Carnage in C-Minor: Difference between revisions

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===Miscellaneous trivia===
===Miscellaneous trivia===
* ''Carnage in C-Minor'' is widely regarded by fans as the worst episode of the Generation 1 cartoon (and one of the worst episodes of any TF series to date) due to the sheer volume of animation errors, and the glaringly obvious nature of many of the individual errors. However, the actual ''plot'' is certainly not the weakest to grace the cartoon series.
* "Carnage in C-Minor" is widely regarded by fans as the worst episode of the Generation 1 cartoon (and one of the worst episodes of any TF series to date), but this is seemingly due to the sheer volume of animation errors, and the glaringly obvious nature of many of the individual errors. However, the actual ''plot'' is certainly not the weakest to grace the cartoon series, and its "continuity errors" have little to nothing to do with the script itself... certainly not to the level of, say, "[[B.O.T.]]".


* This was one of several episodes subjected to ''Mystery Science Theater 3000''-style mocking at a [[BotCon 1999]] panel.
* This was one of several episodes subjected to ''Mystery Science Theater 3000''-style mocking at a [[BotCon 1999]] panel.

Revision as of 01:37, 15 February 2007

Generation One > Season 3

Several Autobots and Decepticons find themselves battling over a planet whose civilization completely revolves around music, and whose inhabitants are capable of using sound as a powerful weapon.

Detailed synopsis

Don we now our gay apparel...

Eurhythma, a planet whose culture is based entirely on music, is threatened by a comet. Zebop Skandana joins fellow Eurythmans Allegra and Basso Profundo to use their combined harmonic weapon to destroy the comet, inadvertently shooting down a number of Autobots and Decepticons.

After Galvatron and Soundwave collapse a bridge on Ultra Magnus, Blaster and Broadside, Zebop joins a number of other citizens to revive the Autobots. He then leads them to Allegra's retreat, where they find that Galvatron has beaten them there and swayed Allegra to their side. When Soundwave uses Allegra's third of the harmony against them, Zebop counters with his own third, which Soundwave then records and combines with Allegra's, plunging Zebop and the Autobots into a chasm. As the Autobots pull themselves up, Galvatron turns on Allegra, prompting Zebop to run onto the battlefield to save her. While he is successful, he is accidentally crushed by Blaster and Soundwave in the process, but is harmonically revived by a tearful Allegra soon after.

Returning to the capital city, the Autobots discover the fallen forms of Perceptor and the Protectobots, who Zebop, Allegra, and Basso heal. The three returned to Earth with the Autobots, where Galvatron and Soundwave were overwhelming Metroplex with the stolen harmony. The trio of aliens countered it with anti-sound, giving Blaster enough time to erase the harmony from Soundwave's tapes. With the battle concluded, Zebop returns to his world with the others, vowing to live in harmony.


Stats

Written by: Buzz Dixon


Notable quotes

  • Quotes


Other Notes

  • Notes


Animation and/or technical glitches

  • Glitches

Continuity errors

"I owed the Decepticons a solid after they raised me from the dead."
  • In one infamous scene, Brawn shows up not only alive and well, but fighting for the Decepticons. In the same shot, Huffer has also switched sides!

Transformers references

  • References

Real-world references

  • The Eurhythman characters' names are all music-related puns.

Miscellaneous trivia

  • "Carnage in C-Minor" is widely regarded by fans as the worst episode of the Generation 1 cartoon (and one of the worst episodes of any TF series to date), but this is seemingly due to the sheer volume of animation errors, and the glaringly obvious nature of many of the individual errors. However, the actual plot is certainly not the weakest to grace the cartoon series, and its "continuity errors" have little to nothing to do with the script itself... certainly not to the level of, say, "B.O.T.".
  • This was one of several episodes subjected to Mystery Science Theater 3000-style mocking at a BotCon 1999 panel.

Keywords

(separate by commas and link each one so a page can be created for it if it does not already exist)

Music



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