Primus transformers

  1. The One
  2. Who Is Primus? The Creator Of Transformers Explained
  3. Allspark
  4. Transformers: Rise of the Beasts has a particularly wild Maximals cameo
  5. The Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts Easter Egg That The Director Thinks Die
  6. To 3D Or Not To 3D: Buy The Right Transformers: Rise of the Beasts Ticket


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The One

Yes, you read that right. The One is an extradimensional entity from before time, in whom Order and Chaos exist in perfect harmony. It created Fiction [ ] DK Ultimate Guide [ ] The One existed before time itself, witness to the birth of the universe. The One was curious about this new realm and created a new being, Unicron, to explore it. For some reason, The One then split its creation in two, one half still being Unicron while the other became Primus. In keeping with their creator's nature as a perfect balance of Order and Chaos, the twin "exploratory heralds" became the embodiments of those two principles, but separated. Notes [ ] • The Armada cartoon, which came out between the Ultimate Guide, provided an interesting parallel in its creation story. Narration in the novelization, which said that the Transformers' pre-war goal was to explore the universe, downloading their discoveries into • The One's method of creating Primus from the substance of Unicron mirrors Primus's creation of the Transformers, whose • The One's (and Primus's, and the

Who Is Primus? The Creator Of Transformers Explained

Pat Sajak's Wheel Of Fortune Replacement Already Found? It's An Awful Choice Warning! This article contains spoilers for Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. Transformers: Rise of the Beasts includes mention of a being named Primus, the creator of the Transformers themselves. Since the Transformers franchise began in the 1980s, many different characters have been spawned from the stories told. This includes the most popular characters used in the live-action series, continuing with Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. As Rise of the Beasts is the seventh installment in the live-action series, it features the inclusion of many new characters from Transformers' history to tell a unique story. From the Maximals - the Autobots able to transform into beasts - to the Terrorcons, Rise of the Beasts includes more factions than simply the Autobots and Decepticons of the series' past. Similarly, Rise of the Beasts features the first live-action mention of a being named Primus from the Transformers series, something that could seed the stories of Transformers 8 and 9 movies. Related: Primus Is A God Who Created The Transformers © Provided by ScreenRant Optimus Prime from The Last Knight and Primus from the Transformers comics In the Transformers universe, Primus is a god who dates back to the beginning of the universe itself. An ethereal being, Primus is a multiversal force for good with many incarnations across many realities and dimensions. In every one of these universes, Primus stands ...

Allspark

Contents • 1 Evolution • 1.1 Generation One Cartoon • 1.2 Marvel Comic • 1.3 Beast Wars • 1.4 Beast Machines • 1.5 Dreamwave • 1.6 Transformers (2007 movie) • 1.7 Animated cartoon • 1.8 Prime Cartoon • 2 Means of access • 3 Notes • 4 See also Evolution [ ] The concept of The Allspark as it now exists has evolved and coalesced over the course of almost all Transformer fiction since the line began. The specific concepts that evolved into "The Allspark" are traced below: Generation One Cartoon [ ] The Autobot Marvel Comic [ ] The Autobot Beast Wars [ ] A Transformer's life-force is first described as a Note: The exact nature of "the Matrix" referred to here is not established. The story editors had at first envisioned it as a mysterious facility on Cybertron, from which Maximal protoforms emerged, counterpart to the Predacon "Pit" facility. These concepts did not make it into the show in any form but were much later made canonical by the referred was left an open question, and so its sequel took up the concept and ran with it where it chose... Beast Machines [ ] What was known as "the Matrix" in Beast Wars is first referred to as "the Allspark." It is defined as the dimension from which all Transformer sparks that exist, have existed, or ever will exist originate, existing there as a collective whole. When a Transformer is "born," a single spark departs the Allspark and suffuses itself into the new Transformer body, giving it true life and soul. When the Transformer then reac...

