series Optimus Prime, a limited quantity of PE-DX-03 - Motobot - Warden... and MORE! Instock this week we have Xtransbots - MM-1 Krank & MM-2 Stax Set of 2, Xovergen - TF-01B - Trailer Force - Black Nemesis Version, Fansproject - Causality M3 Crossfire Intimidator, and MP-08 Masterpiece Grimlock - Asia Exclusive with Flame Sword & Crown Coin. You can also preorder Japanese Generations - Thundercracker and Fireblast Grimlock Exclusives, MP-18 - Masterpiece Bluestreak - Exclusive Edition, MP-14 - Masterpiece Red Alert, MP-20 - Masterpiece Wheeljack - with coin and Anti-Hypnosis Device, and FansToys FT-04 Scoria! Check out the Source Blog for our latest Source Articles, Reviews and Interviews! All this and more... in this week's SourceNews!



In this issue of SourceNews:

1. TFsource Restock - Make Toys Green Giant, Perfect Effect Warden and more!
2. Now up for Preorder - Fanstoys Scoria!
3. Masterpiece Updates!
4. Fansproject Intimidator Set of 5 Now Instock!
5. theToySource.com Updates!
6. Now up for Preorder - Japanese Generations Exclusives Thundercracker and Fireblast Grimlock!
7. Now Instock - Xovergen Trailerforce - Nemesis Version!
8. Unique Toys Update!
9. 3rd Party Customs Update!
10. MMC Fortis Now Instock! Dazzling Glory Add-0n Restocked!
11. Warbotron - Up for Preorder!
12. Source Blog Updates!
13. Newest Preorder items at TFsource
14. Newest Instock items at TFsource

Alles unter mehr!
Diskussion zum Thema.
mehr...

Rabatt Aktion bei NTF-Toys

Jetzt wird es billiger!!!
NTF-Toys veranstaltet einen Rabatt Tag!!! Nur exklusiv für NTF-Archive User!!!
Am 19. Februar 2014 werden wir auf alle Artikel, die sich im Warenbestand befinden, 10% Rabatt geben!!! Ja ihr habt richtig gelesen, statt den üblichen 5% NTF-User Rabatt, geben wir 10% Rabatt auf alles. Dieses Angebot gilt nicht für Preorder Artikel und es ist auch keine Reservierung möglich. Nur am 19. Februar von 8:00 Uhr morgens bis 0:00 Uhr abends habt ihr alle die Möglichkeit, für 10% Rabatt aus unserem Warenbestand zu bestellen.
Wie das geht? Ganz einfach eine PM an Lucy oder Skywarp mit eurer Bestellung und schon könnt ihr euch den Rabatt sichern.

Unser Warenbestand ist voll gefüllt und nun könnt ihr euch schon mal was aussuchen. Hier geht es zum Warenbestand.


MakeToys Trash Talk und Cog Wheel

Hier haben wir die Video Review zu den beiden Make Toys Figuren Trash Talk und Cog Wheel

Quelle: youtube.com

Einen Dank an Hardhead, der das gefunden hat.

Diskussion: hier!

Transformers Robots in Disguise 2014 (AoEToys) - Habsro Pressemitteilung

TRANSFORMERS: ROBOTS IN DISGUISE - 2014 PRODUCT INFORMATION

Hasbro’s TRANSFORMERS: ROBOTS IN DISGUISE line for 2014 features innovative new play patterns—including one-step changers and flip-to-change action—designed to make the TRANSFORMERS line more fun and intuitive for kids than ever before!

Hasbro’s TRANSFORMERS brand is gearing up for an epic year, featuring the release of the hotly anticipated new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION in June 2014. Featuring a brand-new storyline, TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION brings an incredible new group of TRANSFORMERS robots to the big screen for the first time—GRIMLOCK and the DINOBOTS! Together with returning favorites OPTIMUS PRIME and BUMBLEBEE and new AUTOBOTS like DRIFT and HOUND, they’ll take on the menace of all-new DECEPTICONS! And now, it’s quicker and easier than ever for kids to get into the action!

