Wait, come back! I promise this doesn’t involve Mark Wahlberg hate-chugging a Bud Light.
I have a friend whom I’d turned onto IDW Publishing’s Transformers: More Than Meets the Eye a few weeks ago, and she immediately began recommending it to her other friends. While writing this article, I asked her how she was wording these recommendations, and she responded, “Oh man, I just started this great comic, aliens on a big old mission after this huge war ends and they Voyager themselves and the characters are amazing and it’s funny and heartbreaking and…. it’s Transformers.”
That last part tends to be where most people lose interest.
Seven years and four Michael Bay movies have created something of a cultural antipathy for the Transformers brand. Despite the over-saturation of the films, I still have great fondness for the franchise. I love the old 1984 cartoon especially, though usually in the vein of “Let’s get drunk and watch the one where they travel back in time to Camelot and Starscream makes bombs out of bird shit” or “Let’s get drunk and watch the one where Seaspray turns into a mermaid… for love” (The show is nonsense and it is beautiful and I love it).
However, despite being a lifelong shameless apologist of all things Transformers and Michael Bay, even I wouldn’t push them on unsuspecting neophytes as good. Cracked out? Sure. Fun? Usually. But good? As in, “Hi, fellow normal adult, I read a good thing that I think you’d enjoy and I am recommending it to you”? That’s a hard push, even for me.
2014 was the year that I got caught up on IDW’s current Transformers run, including the two current monthly ongoing series, More Than Meets The Eye, its sister title Robots in Disguise (recently rebranded simply The Transformers), and the Windblade mini-series (we’ll talk about Windblade another day.) For the purposes of this article, we’re going to focus on More Than Meets The Eye, written by James Roberts and with art (mostly) by Alex Milne. And here, to my surprise, was the adult-skewing, accessible Transformers fiction that was good. No gritty reboot syndrome, just Robots! In! Spaaaaace! Here was everything the movies should have been—and no one outside of the fanbase was reading it.
I was surprised also how few year-end lists MTMTE made for 2014, because the people who read the comic really, really like it. And honestly I think in large part it’s brand bias; many potential readers who might enjoy the series probably aren’t giving it a look because, well, Transformers. And morbidly fascinated though I may be with the Michael Bay oeuvre, I really, deeply despise the argument that “it’s not supposed to be good.” I hear that one a lot.
But any premise is potentially worthwhile in the right hands, if, that is, you can get past the “Transformers” hump.
The Premise
The year is… near future-ish. The war-without-end between the Autobots and the Decepticons ends abruptly when, at the end of many confusing plot points, an uninhabitable Cybertron is made inhabitable again. Unfortunately, Cybertron is kind of a shithole with no cities, infrastructure, or government. The impulsive and egotistical Rodimus (né Hot Rod), possibly the bro-iest robot ever, is convinced that the best way to fix the situation is to set out on a quest aboard his ship, the Lost Light, to find the legendary “Knights of Cybertron,” who, if not able to repair Cybertron, might find their race a better place to live.
After rounding up a couple hundred of (mostly) Autobots, an accidental space jump throws the them to some undetermined point in deep space. Thus begins a Star Trek: Voyager-esque journey, with Our Heroes cut off from Cybertron but still pursuing their original quest anyway. It is worth noting that as of issue #36, Our Heroes have still made just about zero progress on this quest.
Though I’m sure this quest will come to some fruition some day, as with all good adventure stories it is not the destination so much as the journey and the characters you’re on the ride with—the hodgepodge crew of the Lost Light are about as well-rounded, dysfunctional and identifiable group of nigh-immortal alien robots that turn into vehicles as you’re going to find.
World Building/Character Development in an Established Universe
Playing with concepts that are already set in stone and being creative within a strict rubric can either be awkward to behold (the live action films are a good example) or an interesting challenge. And let’s not kid ourselves—the only reason any of this exists is to sell toys. But moreover, in working with an established brand, we find the comics trying to take characters with names like “Spinister” and “Chromedome” and make them work in an honest-to-god narrative without driving off a meta cliff. But Roberts takes such joy in building a complex world that it’s hard not to buy into it, little things such as, for instance, off-handed explanations for why these guys even call themselves Decepticons in the first place.
