Oh for...! Now he's gone too far!
Man, I loved that old fortress. So cool looking.The one that bothers me, oddly, is the door to Jabba's Palace, replacing it with enormous CGI. Instead of thinking, "Wow, Jabba's fortress looks ancient, run-down, and spooky," I see that and think, "This looks like a cutscene from God of War."
So very much this.When I was just a lad (looking for my true vocation), I used to day-dream about Darth Vader traipsing about on different planets, hunting down grizzled Jedi and having it out with them, man with no name style. A prequel would be badass, I reasoned. You could show all kinds of cool shit.
What I got was angels, Jar-Jar, trade embargoes, and a lot of walking through corridors and sitting about on couches contrasted with OMG CGI EVERYWHERE battles.
Also, lets hide the most dangerous man in the universe's twin children with his family, and one of the leaders of the rebellion he hopes to crush. He'll never find them there!The biggest problem, as has often been said, is that there was no one in a position to say, "I'm sorry George, but that's just not a good idea, and we're not doing it that way."
Likewise, you got this idea in the OT that the Jedi and Republic were good things, things worth saving or bringing back. In the Prequels, you find out that the Republic was a corrupt useless failing government; the Rebellion was more or less started by autocrats and disenfranchised politicians who wanted to return to power, not the common people of the galaxy; and that the Jedi were idiots who deserved what they got.
"According to our prophecies, this boy is literally the most important person in the galaxy. He sure seems to miss his mom, wasn't she a slave on some crime-riddled desert hellhole? Since he's not like the infants we usually take from their families, he's actually got a sense of attachment to her, which we should probably try and compensate for." "Eh, he'll get over it, it's really not worth the effort of sending someone to buy her freedom and start her off on a less hostile world. Still, he's going to need a wise hand to guide him, since he holds the fate of the galaxy as his destiny." "Well, how about the teenager that came in with him? You know, the kid who was just barely promoted to Knight after his first mission, and has absolutely no experience training anyone?" "Yeah, that should be good enough." "I don't see how any of this could possibly go wrong."
It's an improvement, but I still felt there was a bit of dumb shit in it too.http://www.swtor.com/media/trailers/return
The 6 minute trailer (which I'm sure you all have seen before) is head and shoulders better than Episodes 1-3. This is how you make a Star Wars movie.
Fixed for better coverage.Everyone's story is much better in the EU.
I wonder how that would work, consider the space of time between episodes.Shego and fade agree and once again, I will politely sit on the other side of the argument. I pretty much think a fan should recut the prequels into a single film. Because really.
a long passage of time is not a novel thing, I think in the right directors hands, it could work.I wonder how that would work, consider the space of time between episodes.
Also between I and II there's a recap sort of thing; between II and III, you're missing the whole war.a long passage of time is not a novel thing, I think in the right directors hands, it could work.
True.I really think most of I is useless, and that any film would be mostly a blend of II and III
Actually, I think that's the biggest problem with the prequels - massive amounts of them are spent on characters or events that ultimately are irrelevant, especially in Episode I. The largest amount of time is spent following Liam Neeson, who doesn't really do much except be a kind of racist asshole and stubborn prick; trade federation baddies who were incompetent cowards; and Darth Maul, who looked really badass for all 7 and 1/2 minutes he was in the movie. Anakin being an immaculately conceived, messianic figure? Terrible. And oh yeah, a half-hour of podrace, where the plot says, "I'm going to pick up a six pack and some smokes, here's some speedy CGI to watch while I'm gone."True.
Perfectly said. Couldn't agree more. Would like it twice if I could.I thought Qui-Gon was crucial. Even when I was a kid, I read Yoda and especially Obi-Wan as basically telling Luke to be a gray sort of Jedi. Lines in the OT like, "Your emotions do you credit" wouldn't have flown in the old Jedi Order. Luke brought balance to the Force because he didn't walk the extreme path of (old) Jedi or Sith. I loved when Qui-Gon showed up, because he was almost a confirmation of this theory. He was a rebel within the order. He wasn't afraid to tell the rest of the Council to fuck off. His charges, Obi-Wan and Anakin, clearly very powerful Force users slip to either side of the central path he espouses, and then Luke gets it right. He brings balance to the Force, and in a way, centers Obi-Wan and Anakin in the process, too.