The 2014 TRANSFORMERS: ROBOTS IN DISGUISE line from Hasbro features the following products:

Action Figures

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION ROBOTS IN DISGUISE ONE-STEP CHANGERS Assortment
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $9.99/Available: May 2014)
It’s quicker and easier for kids to get into the action of TRANSFORMERS! The greatest AUTOBOT, DECEPTICON and DINO-BOT characters from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION can convert from a great robot action figure into a vehicle or dino-mode and back—in just one step! Kids will have a blast converting characters like OPTIMUS PRIME, GRIMLOCK, BUMBLEBEE, DRIFT, LOCKDOWN, each with their own unique method of converting inspired by the film—flip it, pop it, pull it and more! There are 18 figures to collect in 2014, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION DINO SPARKERS Assortment
(Ages: 4 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $12.99/Available: May 2014)
Capture the DINOBOT riding excitement of the new movie TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION with these amazing light-up DINO SPARKERS! Each DINOBOT has an AUTOBOT rider mini-figure—just pull back on the DINOBOT to charge them up and release to send them racing towards each other for battle action, as kids can try to knock each other’s mini-figures off their dinos. Plus, the DINOBOTS light up with real sparks as they race! Choose from OPTIMUS PRIME with GRIMLOCK, BUMBLEBEE with STRAFE, AUTOBOT DRIFT and DINOBOT SLUG, each sold separately. Does not convert.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION POWER BATTLERS Assortment
(Ages: 6 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $12.99/Available: May 2014)
TRANSFORMERS POWER BATTLERS features cool characters from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION and let kids unleash awesome, easy-to-activate battle action! With a simple squeeze of the leg or twist of the torso, each figure unleashes its own signature attack. Watch out for BUMBLEBEE’s Power Punch! Plus, each figure also converts from robot mode to alternate mode in less than ten steps. Choose from characters like BUMBLEBEE, HOUND, CROSSHAIRS and more. There are 15 figures to collect in 2014, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION TITAN HEROES Action Figure Assortment
(Ages: 4 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $9.99/Available: May 2014)
Kids and collectors alike will have big fun with these 12-inch scale action figures based on the new movie TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION. Each non-converting figure features five points of articulation and packs a lot of play at a great price! Choose from BUMBLEBEE, OPTIMUS PRIME, AUTOBOT DRIFT and LOCKDOWN, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION FLIP & CHANGE Assortment
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $19.99/Available: May 2014)
Flip and covert in one awesome step! Kids can flip each TRANSFORMERS action figure around to smoothly and easily convert it from robot to alternate mode…then flip it the other way to convert it back. Just open the doors, hold them like handles and spin the figure forwards or backwards for an instant conversion! Choose from characters inspired by the film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION, like OPTIMUS PRIME, GRIMLOCK, BUMBLEBEE and more, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION TITAN GUARDIANS Action Figure Assortment
(Ages: 4 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $19.99/Available: May 2014)
The huge heroes of the new movie TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION just got even bigger with these 16-inch action figures! Each non-converting figure features five points of articulation and packs a lot of play at a great price! Choose from OPTIMUS PRIME and GRIMLOCK, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION CHOMP AND STOMP GRIMLOCK Action Figure
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $79.99/Available: August 2014)
TRANSFORMERS adventures just got a whole lot bigger with the CHOMP AND STOMP GRIMLOCK Action Figure! The CHOMP AND STOMP GRIMLOCK figure can convert to dino-mode mode – with a chomping jaw and light-up eyes – in one easy step! Plus, the included non-converting OPTIMUS PRIME figure can ride GRIMLOCK into battle and unlock electronic lights, sounds and pop-out weapons! Kids can also use GRIMLOCK with any TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION ROBOTS IN DISGUISE ONE-STEP CHANGERS figure or TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION POWER BATTLERS figure, sold separately—GRIMLOCK has different lights and sounds depending on whether he’s riding into battle with an AUTOBOT or a DECEPTICON. Figure comes with a non-converting Optimus Prime robot figure. Requires two AAA batteries (demo batteries included).

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION MEGA ONE-STEP BUMBLEBEE Action Figure
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $29.99/Available: August 2014)
BUMBLEBEE is back and he’s badder than ever! Kids can flip this powerful robot hero to change from robot mode to sports car mode and back! The MEGA ONE-STEP BUMBLEBEE action figure is ready for battle with a disc launcher kids can pull to fire discs at the enemy. Get ready for big-time TRANSFORMERS battles and fun!

Diskussion: hier!

