The Planet-Eater!
From Transformers Wiki
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Ultra Magnus can't deal with this lousy coloring, or his own off-model rendition, now! | |||||||||||||
"The Planet Eater!" | |||||||||||||
Publisher | Marvel Comics | ||||||||||||
First published | August 1986 | ||||||||||||
Cover date | December 1986 | ||||||||||||
Adaptation | Ralph Macchio | ||||||||||||
Breakdowns | Don Perlin | ||||||||||||
Finishes | Ian Akin and Brian Garvey | ||||||||||||
Colors | Nelson Yomtov | ||||||||||||
Lettering | Janice Chiang | ||||||||||||
Editor | Bob Budiansky |
While the Autobots and Decepticons fight a crucial battle on Earth, something threatens the very existence of Cybertron.
Contents |
Synopsis
In deep space, the planet Lithone is under attack, buildings and inhabitants alike destroyed by a deadly acidic mist that enshrouds the world. Forced to watch as his friend Arblus goes up in flames before his eyes, a sole Lithone named Kranix manages to escape his homeworld's destruction by transforming to a spacecraft mode and fleeing. Behind him, Lithone disintegrates... and through the acidic cloud where once it orbited emerges the architect of its destruction, Unicron, a monstrous, metallic planet. Having feasted on Lithone, Unicron now turns his sights on Cybertron....
The year is 2005, and although the Decepticons still rule Cybertron, from secret staging grounds on two of Cybertron's moons, the Autobots are preparing to retake the planet. To fuel their impending strike against the Decepticons, Optimus Prime sends Ironhide and a group of Autobots on a mission to Autobot City on Earth to collect the necessary energon cubes—but unfortunately, plans for this mission are overheard by the spying Laserbeak. The cassette reports his findings to Megatron, who proceeds to lead the Decepticons in intercepting the Earth-bound shuttle and slaying its crew, taking the vessel for their own in order to invade Autobot City using the Autobots' own ship as cover.
On Earth, the shuttle's approach is detected by Spike Witwicky's son Daniel, and he and the young Autobot Hot Rod head to Lookout Mountain outside Autobot City to watch its approach. As the ship sets down on the landing pad, however, Daniel is first to notice the Decepticons pouring out. Under the direction of city commander Ultra Magnus, the Autobots scramble to prepare the city for battle, transforming it into its armored fortress mode, but Megatron counters by having the Constructicons combine into Devastator, who begins tearing his way into the city.
Summoned by a distress call from Blaster, Optimus Prime arrives with reinforcements. While the Dinobots tackle Devastator, Prime confronts Megatron himself. A brutal one-on-one battle ensues, with both sustaining heavy injuries. Feigning defeat, Megatron is able to seize a discarded pistol from amid the wreckage of the battlefield and shoot Prime dead on, but with the last of his strength, Prime strikes Megatron a powerful blow, and both leaders collapse. With the tide of battle turned, the Decepticons recover the fallen Megatron and flee aboard Astrotrain. Optimus Prime appoints Ultra Magnus the next Autobot leader and passes to him the Matrix of Leadership, before succumbing to his wounds and dying.
As the embattled Decepticons journey through space, Astrotrain informs them that they must jettison dead weight or they'll never make it back to Cybertron. The healthy Decepticons vote to toss their wounded comrades out into space, and the conniving Starscream ensures that Megatron is set adrift with them. In time, however, the wounded Decepticons cross paths with Unicron, who pulls them down to his surface with a tractor beam. Unicron offers Megatron a deal: destroy the Autobot Matrix of Leadership in exchange for a new body and troops. Megatron resists at first, but is "convinced" to agree when he realises that destruction at Unicron's hands is the only alternative. Unicron reshapes some of the fallen Decepticon warriors into Cyclonus, Scourge, and the Sweeps, and Megatron himself is reformed into the powerful Galvatron!
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
Autobots | Decepticons | Humans | Others |
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Notes
Differences with the film
This comic adaptation is based on a slightly earlier version of the script than the finished film uses, and as such, there are several differences between it and the movie. Alternate scenes, details, and staging derived from the script include:
- Unicron devours Lithone using a corrosive mist. It is only after the planet is destroyed by this threat that we are granted our first look at Unicron, compared to the way the film shows him approach Lithone first.
