"Transformers One" is a lighthearted cartoon origin story

Orion is constantly enlisting his best friend D-16 in his antics because he wants something more. Orion wishes to look through the archives for information on where the Matrix of Leadership might be on Afdah Movie. It does not imply, however, that others are not looking for the Matrix. Sentinel Prime, the hero of Orion, travels to the dangerous and forbidden world above earth with the intention of finding the Matrix. The archives are off-limits and closely guarded. That ought to allude to something sinister. Soon after, Orion and D-16 are involved in a mining mishap; as a result of their disobedience, their supervisor Elita-1 is demoted. Sentinel Prime notices the underdog team because of their courageous performance, and as a result, Sentinel Prime assigns them to a new task in which they will encounter B-127. Orion, D-16, B-127, and Elita-1 will travel together.

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The Hasbro Transformer franchise includes "Transformers One," the first animated feature picture since the 1980s. Nelson Shin, a South Korean, directed "The Transformers: The Movie" in 1986. Shin had also produced the television show. The voice performers back then were diverse, with Jewish Americans among them. Lionel Stander provided the voice of Kup, while Judd Nelson played the role of Hot Rod/Rodimus Prime. Galvatron was voiced by Leonard Nimoy. Scatman Crothers, Arthur Burghardt, and voice actor Buster L. Jones represented African Americans. Casey Kasem provided representation for Arab Americans. The principal characters of "Transformers" and "Transformers: The Last Knight," which concluded in 2017, are primarily White, with some African American or Black characters serving as comic relief or in positions of leadership.

 

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Asian Americans don't feature until 2011's "Transformers: Dark of the Moon," starring Ken Jeong as the paranoid software programmer Jerry "Deep" Wang and Keiko Agena as Charlotte Mearing's assistant and assistant to the director of national intelligence. Playing the UN Secretary-General is Iqbal Theba. Li Bingbing plays Su Yueming in the 2014 film "Transformers: Age of Extinction," which is about the owner of a Chinese factory that KSI uses to create fake Transformers. Han Geng, a mandopop singer, plays a self-portrait. Drift is portrayed by Ken Watanabe as an Autobot and former Deception assassin with a samurai theme. Hailee Steinfeld, a Filipina. That is, if you crash-land in California—that is, if you film in Vallejo, Santa Cruz, Los Angeles, or Mare Island, in particular.

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"Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen" was filmed in New Mexico, Arizona, Pennsylvania, Qatar, Jordan, France, Egypt, and Playa Vista, Long Beach, Imperial Beach, Coronado, Point Loma, and San Diego Bay in California. African American voice actors Brian Tyree Henry, Keegan-Michael Key, and Lawrence Fishburne are featured in "Transformers One." That is anticipated. Additionally, Isaac C. Singleton Jr. voices Darkwing, and Michael Lee voices Jazz. Even though the story doesn't originate in Africa, one could argue that the voice acting stars of a movie set in Africa, like the 2019 version of "The Lion King," should be primarily Black or African Americans. There is no doubting that Japan is where the idea for the Transformers originated, just like "The Lion King."