Transformers: Rise of the Beasts has a particularly wild Maximals cameo

Optimus Primal, Cheetor, Rhinox, Airazor — for legacy fans of the Transformers franchise’s Beast Wars animated TV series, these are household Maximal names. Transformers: Rise of the Beasts adapts them to live action for the first time ever, but it also brings in a fifth Maximal, and his inclusion in this movie is a pretty bonkers deep cut. Someone behind this movie is clearly a serious Transformers lore specialist — this particular Maximal is a reference to Transformers convention fiction from the beginning of the millennium. The gorilla-shaped Optimus Primal (Ron Perlman) leads the Maximals for most of Rise of the Beasts, but in its opening scene, he’s second-in-command to a second metal gorilla named Apelinq. That Maximal is surprisingly distinctive, a different design from Optimus Primal’s gorilla model — he has a white mohawk, metal tusks, and intimidating blades tucked into his forearms. Voiced by David Sobolov (who also voiced Battletrap and Rhinox in this film, as well as the original Beast Wars cartoon’s Depth Charge), Apelinq passes the mantle of Maximal leadership onto the smaller Optimus Primal so Apelinq can stall their enemy Transformer Scourge (Peter Dinklage), and send the other Maximals to safety with the Transwarp Key, a McGuffin Scourge wants on behalf of his planet-eating master Unicron (Colman Domingo). Image: Paramount Pictures Apelinq’s appearance is a shocking but welcome feature-film debut for a character who first appeared as a toy exclusive to Bo...

The Transformers: Rise Of The Beasts Easter Egg That The Director Thinks Die

Scourge looks down on the camera in Transformers: Rise of the Beasts. Warning: mild SPOILERS for Transformers: Rise of the Beasts are in play. If you haven’t taken this latest ride with Optimus Prime just yet, you’ve been warned. Seven movies into the Transformers saga, the lore has been pretty well built up to this point. The war between Autobots and Decepticons, and the longing to get back home to their planet Cybertron, has been richly woven into both sides of the timeline, connecting the Michael Bay movies to the current series of period piece throwbacks. But when it came time to leave his own stamp on the canon with Transformers: Rise of the Beasts, director Steven Caple Jr. dug deep and laid down a pretty huge easter egg, and it's something that he thinks die-hard fans will love to no end. While attending the press day for Paramount’s new summer blockbuster, I was able to sit down with the man himself to ask which reference made him the most proud. As an admitted fan of the Beast Wars saga, as well as a Transformers fan in general, Caple Jr. went hard with his choice for favorite easter egg. Telling CinemaBlend about that selection, and why it’s such a big deal, Steven geeked out about including Primus into the Rise of the Beasts’ sci-fi movie storyline: It’s a big one, because it involves a bigger question. There’s a moment where Scourge is standing over Prime, and about to kill Prime, and he says, ‘Primus would be ashamed.’ And I feel like for the...

To 3D Or Not To 3D: Buy The Right Transformers: Rise of the Beasts Ticket

Thrills that are more than meet the eye have returned thanks to director Steven Caple Jr’s Transformers: Rise of the Beasts bringing the legendary ‘80s toy line back to the movies. There will be car chases, epic battles and perhaps some new entries into the canon of our favorite Transformers explosions. And thank Primus we have another question to ponder with this new installment, the one I’m most keen to discuss with you all today: To 3D or Not To 3D? If you want to read what I thought of the film as a narrative experience, you can head to CinemaBlend’s Transformers: Rise of the Beasts review. But if you want to know if your 3D ticket money is a sound investment, or if you should focus on acquiring some recently discovered antiquities from Cybertron instead, then this is the place to be. Roll out those grey and black shades, as we’re about to get started. Fit Score - 5/5 Does a Transformers movie belong in 3D? Historically, the answer would seem to be yes, as the format has been present as far back as 2011’s Transformers: Dark of the Moon. With franchise returns like Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse ditching the format they once danced with, seeing Transformers: Rise of the Beasts return to the floor is an initially comforting thing. As for the fit presented in the final result, which was observed in an IMAX 3D screening for this review, it's a solid match. The size and scope of the picture fits better on the IMAX screen, and 3D definitely adds a fun layer of excitemen...