There are times when the blockbusters, silently, they keep cards up their sleeves that no one saw coming. One can expect that there will be some surprises in ‘The Flash’ or ‘Spiderman: Crossing the Multiverse’ (they are movies made for it, after all), but ‘Transformers: Rise of the Beasts’ has caught us more on the wrong foot We explain what the surprise twist is and what it means for the saga belownot without warning you that, obviously, it is a big spoiler.
EYE!! From here there is spoilers the size of Optimus Prime About ‘Transformers: Rise of the Beasts’. Be very careful.
a normal little job
At the beginning of the film we are introduced to a surprisingly strong social issue in which Noah Diaz, a Latino ex-military man living in Brooklyn, must take care of his sick brother (but not enough for his hospital bills). After the Transformers appear the indie movie plot practically disappears entirely until, once the Autobots have won, comes the final scene.
In it, Noah gets a job interview in a mysterious place where His boss tells him not only that he knows everything he has done with the Transformers in Peru, but he wants to offer you a job in his top-level agency. In addition, she tells him that her brother already has all the treatments paid for with the best doctors. Before she can think about it, he gives her his card and activates a secret door which gives access to a hangar full of the latest generation aircraft.
intrigued, Noah looks at the card where only one word is written: GI Joe. Hasbro had been trying to unite all its licenses for years, and this may be the first step to achieve it. After the setback (in all senses) of ‘Snake eyes: The origin’ and the drop in the box office of ‘Transformers’, It makes some sense to unite them, more from a business point of view than an artistic one.
Let’s not forget that GI Joe and Transformers they have already shared several crossovers in comic form: the first was from 1987 published by Marvel and since then they have not stopped coming together. Is this the beginning of a new cinematographic universe? There may be more than meets the eye.
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