- The native Lithones have the ability to transform into spacecraft, this being how Kranix escapes the planet, rather than piloting a ship. Arblus is consumed by Unicron's acid mist, instead of escaping with him (right).
- Bumblebee has "bumper stickers" on his arms, which read: "I ♥ CYBERTRON" and "I ♣ DECEPS," but see "Errors," below.
- Instead of taking off from an exposed, flat launch pad, the Autobots' shuttle bursts out of a concealed vertical launch platform, disguised as a mountain on the moon's surface, which shatters as the craft takes off.
- Laserbeak does not spy on the Autobots through a window, but is instead concealed within a cassette deck inside their headquarters. Consequently, the whole scene of his stealthy approach is absent, and we only first see him when he emerges from hiding after the shuttle launch.
- The Autobot shuttle is shown flying through an asteroid field just before the Decepticons' attack, with Ironhide in the pilot's seat, boasting of his ability to dodge the space-rocks. This scene provides an implicit explanation for how the Decepticons were able to get close enough to board the ship without being detected (they hid among the surrounding asteroids) that the film lacks.
- Brawn is shown being blasted in half, in comparison with the shoulder-shot that takes him out in the finished film.
- Hot Rod and Daniel's journey to Lookout Mountain goes by without incident (right). The scene of Daniel hitting a rock on his hoverboard and being caught by Hot Rod is absent, with the Autobot simply picking Daniel up at the start of their journey, and the pair do not smash through Kup's security cordon either.
- Blurr is all but absent; the art includes him during Optimus Prime's death scene, but he was not in the script at all for this portion of the film, only showing up during the post-battle clean-up. This was a holdover from a much earlier draft of the script that had him stationed elsewhere at a forward observation post, only arriving at Autobot City to deliver news of Unicron's consumption of Moonbase One.
- The battle for Autobot City does not last through the night; Optimus Prime and the Dinobots appear to show up not long after Devastator is formed.
- Optimus Prime does not drop the Matrix while trying to hand it to Ultra Magnus, meaning there's no moment of foreshadowing as Hot Rod catches it and it glows in his hands.
- The identities of the other Decepticons tossed out of Astrotrain with Megatron are left indistinct, represented only by generic silhouettes (including one Seeker, and one wing-less Conehead).
- The jettisoned Decepticons actually land on Unicron's surface, rather than floating in space in front of him while Megatron bargains. In keeping with the alternate version of Lithone's destruction, Unicron starts to surround Megatron with his acidic mist to "convince" him to accept his offer, rather than pulling him into his maw.
- Where the film shows only three other Decepticons are transformed by Unicron in addition to Galvatron, Cyclonus, and Scourge, six figures are visible in the comic, in keeping with the script's description that Scourge and Cyclonus would have an "array" of duplicates serving them.
Other changes made to the story, usually in the name of condensing and simplifying it, which are not derived from the script include:
- The scene of the Autobots checking in on Moonbase One is omitted. As a result, Jazz does not appear in the comic.
- Ironhide dies from the first shot the Decepticons hit him with; there's no "heroic nonsense" scene of Megatron finishing him off.
- The Decepticons actually land the Autobot shuttle on the city's launch pad before Daniel spots them. Consequently, Hot Rod and Kup's battle with Blitzwing and Shrapnel is omitted.
- Other scenes cut from the "battle of Autobot City" portion of the story include Starscream's strafing run on Arcee and Springer; the Insecticons eating the door and Hot Rod and Kup smashing through them; Perceptor and Blaster's battle with the cassettes in the communications tower (meaning that Blaster does not appear in the comic, though he is referred to by name); and the Autobots moving the missile launcher into place (though Devastator is still shown being hit with the missile from the launcher). This means that all of Kup's scenes wind up being cut from this issue; he only appears during Prime's death scene, and any important dialogue of his needed to move the story is given to Arcee.
- Hot Rod does not interfere in Optimus Prime and Megatron's fight; Megatron simply surprises Optimus Prime with the gun (right).
- Optimus Prime's final words are an entreaty to the other Autobots to follow Ultra Magnus (right).
- The scene of the Decepticons fighting for leadership inside Astrotrain is cut.
- To create a better cliffhanger ending for the issue, the order of the Decepticons' transformations by Unicron are reversed; Scourge and Cyclonus are created first, then Galvatron.
