Judgment Day!
From Transformers Wiki
This article is about the comic issue. For the mobile game event, see Judgement Day. |
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Weasels ripped my flesh! RZZZZZ! | |||||||||||||
"Judgment Day!" | |||||||||||||
Publisher | Marvel Comics | ||||||||||||
First published | September 1986 | ||||||||||||
Cover date | January 1987 | ||||||||||||
Adaptation | Ralph Macchio | ||||||||||||
Breakdowns | Don Perlin | ||||||||||||
Finishes | Ian Akin and Brian Garvey | ||||||||||||
Colors | Nelson Yomtov | ||||||||||||
Lettering | Janice Chiang | ||||||||||||
Editor | Bob Budiansky |
Galvatron attempts to hunt down and destroy Ultra Magnus and the Autobot Matrix of Leadership.
Contents |
Synopsis
Galvatron and the Unicron-empowered Decepticons return to Cybertron, arriving just as Starscream holds a coronation ceremony to proclaim himself leader. With one blast from his new laser cannon alternate mode, Galvatron reduces Starscream to ash, and the other Decepticons are quick to proclaim their loyalty to him. Galvatron's moment of triumph is sullied soon after, however, when Unicron arrives in the vicinity of Cybertron and consumes one of the planet's moons. Galvatron is outraged, declaring Cybertron and its moons his dominion, but Unicron brooks no dissent from his rebellious creation, revealing that he has the power to inflict great pain upon Galvatron, even from a distance. Relenting, Galvatron orders the Decepticons to head for Earth to carry out the mission Unicron has charged them with: find Ultra Magnus, the current keeper of the Autobot Matrix of Leadership, and destroy them both.
The Autobots on Earth are alerted to Unicron's threat by a message sent by Jazz and Cliffjumper, who are stationed on the first moon, and who are consumed along with it by Unicron. The Autobots prepare to head for Cybertron in a pair of newly-constructed shuttlecraft, but before they can blast off, they come under attack from Galvatron and the Decepticons. Hastily taking flight, the Autobots employ an old tactic of Ultra Magnus's previously used in a battle off Beta 4: they blast a nearby asteroid, the shattered pieces of which pinball into other nearby asteroids, shattering them in turn, and creating a screen of debris that covers the Autobots' escape.Aboard one of the shuttles with Kup and the Dinobots, Hot Rod uses the journey to get in a little sparring with an auto-combatant, but the training mannequin actually defeats the young Autobot. Before Hot Rod can get his own back, the Decepticons catch up to them and attack with moleculon missiles. Hot Rod and Kup are able to avoid the missiles, but their evasive maneuvers take them close to the nearby world of Quintesson. A robotic claw shoots up from the planet and rips into their shuttle, sending them and the Dinobots tumbling down to Quintesson's watery surface. Unable to aid their comrades with the Decepticons on their tail, Ultra Magnus and the crew of the other shuttle are forced to focus on their own survival, and manage to dupe Galvatron by disconnecting the forward section of their ship, leaving behind the rear three-quarters to be destroyed by Decepticon fire. Galvatron believes the entire ship and its crew destroyed, but his celebrations are cut short when Unicron remotely tortures him once more. While Galvatron departs to return to his master, Magnus's crew heads for the nearby planet of Junk to set down for repairs.
Hot Rod, Kup, and Grimlock are separated from the other Dinobots in their fall to the surface of Quintesson, where they are quickly captured by some of the native robotic lifeforms, the Sharkticons, and brought to the citadel of the Sharkticons' masters, for whom the world is named: the Quintessons. Thrown in a prison cell, they meet fellow captive Kranix, the sole survivor of Lithone, who explains to the Autobots about the threat of Unicron, and how the Quintessons serve to hunt down and kill those who survive his attacks. After Kranix is executed and devoured by the Sharkticons, the Autobots are put on trial themselves and sentenced to the same fate. Fortunately, Kup manages to slip his bonds and free his fellow Autobots, enabling them to fight back. The other Dinobots, having observed their capture and followed them to the Quintessons' citadel in secret, arrive to join the fight. Outmatched by the ferocious Dinobots, the Sharkticons surrender, and are convinced by Grimlock to turn on the Quintessons. Wheelie, a refugee hiding from the Quintessons, appears and offers the Autobots a ship that will enable them to get off the planet.