Transformers Generations 2014 & AoE - Hasbro Pressemitteilung

TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS - 2014 PRODUCT INFORMATION

Hasbro’s TRANSFORMERS brand is gearing up for two momentous events in 2014—the hotly anticipated new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION, and the 30th anniversary of the TRANSFORMERS brand and its iconic characters like OPTIMUS PRIME and MEGATRON. In honor of the year-long celebration, Hasbro is releasing new TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS figures, featuring classic conversions and the most detailed and accurate action figures of characters from TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION and throughout the brand’s history.

The 2014 TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS line from Hasbro features the following products:

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS DELUXE Assortment
(Ages: 8 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $14.99/Available: May 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS DELUXE assortment features the characters from the hotly anticipated new film in these detailed action figures available to Transformers fans! Each GENERATIONS DELUXE figure features a movie-accurate design and converts from robot to alternate mode. Choose from characters like BUMBLEBEE, CROSSHAIRS, DINOBOT SLUG and more—there will be 10 figures available in 2014, each sold separately

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS VOYAGER Assortment
(Ages: 8& up /Approx. Retail Price: $24.99/Available: May 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS VOYAGER assortment features larger characters from the hotly anticipated new film in the detailed action figures available to TRANSFORMERS fans! Each GENERATIONS VOYAGER figure features a large-scale movie-accurate design and converts from robot to alternate mode. Choose from characters like OPTIMUS PRIME, AUTOBOT HOUND, GRIMLOCK and more—there will be six figures available in 2014, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS LEADER Assortment
(Ages: 8 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $44.99/Available: May 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION GENERATIONS LEADER assortment features large, feature-packed action figures available to TRANSFORMERS fans based on the hotly anticipated new film! Each GENERATIONS LEADER figure features a large-scale, movie-accurate design and weapons and accessories and converts from robot to alternate mode. Choose from OPTIMUS PRIME and GRIMLOCK, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS 30TH ANNIVERSARY LEGENDS 2-PACK Assortment
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $9.99/Available: Spring 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS LEGENDS 2-PACK Assortment features two great TRANSFORMERS characters, each with a special feature! Choose from some of the greatest characters in the TRANSFORMERS brand’s 30-year history, including ACID STORM, GEARS and CLIFFJUMPER, each coupled with a smaller partner. Both the large and small figures convert from vehicle mode to robot mode, plus, the smaller figures can assemble onto their larger partner as weapons and armor! Each two-figure set sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS 30TH ANNIVERSARY DELUXE Assortment
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $14.99/Available: January 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS DELUXE Assortment features characters and designs from throughout the 30-year history of the TRANSFORMERS brand, each including a special edition comic book from IDW Publishing featuring that character! Characters available in 2014 include RATTRAP, ARCEE, NIGHTBEAT and the “Fan Built Bot” WINDBLADE, a new character who was designed with the help of TRANSFORMERS fans around the world! Each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS 30TH ANNIVERSARY VOYAGER Assortment
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $24.99/Available: January 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS VOYAGER Assortment features larger scale action figures that celebrate the 30th Anniversary of the TRANSFORMERS brand, including characters from throughout the brand’s history. Characters available in 2014 include WHIRL, SKY BYTE, ROADBUSTER and BRAINSTORM, each sold separately.

TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS 30TH ANNIVERSARY LEADER Class
(Ages: 5 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $44.99/Available: Fall 2014)
The TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS LEADER class celebrates the 30th anniversary of the TRANSFORMERS brand with large, feature-packed action figures available for Transformers fans! This popular scale arrives in the Generations segment with the introduction of an all-new version of JETFIRE. The Autobots’ aerial commander features a large and detailed sculpt with snap-on armor, battle helmet, weapons and accessories, and converts from robot to armored jet mode.

Diskussion: hier!

Transformers 30th Anniversary - Hasbo Pressemitteilung

TRANSFORMERS FANS GET READY FOR BIGGEST YEAR EVER AS HASBRO CELEBRATES THE BRAND’S 30TH ANNIVERSARY New “Generations” Toys Based On the Iconic Brand’s 30-Year History and the New Film TRANSFORMERS AGE OF EXTINCTION Make 2014 a Memorable Year for Fans

PAWTUCKET, R.I. – February 15, 2014 – Hasbro, Inc. (NASDAQ: HAS) announced details of the 30th Anniversary celebration of its iconic TRANSFORMERS brand today at The American International Toy Fair in New York. 2014 will be “More Than Meets The Eye” for the beloved franchise, as OPTIMUS PRIME and the AUTOBOTS return to theaters in the new movie TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION this June from Paramount Pictures and director Michael Bay. Hasbro will also celebrate the 30th Anniversary with a variety of new brand experiences including digital gaming, KRE-O construction sets and more.