- Though figures representing them do appear in the art (right), there's no mention of Cyclonus's armada; instead of having Unicron introduce "Cyclonus, the warrior, and his armada," the comic featured narration stating that Cyclonus is "the warrior who will become Megatron's ship." As we'll see next issue, in accordance with the script, Unicron does not provide Galvatron with a ship as he does in the film.
Visual differences from the film, resulting from incomplete or outdated reference material include:
- All the characters are colored using their regular Marvel color models as reference, meaning they often look quite different from the film: Megatron has a black helmet, Soundwave is purple, Optimus Prime has no grey stripe on his torso, etc. Starscream and Sunstreaker are still using outdated colors that future issues of the regular series will revise: Starscream has blue pectorals, and Sunstreaker has yellow "ears" and blue-black arms.
- All the new movie characters are drawn to the specifications of slightly outdated character models, which were the basis for their toys, but which were further revised for the finished animated film; most famously, Galvatron is mostly grey (well, actually light blue in the comic's limited color palette), instead of the purple he is in the movie. Marvel would never get the updated models, and the characters would continue to look this way in every Marvel US and UK publication.
- Spike is not wearing an exosuit, but rather an orange-red bubble-helmeted space suit (below right).
- The Matrix is a featureless green rock. It emerges from Optimus Prime's left window-pec, rather than his entire chest opening up in the movie's iconic style.
Continuity and plotting errors
- The abridged dialogue during Megatron and Unicron's bargaining omits Unicron saying "you belong to me now," making Megatron's response of "no, you don't own me!" something of a non-sequiter.
Art and technical errors
- There is a slight discrepancy regarding the series' title between the cover and the indicia: Whereas the cover calls this issue "The Transformers: The Movie", the indicia identifies it as simply "Transformers: The Movie", without a definite article. The two subsequent issues' covers would drop the definite article.
- Basically nobody is colored right on the cover. Ultra Magnus is particularly egregious, with blue thighs, red boots, and a rather off-model head. Bumblebee's "back tire" is drawn on his front.
- Page 4:
- Panel 2: Cliffjumper is colored like Bumblebee. The smokestack on Optimus Prime's shoulder is blue instead of white.
- Panel 4: Ironhide has white thighs instead of red.
- Page 5:
- Panel 1: Looks like the inker misinterpreted pencil artist Don Perlin's rendition of the "♣" in the sticker on Bumblebee's arm; instead of "I ♣ DECEPS," the finished inked art reads: "180 DECEPS."
- Panel 4: Cliffjumper is again colored like Bumblebee.
- Page 6, panel 2: Soundwave's helmet is grey instead of pale purple. Starscream's wings are solid red.
- Page 7:
- Panel 1: Starscream has solid red wings again.
- Panel 3: Starscream's wings are now solid blue.
- Panel 4: Brawn has green arms instead of grey.
- Panel 8: Starscream's wing colors are inverted; red with white stripes, instead of vice versa.
- Panel 11: Here and throughout the issue, Hot Rod's thighs are the same fuchsia as the rest of his body, instead of the white his regular Marvel color model makes them.
- Page 9:
- Panel 2: Megatron is missing his Decepticon insignia.
- Panel 8: Arcee is red and grey instead of pink and white.
- Pages 12–13: Slag's dino-mode head, frill, and tail are all colored golden-yellow; his head should be a purple-grey with red horns, as should his tail, and his frill white. Sludge's dino-mode neck is grey instead of yellow.
- Page 12:
- Panel 4: Some additional incorrect splotches of yellow appear on Optimus Prime's torso.
- Panel 5: Slag's wings and portions of Sludge's chest are yellow instead of grey.
- Page 14, panel 1: The shadows on Optimus Prime's white parts are rendered in purple-grey instead of pale blue.
- Page 15, panel 3: The border around Optimus' grill-abs is the same pale yellow as the background, instead of white.
- Pages 18–19: Ultra Magnus' chestplate is colored mostly red, with only the central portion being the correct blue.
- Page 18, panel 2: Several details on Magnus' chest are colored blue instead of red. Perceptor's scope is mostly blue-black, instead of red.
- Page 20:
- Panel 4: Starscream's left wing is solid red. His right is uncolored, left the same shade as the background.
