Star Wars *OT* (Off-Topic)

by Avateur @, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 17:52 (3426 days ago)

I'm cautious, but the hype is definitely building. How about you?

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Star Wars *OT*

by Korny @, Dalton, Ga. US. Earth, Sol System, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 18:37 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

Between DICE doing Battlefront and JJ Abrams being a solid filmmaker, my interest in Star Wars has risen to levels never before seen. I've no doubt the movie will be leagues better than the horrible prequels or "meh" original trilogy.

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Star Wars *OT*

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Saturday, July 11, 2015, 18:50 (3426 days ago) @ Korny

Between DICE doing Battlefront and JJ Abrams being a solid filmmaker, my interest in Star Wars has risen to levels never before seen. I've no doubt the movie will be leagues better than the horrible prequels or "meh" original trilogy.

I do have serious doubts it will be better, but I'll still see it on the silver screen.

Now, Batman vs Superman? That latest trailer sure shot my hype through the roof.

Star Wars *OT*

by Avateur @, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 18:54 (3426 days ago) @ ZackDark

Between DICE doing Battlefront and JJ Abrams being a solid filmmaker, my interest in Star Wars has risen to levels never before seen. I've no doubt the movie will be leagues better than the horrible prequels or "meh" original trilogy.


I do have serious doubts it will be better, but I'll still see it on the silver screen.

That's why I'm being cautious at this point, but the fact that they're using real sets and items and costumes gives me hope. They have a good foundation going, and I hope it translates on up through the rest of the movie.

Now, Batman vs Superman? That latest trailer sure shot my hype through the roof.

I know right? The first reveal was sort of whatever for me, but this looks pretty good. And I absolutely did not enjoy Man of Steel. Here's hoping it rocks!

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I'm suckered at this point

by MrPadraig08 ⌂ @, Steel City, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 19:27 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

everytime I see something, a trailer, doc, photo from episode VII I get a huge grin on my face. Star Wars is one of the few franchises that I easily fall for. They have me at this point, if it's bad, I'll be the most to blame.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 19:34 (3426 days ago) @ Korny

[blah blah] "meh" original trilogy.

Get out of my sight.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 19:35 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

I'm cautious, but the hype is definitely building. How about you?

If Lucas were involved, I wouldn't care. He's not, so I'm hyped! So far everything I've seen says this new bunch "gets it."

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Star Wars *OT*

by Miguel Chavez, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 22:08 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

Now, Batman vs Superman? That latest trailer sure shot my hype through the roof.


I know right? The first reveal was sort of whatever for me, but this looks pretty good. And I absolutely did not enjoy Man of Steel. Here's hoping it rocks!

I'm still cautious as I remember the Man of Steel trailers were also mega-hype inducing. Michael Bay has no problem making quality movie trailers.

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I cannot believe what I just read.

by Funkmon @, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 23:03 (3426 days ago) @ Kermit

- No text -

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Star Wars *OT*

by SonofMacPhisto @, Saturday, July 11, 2015, 23:47 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

The hype is real, my friend.

The two Star Trek reboots were glorious, so JJ directing this has me hyped all on its own plus all the usual Star Wars stuff.

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Star Wars *OT*

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Saturday, July 11, 2015, 23:56 (3426 days ago) @ Miguel Chavez

I'm still cautious as I remember the Man of Steel trailers were also mega-hype inducing.

Well, I quite enjoyed Man of Steel, so I guess there's very little room for disappointment there for me.

Michael Bay has no problem making quality movie trailers.

Well, duh, that's all he does.

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Star Wars *OT*

by cheapLEY @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 01:38 (3426 days ago) @ Avateur

The first short teaser was very "meh" for me.