”TRANSFORMERS is one of the biggest brands in the world, and we’re thrilled to be celebrating its 30th Anniversary with a year of tremendous innovation and excitement from our entertainment, our toys and our partners,” said Eric Nyman, Senior Vice President of Global Marketing, Hasbro, Inc. “With the most exciting big-screen installment yet, great programs from our publishing and digital partners and fantastic toys for TRANSFORMERS fans of every generation, we’re looking forward to the next 30 years of our favorite AUTOBOTS and DECEPTICONS.”

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION, hitting theaters in the U.S. on June 27th of this year, marks the fourth big-screen TRANSFORMERS film from director Michael Bay and Paramount Pictures. The new film introduces a new cast of human characters, including Mark Wahlberg as Cade Yeager, and unites a cast of new and returning TRANSFORMERS robot characters, including classic characters OPTIMUS PRIME and BUMBLEBEE and eagerly awaited new additions like GRIMLOCK and the DINOBOTS!

In honor of the year-long celebration, Hasbro is releasing a record 73 fan-targeted TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS figures, featuring classic conversions and the most detailed and accurate action figures of characters from TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION and throughout the brand’s history. Additionally, in celebration of The 30th Anniversary, a non-movie TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS line features the launch of a new scale, GENERATIONS LEADER CLASS, with the release of an incredible new JETFIRE figure. And the TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS DELUXE scale line will include the “Fan Built Bot” WINDBLADE, a new character who was designed with the help of TRANSFORMERS fans around the world! WINDBLADE will be the 30th figure in the “THRILLING 30” program, which features 30 limited-edition TRANSFORMERS figures in celebration of the 30th Anniversary.

Hasbro and its partners will also be celebrating the TRANSFORMERS brand’s 30th Anniversary with a “THRILLING 30” program across Hasbro’s toys and programs in publishing and digital gaming from Hasbro’s partners, including the “DARK CYBERTRON” transmedia event! Based on the epic crossover storyline occurring in IDW Publishing’s flagship TRANSFORMERS titles, “DARK CYBERTRON” comics issues are also available packed in with Hasbro’s TRANSFORMERS GENERATIONS Deluxe toy line, and the characters are featured in a special event in the “TRANSFORMERS LEGENDS” mobile game from DeNA Co., Ltd. The next chapter in Activision’s blockbuster TRANSFORMERS console game series will also be released in 2014—TRANSFORMERS: RISE OF THE DARK SPARK, which unites characters from the TRANSFORMERS film universe and the universe from Activision’s popular TRANSFORMERS: FALL OF CYBERTRON game for the first time!

Transformers fans over 13 years of age can get the latest updates on the entire TRANSFORMERS brand, including toys and entertainment, at the Official TRANSFORMERS Facebook page at www.facebook.com/TRANSFORMERS.

Diskussion: hier!

Renderform Spy Jack und Nightshare

Die 3rd Party Renderform kündigt jetzt zwei neue Produkte an. Zum ersten das RF-014 Spy Jack Upgrade Set. Das ist ein neue Kopf für das Walmart Exklusiv Universe Skyfall. Und zum anderen das RF-015 Nightshade Upgrade Set. Das ist ein neuer Kopf für das Toys R Us Exklusiv Universe Darkwind. In beiden Sets werden auch neue Waffen enthalte sein.

27419755d1392614847 renderform rf 014 spy jack r RF014 00 1392624150 RF014 01 1392624233 RF014 04 1392624233 RF014 A 00 1392624150 RF014 A 01 1392624150 RF014 M 00 1392624150 RF014 M 02 1392624150 RF015 00 1392624150 RF015 02 1392624150 RF015 04 1392624150 RF015 M 00 1392624150 RF015 M 01 1392624150

Diskussion: hier!

Transformers Construct Bots - Hasbro Pressemitteilung

TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS - 2014 PRODUCT INFORMATION

Get ready to construct, change and customize the characters from the highly anticipated new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION! First introduced in 2013, TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS let kids build and customize their own TRANSFORMERS robot action figures for the first time. New for 2014, TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS will include figures based on the new AUTOBOTS, DECEPTICONS and DINOBOTS from TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION!

