PrymeStriker wrote:I hate the G1 cartoon, yes. It's ranking right next to Energon for me. However, to class me as "just a G1 hater" is kind of ignorant and dismissive, since I have valid reasons to dislike it unlike others that may be considered "haters."
Sure, you are giving reasons, but so what? I am not even saying your reasoning is wrong. I am, however, saying your reasoning is placed in the proper context.
PrymeStriker wrote:An episodic cartoon would indicate that each episode is loosely tied together. G1 reset the status quo after every episode or band of episodes and virtually forgot events until season three. Their stories were episode-centric, and even then they lacked the basic elements of a story.
They were at least
loosely tied together. For example, the constructicons show up towards the end of season one, then they pop up in other episodes after that. Megatron builds a space-bridge early on, it's there later. Some plot points were dropped, of course, but most were still in place from one show to another.
But, again, I am not defending the quality of the show really, I KNOW it was a mess in many respects. I am purely defending what I see as the best bad guy in any kids show I've ever seen.
PrymeStriker wrote:So, you're reinforcing my point that these kinds of cartoons are mostly to entirely awful, and are usually praised solely from childhood nostalgia
"Awful" is too strong. Using hindsight makes it easier to say, but it's not awful. It's like saying "the shark looked fake" in "Jaws". Well, yes, by today's standards those effects might be "awful", at the time they certainly were not. So I wont hate on Jaws just because I can compare it to something that looks amazing today. Again, it wouldn't be fair.
And while nostalgia plays a HUGE part in it, it's not the only thing that matters. What ties us into the Transformers actually
is the characters, obviously Megatron is a a giant part of that character base.
PrymeStriker wrote:I can't understand this, either. I grew up on Energon and Cybertron, and I am able to look back and say that those shows were terrible.
I don't know. I've never seen any of them. But there are things from my childhood that I can be nostalgic about and admit they weren't very good as well.
PrymeStriker wrote:The writers of Generation One didn't even bother to make a convincing threat for an evil leader. The Decepticons as a whole in that show were a bunch of Saturday-morning jokes and Megatron most certainly did not help their case.
Yes, often times the decepticons did seem like bumbling fools. But making a convincing threat of a leader? Megatron had a cannon on his arm bigger than the autobot mini's. That certainly looked like a convincing threat. On cybertron, he had the autobots on the run.
And besides Megatron the decepticons also had Starscream and Soundwave and his cassettes, themselves were great villians.
PrymeStriker wrote:Mostly because people today remember those from their childhood rather then them being some sort of incredibly competent leader.
No, it is assuredly more than that.
PrymeStriker wrote:Prime Megatron wasn't a very good leader because he couldn't keep his ranks in check, but he was the best developed Megatron by series' end.
TF Prime was the only other TF series I watched besides G1. I was expecting to NOT like, but I thought it was okay. I was especially expecting to not like Megatron, but I did, though not as much as G1. He was a good character for sure, but I am not so sure he was so greatly developed. Why? Because he actually turn the proverbial leaf at the end? I actually thought that was rather weak and unoriginal. TFP's Megatron was made a fool of almost every step of the way. The more I think about it as I type this the inferior he is to me compared to G1. In TFP, he basically had a countless number of decepticons at his disposal (another thing I couldn't stand about TFP), yet really couldn't accomplish much. He had far more tools than his G1 counterpart did, and while he kept coming close he never quite got there.
Obviously we can debate TF Prime as well, but I'll cut it off now since it really isn't the topic here.
PrymeStriker wrote:but that's something that wasn't afforded in the 80's.
That's not an excuse.
It is, and it isn't. To say that episodic television of the 80's is different than today is just a fact. You can say you don't like the way they did things back then and that would be fine, but it
does give an excuse for some of the reasons you may not like it. Should the writing have been better? Of course. But since the series was nothing more than a vehicle to sell the toys, it's an absolutely
amazing feat that it still resonates with so many of us 30 years later. So, yes, they got plenty of things wrong, but what G1 haters refuse to acknowledge
is just how many thing they got right!PrymeStriker wrote:Other than some dropped concepts, there's virtually nothing wrong with TFP's story. It's that most viewers drop their attention and don't analyze the story enough, in which a show like Prime requires viewer devotion in order to make sense.
It actually sounds like you are making an excuse here. There is nothing about TFP that requires anything more than any other series. And again, just to be clear, I don't hate TFP at all. I wound up liking it more than I thought I would going in. There were, however, spots of bad and lazy writing that, again, I wont get into here.
PrymeStriker wrote:You can still claim some characters to be bad, like I did with Megatron. Your point is moot.
Not moot at all. I will keep contending that if Megatron was as awful as you say, Transformers would have failed. I'll even give you that the vast majority of that loyal viewership rested with the love of Optimus Prime, but that's one side of the coin. And, of course, there are plenty of people who thought the decepticons were outright cooler than the autobots.
PrymeStriker wrote:What would've prevented him from having to retreat in the first place is calculating plans that would ultimately work. He's fought a war with the Autobots for thousands to millions of years, he should know that the Autobots aren't stupid, yet he constantly underestimates his enemy.
He built a space bridge. He actually brought Cybertron to earth's orbit. He created an energy creature that zapped the life from the autobots. Again, he cheated his way to victory in that one episode. He constantly found sources of energon. He kept a rag-tag group more or less in line. He did all these things while still having to get his ass kicked almost every episode. He fit the villain role well. When they finally allowed him to really kick ass in the movie, just look at the destruction he wrought in a single battle.
PrymeStriker wrote:That's your opinion.
I think he was the worst Megatron in existence.
Indeed. And if it weren't for him there
wouldn't be any other Megatrons that you can say were better. And that's something else G1 haters should at least be able to respect.