Hoist Goes Hollywood (episode): Difference between revisions
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*Spike yells, "DUCK!" when Soundwave bursts through the theater screen, but he and Carly run away instead. | *Spike yells, "DUCK!" when Soundwave bursts through the theater screen, but he and Carly run away instead. | ||
*When the Autobots are role-playing the aliens chasing the actress, Sunstreaker looks like he's...goose-stepping? | *When the Autobots are role-playing the aliens chasing the actress, Sunstreaker looks like he's...goose-stepping? | ||
* | *Once again, transformers can fit into human-sized buildings (the studio and the movie theater) with ease. Tracks and Wheeljack even sit in the front of the theater. | ||
==Home video releases== | ==Home video releases== | ||
Revision as of 10:24, 27 February 2011
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![]() Unfortunately, none of these guys made it past Michael Bay. | |||||||||
| "Hoist Goes Hollywood" | |||||||||
| Production code | 700-54 | ||||||||
| Production company | Sunbow Productions | ||||||||
| Airdate | November 21, 1985 | ||||||||
| Written by | Earl Kress | ||||||||
| Continuity | Generation 1 cartoon continuity | ||||||||
Hoist gets cast in a big Hollywood movie! Hi-jinks ensue.
- Japanese title: ホイスト ハリウッドへ行く (Hoist Hollywood e Iku, "Hoist Goes Hollywood")
- German title: "Hoist geht zum Film" ("Hoist goes to the Movie")
- Italian title: Hoist conquista Hollywood ("Hoist wins Hollywood")
Synopsis

Carly and Spike are on a drive through the countryside inside Hoist when they are overtaken by two speeding vehicles. They pursue and see one of the cars make an improbable crash off a cliff and land on top of the other. Before they can investigate, a man on the top of the cliff yells at them for ruining the shot. It turns out they’ve driven into the middle of a movie set. Hoist saves the imperiled drivers of the crashed cars, and the director is so impressed, he hires Hoist on the spot for his next movie. The director invites Spike and Carly along to visit the movie studio.
In the skies, Dirge is having trouble transporting a mysterious, heavy load. He crashes into the swamp set on the lot of Major Pictures. Megatron orders him to shut down, yells at Starscream for no good reason, then sends Astrotrain, Ramjet and Thrust to go after Dirge and retrieve the mysterious cargo.
Hoist arrives at Major Pictures for his big-screen debut, but gets the brush-off from the director. Before filming begins, Tracks, Warpath, Sunstreaker and Powerglide horn in on the set and ham it up for the director’s attention. Strangely, the director is impressed by their hi-jinks and decides to hire them all for the action picture.

Movie work doesn’t prove to be as glamorous as they had hoped. The bots wind up crashing into buildings and playing second fiddle to the human actors, Karen Fishook and Harold Edsel, while Hoist pulls them out of the smoldering wreckage after each take.
Disgruntled at their bit parts, the Autobots ask Hoist to lobby the director for better roles, but the director tells Hoist to get a bagel and sit tight. The Autobots take off just as Astrotrain and the other Coneheads show up to pull Dirge and the cargo out of the swamp set, all as the cameras roll.
Back at Decepticon headquarters, Megatron looks over the strange device. He isn’t sure what it does; he only knows that Wheeljack built it, but he’s sure that it is some kind of potent, deadly weapon. (He doesn’t know Wheeljack very well, does he?) When switched on by Thrust, the device sparks and smokes, but does nothing else. Enraged, Megatron bashes Starscream. Astrotrain then reveals that he and the others were filmed by the humans when they retrieved the device. Megatron orders everyone to the studio to steal or destroy the footage so the device remains a secret.
At the studio, the director is viewing the robot footage and decides to revamp the script into a science fiction epic blockbuster called Attack of the Alien Robots, to the dismay of the human cast. He calls the Autobots to return with the promise of better parts. Once back, the director has the Autobots don googly-eyed, buck-toothed alien masks and stomp around after the female lead. For some reason, the Autobots still don’t like their parts as monsters from space.

