Proving Grounds (BW): Difference between revisions
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* The video game Rattrap plays has some aspects modelled after Street Fighter. Primal tosses a projectile similar to Ryu's "Hadoken" and performs a spinning kick similar to Ryu's "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku". The two characters in the game are a miscolored Megatron (Transmetal body) and Optimus Primal (using the body of pre-beast mode Megatron from [[Beast Wars (Part 1)|"Beast Wars" (Part 1)]]). | * The video game Rattrap plays has some aspects modelled after Street Fighter. Primal tosses a projectile similar to Ryu's "Hadoken" and performs a spinning kick similar to Ryu's "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku". The two characters in the game are a miscolored Megatron (Transmetal body) and Optimus Primal (using the body of pre-beast mode Megatron from [[Beast Wars (Part 1)|"Beast Wars" (Part 1)]]). | ||
*The next game Rattrap plays is of the "First Person Shooter" kind, ala Wolfenstein 3D and Doom. It consists of blasting many [[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]]s. | *The next game Rattrap plays is of the "First Person Shooter" kind, ala Wolfenstein 3D and Doom. It consists of blasting many [[Waspinator (BW)|Waspinator]]s. | ||
*When Dinobot is chasing Blackarachnia there is a shot | *When Dinobot II is chasing Blackarachnia there is a shot in which she runs underneath a log while Dinobot II runs right through it. This is a reference to a scene in the movie ''Jurassic Park'' in which the Jeep is being chased by the T-Rex after its initial attack and they drive under a fallen tree while the T-Rex smashes through it. | ||
==Home video releases== | ==Home video releases== | ||
Revision as of 06:48, 5 March 2011
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Quick, before Silverbolt comes! | ||||||
| "Proving Grounds" | ||||||
| Production company | Mainframe Entertainment | |||||
| Airdate | February 14, 1999 | |||||
| Written by | Arthur Sellers | |||||
| Directed by | William Lau | |||||
| Animation studio | Mainframe Entertainment | |||||
| Continuity | Beast Wars continuity | |||||
Blackarachnia leaves the Maximals, and is drawn into a dangerous hunt with Dinobot.
- French-Canadian title: Sauvetage ("Rescue")
- Japanese title: ラブタイフーン (Love Typhoon)
- Spanish title: La Prueba
- Latin-American title: La Prueba
- Italian title: In fuga ("On the run")
- Brazilian name: Fazendo Escolhas ("Making Choices")
Synopsis

The Maximals examine Blackarachnia, using a machine to display her insides. Rattrap is unimpressed with the Predacon, but Cheetor finds the lady's structure to be fascinating. Rhinox finds the location of the shell program that Tarantulas installed in Blackarachnia's protoform to make her into a Predacon. When the test is over, Blackarachnia responds aggressively to Rattrap's suspicion and Cheetor's infatuation, but Primal orders her to stand down. Frustrated with not yet being accepted, she leaves the Maximal base using a secret tunnel, but Dinobot II, spying on the Maximals, watches her exit and follows.
In the outdoors, Blackarachnia reflects on her situation to a stray butterfly. Before she can execute the butterfly, she notices Dinobot hunting her. She leaps through trees and starts to hunt the predator. Soon, she ensnares and suspends Dinobot by her webbing. Dinobot cuts himself free and transforms to his robot mode. He accuses her of being a coward and walks away.
In the Maximal base, Rattrap enjoys a video game, but Silverbolt deactivates the game to use the computers to find Blackarachnia. Rattrap cries over his lost game, while the Fuzor determines Blackarachnia to be in Predacon territory. Silverbolt convinces Rattrap to not report Blackarachnia's irregular whereabouts to Primal by mentioning Dinobot.

In darker woods, Blackarachnia and Dinobot find each other again. But the spider realizes she has been fooled by a hologram, while the real Dinobot attacks her from behind using a strong tail swipe. The two fire at each other, and Dinobot dodges a falling tree. Blackarachnia runs, but Dinobot blasts down two trees, pinning the widow's legs under two massive pieces of lumber. Before he can carve into her, Blackarachnia is able to grab her gun and fire a shot into Dinobot at close range. With her enemy down, Blackarachnia tries to radio for help, but doesn't notice Dinobot being repaired by his Transmetal 2 energies. Luckily, Silverbolt is already searching for his lady friend, tracing her scent.
The other Maximals figure out that Blackarachnia and Silverbolt are in Megatron's jamming zone.