New CONSTRUCT-BOTS parts make incredible new combinations possible, for even more creativity and customizability! Kids will even be able to swap parts between TRANSFORMERS robots and DINOBOTS! Plus, all of the parts are interchangeable with every other TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS set that has been released!

The 2014 TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS line from Hasbro features the following products:

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOT RIDERS Assortment
(Ages: 6 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $5.99/Available: May 2014)
Construct, change and customize mini-versions of your favorite TRANSFORMERS characters, based on characters from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION! Each mini-rider features customizable parts that work across all TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS sets and can ride on a TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOTS figure (sold separately)! Choose from OPTIMUS PRIME, BUMBLEBEE, AUTOBOT DRIFT and more, each sold separately in special bag packaging.

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOTS Assortment
(Ages: 6 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $9.99/Available: May 2014)
Construct, change and customize characters from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION! Each TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOTS figure lets kids build a DINOBOT figure that can be converted from robot to dino-mode and back again without taking it apart. Choose from a T-Rex, Pterodactyl, Triceratops and more! Plus each figure features powerful action features, including chomping jaws and flapping wings! And each TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOT figure can serve as a mount for the TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOT RIDER figures (sold separately). Choose from GRIMLOCK, STRAFE, DINOBOT SLUG and more, each sold separately!

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOT WARRIORS Assortment
(Ages: 6 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $19.99/Available: May 2014)
Construct, change and customize characters from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION! Each TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOBOT WARRIOR action figure comes with a mini-sidekick DINOBOT figure that can convert into a projectile-firing weapon, or can be disassembled into armor pieces for even more customizing action! Each AUTOBOT and DECEPTICON character is based on the designs from the new movie can be converted from robot to vehicle mode and back again without taking it apart. Choose from OPTIMUS PRIME with GNAW, AUTOBOT DRIFT with ROUGHNECK, LOCKDOWN with HANGNAIL and more, each sold separately!

TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOFIRE GRIMLOCK
(Ages: 7 & up /Approx. Retail Price: $39.99/Available: August 2014)
  Construct, change and customize the ultimate DINOBOT warrior with this huge, 10-inch tall electronic version of the breakout character from the new film TRANSFORMERS: AGE OF EXTINCTION! Kids can build GRIMLOCK and convert him from robot to dino-mode and back without taking him apart. Plus, GRIMLOCK unleashes his fire breath in dino-mode with electronic light-up jaws and 3 rapid fire projectiles! Armor up for battle with two additional rapid-fire cannons and an epic battle sword. All of the parts for TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS DINOFIRE GRIMLOCK can be interchanged with parts from any other TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS action figure, so kids can create the ultimate DINOBOT action figure! Also comes with a DINOBOT RIDERS-scale OPTIMUS PRIME figure that can ride GRIMLOCK in dino-mode, and which also features customizable parts that work across all TRANSFORMERS CONSTRUCT-BOTS sets! 

Diskussion: hier!

Transformers: More than Meets the Eye - Interview mit James Roberts

Jetzt haben wir ein Interview mit James Roberts für euch, indem er über Transformers: More than Meets the Eye spricht. AUßerdem gibt er einiges zur zweiten Staffel bekannt.

Richard Caldwell: James, can you remember the very first piece of fiction that possessed you, whether book, comic or film? Does it still hold a place of high regard for you?

James Roberts: This is a surprisingly difficult question to answer. As a child, my dad would read me Enid Blyton stories. I don’t know how well-known Ms Blyton is in America, but she was an incredibly prolific English children’s author in the 1930s, 40s and 50s. She invented Noddy, the Famous Five, the Secret Seven and the Wishing Chair.

Now even as a kid, when your critical faculties are relatively unsophisticated (although thinking about it, you probably give a more honest reaction to a story when you’re little), you could tell that Ms Blyton stuck to pretty much the same formula: plucky kids get into scrapes, discover a secret island/mine/castle/cave/passage, and foil smugglers. And the writing is flat and perfunctory. But even so, two of her books, The Island of Adventure and The Secret Island, really took hold of me, and I remember asking my dad to read more than his usual two chapters so I could find out what happened next. ‘The Secret Island’ was particularly gripping to a six year old, and at the risk of reading too much into it after the event, it made me think about suspense and structure in storytelling: the setup, the spark, the period of calm, the complication, the resolution. It’s a good book, and it’s only now, in fact-checking elements of this answer, that I’ve discovered that it was originally published as a serial, a bit like an ongoing comic…