The second one, however, got me fully on board. I mean, maybe it's too early to tell, but based on that little amount of footage, it looks like everyone involved just gets it. It just screams classic Star Wars to me. And of course, "Chewie, we're home." I nearly cried.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 02:43 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

I literally yawned watching that, but by the end I was grinning a bit.
It's all so much smoke and mirrors still.
They're clearly trying to deliver the message, "It'll be good this time! It'll be like old Star Wars! Remember old Star Wars, you loved that, come on, just see one movie." The people who have issues with one section or another of the Star Wars universe seem to focus on the writing, and we know next to nothing about the script, and we won't know anything substantial until release or close to it. They're trying to play on emotions and nostalgia and the non-writing complaints about the prequels, and they're doing a damn good job considering they can't use a lot of actual material and the previous apathy of a lot of the people they seem to be aiming at.
They do seem earnest, at least. It could be fake, but I don't feel like it's all fake. It could be them being happy about things that won't make the fanbase happy, which is pretty likely. Either way, for any kind of project you want the people working on it to be happy or at least satisfied, and it seems like they are.
If it sucks, it sucks, I don't really care about the franchise. I did when I was little but other things have eclipsed it many times over (Trek > Wars, fight me IRL). I'll go see it unless I can't clear my schedule, because I'm curious and people will be talking about it, and because my sister loves Star Wars and it's a good opportunity to spend time with her.

Their art department listens!?!? How strange.

by scarab @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 07:05 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

or maybe they just get it. But let's wait and see the film first.

Star Wars *OT* - yes, I'm in. I'm so in...

by yakaman, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 13:49 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

- No text -

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 14:36 (3425 days ago) @ General Vagueness

I literally yawned watching that, but by the end I was grinning a bit.
It's all so much smoke and mirrors still.
They're clearly trying to deliver the message, "It'll be good this time! It'll be like old Star Wars! Remember old Star Wars, you loved that, come on, just see one movie." The people who have issues with one section or another of the Star Wars universe seem to focus on the writing, and we know next to nothing about the script, and we won't know anything substantial until release or close to it.

Um, not true. We know Lawrence effing Kasdan co-wrote it. Harrison Ford said this Friday: "I never thought it would come back to bless me instead of haunt me. ... I was very gratified when I read the script, because I read something that I thought was really remarkable. Well written, with some intriguing developments. So I was delighted to be involved."

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years. The vibe I get is that this movie is being made for me by people who loved the original trilogy like I did. I'm excited. I didn't feel that way at first, but everything I've seen is speaking to me. I'm the old guy--why are YOU so cynical?

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Star Wars *OT*

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 15:16 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years. The vibe I get is that this movie is being made for me by people who loved the original trilogy like I did. I'm excited. I didn't feel that way at first, but everything I've seen is speaking to me. I'm the old guy--why are YOU so cynical?

I am cautiously optimistic. I'm 30. I saw Star Wars for the first time when I was about 5. The early to mid 90s were a time of resurgence for Star Wars, driven in part by some of the excellent books, a some of the stellar Star Wars games by Lucasarts. It's not corrupted; I still have the Original Trilogy and still have them memorized by heart and the memories that go with them.

That being said, more often than not 'by fans, for fans' just doesn't work out. When you're attached it's hard to see things in the bigger picture and stand back. But that's most likely not what's going on here. It's all marketing to convince you that this one will be different.

You'll see me at the Chinese Theatre at midnight, but without the hype of the prequels. I'm just going to have a good time and be entertained.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 16:21 (3425 days ago) @ Cody Miller

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years. The vibe I get is that this movie is being made for me by people who loved the original trilogy like I did. I'm excited. I didn't feel that way at first, but everything I've seen is speaking to me. I'm the old guy--why are YOU so cynical?


I am cautiously optimistic. I'm 30. I saw Star Wars for the first time when I was about 5. The early to mid 90s were a time of resurgence for Star Wars, driven in part by some of the excellent books, a some of the stellar Star Wars games by Lucasarts. It's not corrupted; I still have the Original Trilogy and still have them memorized by heart and the memories that go with them.

That being said, more often than not 'by fans, for fans' just doesn't work out. When you're attached it's hard to see things in the bigger picture and stand back. But that's most likely not what's going on here. It's all marketing to convince you that this one will be different.

Cynic! I don't think it's all marketing. I don't think that Harrison Ford quote is just marketing. Sure, actors compliment scripts all the time, but what he said and how he said it had the ring of truth. I think he's being honest.

And I don't think JJ Abrams & co. are ONLY fans. This is more like the scenario where Cody Miller is given 100 mil to make a game, except I don't know if you know how to make a game. I have confidence that JJ Abrams & the people involved know how to make a movie. (I'm not saying they can't screw it up--making good art is hard!)