This also isn’t a new take on characters you’re already familiar with; most of the characters you probably won’t have heard of unless you’re already a fan of the franchise, or you have a really, really good memory. You might remember the captain and second-in-command, Rodimus (sans “Prime”—shockingly Optimus is still alive in this continuity) and Ultra Magnus from the 1984 movie, and also nominal third-in-command Drift, who you may remember from last year’s Age of Extinction. (He’s the one in the film who looks like a samurai and calls Optimus Prime “sensei.” Yep. Transformers!)
The Kirk/Spock/McCoy trio is given a fun re-examination with these three; Rodimus’s careless impulsiveness is a massive character flaw that sometimes costs lives, Ultra Magnus’s obsession with rules and regulation puts an insurmountable emotional barrier between him and the rest of the crew, and Drift’s emotionality is rooted more than anything in his newfound religiosity (his dynamic with the hardline atheist Ratchet is fabulous.) Somehow none of this is annoying.
The most well known character in the current cast is Megatron, who’s only joined for the past nine or so issues, and, well, he’s an Autobot now. Not a “redeemed” Megatron, necessarily—this guy is tired, smothered by his own regrets, and he’s just so over it. But that doesn’t mean he might not be up to something. Characters like Optimus Prime and Prowl do pop up, but only in flashbacks or by reference. Ratchet, the CMO, is also a popular franchise mainstay, but most of the cast consists of more obscure or overlooked characters, giving Roberts (by his own admission) more of a carte blanche when it came to building characters.
There is action, yes, but the appeal for readers tends to be much more in character dynamic. It’s a pretty big cast—bartender and unstoppable mouth Swerve, lover of staring into the middle-distance Cyclonus and his innocent roommate/nascent fanboy, Tailgate, lover of briefcases Brainstorm and resident murderous psychopath Whirl (whom Cyclonus openly intends to kill, someday)—the list goes on, and your fondness for the characters will only hurt you when the series takes a slight, shall we say, Game of Thrones-y turn around issue #13.
Gender and Sexuality in a Genderless, Sexless World
One of the more problematic elements with Transformers from the get go, even if we go with the whole “male coded but genderless” thing, is that as a franchise it never questions the notion of “male as default.” It’s only with this series that we finally see someone starting to challenge this in a thoughtful way, especially with the idea of gender as a construct that can be completely separate from biological sex.
Especially in franchise fiction, characterization of female characters is often female-function-serving-thing first, character second (if we even get that much). This was definitely the case in almost all Transformers media up until really, really recently.
Nautica, a “quantum mechanic” and currently the lone female-coded bot on the Lost Light, joined the cast when Megatron did. I won’t do her a disservice by trying to describe her as a character, but despite her being “the only one” (the other three she-bots are in the other ongoing series), she’s great, I love her, and you love her, too. You just don’t know it yet.
It’s still a stark dearth of representation, but the current writers of the IDW books are doing a commendable job not having their female characters defined by their female-ness. But most remarkable to me on this subject is the fact that in this universe, despite the fact that there is a gender binary and female-coded characters, there are currently no “straight” couples, but there is a canon “gay” couple.
I said something about the relationship between Chromedome and Rewind on Facebook a few weeks ago (using the quotation marks because, as per IDW official decree, Cybertronians are all “genderless,” but when you’re dealing with a bunch of male-coded robots that use the “he” pronoun, let’s be real here.) A friend assumed that said “gay” couple would be handled with all of the deft sensitivity as the “black” robots in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Not an unfair assumption, even divorced from the Bay films. This was the proud franchise that brought us the “Socialist Democratic Federated Republic of Carbombya.”
While the relationship is text, it isn’t aggressive or political. Still, I have to wonder if there is a bit of political allegory, because when the issue of marriage-equivalent is brought up, it’s in a context of making life-or-death medical decisions for one’s partner.
I was surprised that the book even went there, let alone did it with such a deft hand that doesn’t feel unnatural or ham-fisted. There is a form of elective kinship in this universe that’s only just starting to be explored, along with gentle prodding at the constructed-ness of gender. It’s no wonder that the fanbase is becoming increasingly female, LGBT and non-binary. I find it odd to state that Transformers is developing new forms of inclusivity despite the established nature of the brand, but this is fast becoming a large part of the appeal for many readers.
