Transformers: Robots In Disguise Ongoing #10 Preview
Tuesday, October 9th, 2012 12:32AM CDT
Categories: Comic Book News, Book NewsPosted by: Blurrz Views: 50,173
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Transformers: Robots in Disguise Ongoing #10
John Barber (w) • Livio Ramondelli (a) • Ramondelli, Casey Coller (c)
OPTIMUS PRIME IN SPACE! Orion Pax—the former OPTIMUS PRIME—follows a rogue group of DECEPTICONS into one of the greatest mysteries ever to face the AUTOBOTS! Time will bend—and heroes will fall!
FC • 32 pages • $3.99
*Variant covers:
Variant Marcelo Matere cover!
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Posted by Manterax Prime on October 9th, 2012 @ 2:12am CDT
Posted by Blurrz on October 9th, 2012 @ 2:26am CDT
Manterax Prime wrote:When did Prime step down?
December 2011.
Posted by gothsaurus on October 9th, 2012 @ 10:02am CDT
I guess I'm going to have to pick up every other comic to just get these (???). Or maybe the trade paperbacks will only collect the matching styles? (not to mention the Annual being a MTMTE/RID crossover with covers from both lines... which is also confusing.)
It wouldn't be a big deal except that the styles are SOOO vastly different. Anyone else jarred by the flip-flop changes in style?
Posted by Bass X0 on October 9th, 2012 @ 11:55am CDT
gothsaurus wrote:I'm getting disgruntled over the artist switching in the RID continuity. I really like that painterly look, but don't care at all for the other storyline or art style. (just personal preference, not a comment on its quality.)
It wouldn't be a big deal except that the styles are SOOO vastly different. Anyone else jarred by the flip-flop changes in style?
This painted look signifies Orion Pax's adventures in space and is only used for that. Those stories set on Cybertron during RiD are using the other art style. Throughout RiD, this has not been changed. The Orion Pax storyline is pretty much its own story, just included in the Robots in Disguise banner.
Posted by gothsaurus on October 9th, 2012 @ 12:59pm CDT
Posted by Downbeat on October 9th, 2012 @ 1:33pm CDT
Frankly, I think John Barber is a mad genius, and that's heavily exhibited here. Great job with writing, though the art's a bit hard to follow.
Posted by gothsaurus on October 9th, 2012 @ 2:47pm CDT
Posted by Sodan-1 on October 9th, 2012 @ 6:31pm CDT
Just one question for anyone who can answer: I've got quite a comic backlog so I'm not looking for an explanation, but wasn't Hardhead kind of made undead or something? Is his new life explained and I just haven't gotten to it yet?
Posted by quickmixed on October 9th, 2012 @ 8:01pm CDT
Sodan-1 wrote: wasn't Hardhead kind of made undead or something? Is his new life explained and I just haven't gotten to it yet?
Thats a good point.
To the best of my knowledge, I thought it was only Galvatron who could survive outside the Dead Universe. I dont think Hardhead has been explained yet.
Then again, I never really fully understood the entire Gorlam Prime, Dead universe business.
Posted by Henry921 on October 9th, 2012 @ 10:39pm CDT
quickmixed wrote:Sodan-1 wrote: wasn't Hardhead kind of made undead or something? Is his new life explained and I just haven't gotten to it yet?
Thats a good point.
To the best of my knowledge, I thought it was only Galvatron who could survive outside the Dead Universe. I dont think Hardhead has been explained yet.
Then again, I never really fully understood the entire Gorlam Prime, Dead universe business.
That's what happens when Revelation gets truncated from eight issues to four...
Posted by El Duque on October 12th, 2012 @ 11:41pm CDT
PAGE 1- We’re seeing Spectro, Spyglass and Viewfinder back (or forward) in action. Things are starting to get a little strange. What made you want to bring these guys into the time travel story line that is going through Robots In Disguise?
LIVIO RAMONDELLI: I think most writers and artists hope to take a shot at doing a time travel story at some point, if only for the sheer challenge they represent. And I thought it was very clever of John to turn what might be seen as a continuity error into the springboard for such a story.
JOHN BARBER: Yeah, as long-time readers might know, there was a deal where these guys turned up in Spotlight: Wheelie and were, uh… partial spoiler alert, I guess: dead. And then later on, they turned up in All Hail Megatron, alive… When I saw that, back when I was first putting together what would become the story of Robots in Disguise, I thought there might be an interesting story to tell there.
I mean, I don’t want this to be a story that’s about some continuity problem; it’s just that continuity problem suggested an idea for a story I thought was worth telling. One that might be bigger and weirder… a disjointed story that doesn’t unfold linearly. It’s something I always really wanted to try to write. I kinda wanted to go full-Morrison on a story; do a story where the reader had to really keep up with what was going on. So I knew the Reflector trio was going to be in this story for a long time. I actually thought readers would figure out that Turmoil’s space ship was the Reflectors’ space ship, especially when you saw the little green guys from Spotlight: Wheelie when this ship turned up in RID, back in issue 7.