The bottom line is, though, my interest and excitement would be almost zero if Lucas was involved. Nearly all the negatives of what's happened with the franchise since 1984 I associate with him.

I like being hopeful about things I'm a fan of. Lucas had to really screw up to teach me to not have hope in whatever he does.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 16:31 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit
edited by General Vagueness, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 16:55

I literally yawned watching that, but by the end I was grinning a bit.
It's all so much smoke and mirrors still.
They're clearly trying to deliver the message, "It'll be good this time! It'll be like old Star Wars! Remember old Star Wars, you loved that, come on, just see one movie." The people who have issues with one section or another of the Star Wars universe seem to focus on the writing, and we know next to nothing about the script, and we won't know anything substantial until release or close to it.


Um, not true. We know Lawrence effing Kasdan co-wrote it. Harrison Ford said this Friday: "I never thought it would come back to bless me instead of haunt me. ... I was very gratified when I read the script, because I read something that I thought was really remarkable. Well written, with some intriguing developments. So I was delighted to be involved."

We don't know anything substantial about the story. To be fair, I had forgotten they got the writer of two of the original trilogy as the writer on this one. Still, has he never written anything you didn't like? Has Harrison Ford not signed on to any movies you didn't like?

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years.

That's interesting, care to elaborate? I first saw the original movies in 1995 or 96 (so, near enough to their original form as far as I can tell), and I don't remember seeing anything quite like them... well, ever, come to think of it. I know it's been copied in pieces and in whole, and you can make arguments about the merchandise and the extended universe and the prequels, but I never really engaged with any of the rip-offs or the merch or the extended universe, and I never gave much thought to the prequels until some time around or after episode II when I discovered the Internet backlash.

The vibe I get is that this movie is being made for me by people who loved the original trilogy like I did.

Like I said, they're trying to get that message across, and they're succeeding. That doesn't mean it's accurate-- or even if it is, that doesn't mean they'll succeed in reaching you and the rest of that audience the way you're thinking of.

I'm excited. I didn't feel that way at first, but everything I've seen is speaking to me. I'm the old guy--why are YOU so cynical?

I'm not being cynical. I don't think they're deliberately misrepresenting the movie. If you mean "why are you so pessimistic?", I don't think I'm even being pessimistic, I'm trying to be realistic. I don't say stuff like this because I think something will be bad or to make other people think things will be bad, and in this case it's not even really about lowering expectations, it's about encouraging people to think things through. Maybe there's more material out there than I've heard about, AFAIK it's the video above, one teaser (and a teaser for that teaser), some stills, some vague quotes like the one you gave, and a list of people working on it, and I don't think that's enough to have an informed opinion.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 16:48 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

And I don't think JJ Abrams & co. are ONLY fans. This is more like the scenario where Cody Miller is given 100 mil to make a game, except I don't know if you know how to make a game.

He doesn't, and he refuses to learn how to make a game or even how to make any kind of program, and it's really frustrating because the arguments he makes about games could have so much more depth and weight to them.

The bottom line is, though, my interest and excitement would be almost zero if Lucas was involved. Nearly all the negatives of what's happened with the franchise since 1984 I associate with him.

Is that fair? He didn't make all the decisions and he certainly didn't create everything, and IIRC a lot of that team is still around.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 17:09 (3425 days ago) @ General Vagueness

I literally yawned watching that, but by the end I was grinning a bit.
It's all so much smoke and mirrors still.
They're clearly trying to deliver the message, "It'll be good this time! It'll be like old Star Wars! Remember old Star Wars, you loved that, come on, just see one movie." The people who have issues with one section or another of the Star Wars universe seem to focus on the writing, and we know next to nothing about the script, and we won't know anything substantial until release or close to it.


Um, not true. We know Lawrence effing Kasdan co-wrote it. Harrison Ford said this Friday: "I never thought it would come back to bless me instead of haunt me. ... I was very gratified when I read the script, because I read something that I thought was really remarkable. Well written, with some intriguing developments. So I was delighted to be involved."


We don't know anything substantial about the story.

I don't want to know anything more about the story.

