Dead Metal wrote:Lastjustice wrote:Dead Metal wrote:G1 started 26 years ago and is going on till this very day with things such as comics, books and toys. So saying it ended 20 years ago is totally and utterly wrong.
And I'm going counter point that and say not quite so simple Dead Metal. By your logic just because superman has been going since the dawn of comics it's exactly the same. If you've read both,Action comics number 1 and something off the recently that's definitely not the case.(or batman, Spider-man, or any other major comic character) Things have changed, characters have been killed, staff working on it have come and go. Many characters greatly vary between eras despite being the same character title characters.
Superman, as everything else DC, has been rebooted over and over because DC never managed to keep their continuity straight, that's the reason why the Joker now has "evolving madness". The DC characters from the different eras are all contained in their own little universe, I don't count them as one and the same thing, but I mostly don't care for them. Spider-Man and the rest of the Marvel characters are still the exact same persons they started out as (save for a few exceptions) these persons just evolved over time the same as you did, I mean you where once a baby and evolved into who you are today, does that mean your current self is a completely different thing entirely from you with 5? Just because their worlds and people around them have evolved and kept changing dosen't make them a wholly different thing, only if they decided to start something completely different.
Ok, want to really get technical with me, fine. I thought someone might pull infinite crisis card on that point.I will drive my point home then heh.
For marvel side of things marvel been same characters since the 60s for majority of main characters. But how some of these characters are is quite different from their original release.
Take Ironman he was a poster child for America's industrialism against the red threat, he currently is a mouth piece for that , and more recently was dealing with civil liberties and the government going too far in civil war. Captain America was a recruitment poster boy, and then later evolved into a character against the establishment and keeping true to the american dream. While on paper they re same character, they've changed greatly. They're products of their era.
Heck if anything was made during the 90s, it definitely had the dark age mentality ooze into it's pages. I doubt even transformers was safe from that as Generation 2 tried be "extreme."
Since 1984, there have been many comic books that take place in the Generation One continuity. They include:
The Transformers (Marvel Comics) - The original Transformers comic, published by Marvel and Marvel UK in the 1980s, and later reprinted by Titan Books.
Generations - an IDW series reprinting select issues of the Marvel book.
Transformers in 3D - Three issues produced by Blackthorne publishers in 1987.
G.I. Joe crossovers -- several stories from several publishers have featured G.I. Joe meeting up with the G1 Transformers.
The Transformers (Dreamwave comic) - Several miniseries and a canceled ongoing, published by Dreamwave. The same continuity includes:
The War Within
Transformers: Micromasters
The Transformers (IDW comic) - The current semi-ongoing series with associated mini-series and one-shot titles, largely overseen by Simon Furman. Includes:
This was not all done by same people, in fact was done by different companies all together. Those are as much G1 as the New star trek movie is the original star trek. Not only did they not follow the show, they didn't even follow each other. Dreamwave didn't take right off where Marvel (which it had two Micro-continuities) when they deemed it unprofitable to continue printing transformers comics. (which they had Generation 2 which by default would stop it from being G1 comics, since the series made a very deliberate change of direction for the franchise, bringing it into the 1990s with extreme violence and carnage, huge guns, gritty plot lines, and a fair amount of gratuitous character death.)
IDW didn't pick up where dreamwave left off when they went bankrupt.(it's not like Star Trek where they followed up the original series with next generation, then DS9,voyager which are all same universe/continuity.) The started their own REMAKE of G1 in the wake of that. None of these are same continuity, there for G1 ENDED!! They are G1 only in name and inspiration.
You can debate that's the same, but then like saying Pre-crisis and Post Crisis superman are same. You'd be wrong.
G1 is more than just an era, it's the characters, the main concept and many other things. Most consider The Cartoon to be the core experience, although the comics came first the truth is however the core experience is the concept, characters and their toys, not the comics and not the show and as long as those elements are present anything officially labelled as G1 is G1.
That's fundmentally flawed. Like saying anyone who paints a Mona Lisa is a Davinci. No it would be a remake of it. That's what exists now, remakes using same characters in a new series.
You really didn't get what I said there:
I concede this point after rereading what you said. I agree with you after doing so.
I am not saying the movies should be G1 or Animated or RID, I'm saying they should be what they are, their own thing. And anybody claiming the general public wants the movies to be G1 is just lying to themselves. So don't try to explain to me what I already know.
Yeah I agree anyone who thinks the public is just dying for g1 be revisited is sadly mistake. Most public barely remembers it, and probably couldn't tell you difference at a glance between the following series. I know my sister couldn't as she saw Armada and just knew was transformers before the 2007 movie came out. I had explain that there was several series since.
By SexFighter
You're pretty dismissive of G1.
Sorry I see it for what it is. It was fun for what it was(i still enjoy watching it,as I'm rewatching some of it atm on a reviewing all of G1 thread I'm following.), but some fans make it out to too much of a sacred cow.(I dismiss many as simply being unable take off their nostalgia goggles) It's stories were usually shallow(outside of multiple part episodes they rarely brought much depth.), and generally just took an idea and screwed around with it for 20 mins, then aburptly wrapped it up.
The 86 film did the same thing, just on a larger scale. Screwed around with an idea and let it randomly go whereever, then slammed on the brakes to quickly end it. It was hardly the hallmark of storytelling. It got the intial idea out there,bring us alot of rememberable characters(which the cartoon couldn't juggle very well. Massive casts are better for comics than animated shows since they can spotlight individuals better and have more windows to do it.) but it had hardly scratched the surface of what you could do with.
Beastwars might have followed up G1 Continuity, but it refined the mythos considerably during it's reign. G1 was sloppy, and never focused on having story arcs. Beast wars did, and gave us far more depth on top of just robots beating crap out of each other. The Unicron Trilogy, was alright, I wouldn't dismiss as simply a G1 clone, because like all series reboots, they all manage bring atleast one cool character or idea out of them. Most had several.