
Transformers: 40th Anniversary Event
Action · Animation · Science Fiction
Overview
This special cinema experience takes audiences back to the very beginning as the original voice actors team up for the first time in decades to revisit their characters and recreate the enduring magic of The Transformers. An exclusive behind-the-scenes table read appears on a split screen with the pilot episode, More Than Meets the Eye, Part 1, followed by the next three episodes in the first series. Experience the original Saturday morning cartoon for the first time on the big screen and relive its evolution over the years with a sneak peek of the new season of Transformers EarthSpark.
Top Cast


Frank Welker
Frank Welker
Megatron / Mirage / Rumble / Skywarp / Soundwave (voice)
Frank Welker
Megatron / Mirage / Rumble / Skywarp / Soundwave (voice)


Gregg Berger
Gregg Berger
Cliffjumper / Narrator / Spike Witwicky / additional voices (voice)
Gregg Berger
Cliffjumper / Narrator / Spike Witwicky / additional voices (voice)


Peter Cullen
Peter Cullen
Optimus Prime / Ironhide (voice)
Peter Cullen
Optimus Prime / Ironhide (voice)
Frank Todaro
Frank Todaro
Starscream / Wheeljack / Reflector / Sparkplug Witwicky (voice)
Frank Todaro
Starscream / Wheeljack / Reflector / Sparkplug Witwicky (voice)


Arif S. Kinchen
Arif S. Kinchen
Jazz (voice)
Arif S. Kinchen
Jazz (voice)


Dan Gilvezan
Dan Gilvezan
Bumblebee / Shockwave (voice)
Dan Gilvezan
Bumblebee / Shockwave (voice)


Michael Bell
Michael Bell
Prowl (voice)
Michael Bell
Prowl (voice)


Victor Caroli
Victor Caroli
Narrator (archive audio)
Victor Caroli
Narrator (archive audio)


Paul Eiding
Paul Eiding
Hound / Ratchet / Teletraan 1 / Thundercracker (voice)
Paul Eiding
Hound / Ratchet / Teletraan 1 / Thundercracker (voice)


Corey Burton
Corey Burton
Spike Witwicky / Shockwave / Brawn (archive audio)
Corey Burton
Spike Witwicky / Shockwave / Brawn (archive audio)
Similar Movies

After the death of his mother, evil mutant wizard Blackwolf discovers long-lost military technologies. Full of ego and ambition, Blackwolf claims his mother's throne, assembles an army, and sets out to brainwash and conquer Earth. Meanwhile, Blackwolf's gentle twin brother, the bearded sage Avatar, calls upon his own magical abilities to foil Blackwolf's plans for world domination — even if it means eliminating his own flesh and blood.

Daryl is a normal 10-year-old boy in many ways. However, unbeknown to his foster parents and friends, Daryl is actually a government-created robot with superhuman reflexes and mental abilities. Even his name has a hidden meaning -- it's actually an acronym for Data Analyzing Robot Youth Life-form. When the organization that created him deems the "super soldier" experiment a failure and schedules Daryl to be disassembled, it is up to a few rogue scientists to help him escape.

Larry the Cucumber's vision of the future includes automated robotic hosts telling jokes with random punch lines and musical numbers in which the performers and themes are chosen entirely by chance. As Bob the Tomato quickly points out, the jokes of the future aren't very funny because they don't make sense. Worse, technical malfunctions in the Ventrilomatic hosts actually promote emotional instability. Nonetheless, Bob admits that Larry's vision of the future contains some very cool adaptations of classic songs like Gilbert and Sullivan's fast-talking "Modern Major General" and Binky the Aardvark's solo performance of Mozart's The Barber of Seville. Larry's vision of the future also includes an amusing animated short about greed called "Lunch." Junior Asparagus calls Bob and Larry back to the present with a final song celebrating God's unconditional love.

Sonic's arch nemesis Dr. Robotnik has been banished from the Land of Darkness by an evil Metal Robotnik. The devious doctor tells Sonic that the Robot Generator has been sabotaged and will blow Planet Freedom to kingdom come. But it's not until the President's beautiful daughter Sara turns on the charm that Sonic springs into action.

Set in the year 2000, when the level of Labor accidents begin to escalate around Tokyo Bay, police detectives Kusumi and Hata are assigned to investigate. What they discover leads to a series of government cover-ups, conspiracy concerning a new biological weapon entitled WXIII-Wasted Thirteen and a tragic, personal connection to Hata. The only hope to stop this threat is to cooperate with the military and lead WXIII into a showdown with the Labors of Special Vehicle Division 2.

In the year 2074, the cybernetics market is dominated by two rival companies: USA's Pinwheel Robotics and Japan's Kobayashi Electronics. Cyborgs are commonplace, used for anything from soldiers to prostitutes. Casella Reese is a prototype cyborg developed for corporate espionage and assassination. She is filled with a liquid explosive called Glass Shadow. Pinwheel plans to eliminate the entire Kobayashi board of directors by using Casella

Set in the futuristic Metro City, Astro Boy (Atom) is a young robot with incredible powers created by a brilliant scientist in the image of the son he had lost. Unable to fulfill his creator's expectations, Astro embarks on a journey in search of acceptance, experiencing betrayal and a netherworld of robot gladiators, before returning to save Metro City and reconcile with the father who rejected him.
