Unicron continues to inch closer to Cybertron, turning his attention to the second of its moons. Bumblebee and Spike evacuate, setting explosives that blow up the entire satellite just as Unicron is consuming it... but the blast does no damage at all to the monster planet, and Bumblebee and Spike soon find themselves helplessly sucked into Unicron's maw along with the debris...
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
Autobots | Decepticons | Humans | Others |
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Notes
Differences with the film
The comic adaptation continues to be based on a slightly earlier version of the script than the finished film uses. Alternate scenes, details, and staging derived from the script include:
- Unicron does not provide Galvatron with a ship, with Cyclonus instead serving as the new Decepticon leader's personal vessel. As established last issue, there are numerous Sweeps and members of Cyclonus's Armada.
- The two shuttles which the Autobots use to escape Autobot City are explicitly stated to be newly-constructed.
- While the finished film moves Moonbase Two's destruction up to right after the first one's, the comic keeps it in the same place as the script had it, following the conclusion of the Quintesson adventure.
- There's an additional scene that furthers the "Ultra Magnus doesn't understand Perceptor's overdeveloped vocabulary" running gag, as Perceptor explains the dangers of taking off without warming up their engines first (right).
- As the Autobot shuttles take off, Astrotrain swoops in to lead an attack on them. The Autobots escape by blasting an asteroid field, creating a screen of debris that covers their escape; a tactic Ultra Magnus picked up during a battle on Beta 4, which Galvatron angrily remembers (right).
- The auto-combatant kicks Hot Rod in the butt, rather than punching him, then razzes him with a mechanical tongue.
- The missiles the Decepticons fire at the Autobots are called out in dialogue as "moleculon missiles."
- Kup "inverting polarities" involves bringing the shuttle to a dead stop, so that the moleculon missiles overshoot it and detonate a safe distance away. This was changed for the finished film to the shuttle zapping the missiles with some kind of scrambler beam.
- The Quintessons' planet is not named in the film itself, but would later be identified as "Quintessa" in the subsequent third season of the animated series. Here, per the script, the world is named "Quintesson".
- Rather than crashing after taking hits from Cyclonus, as in the film, Kup and Hot Rod's shuttle is pulled down to "Quintesson" by a giant rocket-powered claw that shoots up from the planet's surface (right).
- Hot Rod and Kup encounter and are captured by Sharkticons rather than Allicons (below right).
- The Quintessons are explicitly tied to Unicron, as Kranix explains that they hunt down those who try to escape his wrath.
- While the finished film has Hot Rod and Kup's restraining bolts disappearing from around them as they fall into the Sharkticon pit, the script and adaptation depict Kup managing to escape his bonds and shooting Hot Rod free. However, see below.
- Rather than a pool, the Sharkticon pit into which Hot Rod and Kup are thrown is a gladiator pit, and they fight the creatures there, since they don't have to use their vehicle modes to create a whirlpool and escape before they can throw down with the beasts on dry land. (but see "continuity errors," below).
- Spike doesn't swear!
Other changes made to the story, usually in the name of condensing and simplifying it, which are not derived from the script include:
- Galvatron and Starscream's final exchange ("Megatron? Is that you?" "Here's a hint!") is omitted, replaced instead with Galvatron very awkwardly recapping his origin.
- The various scenes of the Autobots making a run for their shuttles when the Decepticons attack are all cut: Arcee, Hot Rod, and Daniel dodging fire; Blurr trying to get the Dinobots into a shuttle and Hot Rod and Kup having to take over; and Springer pulling Arcee aboard their ship when she gets left behind.
- When Ultra Magnus gets the idea to repeat the Beta 4 asteroid trick, Springer remembers it from that past battle. In the script, however, it was Kup who was part of that battle, thereby setting up the story he goes on to tell the Dinobots about Beta 4 and his encounter with the Ick-Yak there. The scene of Kup telling that story, however, is cut from the comic, so Hot Rod is not distracted by it; he simply loses to the auto-combatant fair and square.
- The Quintesson adventure is massively truncated, to much negative effect:
- Hot Rod and Kup land safely, so the scene of Hot Rod's battle with the giant squid is cut, and Kup is never in need of repair. However, in the script, when they are thrown into the Sharkticon pit, Kup is able to escape his bonds because his complaint that Hot Rod "left a piece out" when putting him back together turns out to be true, leaving him double-jointed enough to wriggle free. As the scene of Kup even needing repair in the first place was cut from the adaptation, the comic simply credits Kup's "instinct for survival" as the reason for his ability to slip his bonds.
