transforthem wrote:Hey, don't hate me for this statement; some cat named TOYDUDE made the statement on http://whohasswag.com
Here is the original post:
http://whohasswag.com/sjshow.php?swag=70
Here are my reasons the Rodimus Prime was greater than Optimus Prime
I still cannot believe that in the new Transformers movies there has been no mention of who was the new leader of the Transformers for the 90s.
1. Rodimus was a sports car. There is nothing cool or awesome about a huge American-flag colored truck. Unless that truck's name was Ultra Magnus
2. Optimus was too much of a goody goody. His do good and don't hurt anybody attitude was so played out
3. Rodimus had Ultra Magnus. Optimus never had anybody following him who was in many ways his superior Maybe he was insecure
4. He survived the battle that killed Optimus. Say what you want about him but while one truck was dying and another truck was miserably failing Hot Rod was stepping up to the plate
5. He was futuristic and didn't play any games while Prime was always trying to be nice to humans and Decepticons.
There you have it people, my reason for believing that Rodimus Prime deserves much more respect than he is given, and he definitely deserves a prominent role in Transformers 3.
I can't wait to lay into this dude!
Ok, I'm as big a Rodimus Prime fan as anyone, but there needs to be a response.
- Hot Rod was a sports car... more specifically, he was a "hot rod" -- a car tuned (and rebuilt?) for street racing. Rodimus Prime was a sports car modified into a truck (similar to the Citroen CX and XM Tissier conversions).
- Of course Optimus Prime was a goody-goody. He's the "good guy" leader of an '80s cartoon. His sole purpose is to be the paragon of all we hold dear. Instead of a muscular physique with a cape, he's a long haul tractor-trailer. In contrast to that, he's also a military commander, who is often forced to make tough decisions in shades of gray. Rodimus does the same, but his shades of gray are compared to outsiders' impressions of a previous administration. It's like comparing Bush Sr. to Reagan, or Clinton to Carter, or J.F.K. to F.D.R. (please don't go here.)
- Rodimus Prime may have had Ultra Magnus (Prime's initial, yet reluctant choice for the job), but Optimus had Prowl, Jazz, and to some degree, Ironhide. All have been by their leader's side for some time. Prowl, like Ultra Magnus, acts both like a military officer and an advisor, often asking questions contradictory to his leader's train of thought. Ironhide often did the same thing, but acted more like a cross between Kup and Springer.
- Hot Rod survived the battle? Ignoring the fact that he started it prematurely (Megatron would have ambushed the Autobots after a safe landing anyway), Hot Rod survived because a.) Megatron didn't think enough of him than to use him as a living shield. b.) Optimus gave his last to eliminate the threat of "Megatron" (because he more than likely would have cut Hot Rod down after he'd finished with Prime.
- He was futuristic? The movie (and later seasons) were set in an imaginary future some 20 years before the story was to be aired/screened. OF COURSE he was futuristic! That being said, Hot Rod's vehicular mode was never defined to be either a future Earth vehicle, or a Cybertronian one. Rodimus Prime's vehicle mode was simply Hot Rod's changed into Hot Rod's ideal of a paragonic form. (Pronouncing it pa-RA-gon-ic, I'm not sure if it's a real word, or something I made up.) Since his idol is Optimus, he becomes a trailer/highway truck. Since big rigs have smokestacks/exhaust at trailer height, his monster tailpipes have been so altered. If you need a comic book reference, think of Billy Batson, b.k.a. DC (and Fawcett)'s Captain Marvel. Captain Marvel's body represent's Billy's paragonic ideal of a champion, which includes some likenesses to his deceased father.
- As for not playing any games, to be honest Rodimus would've rather been playing games than being responsible for running all things Autobot. This was also Optimus's job, but his focus was force to change, to localize once his specific unit of Autobots were marooned on Earth. He knew he'd only win if he had the support of the planet's people, even if they weren't able to directly act on the Autobots' behalf. He also knew that peace could only be achieved if he offered the Decepticons the opportunity to seek it.
- Leader of the '90s? Rodimus Prime lead the Autobots in only one year: mid-1986 to early 1987. (All of '87 if you go by the Japanese fiction.) By the '90s, the undisputed leader of the Autobots was Optimus Prime (especially in Generation 2). Hot Rod and Grimlock got honorable mentions, but Hot Rod/Rodimus Prime didn't even get graced with another toy until 2001 (2007 for a non-reissue).
-- Cybertronian.
