Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki

Welcome to Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki. You may wish to create or login to an account in order to have full editing access to this wiki.

READ MORE

Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki
Register
Advertisement
MarvelUS-39

He's a bad mother... SHUT YOUR MOUTH.

Marvel U.S. > Issue # 39
Previous Issue Next Issue
Marvel UK > Issue #158–159
Previous Issue Next Issue

Acapulco was never like this...

Synopsis[]

As Buster Witwicky slowly comes to, he quickly realizes he is far from home. The giant Decepticon robots looming over him were a good clue. Shockwave and Ratbat debate the fuel-efficiency merits of keeping the young human alive, with Shockwave defending his position by pointing to the human naval fleet just off the coast of their new island base. He correctly believes that Buster will serve as an effective human shield against any reprisal by Triple-I or the military. As Forsythe and Barnett find themselves stymied by the Decepticons, Walter calls home to Oregon to alert Sparkplug Witwicky of his son's fate.

At that very moment, Spike Witwicky has returned to his father's hotel to inform him that he's going to search for Buster. As Barnett's call comes through, Spike surprises his father by "tracing the call" just by holding the phone wire in his hands. He's forced then to reveal his new status as an Autobot Headmaster, and takes his father outside to introduce him to his new partner, Fortress Maximus, and the Targetmaster troops currently under his command. As Spike is doing the introductions, though, there is dissension in the ranks, especially with Kup, who disapproves of their overly-sentimental new leader.

As the Autobot turbo-transport arrives at the island, Kup insists Fortress Maximus remain behind and provide covering fire for the Targetmasters, lest his sentiment interfere directly with the mission. Kup should have been more worried about the island itself interfering, though, as massive cannons and blaster-weapons pop out of the sand and began unloading on the Autobots. Kup and his men are driven back into the water as the island's impenetrable dome forms above the sand, revealing its true form as a giant spacecraft.

In order to save his brother, Spike combines with Fortress Maximus and leaps onto the island craft as it begins shooting out of Earth's atmosphere. As the Decepticons inside detect his presence, Shockwave triggers an elaborate defensive mechanism that flips Fort Max off the side of the rocket and directly in line with a palm tree that spears him with a missile. Damaged, Cerebros splits off from his larger partner, only to be forced into combat with Shockwave himself, who has left the rocket to defend his precious logic from the illogical actions of the Autobot. A blast from Shockwave's gun mode cripples Cerebros, and Spike is forced to separate off once more, leaving himself very vulnerable. However, he manages to remotely line-up Max's guns to target Shockwave, blasting him back into Earth's gravitational pull, where the Decepticon begins to burn up in re-entry.

Spike has a brief moment of reunion with Buster through the island's transparent casing before Ratbat fires the rockets and takes the ship far beyond Spike's meager propulsion capabilities. As he and his components are picked up by the Targetmasters' transport, Spike laments the loss of his brother. Despite that, his take-charge attitude and success against Shockwave earned him the respect of his fellow Autobots, and Kup officially welcomes Spike onto the team.

Credits[]

Script: Bob Budiansky
Pencils: Jose Delbo
Inks: Dave Hunt
Colors: Nelson Yomtov
Lettering: Bill Oakley
Editor: Don Daley
Editor-in-Chief: Tom DeFalco

  • Originally published: April, 1988

Major characters[]

(Numbers indicate order of appearance.)

Autobots Decepticons Humans
Regulars

Guests

  • Forrest Forsythe (4)

Nebulans

Errors[]

  • Forsythe and Barnett incorrectly identify their former Autobot captives as numbering seven total, not six.
  • The entire island was being held back by Fortress Maximus's weight alone?
  • Why wasn't Buster sucked out through the top of the island when it opened up to fire the palm tree?
  • In the scene where many Decepticons are seen in the control room one of them is clearly either Frenzy or Rumble. (Like all the non-speaking Decepticons in that scene he's block coloured so it's not possible to identify which, although the block colour is blue.) However both Decepticons have been in cold storage in the Ark since "Command Performances!" in issue #19 and won't be released until "Totaled!" in issue #41.

Items of note[]

  • Spike's trick with the phone makes it clear that binary-bonding bestows Headmaster partners with more than just transforming ability.
  • In the U.S. comic, Shockwave is supposedly destroyed, and indeed believed dead for years until he eventually turns up again in U.S. #65.
  • Though it's glossed over, one can assume the Autobots stopped off at the naval fleet and collected the Throttlebots from Barnett and Triple-I around this point, as the robots were back with the Autobots by the Underbase Saga.

UK printing[]

  • The UK cover features Shockwave holding Buster, drawn by Dan Reed. UK issue #158 includes Transformers A to Z entries for Hound and Huffer.
  • The UK version corrects the number of Transformers Triple-I captured to six and the number of Throttlebots Barnett brings with him back down to five... except for the fifth panel on page 7 which is untouched and retains the U.S. error. Whoops.
  • It also corrects Spike calling Galen a "Human" during his explanation to Sparkplug.
  • It also changes Spike's explanation from stating that he bonded with "Galen's Autobot body" to "Fort's Autobot body", which is arguably an unnecessary correction, since the body of Fortress Maximus is the same thing as the Autobot body of Galen.
  • The cameo by Frenzy or Rumble is not an error in the UK continuity as Frenzy escaped the Ark in "Target: 2006" in issue #83 and had since returned to the main Decepticon forces, as shown in "Resurrection!" in issue #104.
  • In the UK version, Shockwave's supposed demise was edited into the more benign sounding fate of merely falling to Earth, to allow his continued use in UK only stories such as in very next issue. Specifically, Shockwave's line "Its gravity is pulling me down... into the atmosphere... where it is only logical... that I burn up..." was changed to the much less ironic "it is only logical... that I fall to earth..." A couple of Ratbat's lines have also been changed to reflect that Shockwave does not die, and these changes similarly drain the irony from his lines.
  • All of these changes are sloppy, and look like they were penned in by a six-year-old.
  • In Grim Grams for issue #158, Grimlock attempts to clear up confusion over if Fortress Maximus's original partner was Galen or Kord, and continually teases on the events in the upcoming issues #160 & 161.
  • In Grim Grams for issue #159, Grimlock accepts yet more praise for Legacy of Unicron and the last 50 issues.

Covers (3)[]

  • U.S. issue 39 cover: Fort Max shafted by Jose Delbo
  • UK issue 158 cover: Shockwave holding Buster by Dan Reed
  • UK issue 159 cover: Truly ugly copying of the US cover by Will Simpson and David Elliot
MarvelUK-158

158 cover

MarvelUK-159

159 cover

Advertisements[]

  • None yet identified.
Advertisement