But to me, the thing I really wanted to do was to get into this time jump story. And the Reflectors provided a great way into that, I though.
PAGE 2- Following up with Orion Pax, Hardhead, Wheelie and Garnak, as previously seen in Syndromica Part 1. The hint of weirdness continues. Working with an artist like Livio, would you say that you both have an influence on the work you produce the way either of you wouldn’t have with a different writer/artist?
JOHN BARBER: Definitely. I mean, I see it as being in a band. The usual RID band is me and Andrew Griffith with Josh Perez on colors, but I feel like I get to do side projects with Brendan Cahill and Guido Guidi… and every once in a while that guy from the Autocracy band with Chris Metzen and Flint Dille comes over and we jam together. They’re all really different experiences to me—I love the collaboration of it all.
The first “Syndromica” issue that Livio and I did was in issue 6, and it was all big, wide shots; lots of landscapes and big action and scary characters. Livio and I really hammered that story out together, and it was great to do, but I knew this one would be different. I was kinda sticking Livio with a story here, and I missed that back-and-forth on the writing side, but anyway… such is life, and I wrote a draft of the first few pages and sent it to Livio. I thought he was waiting for the script, but he actually had some other work to finish first. We were pretty far ahead of the deadline, at that point.
I wasn’t really happy with what I’d sent, and I was flipping through Watchmen that night—you know, like you do—when Livio emailed me and said he wouldn’t be starting for a few more days. I emailed back and told him to delete the script I’d sent. It was much more of a straightforward opening; more of a… I don’t know, a regular comic book. But I was looking at how Watchmen used the 9-panel grid, where it wasn’t just 9 panels in sequence; each panel also had relationships and echoes to previous panels and pages and it was all part of a big whole, and I wanted to try to use that structure to make the time-travel stuff work better…
Getting this rigid structure and using it as a counterpoint to a really chaotic story and giving Livio the opportunity to play against what I usually think of him doing so well—but that I was convinced he would do really well and he was the only person on Earth who could draw this—all that opened up. I emailed Livio back and said “how far down the rabbit hole are you willing to go, here?”
LIVIO RAMONDELLI: RID #10 is unquestionably the most challenging story I’ve ever worked on in terms of layouts. I’m not an overly mathematical person, and so reading the script (with descriptions like “panel 4 on page 3 here will echo panel 8 on page 21,” etc.) was hard for me. I honestly don’t know how John wrote it without drawing it first, hah. It’s the only time I’ve ever sat down with him in person to talk through panel arrangements. But it was very rewarding to see the final issue coming together, and the repeating panels sliding into place. I really respect John as a writer, and the care he puts into telling his stories. And I think this issue represents a challenge we took on to deliver a different reading experience for this particular tale.
Originally, RID #10 was supposed to be relatively straight forward. But I recall getting a cryptic e-mail from John one day saying essentially “how do you feel about drawing something really crazy?” His ambition in crafting a story this complex was inspiring to be a part of. And so when he asked me how far I’d be willing to go with him on this, I told him I’d draw whatever he wanted. I have total faith in the guy, and so I’m happy to blindly commit to something he’s writing.
Having said that, I also now feel like John owes me for drawing his insane fever dream. And one day, and that day may never come, I will call on him for a grave favor.
But seriously, I think the band analogy is a great one. One thing that all the current creative teams seem to like is that we have our own sandboxes to play in (be it More Than Meets the Eye, Autocracy/Monstrosity, or RID), yet we can also mingle with one another as part of the cohesive universe. So it’s always fun to pop in and work with John the writer, in addition to John the editor.
PAGE 3- Pax’s ship arrives on LV-117, the planet that Wheelie crashed on in Spotlight: Wheelie. And he finds the dead Viewfinder inside the ship they were just following. How do you plan for an issue like this, with so much complexity to it?
JOHN BARBER: Well… I just had to keep all this in my head as I was writing. I had a couple diagrams but most of it was just… I just tried to visualize the shape of things—I mean the shape of the panels, leaving these Livio-sized holes in my thinking—and keep all that in mind.
I do have to say that editor Carlos Guzman was utterly invaluable here. I mean, he always is, but here especially. He really came in with lists of things that didn’t work; plot points that were utterly impenetrable (instead of just, like, mostly impenetrable) and things that didn’t add up… Carlos went in and diagrammed out all the layouts based on the script and I did a pretty significant rewrite and then another bit here and there…
Then we sent it over to Livio and I just dumped out all the data I’d had stored. I mean, it was kind of crazy. There was a week or so where I knew where everybody was on every page in every time period and what they were doing and what direction in time they were going and blah blah blah… and then it was just GONE. And Livio would ask questions and I would have no idea… it was his problem at that point.