Blackarachnia keeps her guard up, aware that Dinobot is still hunting her. Silverbolt arrives, and is promptly shot directly in the chest. The two males battle, with Dinobot getting an upper hand. As Dinobot uses his heat vision to slowly burn Silverbolt's face, Blackarachnia fires her machine guns at her lover, announcing the fight is between Predacons.
Blackarachnia tries to convince Dinobot to form a private alliance. Dinobot rejects the idea and stuns her with a beam from his eyes. But Blackarachnia's conversation gives Silverbolt the time to stand up again. Dinobot's attacks, but discovers too late that Silverbolt had created a hologram of himself using the vaguely sexual looking holo-projector. He blasts the Transmetal 2 over the edge of one of those surprisingly common steep cliffs—but Dinobot climbs back up to level. However Blackarachnia fires a missile directly into his face, making sure he won't be able to climb up again.

As the sun rises, Blackarachnia and Silverbolt discuss the conversation about her betrayal that he overheard. She explains it was an attempt to fool Dinobot—a stalling tactic. Blackarachnia decides to leaves the Maximals—no longer desiring to let them distrust her as they do. Blackarachnia tries to leave, but her headbutt harms both Silverbolt and herself. Primal lands and explains that it's up to Blackarachnia if she wants to have the shell program removed. Blackarachnia is surprised to find out Optimus is pro-choice. Blackarachnia agrees to stay with the Maximals, but keeps herself the way she is.
Featured characters
(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)
| Maximals | Predacons |
|---|---|
|
|
Quotes
"What's the matter? Don't you trust me?"
"Huh, about as far as an anvil can jump." [forcibly grabbed by the neck] "Of course, I mean that in the best possible way."
- —Blackarachnia and Rattrap
"I'm beginning to like you, Skullface. Let's play."
- —Blackarachnia
"Now we play...for real!"
- —Dinobot, holding a vaguely sexual apparatus
"Hands off the metal, Sir Drools-a-lot."
- —Rattrap to Silverbolt
"Mood, setting...all I need now is my dance partner."
- —Blackarachnia on her "hunt"
"Now hold still, this will hurt."
- —Dinobot with Blackarachnia at his mercy
Silverbolt: You're going to hear the truth if it...
[Blackarachnia turns around and headbutts Silverbolt, knocking him down.]
Blackarachnia: Warned ya...ohh, not such a great idea.
[Blackarachnia falls to the ground; she and Silverbolt groan.]
- —Blackarachnia learns not to do something stupid the hard way.
Notes
Animation and technical errors
- When Blackarachnia jumps out of the X-ray machine, she's missing her beast mode legs.
- The way the trees fall on Blackarachnia, her head and torso would have been trapped, with her legs sticking out.
- During the scene where the Maximals work out where Silverbolt and Blackarachnia have gone, a piece of green metal clips through Rhinox's chest.
Real-world references
- The video game Rattrap plays has some aspects modelled after Street Fighter. Primal tosses a projectile similar to Ryu's "Hadoken" and performs a spinning kick similar to Ryu's "Tatsumaki Senpuukyaku". The two characters in the game are a miscolored Megatron (Transmetal body) and Optimus Primal (using the body of pre-beast mode Megatron from "Beast Wars" (Part 1)).
- The next game Rattrap plays is of the "First Person Shooter" kind, ala Wolfenstein 3D and Doom. It consists of blasting many Waspinators.
- When Dinobot II is chasing Blackarachnia there is a shot in which she runs underneath a log while Dinobot II runs right through it. This is a reference to a scene in the movie Jurassic Park in which the Jeep is being chased by the T-Rex after its initial attack and they drive under a fallen tree while the T-Rex smashes through it.
Home video releases
- VHS
2000 — Beast Wars: Super Lifeform Transformers: Metals — Love Typhoon (Pioneer LDC) — Japanese audio only.
2000 — Beast Wars: Transformers — Volume 2 (Universal)
- DVD
2000 — Beast Wars: Transformers: Metals — DVD Box 2 (Pioneer LDC) — English and Japanese audio.
2004 — Beast Wars: Transformers — The Complete Third Season (Rhinomation)
2005 — Beast Wars: Transformers — Vol. 2 (Universal)
2006 — Beast Wars: Transformers — Season 3 (Madman Entertainment)
2009 — The Transformers: Beast Wars — Complete Collection (Madman Entertainment)

