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The Transformers The Movie was spun off from an incredibly popular line of toys released by Hasbro that first premiered in stores in 1984 (the designs of which had been taken from an earlier line of Japanese toys). At the same time as the toys appeared, the Transformers were immediately drafted into an animated tv series The Transformers (1984-7), upon which this film is directly based, as well as a series of comic books. The animated series stayed on air for three seasons and there have been numerous subsequent spinoffs, of which a by-no-means-necessarily exhaustive list includes the Japanese-made series The Transformers: Headmasters (1987), Transformers: Chojin Master Force (1988), Transformers: Victory (1989), the Canadian-made series Beast Wars: Transformers (1996-9) and Beast Machines: Transformers (1999-2001), as well as several new Japanese animated series, Transformer: Car Robot (2000-1) and Transformers: Armada (2002-3). That was of course before the huge success of Michael Bays live-action movies Transformers (2007), Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (2009) and Transformers: Dark of the Moon (2011). Toy sales seem to be the sole motivating reason behind The Transformers The Movie. It would seems to be the reason why we have so many subplots that have little or no connection to the main story and exist solely to introduce as many Transformers as possible. This becomes irritating to the extent it frequently becomes impossible to tell one character from another or even which side the action is being focused on at any point. The conceptualisation of the transformers themselves seems frequently silly one wonders why anybody would design a robot that would compact up into a vehicle. Planes and spaceships okay, sports cars is just pushing it, but, for griefs sake, robots that turn into steam-trains and ghetto-blasters? Why would anybody wish to design robots as sharks and dinosaurs, even less, deliberately stupid ones? Or why for that matter give them such redundantly anthropomorphic features as bi-optic eyes, noses and mouths? The animation has been cheaply produced and is limited. The film does array an interesting cast, including rather ignobly Orson Welles, whom many consider the greatest American filmmaker, in his penultimate screen performance. Leonard Nimoy of Star Trek (1966-9) fame also plays the new Decepticon bad guy.
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