To be fair, I had forgotten they got him as the writer on this one. Still, has he never written anything you didn't like?

I've liked everything I've seen that he's worked on.

Has Harrison Ford not signed on to any movies you didn't like?

Sure; a few. See my comment to Cody about that quote.

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years.


That's interesting, care to elaborate? I first saw the original movies in 1995 or 96, and I don't remember seeing anything quite like them... well, ever, come to think of it. I know it's been copied in pieces and in whole, and you can make arguments about the merchandise and the extended universe and the prequels, but I never really engaged with any of that besides the prequels, and those I just kind of watched and then didn't think about.

Nearly every blockbuster movie since Star Wars has been influenced by Star Wars. It's hard to describe the effect that movie had on the culture. I've not been very engaged either, but the prequels felt like a betrayal of my faith in Lucas as a creator. The mucking with the originals upon rerelease should've been the canary in the coal mine, but I wanted to believe. I'm not going to let my disappointment in that quell my excitement over what looks like an good faith effort to right the Star Wars ship.

The vibe I get is that this movie is being made for me by people who loved the original trilogy like I did.


Like I said, they're trying to get that message across, and they're succeeding. That doesn't mean it's accurate-- or even if it is, that doesn't mean they'll succeed in reaching you and the rest of that audience the way you're thinking of.

I'm excited. I didn't feel that way at first, but everything I've seen is speaking to me. I'm the old guy--why are YOU so cynical?


I'm not being cynical. I don't think they're deliberately misrepresenting the movie. If you mean "why are you so pessimistic?", I don't think I'm even being pessimistic, I'm trying to be realistic. I don't say stuff like this because I think something will be bad or to make other people think things will be bad, and in this case it's not even really about lowering expectations, it's about encouraging people to think things through. Maybe there's more material out there than I've heard about, AFAIK it's the video above, one teaser, some stills, some vague quotes like the one you gave, and a list of people working on it, and I don't think that's enough to have an informed opinion.

I've stated all the reasons I'm excited, and I don't need any more information--I know enough to be hopeful about Star Wars again, and that a big deal for me because the franchise was a very important part of my childhood.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 17:14 (3425 days ago) @ General Vagueness

And I don't think JJ Abrams & co. are ONLY fans. This is more like the scenario where Cody Miller is given 100 mil to make a game, except I don't know if you know how to make a game.


He doesn't, and he refuses to learn how to make a game or even how to make any kind of program, and it's really frustrating because the arguments he makes about games could have so much more depth and weight to them.

The bottom line is, though, my interest and excitement would be almost zero if Lucas was involved. Nearly all the negatives of what's happened with the franchise since 1984 I associate with him.


Is that fair? He didn't make all the decisions and he certainly didn't create everything, and IIRC a lot of that team is still around.

As you said earlier, people complain about the writing, and Lucas wrote the prequels. The visuals in the prequels were great. The action was great. The actors were good actors. The writing, though, stunk on ice.

Star Wars *OT*

by Avateur @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 17:46 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

As you said earlier, people complain about the writing, and Lucas wrote the prequels. The visuals in the prequels were great. The action was great. The actors were good actors. The writing, though, stunk on ice.

I've agreed with every one of your posts until this one. The visuals in the prequels weren't great. A ton of the CGI served no purpose beyond cluttering up the screen. It's like the Special Editions with how Lucas had to just add in random stuff all over the place just because. The entirety of the prequels was soulless, and the writing just happens to be the worst of it all. The action also wasn't that great, mostly due to the aforementioned CGI. All of it lacked subtlety. And the actors, unfortunately, weren't great by virtue of the horrible writing. They didn't have a chance to be great or show their greatness. The acting was terrible, and I blame that almost entirely on the script and director.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 18:14 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

As you said earlier, people complain about the writing, and Lucas wrote the prequels. The visuals in the prequels were great. The action was great. The actors were good actors. The writing, though, stunk on ice.


