Transformers Animated Movie Torrent

Transformers Animated Movie Torrent 4,5/5 1295 votes

Transformers Files: 16 Type: TV Series Episodes Length Watch Download Episode 1: More Than Meets the Eye Part 1 22:14 (233MB) Episode 2: More Than Meets the Eye Part 2 22:19 (233MB) Episode 3: More Than Meets the Eye Part 3 22:20 (233MB) Episode 4: Transport to Oblivion 22:17 (233MB) Episode 5: Roll for It 22:19 (233MB) Episode 6: Divide and Conquer 22:18 (233MB) Episode 7: Fire in the Sky 22:16 (233MB) Episode 8: S.O.S. Dinobots 22:17 (233MB) Episode 9: Fire on the Mountain 22:16 (233MB) Episode 10: War of the Dinobots 22:17 (233MB) Episode 11: The Ultimate Doom Part 1: Brainwash 22:17 (233MB) Episode 12: The Ultimate Doom Part 2: Search 22:15 (233MB) Episode 13: The Ultimate Doom Part 3: Revival 22:15 (233MB) Episode 14: Countdown to Extinction 22:16 (233MB) Episode 15: A Plague of Insecticons 22:17 (233MB) Episode 16: Heavy Metal War 22:18 (233MB) If you want to save the file, you may have to right-click and choose 'Save As' instead of simply clicking on the download link. No multiple downloads!

Download Transformers 2 Torrent at TorrentFunk. We have 576 Transformers 2 Movie torrents for you! Transformers Animated Season 2 Complete 720p WEB. Transformers Animated is the latest Transformers cartoon to be forgotten by its legion of former fans, who all moved on to fap over Prime instead. With the use of shitty paper cutouts to depict characters, it proves Cartoon Network is too fucking Jew to hire Korean animators like all the other fascist media outlets.

- Related Anime People who downloaded this also liked. Enox tv software update.

Overview - A war has been waging on the planet Cybertron for millennia. The Autobots, led by the heroic Optimus Prime, prepare to make a daring attempt to retake their planet from the evil of Megatron and the Decepticons. Unknown to both sides, a menacing is heading their way - Unicron, a planet that devours everything in its path. The only hope of stopping Unicron lies within the Matrix of Leadership and the Autobot who can rise up and use its power to light their darkest hour. Will the Autobots be able to save their home world from destruction or will the Decepticons reign supreme? The all-star cast of voice talent includes Peter Cullen, Frank Welker, Eric Idle, Judd Nelson, Robert Stack, Orson Welles, Scatman Crothers, Casey Kasem and Leonard Nimoy.

'Transformers: The Movie' has had a long and troubled history on home video. From VHS to Laserdisc to DVD and now Blu-ray, the film's distribution rights have changed hands a number of times, both domestically and abroad.

Every new label does a new video transfer for it, and no two have ever looked quite the same, with major variances in aspect ratio and color. A sticker on the slipcover for the new Shout! Factory Blu-ray claims that it comes 'from a new 4k transfer.' I wish I could say that this was, finally, a definitive restoration for the film. Unfortunately, it's still plagued with issues. In 1986, 'Transformers: The Movie' was made for theatrical release at an intended projection ratio of 1.85:1.

However, the producers fully realized that the film's primary life would be on video and television syndication, the standard for which at the time was 4:3 (1.33:1). The animation's original artwork was drawn at a ratio somewhere in the vicinity of 1.4:1. (The exact width varied slightly from shot to shot.) In theaters, the image was matted on the top and bottom down to 1.85:1, but given that the movie was a flop, most viewers first saw it later in 4:3. Through the years, many fans have argued that 4:3 is the purest version of the movie – the rationale being that if artists took the time to draw extra image at the top and bottom of the frame, it deserves to be seen, regardless of whether it was visible in theaters or not.

Others favor a preservation of the theatrical experience, which also happens to fit nicely with the modern HDTV standard. Early VHS, Laserdisc and DVD editions presented the movie exclusively in 4:3. The first DVD distributor, Rhino Home Video, made an attempt to prepare a widescreen video transfer, but gave up and claimed that no widescreen source elements could be found.

Eventually, the 2006 20th Anniversary Special Edition DVD from Sony BMG provided two new video transfers on separate discs, one in widescreen and one in Full Frame 4:3. The new Shout! Factory release follows that model. My preference is for the widescreen framing, so I started there. The 1080p/AVC MPEG-4 transfer is slightly letterboxed to 1.85:1. Almost immediately, my hopes for the quality of the disc sank.