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Transformers Movie 2 Deluxe Sideswipe

June 30th, 2009

Transformers Movie 2 Deluxe Sideswipe



User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars the new jazz… sorta
The majority of all transformers have similar characteristics. Whether it be the overall design of either car or robot mode, they all have a unique style at the same time. In Sideswipe’s case, he is a prefect ballance of two different Autobots. The two being Jazz and Barricade, at least in the movie incarnations. Sideswipe is a Corvette Concept with silver paint and blue tinted windows, similar to Premium jazz’s appearance, though with better quality. The headsculpt bares resemblence to Decepticon Barricade. However, everyone knows that Sideswipe is an Autobot. Could he be somewhat related to the two? Who knows what sub-plot this autobot has in store in the film Transformers Revenge of the Fallen. This figure has great posability with a great sculpt a wonderful attention to detail. The only problems I have are the occasionaly popping off of parts during his transformation and having minor balancing issues with the way the feet have to form in robot mode. Other than that, this is a great figure with great modes throughout.

4 Stars That Guy Sideswiped Me!
Sideswipe is one of the hip new autobots who will appear in the Revenge of the Fallen movie. According to the packaging he likes close combat and is a sword expert.

For kids:

This guy is a sweet ride. He’s a silver Corvette concept with blue windows and is probably one of the sportiest cars in the line. He transforms fairly easily but has tons of little bits and parts that move and come apart and go together. Because of this he doesn’t seem quite as durable to me as some of the others. His swords are one of the coolest “mech-alive” features I’ve seen yet though and he’s got a pretty cool looking robot form. I think he might frustrate younger kids but most kids will like both the car and robot forms.

For adults:

This guy is still a sweet ride. I even want to drive him around and make engine noises. He is painted silver instead of just molded in a certain color and this makes him pop visually. The downside is that over time I see this paint job chipping around the edges and rubbing off on corners. Another down side is because his is an involved transformation and he’s such a bright color there are many visible seam lines.

His transformation isn’t difficult but it is intricate with many pieces of the body of the car that move and swivel and break apart. He feels a bit delicate but so far has proven durable. Still, if someone went a little nuts on him he might break easy.

Once in robot mode he looks pretty cool with a sleek head, his shoulders that are the rear fenders of the car and a couple of neat points of articulation action. He has pistons and sliding knee covers in his legs that move as you bend it at the knee and he has four hydraulic rods connecting his leg to his body that slide up and down as you move his legs. The rods are a soft material so they won’t snap. That’s all pretty neat. He does have a bit too much of the car stuck onto his back though to look fully streamlined. But the biggest complaint is his feet. They look fine but the wheels are at bottom (as in his feet don’t sit flat on the ground) which makes standing him up a bit of a chore as you have to wiggle him and his feet around to find balance.

His swords are two thin strips of the doors attached to each elbow. The cool part is if you grab one of the two and pull it around in an arc toward the front of his arm the other one swings in the opposite direction automatically via a cool little gear set up. They meet right in front to form the sword on each arm. It’s a cool mechanism and works well. Plus you can take the two parts of the sword part way to make double swords or scissor like weapons or half way to make a shield like weapon. It’s versatile and can be used to change up the look.

This is a tough one, I’ll rate him four but three and a half would be fair too due to his inability to stand well, many seam lines, his chipping paint job and his delicate nature. Then again he looks cool and has those swords…

4 Stars Jazz v2.0?
Sideswipe from Transformers ROTF is a new character from the movie.

PROs:

- Painted body in vehicle mode: The whole car’s plastic body panels are PAINTED silver. This is a first for Hasbro in a regular Deluxe toy! (the old regular Jazz received this treatment with the Premium Deluxe toy line, which came very late. Such a Premium line won’t probably happen again).

- Clear plastic headlights and tail lights: These look very cool, and in the older Jazz, these were only painted.

- Complex transformation and tons of articulation: The robot mode has a lot of articulation and piston-like bits that work, which is way cooler than Jazz, Bumblebee and other toys from the first movie.

- Robot mode proportions are more slender than the bulkier old toys. Sideswipe’s weapons are his arm mounted blades, which are quite cool to rotate into position. The hands and other molded details look fantastic.

CONs:

- Big clear plastic parts: clear plastic is always more brittle than regular plastic, so it may break easier. I’ve damaged 2 pieces already.

- Complex transformation (level 4 out of 5 if I recall correctly): The instructions are not clear and won’t let all the pieces fall into place, like the back windshield + trunk portion: you can see it jutting up in the product picture. When transforming to car mode you need to move face its head down so that it’s looking inside his chest. This way the back windshield hinge fits behind its “ears” and the back windshield and tail will fall in place.

- Lots of panels in vehicle mode = lots of visible seams.

- Robot mode looks great and somewhat accurate to concept art… except that it lacks any paint. I mean, even ol’ regular Deluxe Jazz (not the Premium Deluxe Jazz) has more paint applications in robot mode than this guy! Sadly, this seems to be the trend with the ROTF Deluxe line of toys: great paint in vehicle mode, but NO paint in robot mode. Good thing is, with the molded detail in these toys, a little touch up will do wonders.

This toy then is geared towards children older than 7, because of its complexity and small parts that can detach. It will appeal also to older collectors, like me, who will need to fill the void left by one of the greatest transformers toy line of all: Takara-Tomy Binaltech.

