sentinel prime age of extinction

Sentinel Prime Age Of Extinction ❲COMPLETE❳

RDLEG 5/2015, DE 30 DE OCTUBRE. TEXTO LEGAL

Autor/a : Vicente Valera
Ilustrador/a : Cinthia Moure

En esta obra, Vicente, junto a la diseñadora gráfica Cinthia Moure, ofrece una versión fácil estudio sobre el Texto Refundido de la Ley del Estatuto Básico del Empleado Público, al objeto de favorecer el empleo de la memoria visual, algo tradicionalmente poco empleado en el mundo jurídico.
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Sentinel Prime Age Of Extinction ❲COMPLETE❳

When Optimus Prime flies into space at the film’s end, blasting the Creator’s beacon, he is not a triumphant hero. He is a refugee. His exile is the direct consequence of Sentinel’s greatest lesson finally being learned by the universe’s most violent pupils: humanity.

When Optimus finally confronts Lockdown (a bounty hunter hired by the Creators), the villain delivers the film’s thesis: “Your precious humans… they’re just a primitive, violent species. Just like the Decepticons.” Lockdown is essentially a ghost of Sentinel Prime—a cold, utilitarian executioner who sees all lesser beings as resources.

The humans use the very technology Sentinel sought to exploit—Cybertronian metal, weapons, and engineering—to build their own anti-Transformer kill squads. In a grim twist, Sentinel’s legacy is the human race becoming him : a species willing to sacrifice its former allies on the altar of survival. sentinel prime age of extinction

This is most evident in the film’s most controversial creation: . Using the severed head of Megatron (and, implicitly, the reverse-engineered science of Sentinel’s Space Bridge technology), human scientists build a man-made Transformer. When Galvatron inevitably gains consciousness, he is not a Decepticon in the classic sense. He is Sentinel’s Frankenstein monster—an artificial being created by a paranoid species that learned from Sentinel that organic life is disposable. The Knight vs. The Traitor Optimus Prime’s arc in Age of Extinction is, in many ways, a therapy session for having executed his mentor. He spends the film broken, rusted, and fleeing the very humans he once died to protect. His famous line—“I am not a hero. I am just a soldier who chose the wrong side”—is a direct confession of his failure to stop Sentinel’s ideology from infecting Earth.

When Michael Bay’s Transformers: Age of Extinction hit theaters in 2014, it was marketed as a reboot of sorts—a new human lead (Mark Wahlberg’s Cade Yeager), a fugitive Optimus Prime, and a genocidal new threat in the form of Lockdown. But lurking beneath the din of crumbling concrete and screeching metal is a ghost that never truly leaves the screen: Sentinel Prime. When Optimus Prime flies into space at the

Optimus killed him for it. But the seed of Sentinel’s philosophy—that survival requires ruthless, preemptive betrayal—did not die. It was planted into the soil of human military-industrial thinking. By the opening of Age of Extinction , five years after the Battle of Chicago, humanity has fully internalized Sentinel’s worldview. Enter Harold Attinger (Kelsey Grammer) and his black-ops unit, Cemetery Wind. Their mission: exterminate all Transformers, Autobot and Decepticon alike. Why? Because they have concluded what Sentinel argued: aliens are an existential threat that cannot be trusted.

But here is the film’s true horror: Lockdown is proven correct. By the end of Age of Extinction , the humans have created their own planet-killing weapon (the Seed), and the U.S. government has openly sanctioned genocide against the Autobots. Sentinel didn’t fail to destroy the Autobot-human alliance; he simply showed humanity how to do it more efficiently. Age of Extinction is not a story about a new villain. It is a story about the long, radioactive half-life of a fallen leader’s ideas. Sentinel Prime wanted to tear down the old world of alliance and rebuild it on a foundation of betrayal. He failed to do it with the Space Bridge. But five years later, Harold Attinger finished the job without firing a single Decepticon laser. When Optimus finally confronts Lockdown (a bounty hunter

Though Sentinel physically perished at the end of Dark of the Moon (2011), his ideological shadow is the secret engine of Age of Extinction . The film, often dismissed as the franchise’s bloated mid-life crisis, reveals its darkest thesis when you realize that the humans have learned Sentinel’s lesson all too well: The Prime Who Sold the World To understand Age of Extinction , we have to remember why Sentinel betrayed the Autobots. In Dark of the Moon , Sentinel argued that the Cybertronian race was dying. His solution was brutal realpolitik: sacrifice Earth’s human population to rebuild Cybertron using the Space Bridge. He wasn’t a sadist; he was a pragmatist. He believed that the survival of his species justified the annihilation of another.

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