Dagon wrote:To address the initial question, I don't know. Animateds' success or lack of is just like the movies: if you like it you are somehow in the class of the next evolution of human being, and are therefore able to comprehend things that mortals don't like, and if you don't like it, you're only disliking it becuase it's popular to do so, and you feel that great a need for popularity that you bandwagon shows and movies just ot fit it. I didn't care for Animated, but it's always a shame when a cartoon gets the ax.
That's cool man. I hope I didn't give the impression that all were lowly peons for not liking TFA or whatnot. I don't like it when people do that, either, its childish.
I'm just reading through for a couple of minutes and wanted to tag along with this idea here.
For some reason, there was this idea floating around that Prime was going to be/was planned to be the TF cartoon for the foreseeable future, stretching over 5+ years, and I guess my response was always that people believe that load of horseradish? Honestly? 5+ years for a cartoon? I know, inb4 Simpsons/Flintstones/Family Guy/other obviously major network/prime time shows. Really, a TF cartoon that would run for more than 3 or 4 seasons? The original ran for three season in the States, Beast Wars for 3 (so there's two of the best, or most popular, or influential) and people honestly think that there's going to be a cartoon that runs for more than 5 years?
We're not talking about like, niche animation like the Adult Swim stuff, and not about the mainstream Fox stuff. If it does last for that long, I'll necrobump this thread to apologize. But seriously, people really think that a TF cartoon will run over 5 years and not eventually just lose its audience and/or appeal?
No need to apologize, man, I think what you're saying still relates to the original question in a way.
I think that a TF cartoon can indeed run for 5 years or more, given certain considerations are met. My favourite Anime (well, the
only Anime I've liked since Robotech truth be told) went 6 seasons, and finished a few years later with a 7th to much fan relief. My take on that success was that it was a great story with great characters, all of whom had satisfying circles of growth. Everyone and everything in the story evolved in a way that was both fitting, natural and not distracting. In fact, the ways that things and people evolved continually enhanced the story. Lastly, the story never lost sight over what it was about.
Likewise with a TF cartoon series; if it can meet all the above criteria in ways that suit the franchise, then I think it can work for 5 years or more. TFA, seemed to have been meeting the above criteria in its way. There was an evolution in things that was fitting, natural, non-distracting, while enhancing the overall story by setting the stage for yet bigger and more exciting events.
Now, that being said I have concerns about TF Prime, not so much because it's a 5 year plan, but because the set-up looks like it will stunt all the criteria for long-term success.
-Starting them on Earth; extremely bad idea. If this show is about what it means to be a 'Prime,' then they should have started on Cybertron. Start just where Exodus started, with Orion Pax. We've not seen this version of Optimus' story explored at any great depth on a TV series. Starting on Earth, been there, done that. TFA sidestepped this whole cliche by making 'Prime' a common rank and Optimus as wash-up with redemption potential.
-More human drama than ever before...
This is what makes me wonder if Hasbro is out of touch rather than just really confident. Its almost like the success of Bay's films have given them a mistaken impression on who the focus should really be on. Having human characters that immediately clash with the human characters in the films doesn't make any sense to me either, creatively, or business-wise.
-No toys on the immediate horizon. This seems to have hurt TFA in some degree from what I've been reading.
-Premium Cable...(was it you Dagon, that mentioned this initially?)
A show on Premium cable, in hard times, and competing against the juggernaut that is Clone Wars, which is more widely available...Yeah, not looking good there. I'm not intrigued enough to up my cable bill by more than half just to watch this. Surely I'm not alone it that either. Again, Hasbro is either just really confident that they've got something special, or they're flat out of touch with their own property.