Dominic wrote:"reading like fanfic" is one of "those things" that we all know and understand the meaning of. Do we really need a 10 page digression defining it?
I’d say apparently we do, given how we keep asking you to define it since the majority of us do not know what you are talking about.
Again, the *only* TF fanfic (and almost all of the fanfic I’ve read, period. I’ve written some, but that was…something else entirely) is DvD’s stuff, and the trappings of that entails characters having discussions and getting into situations that explore concepts within the fiction of the franchise and serve to provide possible explanations for elements other writers may have glossed over. Which again, more describes Costa’s run on the Ongoing than anything in MTMTE. This is the only frame of reference I have for ‘reads like fanfic’.
Because it is gay robots. I am not against gay robots because they are gay. I am against gay robots because gay robots are fucking stupid.
Just as I dislike people who live/act down to stereotypes about themselves, (Irish or Russian drunks are slightly more offensive than other drunks, subt-literate Italian brutes are worse than brutes of other descent, you get the idea), I dislike fandoms and properties that deliver on stereotypes. "Gay robots" is writing down to the level of Encyclopedia Dramattica mockery, and then saying "there is nothing wrong with it". This is the kind of shit that used to show up in the worst fanfics.
Now, Saint James is taking those elements and saying they are okay by putting them in official media.
Okay, first off, just because you’re somehow uncomfortable with the idea of robots in romantic relationships (and I’ll get to that in a second) that still doesn’t make said relationships ‘shipping’.
Transformers, despite technically being alien space robots, have generally always been portrayed as giant metal people. The closest we’ve ever gotten to an ‘alien’ portrayal of them was in the live-action movies, and arguably Costa’s ongoing. Going back to the earliest IDW comics, we’ve seen Transformers participate in sports, get drunk in bars, get high in bars, practice politics, become mentally ill, dream while sleeping, enjoy violence on a visceral level, practice religion, commit suicide, and get sex changes, among others. So now, being in romantic relationships is somehow a step too far? How does that go over the line, but none of the other anthropomorphization/personification didn’t? Furthermore, the romantic relationship was actually used (and used well, even I’ll admit) as a key point of the story and for development of several characters, plot threads, and background concepts.
Alan Scott and his boyfriend are not gay space robots.
Right, they’re gay parallel-universe alternate-history superheroes. I fail to see how one is more ridiculous than the other.
Again, we all understand what fanfic is. And, I hope that we, both as a forum and a fandom, see the problem with fanfic.
This book has shipping. It has "TFs are just like people, complete with having movie night". It has memes, such as "nightmare fuel". It is loaded with those great "clever" fan/character moments.
Again, this is not shipping. You clearly do not understand what shipping actually is. Transformers have *always* been portrayed as just like people (the G1 cartoon had TFs going to psychologists and watching intergalactic sporting events on TV! Beast Wars and Animated had them playing video games! How is a Movie Night any worst than those?). Transformers has been making references to other things since the dawn of time (every chapter of Costa’s run was named after this one writer’s line of political thriller novels. Was that ‘oh-so-clever’? Is Costa’s run automatically complete crap now?). I have no idea what you mean by ‘clever fan-character moments’, but I don’t expect you to explain since apparently we should all just ‘know’, right?
This gets in to the question of immersion, similar to what Gomess brought up months ago in the video game thread. I forget the exact question being argued. But, the defense was "in-story reason for this stupid thing". Gomess' response, (which I actually agreed with), was basically "the whole story is written by somebody in the real world and they make the stupid thing happen". Gomess went on to say that at some point, one had to step out of/back from the game and recognize that.
In this case, Rewind and Chromedome are described as being "significant others". We all *know* what that term means. Why would Saint James be using it unless he was implying that the "special bond" between Chromedome and Rewind was more than friendship? What does that mean and why did Saint James Roberts put it in?
But think about it this way, from your own point of view of story usefulness: Roberts wanted to write a story about characters with a close, yes, romantic relationship and how that affected their reactions to a crisis and the seeming impending demise of one of that pair, followed up by Chromedome’s reaction to turning out to be unable to help Rewind. Chromedome and Rewind were perfectly suited to this story, since they’d already been established as a pair, their co-dependence had been mentioned and consistent since the first issue, and there were multiple built-in backstory reasons for them to be together, with this particular story using that as a chance to expand on that backstory even more. Roberts used the characters most appropriate to tell the story with the concept he wanted to (and again again again, IDW TF’s are pointedly 99.9999999% male, so any ‘romantic’ relationship established for the purposes of such a story would HAVE to be a male/male pair).
There is nothing wrong with gay fictional characters, (nor is there anything wrong with gay real people). But, gay robots are fucking stupid to the point of sounding like a parody of the kind of things that people would say is wrong with a comic about space robots. (And, yes, they are "gay" in this case. TFs are typically written as male. This gets in to that immersion thing mentioned above.) In this case, it is one more thing that reads like part of a stereotypical fanfic in a book that is saturated with those sorts of plot points.
Okay, big question time: If it weren’t Rewind that Chromedome was paired up with, but Rosanna, would the relationship as depicted in the book be ‘okay’ in your opinion?
Dom
-seriously, Minibot movie night?
YOUR FAVORITE G1 CHARACTER LOVES ROCKING OUT TO SWEET TUNES!!