Transformers #45
John Barber (w) • Andrew Griffith (a & c)
JETFIRE and KUP lead a team to investigate the mysterious ONYX system. Meanwhile, GALVATRON… well, GALVATRON just doesn’t like anybody.
FC • 32 pages • $3.99
Bullet points:
The events of the past months crash together—with disastrous results!
The stage is set for next month’s Earth-shattering (literally) epic!
Variant Cover by Golby!
IDW The Transformers #45 Full Preview
Posted by Va'al
Sep 25, 2015 at 6:09pm CDT
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Re: IDW The Transformers #45 Full Preview
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Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Sep 25, 2015
Gonna be a busy week of reading, that's for sure 

Re: IDW The Transformers #45 Full Preview
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Comment by pie-man
Sep 25, 2015
Finally... we get to Jazz again! 

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Comment by steve2275
Sep 25, 2015
what you guys said
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Comment by Whifflefire
Sep 26, 2015
THE WATER IS DRY
I do enjoy the interpretation of the condors as Statler and Waldorf-esque duo.
I do enjoy the interpretation of the condors as Statler and Waldorf-esque duo.
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It is good to see the other casettes getting characterization. Rumble and Frenzy are pretty consistently portrayed as street punks and Ratbat as a scheemer bigger than his size implies, but the others often go voiceless and without perso nality.
Comment by Shuttershock
Sep 26, 2015
Whifflefire wrote:THE WATER IS DRY
I do enjoy the interpretation of the condors as Statler and Waldorf-esque duo.
It is good to see the other casettes getting characterization. Rumble and Frenzy are pretty consistently portrayed as street punks and Ratbat as a scheemer bigger than his size implies, but the others often go voiceless and without perso nality.
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Comment by Randomhero
Sep 26, 2015
Totally. It's hard to say anyone but blue rumble and marvel ravage were ever characters. Frenzy in the cartoon was just a red and black twin of rumble and ravage was a spy and sound waves kitty.
That's somethings James and John have really done well, give a lot of characters we know and love actual character traits. Needlenoes is starting to make his way to my top ten favorite characters
That's somethings James and John have really done well, give a lot of characters we know and love actual character traits. Needlenoes is starting to make his way to my top ten favorite characters
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Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Sep 26, 2015
That's a reason I fell in love with MTMTE: characters I'd never heard of before. When I finally started reading comics, it was around the time issue 21 came out and I wondered who the hell was on the front cover. I really had no clue! But I'm glad so many characters are finally getting good personalities and interpretation 

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Comment by megatronus
Sep 27, 2015
Ten bucks says Kup has the 'argle bargle' line because of Antonin Scalia's recent publicity for using the phrase.
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Comment by Henry921
Sep 28, 2015
Galvatron is lying to bloody everybody.
I get that the solicit for this issue is that he "doesn't like anybody" but to what end is he working towards?
I get that the solicit for this issue is that he "doesn't like anybody" but to what end is he working towards?