- The scene of Kup trying to placate the Sharkticons with the universal greeting is left out (right), thereby removing the necessary set-up for the greeting's use on Junkion, which still takes place in the next issue of the adaptation.
- In a huge difference to both the film and script, Grimlock lands with Hot Rod and Kup and is captured and put on trial with them. The plot is completely unchanged by this, but the scene of the Dinobots exploring Quintesson and meeting Wheelie is cut (as is another scene of the Dinobots getting lost in the first place that was in the script, but which didn't make it to the finished film). Without Wheelie to guide them to the rescue, Sludge, of all characters, is required to deliver an excruciatingly overwrought speech explaining that the Dinobot saw the others get captured and stealthily followed them to the Quintesson palace (right).
- Having been deprived of an introductory scene, Wheelie appears out of nowhere once the fighting is over. The need to have him introduce himself and explain his deal in one speech bubble (the only line of dialogue he gets in the entire adaptation) means his rhyming speech quirk is kept to a quick introductory quip.
- While the film intercuts the Quintesson scenes with scenes of the Autobots crashing on Junkion and battling the Decepticons there, the comic presents them as one unbroken run, rather than split the story over two issues.
Visual differences from the film, resulting from incomplete or outdated reference material include:
- Starscream has no extra coronation vestments, lacking both his famous crown and cape.
- The auto-combatant bears only a loose resemblance to its animated counterpart.
Continuity and plotting errors
- The abridged dialogue during Hot Rod and Kup's trial scene removes the Quintesson's warning that the Autobots will be "held in contempt of this court." However, Hot Rod's response—"I have nothing but contempt for this court!"—is retained (right), turned into a simple non-joke statement, lacking the set-up or emphasis in his delivery that makes it a pun.
- In accordance with the script, as noted above, the Sharkticon pit is depicted as a gladiator pit when Hot Rod, Kup, and Grimlock are thrown in to it. However, earlier, when Kranix is tossed in, it appears as it does in the finished film, as a water-filled pit, though the script never describes it in this way even during this scene.
- Spike refers to Unicron by name, but there's no way for him to know the monster planet's name, as Hot Rod and Kup have only just learned it from Kranix themselves.
Art and technical errors
- Issue 1 was called "The Transformers: The Movie" on its cover, but this issue and the subsequent one are simply called "Transformers: The Movie", without a definite article. The indica for all three issues identify the series' title as "Transformers: The Movie Vol. 1".
- Hot Rod's right arm is in a pretty crazy position on the cover; it seems like it's meant to depict a Sharkticon merely biting his forearm, but the art appears to show Hot Rod's arm phased through the Sharkticon's body and sticking out its mouth. Also, only the two Sharkticons being tossed about by Hot Rod and Grimlock have antennae.
- Page 1:
- Cyclonus's ears and Galvatron's fists are dark blue; they should be pale blue.
- Galvatron's eyes are uncolored.
- Compared to last issue, in which only six figures were visible in addition to Galvatron, Cyclonus, and Scourge, there are now loads of new troops for the new Decepticons to command, with at least fifteen discernible silhouettes in the background.
- Page 2, panel 2: Galvatron's body is dark blue instead of pale blue.
- Page 4:
- Panel 1: Jazz is colored like Cliffjumper, and Cliffjumper is colored like Jazz. After being colored like Bumblebee in issue #1, this means Cliffjumper is coloured incorrectly in both his appearances in the comic adaptation.
- Panel 2: The shuttle seen being constructed in this panel doesn't look anything like the shuttles the Autobots used to escape in a few pages' time, which match the design of the ships seen in the finished film.
- Panels 3-5: The ship in which Jazz and Cliffjumper try to escape the moon is not an Autobot shuttle, but instead a Lithonian ship (seen in the finished movie, but not the comic). It is drawn upside down, with its three prongs pointing forwards, instead of angled backward.
- Page 5:
- Galvatron's fists and helmet are colored dark blue instead of pale blue again for most of this page.
- Panel 4: Springer's only supposed to be two shades of green—one light, one dark—but this issue adds a medium tone into the mix. In this panel, his torso is light instead of dark, and his left bicep is medium instead of light. His right shoulder pylon is light green instead of yellow.
- Page 6:
- Panel 1: Ultra Magnus's helmet and chestplate are colored pale blue (the same color used to shade his white parts) instead of the darker blue they should be (seen in this panel on his arms).
- Panel 4: Hot Rod's nose is fuchsia instead of white.
