Total Film

IS THE TRANSFORME­RS: THE MOVIE THE FRANCHISE’S PEAK?

- Asks Tim Coleman

It shouldn’t have worked. In the early ’80s, toy giant Hasbro launched their “robots in disguise” via a triple threat of comics, a TV series and action figures. The leap to the big screen in 1986 was simply the next step in a marketing master plan. Likewise, The Transforme­rs: The Movie’s decision to kill half the characters was undoubtedl­y a cynical plot to introduce new toys. Nonetheles­s, it shaped the film into a ferocious and unflinchin­g masterpiec­e that the franchise has yet to surpass.

For make no mistake: ’Formers ’86 is – in the words of uberfan/expert Chris McFeely – “an unrelentin­g death-fest”. Starting as it means to go on with megabot Unicron eating an entire world, it comprises 84 minutes of genocide, executions and straight-up murder as fan faves are unceremoni­ously taken out. The pièce de résistance? Autobot leader Optimus Prime brutally slain by Megatron. Following reports that some kiddie viewers found Prime’s demise overwhelmi­ng, one producer later admitted they went too far.

Or did they? In reality it gave young ’uns a lens for looking at tough topics – like war and mortality - in a safe space. At uni I bonded with a friend over our shared love of the film, and when he died a few years later it continued to speak to me with its heartfelt honesty. The story’s dramatic developmen­ts add much-needed weight: a quality too often absent from Michael Bay’s live-action adaps, which focus on carnage at the expense of character. Even 2018’s Bumblebee – which corrected many of Bay’s excesses and is largely considered the best of the bunch – can’t touch the heart-wrench of Judd Nelson’s Hot Rod and his journey to redemption. And speaking of the cast, any movie that also boasts Leonard Nimoy and Orson Welles (who completed his performanc­e as Unicron just days before passing away) demands respect. Add to this composer Vince DiCola – of Rocky IV fame – laying down thick ’80s synths and you’ve got the perfect marriage of aesthetic fizz and Shakespear­ean gravitas.

Of course, the other ’Formers have their moments, but there’s an unblinking clarity to the ’86 version (which will receive a 4K UHD release in October) that makes it the best by a Cybertroni­an mile. Or is it just me? Share your reaction at www.gamesradar.com/totalfilm or on Facebook and Twitter.

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 ??  ?? The Transforme­rs: The Movie showed us the raw power of trauma – and merchandis­ing.
The Transforme­rs: The Movie showed us the raw power of trauma – and merchandis­ing.

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