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Synopsis
JETFIRE and KUP lead a team to investigate the mysterious ONYX system. Meanwhile, GALVATRON… well, GALVATRON just doesn’t like anybody.
Story
There is a web being woven, in which each piece of the puzzle so far seems to slot, slide, slip and get trapped. SkyLynx, Kup, D.O.C., Jetfire, Soundwave, Galvatron, the Onyx system, Blackrock, Faireborne, even Thundercracker and Buster. How does it hold together? Perhaps it doesn't.
John Barber, a long while ago now, talked about what was then Robots in Disguise as being the intrigue, thriller, Rome/Borgias/Game of Thrones-esque counterpart to the sitcom/space opera of MTMTE - and if anything were to prove that point further, it's this issue, with no doubt. The main plot carries on the workings of devious Blackrock mostly...
...but also those of Galvatron - perhaps even more so - as the Autobots are used for purposes that are still not entirely clear at this point. In fact, they seem to be the flies of that web. Galvatron's goals are shrouded in what comes across as pure cruelty, almost for the sake of it, if we are to take the example of Skywarp's function in his eyes - a repeated, ongoing agonising torture.
What Barber is setting up is big, very much so, and informed by Combiner Wars in more ways than one, but giving some really emotive aspects to the lesser used characters, while keeping the spotlight pointed just to the side of the key players of something even bigger about to go down.
Art
Andrew Griffith continues a very strong stretch of regular work with this series - though I sometimes still find myself wondering at some of the human jawlines. His Galvatron is magnificently terrifying, and the way in which the art is laid out just ensures that, yes, he is in control of the space he inhabits. Not to mention some splash pages that...
...with the addition of Josh Perez's colour-work, really drive the 'point' home. A lot of the action, if not all of it, takes place in a strange, ethereal locating of spaces that are both inside and outside - and then you have the snow scenes. So much snow. So much.
Tom B. Long is busy on this one, for pages and pages, in a sequence that I do not want to spoil for anyone reading, but the fontwork gives a fantastic sense of the scale of it all, and of what is at stake in the longer narrative of the upcoming issues. As for covers, the Griffith and Perez take on the main variant, while Casey Coller and Joana Lafuente add their own spin to the Autobot crew (thumbnailed). And of course, we have seen the Kei Zama and Yamaishi incentive variant Galvatron, being diplomatic.
Thoughts
Spoilerish ahead
If you were paying attention to other aspects of the Transformers universe, not just its fiction, you might start spotting some patterns emerging that were not there initially. Barber's weaving is intricate, logical, underlying a slower pace than MTMTE at times - but this month, this is definitely the book that delivers the most punches, in my view.
There are several moments - stunningly and darkly rendered by the visuals team - that feel not too dissimilar from major game-changing episodes or scenes in those same shows that stand as inspiration, and no one is really in control of their fate or condition, except for whoever is actually pulling the strings. Read this.
Comment by Va'al
Oct 1, 2015
HaXXorz
(Spoiler free-ish)
(Spoiler free-ish)
Synopsis
JETFIRE and KUP lead a team to investigate the mysterious ONYX system. Meanwhile, GALVATRON… well, GALVATRON just doesn’t like anybody.
Story
There is a web being woven, in which each piece of the puzzle so far seems to slot, slide, slip and get trapped. SkyLynx, Kup, D.O.C., Jetfire, Soundwave, Galvatron, the Onyx system, Blackrock, Faireborne, even Thundercracker and Buster. How does it hold together? Perhaps it doesn't.
John Barber, a long while ago now, talked about what was then Robots in Disguise as being the intrigue, thriller, Rome/Borgias/Game of Thrones-esque counterpart to the sitcom/space opera of MTMTE - and if anything were to prove that point further, it's this issue, with no doubt. The main plot carries on the workings of devious Blackrock mostly...
...but also those of Galvatron - perhaps even more so - as the Autobots are used for purposes that are still not entirely clear at this point. In fact, they seem to be the flies of that web. Galvatron's goals are shrouded in what comes across as pure cruelty, almost for the sake of it, if we are to take the example of Skywarp's function in his eyes - a repeated, ongoing agonising torture.
What Barber is setting up is big, very much so, and informed by Combiner Wars in more ways than one, but giving some really emotive aspects to the lesser used characters, while keeping the spotlight pointed just to the side of the key players of something even bigger about to go down.
Art
Andrew Griffith continues a very strong stretch of regular work with this series - though I sometimes still find myself wondering at some of the human jawlines. His Galvatron is magnificently terrifying, and the way in which the art is laid out just ensures that, yes, he is in control of the space he inhabits. Not to mention some splash pages that...
...with the addition of Josh Perez's colour-work, really drive the 'point' home. A lot of the action, if not all of it, takes place in a strange, ethereal locating of spaces that are both inside and outside - and then you have the snow scenes. So much snow. So much.
Tom B. Long is busy on this one, for pages and pages, in a sequence that I do not want to spoil for anyone reading, but the fontwork gives a fantastic sense of the scale of it all, and of what is at stake in the longer narrative of the upcoming issues. As for covers, the Griffith and Perez take on the main variant, while Casey Coller and Joana Lafuente add their own spin to the Autobot crew (thumbnailed). And of course, we have seen the Kei Zama and Yamaishi incentive variant Galvatron, being diplomatic.
Thoughts
Spoilerish ahead
If you were paying attention to other aspects of the Transformers universe, not just its fiction, you might start spotting some patterns emerging that were not there initially. Barber's weaving is intricate, logical, underlying a slower pace than MTMTE at times - but this month, this is definitely the book that delivers the most punches, in my view.
There are several moments - stunningly and darkly rendered by the visuals team - that feel not too dissimilar from major game-changing episodes or scenes in those same shows that stand as inspiration, and no one is really in control of their fate or condition, except for whoever is actually pulling the strings. Read this.
.
out of










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Comment by pie-man
Oct 1, 2015
To me, the last few pages felt like a sucker punch. Great read, with a lot of unexpected stuff happening to the autobots (unexpected by me, at least) and really tore away that aura of invincibility I thought they had... either because of Optimus' presence, or even Prowl & the Constructicons' presence.
I've been looking forward to this issue cause of the return of Jazz. I'm not optimistic about his fate
Can't wait even more for the next issue.
I've been looking forward to this issue cause of the return of Jazz. I'm not optimistic about his fate

Can't wait even more for the next issue.
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Comment by Starsaber468
Oct 1, 2015
Jetfire:Gurwalk mode activated
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Comment by Optimizzy
Oct 1, 2015
Sucker punch is right. Man. This is getting good and I LOVE Galvatron as the...villain? Is that what he is? That's why it's so good. You can't really be sure sometimes.
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Comment by D-Maximal_Primal
Oct 1, 2015
Talk about everyone getting beat down, holy cats. And Blackrock, holy cats again. This issue hit some big punches 

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Comment by MrBlack
Oct 1, 2015
This is really Barber at his best. He builds things up very slowly so that you feel the protagonists have a handle on things, and then BAM! Rug pulled out from under them, all hope is lost. It's what made his final arc in the first "season" of Robots in Disguise so fantastic.
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Precisely!
Comment by Va'al
Oct 1, 2015
MrBlack wrote:This is really Barber at his best. He builds things up very slowly so that you feel the protagonists have a handle on things, and then BAM! Rug pulled out from under them, all hope is lost. It's what made his final arc in the first "season" of Robots in Disguise so fantastic.
Precisely!