I've agreed with every one of your posts until this one. The visuals in the prequels weren't great. A ton of the CGI served no purpose beyond cluttering up the screen. It's like the Special Editions with how Lucas had to just add in random stuff all over the place just because. The entirety of the prequels was soulless, and the writing just happens to be the worst of it all. The action also wasn't that great, mostly due to the aforementioned CGI. All of it lacked subtlety. And the actors, unfortunately, weren't great by virtue of the horrible writing. They didn't have a chance to be great or show their greatness. The acting was terrible, and I blame that almost entirely on the script and director.

This is true. Go back and look at say, Attack of the Clones. The CGI backgrounds look terrible nowadays, and they completely overused the light wrap and bloom when doing green/blue screen keys. It stands out as completely fake when you watch it now. The acting WAS bad, but again, that is the fault of Lucas, as Kermit originally pointed out.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 18:16 (3425 days ago) @ ZackDark

I'm still cautious as I remember the Man of Steel trailers were also mega-hype inducing.


Well, I quite enjoyed Man of Steel, so I guess there's very little room for disappointment there for me.

Michael Bay has no problem making quality movie trailers.


Well, duh, that's all he does.

Nonsense. He's been known to make good movies every now and then. Case and point: The Rock, and Pain and Gain.

Star Wars *OT*

by Claude Errera @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 19:22 (3425 days ago) @ Cody Miller

I'm still cautious as I remember the Man of Steel trailers were also mega-hype inducing.


Well, I quite enjoyed Man of Steel, so I guess there's very little room for disappointment there for me.

Michael Bay has no problem making quality movie trailers.


Well, duh, that's all he does.


Nonsense. He's been known to make good movies every now and then. Case and point: The Rock, and Pain and Gain.

Pain and Gain? That was a piece of shit. Really. (Wasn't even that fun as a piece of shit.)

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 19:27 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

Heh, I haven't watched them since they were the in the theaters. The special effects were state of the art then, but yes, you're right. Lucas doesn't know when enough is enough. Frankly, I thought things started getting too busy in Return of the Jedi. (And too cutesy--another Lucas indulgence.)

I never meant to imply that the acting was good. It's a testament to how bad the script and direction was that those talented actors couldn't pull it off.

Star Wars *OT*

by Avateur @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 19:43 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

Heh, I haven't watched them since they were the in the theaters. The special effects were state of the art then, but yes, you're right. Lucas doesn't know when enough is enough. Frankly, I thought things started getting too busy in Return of the Jedi. (And too cutesy--another Lucas indulgence.)

I know what you mean. At the same time, I really enjoy Return of the Jedi even though I know it's not the strongest or even the best one. It's totally ridiculous on a lot of levels, but at the same time it's also enjoyable. The space battle is awesome, and even the Endor battle has its moments. Great character interactions all around. I get wanting to appeal to children, and I think Jedi does a pretty good job of it without completely forsaking the rest of the writing and themes of the movie and series.

I can't tell if the prequels were all about targeting kids, mostly because the writing and plot involved so much politics and forced love scenes that rarely made sense or showed any excitement. I don't know who the target audience was supposed to be with the prequels, or if they were literally designed to make money because they knew people would still go and see the things. Or Lucas was deluded. I have no idea. I try not to think about it too much because it's frustrating beyond belief.

I'm really looking forward to these new movies.

I never meant to imply that the acting was good. It's a testament to how bad the script and direction was that those talented actors couldn't pull it off.

Which is really unfortunate.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 19:48 (3425 days ago) @ Claude Errera

Pain and Gain? That was a piece of shit. Really. (Wasn't even that fun as a piece of shit.)

Nah, look beyond the lame jokes. Underneath there's something poignant about Misdirected American Machismo.

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"Underneath"

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Sunday, July 12, 2015, 21:28 (3425 days ago) @ Cody Miller

- No text -

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I recently read the novelization for Revenge of the Sith

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Sunday, July 12, 2015, 21:32 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

Gotta say, that movie was definitely thrown under a bus by someone. The book is astoundingly better than it. Even Anakin is great.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 21:42 (3425 days ago) @ Kermit

We don't know anything substantial about the story.


I don't want to know anything more about the story.

Oh I get that, I'm just saying you can't know if it's good if you don't know what the story is yet.

To be fair, I had forgotten they got him as the writer on this one. Still, has he never written anything you didn't like?


I've liked everything I've seen that he's worked on.

fair enough

Has Harrison Ford not signed on to any movies you didn't like?