Making their rounds, Spike and Carly find the room where the film negatives are stored and discover that someone has stolen scenes from the movie. That someone was Starscream, but Soundwave reports to Megatron that the original negative still exists. Megatron pounds on Starscream again, this time ripping wires out of his chest! He then orders the others to get the negative.
Meanwhile, the Autobots are filming another scene with pyrotechnics, which have been switched for actual explosives by Rumble. Spike and Carly are in a screening room watching a new print of the stolen footage of the Decepticons and the device. Midway through the screening, Soundwave rips through the screen and destroys the projector. Spike and Carly rush to the film vault to get the original before the Decepticons do, but are interrupted by Megatron. Carly fools him by giving him an empty film canister, and they race around the studio lot with the Decepticons close on their heels. They finally meet up with Hoist, who has a plan.

Megatron and the others finally catch up and find the Autobots on a movie set. Hoist threatens to drop the humans and the film into a vat of flesh-eating lava if the ‘Cons don’t withdraw. Megatron says he won’t do it, but Hoist drops them in. Content that the film is gone, the Decepticons retreat. Hoist then lifts Spike and Carly from the “lava”, which is just bubbly, muddy water mixed with special effects.
The Autobots show the film to Wheeljack in the screening room. The Autobot scientist laughs at Megatron because the device Megatron wanted so much is actually worthless. Impressed with Hoist's performance at the lava pit, the director offers him the leading part in a new film, but Hoist declines, saying that his duty as an Autobot comes first, no matter how unglamorous it is.
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
| Autobots | Decepticons | Humans |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
Quotes
"Ready for my big scene, Mr. Director."
"Huh? Oh, yeah, the robot. Er...okay, Moist, er...pick up a donut from the catering truck and relax until I call for ya."
"Donut?"
- —Hoist gets the brush-off from the Major Pictures director.
"The star has arrived!"
- —Sunstreaker, humble as ever
"Oh, no. The Autobots have gone movie-mad.”
- —Spike
"Who would want to steal scenes from this picture?"
- —Spike Witwicky, movie critic
"I feel like a fool!"
"Do you wanna quit?"
"No, but I still feel like a fool!"
- —Tracks and Sunstreaker aren't enjoying their movie careers.
"He is...no match for the alien robots...I-I mean, the evil alien robots."
- —Warpath shows his acting chops.
Notes
Animation or technical glitches