- Panels 5 and 7: Starscream's got inverted wing colors again.
- Page 21: The magenta inks on this page are misaligned, shifted slightly down and to the right. It's most noticeable around Cyclonus and Scourge's eyes.
- Page 22: Galvatron's Decepticon symbol is red. The dark blues on this page are misaligned, shifted slightly to the left; it's most noticeable on Galvatron's "abs" and the text declaring his name (see the image in synopsis above).
Other trivia
- Autobot City is referred to as "Fortress Maximus." This was a name Hasbro had been holding in reserve for a while; it was initially conceived for the character who would instead be named Omega Supreme, and its use here suggests they were planning to use it for Metroplex, before deciding against it. It would, of course, eventually see use the following year as the name of the 1987 Autobot Headmaster leader.
- In accordance with the script, Snarl is absent from the Dinobots' ranks throughout the mini-series, just as in the finished film. Swoop is also missing from this issue, but he turns up next issue.
Cover
- Issue #1: The cast in a movie-poster pose, presumably by Don Perlin, Ian Akin, and Brian Garvey.
Advertisements
US
- M&M's - inside front cover
- Lazer Tag - between pages 4 & 5
- Bonkers! (candy) - between pages 5 & 6
- Westfield Comics Subscription Service - between pages 9 & 10
- NBC Saturday morning cartoons: Kissyfur, Disney's Adventures of the Gummi Bears, Smurfs, Punky Brewster, Alvin and the Chipmunks, Foofur, Kidd Video, plus: One to Grow On - between pages 12 & 13
- Adidas Astronauts (boys & girls activewear) - between pages 15 & 16
- Marvel Super Mart and sketchy ads - between pages 16 & 17
- Bullpen Bulletins and checklist - between pages 18 & 19
- Marvel subscription service
- Dungeons & Dragons set #1: Basic Rules - inside back cover
- Brach's candy (back cover)
UK
- Transformers Tell-A-Tale Adventures - inside front cover
- Marvel Super Heroes Advanced Set (TSR RPG) - page 27
- Transformers UK Weekly Comic - inside back cover
- 'The New Leaders' Transformers Toy Advert - back cover
Reprints
The Transformers Winter Special 1986 (Marvel UK, 1986)
Classic Transformers, Vol. 6 (IDW Publishing, 2010)
The Transformers Classics, Vol. 7 (IDW Publishing, 2014)
Transformers: The Definitive G1 Collection: Volume 92: Transformers: The Movie (Hachette Partworks, 2020)
Reprint notes
Marvel UK
- All three issues of the mini-series were collected into one special for release in the United Kingdom. This reprint edits the date from 2005 to 2006, to keep continuity with the regular weekly comic's recent story "Target: 2006," which—working from an even older draft of the film than the one on which this adaptation was based—placed the events of the movie in that year.
- It appears some colouring alterations were made to this UK release as the misaligned inks on page 21 are corrected and Galvatron's Decepticon symbol is white on page 22.
IDW Transformers Classics
Like the regular monthly series, this mini-series also had its colors "remastered" for The Transformers Classics series of trade paperbacks, with varying degrees of success. The process was applied less thoroughly to these issues; notably, Hot Rod was not changed from fuchsia to toy-accurate red-and-orange, nor was Soundwave changed from his normal Marvel purple to toy-and-cartoon accurate blue, as both were in other volumes.
- Page 2, panel 1: The gun on Kranix's forearm is recolored from grey-purple to the same brownish-grey as the rest of his arm.
- Page 4
- Panel 2: Cliffjumper's colors are corrected... except they're "corrected" to his cartoon colors, with grey-and-black arms (right). On his Marvel color scheme, his arms should be blue.
- Panel 3: Optimus Prime's pelvis has gone from the correct white to incorrect blue.
- Page 5, panel 1: Bumblebee's eyes were yellow like the rest of his face in the original art, which was a pretty common way of coloring him in the regular comic; here, they've been recolored white.
- Page 9, panel 8: Arcee's colors are corrected.
- Page 12, panel 4: The yellow splotches on Optimus are removed.
- Page 21: The misaligned magenta inks are corrected, but a misinterpretation of them sees Scourge's eyes are changed from red to yellow.
- Page 22: The misaligned blue inks are corrected.