Jazz (Movie)


 * Jazz is an Autobot from the Movie continuity family.



First Lieutenant Jazz is one happy-go-lucky Autobot. Good-natured and always able to take things in his stride, he provides a decent contrast to the more serious demeanour of Ironhide or Prime himself. He's also a talker, something Ironhide and Prime like to tease him about. He might be the smallest Autobot but he's by no means a coward. His only real complaint is that he gets stuck fighting the small ones.

Ghosts Of Yesterday
Onboard the Ark, Jazz was the first to detect the Ghost 1's presence, and was later badly damaged in a fight with the Decepticons. After being repaired, he and Ratchet fought together against Barricade.

Transformers (2007) film

 * Voice actor: Darius McCrary (English)

Part of Prime's crew that went to Earth, Jazz, after finding a suitable form, met up with the other Autobots, greeting Sam and Mikaela as "little bitches". He casually sat while Optimus explained their mission&mdash;on the hood of another car. When Sam and Mikaela were captured by Sector Seven, Jazz used grapplers to relieve the humans of their weapons. After Bumblebee was captured by Sector Seven during the retreat, Jazz expressed his desire to rescue him, but was overruled by Prime, who didn't believe it possible to accomplish this without harming the humans.



In the final battle with the Decepticons, Jazz valiantly attacked Megatron to buy time for the others, but was completely overmatched. The Decepticon leader tossed him through the air, stomped him into a building, and finally tore him in two, killing him.

Techspecs
Despite his quite unambiguous death in the film itself, the packaging for the upcoming Target-exclusive Jazz redeco (see below) claims he survived this encounter and was repaired by Ratchet, and that he chose his new colors as a way to relieve boredom during his long convalescence.

Transformers (2007)

 * Autobot Jazz (Deluxe, 2007)
 * Japanese ID number: MA-04




 * Jazz transforms into a silver Pontiac Solstice Custom Hardtop. Included is a blaster weapon that elongates into a sniper rifle, which may also be clipped directly onto his rear spoiler when in vehicle mode. In robot mode, the section featuring this same rear spoiler may be kept folded onto his back or worn on either shoulder as a shield. An interesting undocumented feature is a hinge joint located on the bottom of the rifle can attach to the shield's hinge joint, creating three choice weapon configurations: (a) a mounted long range sniper rifle, (b) an ambidextrous shoulder-mounted canon, or (c) a short range blaster with built-in shield somewhat akin to what has been seen in Jazz's concept art and in the movie itself.


 * As with most of the mainline toys, he features a Automorphing gimmick that is activated by pushing the car roof down onto his back and locking it into place. This raises his head and slides his chest panels into proper position for the robot mode. This feature, like the weaponry mentioned above, is not documented at all, so one must be careful to not press the chest and the back at the same time.


 * Autobot Jazz (Legends, 2007)




 * A much smaller version of the character, Legends Jazz features limited articulation and detail, along with a much simpler transformation. A rather glaring side-effect of this transformation and a desire to mimic the hood chest of the larger toy is the addition of a second front bumper on the roof of his alt-mode. If this means Jazz also includes a second engine to go with this front bumper or an attempt at compensation for a case of police bar envy is unknown.


 * Final Battle Jazz (Deluxe, 2007)
 * Japanese ID number: MA-14




 * An extensive retool of Jazz, modifying most of his legs to give them a broken, battle-scarred appearance. Amusingly, because Hasbro chose to keep his vehicle mode prestine, nearly the rest of his body is undamaged. The damaged parts and his head have a black and blue deco, representing exposed circuitry and glowing conduits.


 * Jazz comes with a brand new spring-loaded gattling cannon weapon (called a quagma cannon on the packaging), modeled after the actual weapon the CGI model of Jazz appears with. It can fire a transparent blue projectile and like his original weapon, can be mounted in several configurations: (a) Mounted on his right arm with the gattling cannon/launcher facing forward as he appears in most promotional material, and (b) mounted on his left arm with the flip-out long rifle barrel pointed forwards.


 * Unusually for a regular Deluxe figure, Jazz is packed in his card in robot mode, no doubt to highlight the changes to the figure that would not be visible in vehicle mode.


 * Autobot Jazz (Repaint) (Deluxe, 2007)




 * An extensive redeco of Deluxe class Jazz, this Target-exclusive has a colour and paint deco based heavily upon Generation 1 Jazz's Martini Racing scheme, though he is lacking in Martini sponsorship for obvious reasons, replacing them with his own name. Disco Jazz doesn't need to advertise really, but he does.

Fast Action Battlers

 * Ion Blast Autobot Jazz (2007)




 * Smaller than his Deluxe toy and less articulated, this one has a missile in place of one hand. Who knew Jazz was a lefty?

Robot Replicas

 * Autobot Jazz (2007)



Titanium Series

 * Autobot Jazz (Robot Master, 2007)

Trivia

 * The packaging text for the deluxe Jazz figure refers to his weapon as a "telescoping sword". As ridiculous as this sounds considering this weapon looks like a firearm, this very idea comes from sketches of a sword weapon featured on the same concept art that has Jazz showcasing the short range blaster/shield combination stated above. Way to compensate text-writing guy!