The first book I remember reading myself and becoming obsessed with was Mr Magus is Coming for You by Gene Kemp, which was published in 1986. I’d have been nine or ten. It starts off as an everyday adventure story set in suburbia, but (spoiler alert!) morphs into science-fiction/fantasy when the otherworldly nature of the titular character is revealed. Much more than Blyton’s books, it made me think about character in fiction. Kemp’s four protagonists are very clearly defined — actually, they’re exaggerated characters, but that’s okay. They all undergo very significant and clearly signposted transformations throughout the course of the book.

After Blyton and Kemp, we have Simon Furman. I started collecting the UK Transformers comic in late ’86 and was properly obsessed, absolutely caught up in Furman’s rich, long-form storytelling. It was TFUK more than anything that got me interested in storytelling; it served as my gateway into British comics (TFUK begat Death’s Head, Dragon’s Claws, 2000AD, Crisis, Revolver et al) and science-fiction generally. Simon’s stories still hold up well today.

RC: I should hope that if any non-creator deserved a post-creation co-creator credit it would be Furman on Transformers.

JR: Yeah, as far as I’m concerned the Holy Trinity—in terms of establishing, enriching and/or rejuvenating the TF Universe—is Bob Budiansky, Simon Furman and Bob Forward/Larry DiTillio (the story editors of the Beast Wars series). Okay, so Bob and Larry count as two people, but that would ruin my Trinity.

RC: I think while the toys, animation and films have their audiences, the comics involve less of a wait time between new material seeing light, so he’s held down the fort for the property in many ways- and went much further in breathing so many more dimensions into the Transformers universe.

JR:I think that’s because comics—good SF comics in particular—burn through new ideas. A good, strong, compelling SF hook can carry a multi-million dollar movie or a 500-page novel, or it can carry a 22 page comic. And if it’s the latter, you need another good idea a month later. I look back over the first 22 issues of More Than Meets The Eye (which I’m calling Season 1), and I probably squeezed too many new ideas and concepts in there… although maybe that’s one of the things people like about the series.

RC: I understand you were a fan long before your own name began appearing in the credit boxes, but was it Transformers specifically that really prompted your efforts to write, or had you gone the traditional route with university and the like?

JR: I was a fan when G1 was out, yes. Bit of a latecomer, though: I was ten in 1986 when I started collecting the toys and buying the UK comic. I wrote stories before I became a TF fan, although inevitably my love for the characters and concepts informed a lot of what I wrote in my formative years. I even edited a fanzine, Transtext, in my mid-teens, wherein I published both my own material and stories submitted by other fans.

I think what my love of Transformers did was encourage me to write science-fiction to the exclusion of all else, which wasn’t necessarily a good thing. I have since corrected that, but most of the fiction I wrote during my teenage years had a science-fiction bent.

RC: And your Eugenesis novel- as massive an undertaking as that was, did you ever see it as “fan-fiction”, or as a professional are you looking for ways to sneak aspects of the work into canon?

JR: I wrote Eugenesis in the late ’90s, when the original Transformers line – Generation 1- seemed dead and buried and I wanted to celebrate the richness of the fictional universe that had been built up between ’84 and ’92. It was an avowedly unofficial piece of work produced on a not-for-profit basis and so yes, it was absolutely fan-ficiton — but that didn’t mean that I approached it any less seriously than I would have done had it been official. You know, we could talk for hours about how fan-fiction is too often mocked and denigrated simply for being unofficial. Like most things in like, a lot of it is awful and some of it is great.

Anyway, Eugenesis was the apotheosis of all the TF short stories I’d written over the preceding 10 years, and it was pretty much the last TF story I wrote until I started on the TF books for IDW in 2009. I’ve deliberately tried to avoid recycling characters and concepts from the novel, mainly because I prefer to try out new things. That said, I’m conscious that the book had an exceptionally limited audience and came out over a decade ago, and so I’m not above using some of the stronger ideas in MTMTE if I think it’s for the good of the wider story. I should add that I’m talking about concepts rather then plots or character arcs or set pieces, or anything like that.
RC: Concepts like redemption itself? Redemption would seem like a heavy theme for something that began as a toyline as far as some might be concerned, yet it obviously seems to play a big part in MTMTE. Whirl was essentially a clockmaker who was mutilated by the corrupted peace time Government and basically became a psychotic killer who really should have been a Decepticon, but joined the Autobots. Cyclonus is historically a Decepticon, but you’ve turned him into an honourable soldier. What attracted you to these two characters? And is the fact that they are both trying to redeem themselves a reason why they work so well together?