These comics are, first and foremost, pop art designed both to appeal to a general audience and to sell a product (toys). It isn’t a perfect series by any stretch—much fun as it has with expanding upon the Transformers universe, it’s still constrained in many ways by the franchise (the lingering deficit of female characters is still a side-effect of the whole “based on toys” thing). It’s a bit hard to follow at times, despite being intended as a jumping-on book, and the stylistic, muted color palette for the first season makes it really difficult to tell the characters apart if you’re coming in blind, but these are nitpicks. At its core, it’s just fun.
I barely touched on the increasingly-infamous character mortality rate, and won’t go into detail, because spoilers. The book has developed something of a reputation for a high body count, but I don’t think that’s quite fair. It isn’t the volume body count so much as the gut-punch when it does happen, the false sense of security Roberts lulls you into with the fun, light tone only to pull the rug out when great harm (and often death) comes to characters you didn’t even realize you’d grown so attached to. That a goofy space adventure can take such effortless turns into explorations on life after war, loss, religion, purpose in society, caste systems, the list goes on- and franchise based on a 30-year-old line of toys or not, that’s just effective writing.
If the idea a Guardians of the Galaxy-style whimsical space adventure with a heavy undercurrent of Game of Thrones-style author sadism interests you, give it a go—you’ll both thank me and be really mad at me later. Before you know it, you’ll have joined the ever-biggening crew of MTMTE devotees. Gooble gobble, ‘Til all are one.
Lindsay hosts the web series “Nostalgia Chick” and “Booze Your Own Adventure” on YouTube and is co-founder of ChezApocalypse.com. If you want your timeline flooded with tweets about old cartoons, dog pictures and Michael Bay, you can follow her on Twitter.
Unfortunately, I have a serious hate on Hot Rod, so anything with him in charge gets a thumbs down from me.
I will read the article in a second, but first:
OH GOD YES. I didn’t pick this series up until last year when I bought all the available trades, but talk about AMAZING. I’m actually rereading it right now, as Dark Cybertron Part 2 and MTMTE Volume 6 will be arriving on my doorstop later this week. I’ve been hoping this book would get a mention on Tor.com, and today’s apparently the day that wishes come true. :)
So i’ve been very interested in picking up this (and it’s sister series) for a while now. I’m just not sure how much backstory you need to have read to get into it. Can you help with that? Can I just jump into MTMTE and RID without reading any of the previous stuff?
I love the series, been reading it since the first issues. It’s be extremely enjoyable for me at least.
@3: I would recommend tracking down the trade of THE LAST STAND OF THE WRECKERS, also by Roberts: thought it’s not 100% necessary, it is fantastic on its own, and events from that miniseries get referenced a bunch in MTMTE starting in Volume 2. Besides that, you should be fine. I was. (Volume 1 opens with “The Death of Optimus Prime” one-shot that pretty much brings you up to speed.) Otherwise, you can always fill in any gaps at the TFWiki.
Once again we must deal with thorny tangle that is comics numberings. The amount of time I’ve tried to buy a trade-paperback and ended up with a single monthly issue is unreal because comic book retailers and publishers insist on making things as murky as possible. No wonder the comics industry is in trouble, when you can never be sure what you are buying until it arrives on your doorstep. Is it a “collected issues”, or a “trades-volume”, “trade-paperback”, “monthly omnibus edition”, I’ve seen all of those, and other descriptors too, used to describe the exact same damn thing. Does anyone have a link to the various trade-paperback collected volumes?
I’d love to support my local comic store, but sadly the comic industry didn’t and my new “local” store is now almost 100 miles away. I’m not driving 100miles just to check I’m buying the right comic, if they even stock it. They don’t even stock all the current Bat-family books, and if a store cannot even carry the only really successful comic-book brand out there right now, then something as niche as Transformers, no matter how good, has no chance.
