xunk16 wrote:Except there was already reports of a coming pandemics for months before that, and the aforementioned project could have been a major tie-in, necessitating the coordination of many artists; in itself maybe provoking a delay even before the shutdown hit.
... putting aside the completely ridiculous idea of such a minor title with a total circulation of only a few thousand being involved in a "major tie-in", this doesn't line up with objective reality.
Yes, there were warnings... but businesses in general didn't curtail or cease operations until compelled to do so by lockdown orders from their local/regional governments, and those companies that had the means to continue working remotely during the lockdown overwhelmingly did so. Pretty much the entire comic book industry is supremely well-equipped to work remotely and continued to operate during the lockdown. Some of the larger publishers did scale back their output once Diamond Comic Distributors suspended operations, but a lot of that content just went direct-to-digital instead.
Then, of course, there's the patently absurd idea that a veteran publisher like Titan Publishing Group stopped work on a book arbitrarily and without notice to its distributor, customers, or readers to work on a "major tie-in" for an entire calendar quarter... and all without mentioning or doing anything to promote this side project.
I don't mean to sound rude, but this argument of yours is just absurd. It requires a well-established and respected publisher with almost 40 years of experience to behave worse than a rank amateur.
xunk16 wrote:There might also arise issues about legal concerns and negotiations over going "too much macross". He did state the only limit was to be set by the right holders.
I doubt this is based in the legal situation. If there'd been some legal action taken, or threatened, against Titan by
Macross's owners in Japan there'd be a clear paper trail... and there isn't one, at last check.
xunk16 wrote:And going totally on the wishful thinking side; let's say it was supposed to be a movie tie-in... they most probably are sitting on a few pages worth of development hell right now. Which could mean Sony is preventing them to reveal anything before they are ready on their side.
That's a bit beyond the realm of wishful thinking... that's a field trip to Bizarro World and about as high on the list of things Things That Will Not Happen as it gets.
Also, bear in mind that Titan's
Remix is based almost exclusively on
Macross designs... designs that Harmony Gold and its licensees cannot legally use in new film works. Whatever Titan's doing wouldn't and couldn't have any bearing on the nonexistent live-action movie for legal reasons.
Zer0 Kay wrote:No it wasn't. Are you saying that the story in the anime wasn't:
1. Overwhelming alien force arrives
2. Prior enemies assist against incoming enemies (world governments, Zentradi, RT Masters, Invid)
3. Humanity almost destroyed (either literally or figuratively)
4. Humanity befriended by some of alien force
5. Alien force for some reason stops short of destroying humanity
6. Rinse and repeat
That's what I'm saying, yes.
Your #2 there doesn't happen in any of
Robotech's three sagas. No individual national government intervenes in the war with the Zentradi in the Macross Saga, there are no Zentradi present in the Masters Saga, and there are no Masters or Zentradi in the New Generation (which also goes out of its way to imply the Zentradi are extinct). That only occurs in the failed sequels like
Robotech II: the Sentinels, where the few surviving Zentradi and the Tirolians the Masters abandoned band together with humanity against the Invid. (For legal reasons, the Zentradi were all killed off in the sequels anyway.)
Your #3 arguably doesn't apply to any of the three sagas. The Zentradi don't make any effort to destroy humanity until the very end of the war, and the renegades raise hell but their goal isn't wiping humanity out it's to get off the freaking planet. The Masters never pose a serious risk to the human population until the very end of the Masters Saga, when their desperation peaks and they conclude they have to wipe humanity out or risk being wiped out by the Invid themselves. The Invid NEVER attempt to destroy humanity and are seemingly quite content to peacefully coexist with humans.
Your #4 is pretty dubious as well, unless you're exceedingly generous with the definitions of "befriend" and "some of". It's true for the Macross Saga, but in the Masters Saga Zor Prime doesn't know who or what he is for most of the story and when he does he doesn't befriend them... he just uses them to further his personal vendetta against the Masters, which has apocalyptic consequences for Earth. Bowie just sort of abducts Musica, over her protests, because he's infatuated with her. Likewise, Ariel is only able to befriend Scott's group because nobody knows she isn't human and she is later shunned when it's discovered she's an alien even though she plays a small role in helping convince the Regess to leave Earth. This is even carried forward into the post-reboot sequels, wherein many in the UEEF seem to consider aliens inherently untrustworthy and are stunned to learn that there is ONE human-alien hybrid living among them even though her family are essentially celebrities.
Your #5 is hard to apply to any of the three sagas. The Zentradi don't "stop short" of trying to destroy humanity... the hostile ones are simply all killed. Twice. (This would, however, apply to
SDF Macross.) The Robotech Masters likewise only stop their attempted genocide of humanity when they're all dead. The Invid never attempted to destroy humanity in the series.
The total order arguably doesn't apply to the New Generation either.
Zer0 Kay wrote:EoC was indeed CM's attempt to make RT in effect circular. I didn't think that was a bad idea or desire to want to be able to allow the viewer to drop anywhere in the series and enjoy it.
That wasn't quite the goal... the goal was just to have enough material to fill every weekday in a standard calendar year, so the show could run in a loop.
Mind you, the time loop idea wasn't the original one either... the first version talked about was that, in the final episode, some raw cadet would ask a future Commodore Hunter how this all began and he'd start telling the story from the beginning, cut episode 1.