Some of the links to external sites posted on this site may automatically be converted to an affiliate link for which we may be compensated. Some of the content on this site are sponsored posts for which we have been compensated. In order to comply with the FTC's endorsement guidelines, we hereby inform this site's viewers that we occasionally receive sample products, content, or other forms of media from various companies in order for us to provide content of interest to our readers. Visit to view Hasbro's official Transformers website or visit Takara Tomy's official Transformers website. Transformers® is a registered trademark of Hasbro, Inc. It is not associated with nor endorsed by Hasbro or Takara Tomy. And it dodged a bullet by having Goofy himself voiced by his longtime standard voice actor Bill Farmer instead of the celebrity they originally wanted to voice him, Steve Martin, all thanks to Disney executives stepping in and saying "No, Goofy should have his normal voice. The very next Disney animated movie, The Lion King, was stacked with celebrity voice talent, and then both Pixar and Dreamworks went on to pretty much make celebrity voice casting the next big thing in animated film work, becoming the standard that it is today.Īs an aside, it's a miracle that A Goofy Movie (released not too long after both Aladdin and The Lion King) mostly avoided the traps of celebrity voice casting by only having its biggest names (Pauly Shore, Wallace Shawn, and the late Pat Buttram) in only minor roles not important to the film's main story. But when Williams as the Genie proved to be a smash hit, suddenly everyone wanted celebrity voices in their animated movies to get more parents in seats along with their kids. Prior to then, any celebrity voices in movies were mostly a neat novelty or signs of some just needing a quick paycheck. Been there, done that."Īll this celebrity voice casting form animated movies really stems from Robin Williams being cast as Aladdin's Genie. The normal reaction to this is every time that happen, we just eye-roll and say, "yeah, whatever. It's corporate way to market things and to appear good with minimum efforts. All those "first black to X", "first woman to Y", "first hoola-hoop dancer to Z" is pretty ridiculous in itself and can be sliced ad infinitum. LGBT representation is a thing in media since decades. That was just the first thing that came to mind because it was the best example for the "first ever X", celebrating it like it's "groundbreaking" over and over while in fact it's just mundane. Like for Disney loudly claiming that their new movie have the "first LGBT thing ever" at almost every single movies they release is a meme on itself.Ī lot of people choose to just forget the 1986 cartoonmovie happened, that is why this is hilarious.Īnd seriously, you really don't need to bring up "LGBTQ+" at every opportunity, especially when the "first japanese transformer" joke was right there too. How many movies had their "first X ever"? ![]() Hollywood think people are goldfishes and we can only remember what happened a minute ago. ![]() ![]() Like the original 1986 movie doesn't count? They boldly proclaim that this will be "the first animated Transformers movie EVER".
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