@random22
IDW the essentials via Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-Last-Stand-Wreckers-HC/dp/1613771266/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421084947&sr=8-1&keywords=Transformers+last+stand
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-Vol-5-Chaos-Theory/dp/1613770901/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421084956&sr=8-1&keywords=Transformers+chaos+theory
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/1613772351/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085000&sr=8-1&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+1
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/1613774982/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085000&sr=8-2&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+1
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/161377592X/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085000&sr=8-3&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+1
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/1613776918/ref=sr_1_5?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085000&sr=8-5&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+1
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/1613778023/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085019&sr=8-1&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+5
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-Dark-Cybertron-James-Roberts/dp/1613778910/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085151&sr=8-1&keywords=transformers+Dark+Cybertron
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-Dark-Cybertron-John-Barber/dp/1613779984/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085151&sr=8-2&keywords=transformers+Dark+Cybertron
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/163140184X/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085019&sr=8-2&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+5
http://www.amazon.com/Transformers-More-Than-Meets-Eye/dp/1631403273/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1421085031&sr=8-1&keywords=transformers+more+than+meets+the+eye+volume+7
Enjoy! :)
I’ve been following this comic since issue 16 or so, and it’s become one of my favorites. My only complaint is when it gets pulled into the big crossover junk (Dark Cybertron could’ve been done better). But when it’s being crazy space adventure? Entirely too fun.
This said, have you been reading the new Transformers vs GI Joe series? It is ridiculous and Kirby-tastic and honestly the most refreshing take on either franchise in years.
Not really related to the rest of the topic, but another really good example of Transformers writing was the Beast Wars TV series, helmed by genre vets Bob Forward and Larry DiTillio.
I’ll add to the chorus, these series are really well done -it’s great to see such a nice shout-out for them. IDW released a beautiful hardcover -Transformers: IDW Collection Phase Two vol. 1 in september. It’s ideal to begin both series, and the production values are top-notch.
@6/7: TFWiki has a list of the various MTMTE collections, including details such as ISBN and which trade collects which issues.
MTMTE #22 (which recently came out) even has a deleted scene (revealed in script form by James Roberts), handled here by artist Josh Burcham:
(minor spoilers for #21)
http://www.allspark.com/content/2015/01/josh-burcham-does-the-mtmte-deleted-scene/
Totally agree: it’s not a perfect series but this, along with the former Robots In Disguise, plus Death Vigil & Aphrofite IX/ IXth Generation are pretty much at the top of my reading list when they hit the shelves.
I would reccomend that, whilst MTMTE Vol. 1 is a superb starting point (what with including The Death of Optimus Prime) the preceeding Chaos Theory/ Chaos collections set up some story beats it’s useful to know about going in.
And Random22: Yeah, numberings can be a pain. Fortuantely, IDW’s TF stuff is a little easier: MTMTE & RID have seperate numbering to the previous collections of the TF ongoing, and they periodically release bigg-ass omnibusses collecting a big old chunk of material together. If in doubt though hit Amazon, find the volume(s) you wnat and scribble down their ISBN numbers. In theory any good bookstore should be able to find them for you off of that…..
Many thanks to all those who’ve given me pointers to find the correct books. Thank you :o)
MTMTE is one of the comics that has been on my pull list for ages. The characters are spot-on, the relationships are excellent…not just Chromedome and Rewind, which has so many deep, feels-inducing levels, but also that of Cyclonus and Tailgate, which sort of straddles the line of ‘could be platonic, could be romantic’, Nautica, who seems to be coded neuroatypical (woot!), the ship dynamics….and we get deep insights into the characters! Whirl’s relationship with all that’s been taken from her and what she’s done as a result….and how she’s more than just the resident chaotic neutral type on board. It’s a well-crafted story and very poignant,and Roberts specializes in kicking you right in the feels. Highly recommended, even if you aren’t a TF fan (I wasn’t until relatively recently…now I have a bunch of figures on my desk at home)
I have to agree with this article. I’m new to the Transformers series (as in, just jumped on board about five months ago)and MTMTE was the first comic series of the franchise that I read. As a writer myself, I respect James Roberts’ storytelling skills, particularly because of how hard you feel every death, or even when you think someone’s about to die. It’s an incredibly well-written and fun series, and it’s heart-wrenching when it should be. The Lost Light crew is easy to care for, and the plot, though it often gets chaotic, is always done well. They’ll revisit things you thought were just a joke, or that were far enough in the past you thought they were irrelevant, and the foreshadowing and planning of it all is really fantastic. I highly recommend this series.
Loved every word of this article. As a long time fan of Transformers, this series along with the other stuff IDW has been putting out has been Nirvana to me and it’s a damn shame so many people won’t give it a shot because of the name Transformers.
It’s a literal case of judging a book by it’s cover.