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Transformers Movie 2 Deluxe Sideways

June 28th, 2009

Transformers Movie 2 Deluxe Sideways



User Ratings and Reviews

3 Stars Taking Sides
Sideways is a new face we will see in Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen (ROTF) in a couple of days. According to the package he’s a wimpy decepticon courier who likes to befriend larger robots to protect him. I wonder how that will play out in the movie.

For kids:

Eh, I think you’d do better to pick up Sideswipe kid. But if you need someone for him to knock around….

For Adults:

As much as I liked Sideswipe I had high hopes for Sideways but he doesn’t quite live up. In car mode he is an Audi – well an approximation anyway- and while he looks nice he does have some flaws. One is that the panels of his vehicle mode don’t hang together as solidly as many other transformers making him feel a bit more fragile than I like. This lends itself to another issue in that there are many clunky cut lines – even more so than Sideswipe. In particular there is an “H” shaped hinge right in the roof that sticks out like a sore thumb. They sculpted the rear window to imitate the engine you can normally see in there on this type of car but they didn’t paint it so it adds noting to the vehicle and only makes the window look funky. Last and worst is that his robot body rather clumsily fits into the car and if you set him on a flat surface his wheels don’t actually touch the ground. That’s right – this is a car that doesn’t roll.

His transformation starts off strong. With the push of a button his front wheels snap up and his chest piece snaps down. After that it’s all the standard unhooking of panels and bending of legs and arms. I’ll say this – it’s not nearly as smooth as many other transformations and of all the ROTF toys I’ve tried seems the most rushed together. He seems much more like a robot stuffed into a car than a car that turns into a robot and therefore much of the car is left hanging on his back. I believe the term is “kibble” in the transformer community.

In robot mode he looks OK but not great. He has tiny feet and skinny legs but with a light touch he’ll stand fine. His arms are pretty poseable and have some moving bits inside when you bend them at the elbow which I assume is his “mech-alive” feature. If so it’s a bit weak. His hand blade is touted as a feature on the box but is just a spinning wheel. I was excited to see that he had wheels on his hands at first and was expecting some unique transformation where a wheel splits and becomes part of the hands but was disappointed. The wheel on the hands is a separate piece and the actual wheels fold away. I understand this type of thing sometimes but it still felt like a cheat. He has an odd color scheme with a bright red midsection. And his head kind of flips up and sits on his chest on a plate and so doesn’t feel as integrated a part of his body as normal. Overall he doesn’t look horrible but not the nicest looking robot in the line.

I think 2 ?stars is fair and since I’m a nice guy I’ll round up to 3. Overall pretty average to slightly below.

3 Stars Audi R8 lookalike that transforms into Barricade lookalike…
Transformers – Revenge of the Fallen (ROTF) has generated a lot of speculation about the new characters and plot a couple of weeks before it’s opening day.

If you looked at the product picture, or at the movie’s trailer, you already know that Sideways is a Decepticon robot whose alternate mode is an Audi R8… at least it is in the movie.

The new line of toys for this second movie seems to be better made than the toys from the first movie. The Deluxe and Voyager lines of toys feature crisper detail in the molds, more accuracy to the screen appearances, better articulation and better paint applications. Some characters (Optimus and Starscream) even got updated and look gorgeous compared to their old 2007 selves.

So, overall we can expect better looking robots and, of course, vehicles. This will appeal to more mature collectors (I’m 32), and certainly won’t set back kids that play with their toys.

I value the accuracy of the vehicles, and in this area the movie producers have one big advantage, because they use movies to advertise products and companies will even pay them to appear in the movie.

On the other hand, toy manufacturers like Hasbro or Takara must ask these same companies for a license to use such vehicles as toys (and probably have to pay these same companies).

Hasbro expressly states the license when a vehicle is depicted by one of their toys: just look at the back of the box of ROTF Deluxe Sideswipe and Bumblebee and you’ll see GM’s logo and the licensed vehicle’s name (like Corvette Stingray Concept, Chevrolet Camaro) or the new Starscream (Lockheed Martin’s F-22). This basically means that the company approved the toy and the toy depicts such a vehicle.

Sideways’s box does NOT show a license from Audi, and I strongly believe that Hasbro didn’t get a license from them.

Because of this, the Deluxe toy car looks like a bootleg Audi R8: It’s like that car, but with the wrong vents, grille, lamps, exhaust, air intakes and body panels; with a longer bonnet but without the cool “gills” below all the lamps, or even the Audi logo.

This is such a shame, when you consider the nice work they did with the GM cars (these cars feature the company insignia), or even the 2007’s Saleen Ford Mustang that Barricade transforms into.

So, overall:

PROs:

- Vehicle mode features painted body panels and transparent head/tail-ligths (BIG plus compared to 2007’s Jazz Pontiac Solstice). A kid wouldn’t mind the “bootlegginess” look of this toy.

- Nice articulation in robot mode.

- Nice representation of robot mode concept art.

CONs:

- Gear Alive gimmick is useless.

- Lots of big transparent plastic that seems brittle and easy to break.

- Vehicle mode looks like you didn’t transform it well and couldn’t get the pieces to fit.

- Robot mode paint application is non-existent: most parts are the wrong color when compared to concept art from the internet.

- This is not a problem of the toy itself, but conceptual design of the character looks too much like a recycled Barricade.

At this moment we don’k know how big a part will this character play in the movie, and this could boost the coolness and “desiredness” of the character’s toys.

Based on the toy itself, I believe it’ll appeal to younger collectors and kids older than 7. It’s not suitable for small children because it’s got pointy, sharp edges and brittle clear plastic in large proportions.

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