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Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #32 – Review

By: James Roberts (writer), Alex Milne (art), Joana Lafuente (colors)

The Story: The crew investigates a familiar shipwreck, only to find that things aren’t quite how they left them. Think of it like a director’s cut…with a rusty blade.

The Review: Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye has always been about the past. From the presence of living fossils like Cyclonus and Tailgate to the influence of Chromedome’s previous relationships to the desperate nostalgia that’s fueled Rodimus and then Megatron’s hunt for the Knights of Cybertron, the crew of the Lost Light has consistently been driven and ruined by past events. This issue we find ourselves on unsteady ground as characters are forced to consider the future in more ways than one.

Pretty immediately upon entering the wrecked Lost Light the crew realize that something’s not right, sending them on desperate searches to determine what happened, if there are any survivors, and if this fate can be avoided. The absence of MTMTE staples proves just how skillful a writer James Roberts is, as he provides the same high level of character work without any of his familiar favorites or missing a beat.

Standouts, as ever, include Megatron and Nautica, but there are some solid moments with Getaway and newcomer Ravage as well. There’s plenty more discussion of Megatron’s defection, but the subject gets a shot in the arm in the form of an actual Decepticon for Megatron to stare down. It’s still amazing how real Roberts makes this transition and anyone who’s escaped from a self-destructive friendship will be able to see a little bit of themselves in the former tyrant. Likewise, it’s great to see the Autobots admit how difficult it can be to hold a grudge.
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Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #31 – Review

By: James Roberts (writer), Atilio Rojo (art), Joana Lafuente (colors)

The Story: Was it Megatron? In the Rod-Pod? With the Fusion Cannon?

The Review: Remarking upon the main cast of Transformers: More Than Meets the Eye, one bot famously observed that, “as far as I can make out, all you do is argue, crack jokes, and get sidetracked doing pointless, silly things that only you find amusing!” It may hold a scant thirty issues and an annual against the full history of the Transfomers brand, but MTMTE has carved out a well-defined niche as a place where the brand can indulge its sense of humor, its talkative nature, and its love of narrative experimentation. If you need proof, look no further than More Than Meets The Eye #31.

“Twenty Plus One” is a classic bottle episode, a television term for a dialogue-heavy story that takes place in a single location with few guest stars or visual extravagances. The idea was pioneered and perfected by the original Star Trek in an attempt to stretch the budget for other, more effect heavy episodes. Despite their pragmatic origin, bottle episodes are frequently an opportunity for character-building and significant conflict thanks to the difficulty of holding audience attention and their similarity to staged theater. Thoroughly enamored with the trope, James Roberts conducts the issue like an old-time murder mystery, paranoia, prejudice, well-timed power outages, and all.

Stuffing twenty Autobots(?) into close quarters allows Roberts to call upon the myriad tones of MTMTE all in one issue. Fittingly, the best elements of this story are generally the highlights of the series: a blurred, honest line between comedy and drama; a complex but easily followed plot; razor-sharp dialogue; and a contemplative approach to the social and political aspects of being a Transformer being notable examples.
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Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #30 – Review

By: James Roberts (writer), Alex Milne (art), Joana Lafuente (colors)

The Story: “You’re out of order! You’re out of order! The whole trial’s out of order!”

The Review: As Megatron’s trial comes to an end, James Roberts takes the opportunity to make it something to remember. It’s pretty impressive when a Seacon invasion is the least interesting part of a trial!

Punctuated with cruel cliffhangers that are all rewarding enough to justify themselves, the flashbacks in MTMTE #30 will keep you on the edge of your seat. Megatron is a natural star and you’ll find it hard not to sympathize with Cybertron’s imperialist mass murderer. Far from the cowardly conqueror of the 1980s or the cackling madness of G1 Galvatron, Roberts writes an intense, Byronic Megatron. Tortured without seeming self-indulgent, Megatron’s inability to accept a failed life presents all kinds of fascinating ideas and propels the story forward, taking him from masterful manipulator to broken old warrior for justice and more in the span of half an issue.

Likewise, Roberts brings the best out of Ultra Magnus and Optimus Prime. With a splash of humor and an appropriately straight face, each of the truckformers act as a voice of reason, even as their actions inspire a fist pump or two. Optimus is especially interesting. The mythic connection between Prime and Megatron is strong and you can feel Optimus, almost desperately, trying to nurture what he sees growing in Megatron’s spark.

While every scene in the book could probably be described as character-driven, Roberts really shows off how strongly he can structure an interaction. Exposition, character, and comedy are woven throughout the entire script and moments like Ratchet’s final line to Rodimus hit you like a punch to the gut.
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Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #29 – Review

By: James Roberts (writer), Alex Milne (artist), Joana Lafuente

The Story: “You have five seconds to talk me out of doing something spectacular”

The Review: Freed somewhat from the last issue’s need to hook new readers and establish new plot threads, Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye is feeling a bit more like itself this month. While the jokes and character development still come at a breakneck pace, there’s a little more space to explore.

It’s nice to see that Megatron can remain an intriguing part of the series without dominating the page. This issue is largely focused around Trailcutter and Chromedome, in the present, and Rodimus in the past. Trailcutter’s story is a great example of how easily Roberts can make comedic plots into something that feels legitimate and meaningful, both to the character’s arc and the larger narrative. Meanwhile the addition of Nightbeat continues to pay off as his investigation with Chromedome introduces even more wrinkles into one of the most beloved and affecting running plots the series has.

The entire present section of the story runs exceedingly smoothly and contains plenty of the series’ trademark humor. Trailcutter is especially gifted in this latter regard, even setting up an editorial caption’s punchline.
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Transformers: More Than Meets The Eye #28 – Review

By: James Roberts (writer), Alex Milne (art), Josh Burcham (colors)

The Story: Megatron ended the war with a badge and fought it with a canon, but he started it with a pen. Only now does he look down at the story he’s written to find that it’s a tragedy.

The Review: Say what you will about IDW’s handling of the Transformers brand, but it’s been a while since you could honestly say that they’re getting stale. John Barber and James Roberts have done an impressive job of recombining the desperate elements of the classic franchise in new and fascinating ways. Two years of reconstruction and five months of “Dark Cybertron” and transformers is trying something new again. Last week Optimus Prime set off for Earth to find that the more things change the more things stay the same and before that, Transformers: Windblade showed us that the classic TF political reformation story need not be a series of grandiose battles but can thrive using simple effective character work. Both reintroduce classic elements of the mythos, but move in new and interesting directions.

In this new world that the it falls, most of all, to More Than Meets The Eye to keep the spirit of the past few years alive and the shared universe expanding.

Caught, like all of the Dawn of the Autobots issues, between “Dark Cybertron”’s fallout and the present day, MTMTE #28 returns us to the Lost Light and its group of rag-tag crusaders. The roster has changed slightly, but the ship’s character remains the same.
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