It’s upsetting as a fan to hear podcasts and websites gush over the good stuff Marvel and DC put out, but when it comes to my beloved Robots in Disguise the tone becomes much more harsh and cynical.
As an aspiring writer myself, I can’t agree more with your stance that every premise deserves a chance.
As a writer and lover of fiction in general, I have to believe that there is no such thing as a bad character, bad story, bad concept or bad continuity, only writers who failed to write any of the above to their full potential.
I honestly believe if the Bay movies were more like MTMTE, and if people could overcome brand bias, then Marvel could have some competition at the box office.
But at least we all know what’s up, and for the time being it can be the fandom’s “inside joke.”
Well, I just received (and read) Dark Cybertron V2 and MTMTE V6 last night. DC was okay, I guess. But MTMTE… HOLY CRAP YOU GUYS THIS BOOK. I’ve read the entire series in trade, but I’m sorely tempted to run out today and catch up the last 3 months of floppies…
It’s a great series that more or less begins with Last Stand of the Wreckers. Also phenomenal. One day, you need to go in-depth into this series. The story arc with the K-Class Decepticon is hilarious, touching, and so creepy. This also describes Whirl.
Also, fun fact (or rather, fun thing I’ve been told but did not fact-check). The autobot psychiatrist, Rung, is a fanfic character James Roberts made long before getting the gig.
Well, I’m weak: I just ran out and bought issues 34-36 at lunch today…
I have read volume 1 of MTMTE, and quite honestly, I have NEVER utterly hated a comic quite as much as I hate this piece of crap. I hate every single character, the plot after they leave Cybertron is anaemic at best, the dialogue is utterly offensive and the artwork from Alex Milne and Nick Roche is so completely contrary to the tone of the work. The characters are so despicable and irredeemable I just want them all do die horribly.
Just like that overrated story Last Stand of the Wreckers, based on issues 1-5, ALL this story knows how to do is kill characters in idiotic pointless ways, which is one of the most utterly lazy things writers can do to try and make it seem mature.
I really do not see how you could get invested in this story, it’s really badly written in general.
@spikeprime: Hyperbole much?
‘… the dialogue is utterly offensive’. Wow. In what way did you find it offensive? Do you mean *literally* offensive, in that something about it was actively distasteful or profane to your sensibilities, or do you actually just mean ‘bad’?
‘The characters are so despicable and irredeemable’. Really? ‘irredeemable’ in what way? Do you mean that the characters themselves are awful, awful people who no sane person could find appealing, or is it just that you think they are uninteresting?
I also think it’s strange that you want all these characters to die horribly and yet object when they do as it is ‘utterly lazy’ writing. Despite the fact that, in all honesty, one of the commonest criticisms heard in fan circles of Roberts’ writing is that he uses far too many ‘fakeouts’ of potential main character deaths, and that there should be more deaths that actually stick, lest the device be somewhat overused. I don’t know what deaths you are talking about in the first volume of MTMTE; the only actual deaths that take place in issues 1-3 are of characters we’ve never *actually* met.
It’s a shame that you don’t see how people could become invested in this story. They clearly are. I’d be interested to hear what comics you do like. I suspect Roberts’ work is just not your cup of tea.
I also think you have entirely missed the point of LSotW. This was a story about the cost of war and how many soldiers do not die heroic, significant deaths. Many die in pointless, tragic circumstances that they do not deserve. Roberts and Roche’s intention that, despite many of the characters being obvious fodder for such a story–blatantly redshirts, as it were–they would develop them enough through the course of the 5 issues that they would garner affection and so that it would actually be painful for the readers when they met their inevitable ends. Clearly you don’t think they succeeded. I suspect you’ll find that thousands of other fans disagree.
Just because someone doesn’t like something, that doesn’t mean it’s bad. One’s views on good writing and bad differ in most cases, but when something is actually good writing, it is good writing. I love this series. The Transformers have never been known for fabulous story lines, character development or writing, but this series takes all of these preconceived notions and throws them out the window. While the main premis is slow moving it is still telling an interesting and dynamic story with interesting plot points and emotionally involved characters who seem to much be “realer” than Transformer’s characters have been in the past. I like this articals explanation of the series. The book isn’t perfect, yes, but it’s a whole hell of a lot better than a lot of things that came before it.