- Spike's hair is briefly colored orange at the beginning of the episode.
- As the cars speed past Hoist, the ground has lines on it in a few shots even though they're on an unpaved cliffside.
- Warpath "sharpshoots" at nothing!
- As the director announces the Autobots will be his stunt vehicles, you can hear Spike's "Tracks!" line played over again.
- As the director notes he wants something "extra," his glasses are missing their earpieces for a moment.
- In the swamp, when Ramjet transforms and takes off, he is given Thrust's colors. He's also standing where Thrust had been a moment earlier.
- The usual "clunk" sound is missing as Megatron punches Starscream.
- Megatron, Starscream (in robot mode!) and Soundwave leave the Decepticon base, but the very next shot shows Megatron, Soundwave and three jets (one could be Starscream, but there was no transformation sound).
- Tracks' chair is labeled "TRUCKS."
- Karen Fishook's attempt to console her co-star is cut off in mid-sentence by the scene edit.
- The "CLOSED" sign on the studio the Decepticons are in reads "CLLOSE".
- When Megatron grabs Starscream after he learns the negative is still in existence, Starscream's hips turn white, but they immediately turn back to their normal red when he gets picked up.
- After Megatron rips Starscream a new one, Soundwave is colored like Perceptor.
- Warpath and Powerglide are missing their face plates after the explosion scene.
- When Spike and Carly view the footage, Wheeljack's invention is yellow instead of gray.
- When Soundwave tells Carly and Spike to "Surrender the negative," he appears as if he's sliding forward in the next scene, even though he's walking towards them, as evidenced by the sound of his footsteps.
- Megatron, Soundwave and Rumble tear through a jungle background, but it's still there as they walk through the tear.
- As Megatron jumps out of the cave, his head is about a third the size it should be, but returns to normal size once he lands.
- Near the end of the episode, Warpath says "You tell him Hoist, yeah," but Hoist's mouthplate is moving in sync with the words, and his body language reflects the dialogue. Whoops.
- During the last shot of the Autobots congratulating Hoist, Sunstreaker is placed too high in the cel, making him appear to be floating.
Continuity errors
- Apparently, Dirge brought Wheeljack's part back from Cybertron (probably via the space bridge). Shouldn't this be a job for Astrotrain?
- Not an error per se, but we never do find out exactly why Megatron blames Starscream for Dirge's crash.
- Nor is it clear why Dirge struggles to carry the device, while Ramjet seems to have no trouble with it.
- Soundwave's shots miss Carly and Spike in the hangar even though they're maybe 20 feet away from him. Also, why doesn't he deploy Laserbeak or Ravage to get them?
- Why would Hoist's threat to drop Spike, Carly, and the film negative into the lava have given the Decepticons pause when they'd been trying to destroy the three of them for pretty much the whole episode?
- Hoist says there's "no such thing as flesh-eating lava." What about...lava?
Real-world references
- The characters of Harold Edsel and Karen Fishook are obvious parodies of Harrison Ford and Carrie Fisher from the Star Wars films. Karen Fishook is voiced by Susan Blu, who would later voice another Princess Leia parody: Arcee.
- Upon Powerglide's entrance, he references the Academy Awards, saying "I'll show you some real Oscar-winning material." No Transformers movie has won an Oscar, though the 2007 film was nominated for three awards and its 2009 sequel was nominated for one.
- The role of "Dash Jordon" is an obvious reference to the character Flash Gordon.
Trivia
- This is one of four pre-movie episodes that doesn't feature Optimus Prime.
- Megatron is incredibly abusive toward Starscream in this episode...well, more than usual. Starscream is absent for the next few episodes after his wires are pulled out; Megatron must have done some real damage.
- We never find out what Wheeljack's device is supposed to do.
- Spike yells, "DUCK!" when Soundwave bursts through the theater screen, but he and Carly run away instead.
- When the Autobots are role-playing the aliens chasing the actress, Sunstreaker looks like he's...goose-stepping?
- Once again, transformers can fit into human-sized buildings (the studio and the movie theater) with ease. Tracks and Wheeljack even sit in the front of the theater.
Home video releases
- Laserdisc
1995 — Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers — Megatron Set (Takara) — Japanese audio only.
1999 — The Transformers — Decepticon Edition (Pioneer LDC) — Japanese audio only.
- DVD
2001 — The Transformers — DVD Box 2 (Pioneer LDC) — Japanese audio only.
2003 — The Original Transformers — Season 2 Part 2 (Rhino Entertainment)
2003 — The Original Transformers — Season 2 Part 2: Vol. 7 (Rhino Entertainment)
2004 — Transformers — Season 2 Part 2 (Metrodome)
2004 — Transformers — Collection 3: Series 2.2 (Madman Entertainment)
2006 — Transformers — The Complete Generation One Collection (Metrodome)
2007 — The Transformers — Complete Collection (Madman Entertainment)
2009 — Transformers — Volume 06: Stagione Due Parte Quarta (Medianetwork Communication) — English and Italian audio.
2009 — Transformers — Season Two: Part Two (Metrodome)
2009 — The Transformers — Complete Collection: Decepticon Edition (Madman Entertainment)
2009 — The Transformers — The Complete Series: 25th Anniversary "Matrix of Leadership" Collection (Shout! Factory)
2009 — The Transformers — Season Two, Volume Two: 25th Anniversary Edition (Shout! Factory)