LIVIO RAMONDELLI: The issue was very complex. Some of it might not even look that hard in the final pages. But we were dealing with repeating panels, and different time periods. In addition, the pages had a very rigid panel arrangement and smaller shots for the most part. I tend to like to frame things in more of a horizontal, widescreen fashion. But this was fun, playing with the almost Watchmen-style architecture that Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons did so masterfully.
Each of the time periods had to look different, and so that meant a new lighting scheme for each one. This can be insanely tricky. I knew Pax and co. arrived in sunshine, and so I contrasted that with the kind of red, hellish light that the final battle takes place in. But in addition, there were other lighting schemes to consider: Pax fighting Bludgeon, as well as him encountering Turmoil, among others. I like the red lighting in the final battle, as I think it’s strikingly different from what has come before. And I think the extreme nature of it fits the crazy landscape. But the Turmoil scene is the one I wish I’d found a better lighting technique for. Ah well, you learn and move forward.
PAGE 4- Pax continues looking thought the crashed Decepticon ship, strange things are happening to him. Was there a specific reason why this time place with Pax and his crew, rather than on Cybertron with Bumblebee and everyone there?
JOHN BARBER: Yeah. I mean, Bumblebee and his crew are the main story through issue 15 or so. And after that… the stuff we’re getting set up here is really the next big story. It’s all together, it’s all interconnected—I mean, the Reflectors came from Cybertron in issue 9 leading here; the story of Jhiaxus and Monstructor builds on what we saw in the Annual… it’s all one big thing, but yeah—it’s intentional we’re following Pax and the crew here.
PAGE 5- Pax goes through what appears his own time travel event after touching the glowing sphere in the Decepticon craft. Any relation between the possible time bending here and what he experienced as Prime in Death of Optimus Prime?
JOHN BARBER: He experienced a time jump there, so yeah—he recognizes the phenomenon here. It’s not necessarily the same cause, but it’s an effect he’s familiar with.
Actually—one of the things I really wanted to get across here was the way Prime reacts to that. When we see the first time jump with the Decepticons, they start panicking. When we see it on page 2 with Pax and the Autobots, Pax immediately takes control and gets a read on the situation—“Everyone saw that?” The first thing he does is confirm it wasn’t a hallucination; it wasn’t an error with him. Then he calms everybody down and sends them toward the planet for answers. That’s why he’s Optimus Prime and the Reflectors aren’t. Even when he’s Orion Pax, he’s Optimus Prime.
LIVIO RAMONDELLI: I think that whether he’s calling himself Orion Pax or Optimus Prime, he can’t help but be inherently noble and a natural leader. One of my favorite moments in this issue is what Pax does to Turmoil upon seeing an innocent threatened. I always thought of Prime as being a gentle soul… but he will absolutely beat someone down if they attempt to prey on innocents. He’s such a great mixture of strength and compassion. Which is why I assume he’s meant so much to myself and many other people around the world.
Posted by Bubbah on October 13th, 2012 @ 2:03pm CDT
Downbeat wrote:The Orion Pax stuff is heavily intertwined with the main story and neither would make sense without the other.
Frankly, I think John Barber is a mad genius, and that's heavily exhibited here. Great job with writing, though the art's a bit hard to follow.
I agree, the writing is excellent and while I understand this art style is used for Orion's storylines, I personally am not a fan of Livio's work. It makes it extremely hard to follow, most of his work is zoomed in so you only see a face, an arm, a glowing orb for an eye ... There is very little background in his art to show surroundings and so trying to understand the context of what's taking place is left entirely up to the writer, instead of the art and writing working together.
Livio's work reminds me of fan art. It has a unique style and looks good as single pieces of work or for covers, but when trying to move a story forward or used consistantly as the driving force for an entire book, it doesn't work for me. (and I'm sure I'll get plenty of flak for it haha)
Posted by Tigertrack on October 14th, 2012 @ 6:04am CDT
Livios art is great! It is harder for me to like with transformers rather than an artist who draws them more classic in style. I'm not hating it on tfs anymore, because at this point I've learned to accept it in my transformers stories. I prefer the other classic style but totally respect Livios talent and style. He's got loads if both.
Posted by gothsaurus on October 15th, 2012 @ 9:28am CDT
We DO want the mystery, unfolding details, reveals... but you need the general public to be able to follow it, especially if you start throwing in time travel, alternate universes, multiple timelines, dream sequences... Those should be your red flags in writing a story. You're going to have to start holding people's hand a bit to lead them through that mire.
I hope feedback on forums can help lead the writing team into pushing for a little more clarity. But still, that said, I loved it. Just had a little trouble following it. Still put it down thinking it was awesome.