JR: Yeah, it’s interesting – I never made a conscious effort to make redemption a theme for the first ‘season’. In fact, I made a point of not writing around themes at all. I prefer to let things develop organically. In my experience, deciding on a theme and working backwards makes for rather contrived and earnest stories.
With Cyclonus and Whirl, I wanted characters who were more Decepticon than Autobot, even if Cyclonus is non-affiliated and Whirl, as you say, is an Autobot (although it’s hinted that Optimus recruited him purely to ‘claim’ him before the Decepticons did). The Lost Light is crewed by decent- if flawed and wayward- Autobots, and I needed a few wild cards in there. Whirl is chaotic and violent, Cyclonus is calm and violent. I didn’t plan for them to have a vendetta until I re-wrote issue one and inserted their fight, and there was a spark that made me want to go back.

I was conscious when writing Cyclonus that I didn’t want him to be too much of the typical antihero. He needed to have and keep his rough edges. There’s a deliberately disturbing scene in issue #3 when he assaults the much smaller Tailgate in the privacy of their own hab suite, and although their relationship has changed a lot since then, he is still a person who is capable of doing that- of attacking people smaller and weaker than him. What he did was unforgivable, and he’s neither sought forgiveness or apologised for it, even though now he cares deeply for Tailgate.

With Whirl, the fun is in peeling back the layers and showing readers what makes someone like him tick. I don’t believe anyone is born bad, and I wanted to reveal, bit by bit, and not necessarily in chronological order, the events in Whirl’s life which defined him. He’s a tragic character, with reasons to be angry and to hate the world… but he’s reached the point where he probably doesn’t want to change, even if the war has ended and the world around him has changed in a way that makes it possible for him to step back from the anger he feels all the time. Like Cyclonus, he’s unapologetic about who he is.

RC: In the first issue of MTMTE Prowl received a message from the future listing all the things the crew of the Lost Light should avoid: don’t open the coffin, don’t let them take Skids, don’t go to Delphi and don’t look in the basement. These stories have all for the most part played out since. How far in advance are you coyly planning your work? And will we get a similar tease for stories yet to come?

JR: MTMTE #1 is mostly setup, as you’d expect. It’s designed as a grand pre-credits sequence in the tradition of Paul Thomas Anderson’s Magnolia, with the camera sweeping in and shadowing a character or two and then veering off to focus on someone else. By the issue’s end the crew of the Lost Light has been assembled, the ship has taken off, there’s been an accident, and our heroes have been thrown into deep space. With the message from the future at the very end of issue 1, I wanted to show that what you’ve just read is merely the beginning of a huge, sprawling, multiyear quest stuffed full of action, adventure and intrigue – I wanted readers to feel confident that we knew where we was going, that everything was mapped out, and that it was worth them investing their time in this series.

Anyway, as I wrote Season 1, I had a lot of fun foreshadowing certain events and seeding little ideas that I knew would pay off in three, six, 12 issues’ time. And once fans got the measure of the series – once they picked up on the fact that nothing is throwaway and that every conversation/decision/event hints at, or triggers, something else – a lot of them sort of surrendered to the MTMTE experience and started subjecting each issue to a level of scrutiny that, hopefully, brings further rewards. And people seem to like going back to the start and re-reading the series because, in hindsight, they see certain scenes and exchanges of dialog in a different light.

All of which is a preamble to me saying that when it came to plan Season 2 (which kicks off in April with issue #28, after Dark Cybertron finishes), I was even more determined to map out an intricate, multilayered, complex storyline, albeit once that is broken down into a series of one- and two-parters. If all goes to plan, ‘Season 2′ will climax- in a very, very big way- around the issue #50 mark.

There’s a risk to this, of course. You can take nothing for granted, especially in the world of comics, and who knows, maybe MTMTE will have to stop before it reaches the natural conclusion to Season 2. Accepting that that’s a possibility, I have a ‘break glass in case of emergency’ type back-up plan whereby I can wrap up the main plot in a handful of issues.