- Page 7:
- The sides of Ultra Magnus's chestplate are red instead of blue.
- Springer's cheekguards are consistently medium green, instead of the same dark green color as the rest of his helmet. In panel 1, his whole torso is mostly a solid mass of medium green.
- Panel 1: The headrests of the seats Springer and Perceptor are sitting in are coloured green and blue respectively, as if they were parts of their bodies.
- Page 8, panel 6: Ultra Magnus's helmet is white instead of blue. The top of his torso, just above his chestplate, is coloured blue instead of red. He's also missing an antennae.
- Page 9: From this page, we can see that, like last issue, Hot Rod is still being colored to the specifications of an earlier model that omits the white thighs of his finished Marvel design, and makes his feet blue/black instead of white. His Autobot symbol is uncolored on this page, and in panels 2 and 3, his collar is a pale purple instead of the same fuchsia as the rest of his body.
- Page 12, panel 4: Springer's cheekguards are still medium green instead of dark green, and his torso is mostly medium green, including portions of his light-green chestplate. His "abs" are yellow instead of dark green, and a fourth shade of green—a pale yellowish-green, used to shade his yellow shoulder pylons—is used for his face and hands, which should just be light green.
- Page 13:
- Panels 2-3: Galvatron's torso and shoulders are solid dark blue.
- Panel 5: The top of Ultra Magnus's torso is white instead of red. The headrest of the seat behind him has been colored the same red as his body.
- Page 14:
- Panel 1: Springer's cheekguards, torso, and now shoulders are all again medium green. They're finally fixed for panel 2, but his face remains pale yellow-green throughout, instead of the same light green as his chestplate which it should be.
- Panel 5: The foregrounded Hot Rod seems like he's meant to be block-coloured, but he's two colours instead of one: his head is dark blue, and his body grey.
- Page 15-20: Throughout these pages, only the central panel of Grimlock's chest is colored yellow, when his whole chest should be yellow. The Dinobot leader is otherwise entirely block-coloured blueish-grey. Also, per Kup's finished Marvel color scheme, the old Autobot's legs should be solid grey, but he is frequently coloured with either solid blue boots, or as having blue shins.
- Page 16:
- Panel 4: Kranix is missing the box on the center of his chest.
- Panel 6: The top of Kranix's torso is now coloured pale maroon, but only on his left-hand side; the color fades out as it moves across his shoulders.
- Page 19, panel 1: Kup has a solid blue face, helmet, and torso.
- Page 20:
- Panel 1: The Sharkticon in the foreground is missing its antennae.
- Panel 6: Sludge's dino-mode head is grey instead of yellow.
- Page 21: The Sharkticons' antennae appear and disappear from panel to panel. When seen from behind, the ridges that outline their bulging eyes are colored green, but they should be purple; it's the eyeballs themselves, only visible from the front, that are green. Swoop's dino-mode head is solid red (it should be white, with only his lower jaw and crest being red), and his wings are blue/black instead of white.
- Page 22, panel 1: Sludge's dino-mode neck is missing the yellow portion on its upper half.
- Page 23: Though colored blue on the previous page, Bumblebee's eyes are yellow on this one.
Cover
- Issue #2: Hot Rod, Kup, and Grimlock fight the Sharkticons, presumably by Don Perlin, Ian Akin, and Brian Garvey.
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US
- M&M's - inside front cover
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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 swapped colours on Jazz and Cliffjumper are corrected on page 4, panel 1.
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 recolored into toy-accurate red-and-orange, nor was Soundwave changed from Marvel purple to toy-and-cartoon accurate blue, unlike in previous volumes.
- Page 1: Cyclonus' ears are corrected from dark blue to light blue but so is most of the rest of his body, replacing his purple coloration.
- Page 6, panel 4: Hot Rod's nose is corrected from fuchsia to white.
- Page 7, panel 1: Hard to fault anyone not being able to fathom Springer's colors in this one, but his correctly-coloured yellow shoulder pylon is changed to incorrect pale yellow-green.
- Page 9: Careless remastering changes Hot Rod's already-incorrect pale purple collar to the same light blue used for the exhaust pipes on his forearms.
- Page 12, panel 4: Springer's correctly colored light-green chestplate is changed to match his incorrectly-colored medium green torso.
- Page 14, panel 2: Springer's rarely correctly colored cheekguards are changed to incorrect light green!
- Page 16, panel 6: The maroon on the top of Kranix's torso is extended to span the width of his shoulders, though it shouldn't be there at all.