Will you get an in-universe tease for the Season 2 stories like at the end of issue #1? Nah. This time, I don’t want anybody knowing what’s around the corner.
RC: I think you and fellow scribe John Barber are writing rather intelligent sci-fi masquerading as Transformers comics. What won me over especially with the current TF titles is the stunning level of realism being explored. Not just in terms of the depthful characterizations and psychological drama and humor, but in the situations you both have constructed- from the notion of the pre-war government being corrupt to the arguably homosexual nature of the Chromedome/Rewind relationship. I’ve even heard an interesting argument that Bumblebee’s political struggles are analogous for the Obama administration in certain respects. Was realism a thing you and Barber wanted specifically to keep in the forefront to balance the intense science-fantasy, or was that just how things inadvertently worked out?

JR: Well I can’t speak for John as far as the Obama analogies go, but I know that neither he nor I feel constrained by writing Transformers stories. Quite the opposite, in fact. We’re talking about a sprawling SF universe populated with near-immortal mechanical beings who share a multiplicity of character traits with humans yet remain tantalisingly Other. There’s so much potential there, and everyone involved wants to take things in new directions and tell thrilling, funny, moving stories.

The best science fiction tells you something about yourself and the world you live in by making you look at big issues through new lenses- whether we’re talking about racism, oppression, the clash of ideologies, body horror, modes of government, slavery, medicine- and even gender, these days. I love exploring all of those things through More Than Meets The Eye, firstly because I want to tell thought-provoking stories (who doesn’t?), and secondly because I love world-building and exploring Cybertronian society and societal attitudes, past and present, is the best way of doing that.

As for the balance between realism and science-fantasy… I must admit I don’t consciously try to set one off against the other. But I will say that the characters are at the absolute heart of the book; most of my energy as a writer is spent on bringing them to life. Get the characters right- make people care about who’s on the page- and the rest will follow. If I was being reductionist, I’d say Character + High Concept SF + snark = MTMTE. I like to think that the book has a personality of its own, a unique one. People who get it REALLY get it.

RC: Are you the sort who needs a particular environment to get your writing knocked out- privacy, music and a computer, etc, or scraps of papers while trotting about town?

JR: I’m afraid I live and breathe the horrific stereotype of the writer camped at a table in the corner of the coffee shop, hunched over his notebook, inches away from a giant neon arrow and sign that that says, ‘Behold His Creativity’. Why the coffee shop works for me I don’t know, although I have read articles putting forward theories about how certain levels of ambient noise are conducive to creative thinking, so who knows. Maybe it’s just the coffee.

Anyway, yes, I write the first few drafts of any script in longhand because, while I can still go back and scribble and annotate and cross out, I’m not sucked into computer-enabled editing hell whereby I sit there and tinker with a sentence for three hours. Longhand, then endless redrafts on screen. The most satisfying moment for me comes near the end of the process, when you can print the whole thing off, return to the welcoming arms of the baristas, and edit the thing by hand.

Music… well, I could listen to music for ever, but I can’t listen to it whilst writing. Not any more. Music does play a part in the creative process, though: readers are used to me posting links to a selection of tracks that to my mind reflect and enhance the story in the latest issue. I think there’s a now playlist on YouTube.

RC: Now that you have stacked up a small fortune in Transformers comic book credits, have you gotten the itch to try writing comic books dealing with other properties, whether your own or commercial? Or is it Transformers all the way to the end?

JR: My love of comic books and of writing – and all forms of storytelling, including prose and scripting for film or TV – eclipses even my love for Transformers, so yes, I very much intend to try my hand at other things, other projects and properties, in due course. I enjoy science-fiction and superhero material as much as I do small-scale, kitchen sink, slice-of-life stuff, so I’m attracted to something that combines all of the above. The L Shaped Room meets Blade Runner, maybe.

RC: James, it has been a blast talking with you. One last thing though, will we ever find out what is in Brainstorm’s briefcase? Might it be the soul of Marsellus Wallace?

JR: It’s a straight question, it deserves a straight answer. And the answer is “yes”.

I like mysteries, I like slow builds, I like inviting speculation… but I also like answers, concrete and logical and sometimes even face-palm-y. So yes, the mystery of Brainstorm’s briefcase will be revealed. It will be opened, and there will be consequences… big, frightening, quest-defining consequences.

James Roberts 1392575371

Quelle: bleedingcool.com

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