Sure; a few. See my comment to Cody about that quote.

Your quote to Cody was that you don't think he's lying. I don't think he's lying either, but I don't know that his sensibilities and yours line up. You're saying now that they don't always line up; if I was you that wouldn't only make me excited, I would also consider the possibility of this being a case where his thoughts don't line up with mine.

I really feel sorry for people around your age, because I think it's particularly difficult for you to understand what made Star Wars special. It's been diluted, copied, and corrupted in so many ways over the years.


That's interesting, care to elaborate? I first saw the original movies in 1995 or 96, and I don't remember seeing anything quite like them... well, ever, come to think of it. I know it's been copied in pieces and in whole, and you can make arguments about the merchandise and the extended universe and the prequels, but I never really engaged with any of that besides the prequels, and those I just kind of watched and then didn't think about.


Nearly every blockbuster movie since Star Wars has been influenced by Star Wars. It's hard to describe the effect that movie had on the culture. I've not been very engaged either, but the prequels felt like a betrayal of my faith in Lucas as a creator. The mucking with the originals upon rerelease should've been the canary in the coal mine, but I wanted to believe. I'm not going to let my disappointment in that quell my excitement over what looks like an good faith effort to right the Star Wars ship.

Weren't you one of the people complaining about people who said they felt they were owed something other than the final game by Bungie or other developers? Yet here you are talking about George Lucas's betrayal, like there was some kind of agreement between you, like you knew him. Maybe I'm reading "a betrayal of my faith" wrong, but any way I look at it it seems melodramatic.

I'm not being cynical. I don't think they're deliberately misrepresenting the movie. If you mean "why are you so pessimistic?", I don't think I'm even being pessimistic, I'm trying to be realistic. I don't say stuff like this because I think something will be bad or to make other people think things will be bad, and in this case it's not even really about lowering expectations, it's about encouraging people to think things through. Maybe there's more material out there than I've heard about, AFAIK it's the video above, one teaser, some stills, some vague quotes like the one you gave, and a list of people working on it, and I don't think that's enough to have an informed opinion.


I've stated all the reasons I'm excited, and I don't need any more information--I know enough to be hopeful about Star Wars again, and that a big deal for me because the franchise was a very important part of my childhood.

Being hopeful and being excited are two different things. Hope is great, hope makes life worth living, hope doesn't need evidence, nor should it. Excitement, on the other hand, should be backed up by something, I think.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 21:54 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

As you said earlier, people complain about the writing, and Lucas wrote the prequels. The visuals in the prequels were great. The action was great. The actors were good actors. The writing, though, stunk on ice.


I've agreed with every one of your posts until this one. The visuals in the prequels weren't great. A ton of the CGI served no purpose beyond cluttering up the screen. It's like the Special Editions with how Lucas had to just add in random stuff all over the place just because. The entirety of the prequels was soulless, and the writing just happens to be the worst of it all. The action also wasn't that great, mostly due to the aforementioned CGI. All of it lacked subtlety. And the actors, unfortunately, weren't great by virtue of the horrible writing. They didn't have a chance to be great or show their greatness. The acting was terrible, and I blame that almost entirely on the script and director.

I believe him when he says the special editions were how he originally wanted the movies to go, because he did the same kind of thing with all of them and all the prequels. I think he never had an eye for subtlety or minimalism or downplaying things and was forced into a bit of that by the technology and by the people he worked with and it happened to turn out well. I contest the claim that the action was bad, I thought the duels and battles were just as good as in the original movies aside from one or two (or maybe three). For the actors, I think he was saying that they were good actors, not that they gave good performances. I would add that a very good actor can deliver a good performance even if the script is bad-- their lines won't be very good, but they can still be delivered well, with good intonation, pacing, diction, volume, accent, body language, and whatever else, and the actor can still hit all their marks and do whatever they're required to do physically and do it well, and I think the prequels are good examples of that, you have a lot of less than great lines with almost paradoxically beautiful delivery.

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I recently read the novelization for Revenge of the Sith

by Vortech @, A Fourth Wheel, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 22:16 (3425 days ago) @ ZackDark

Does he still hate sand?

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As a matter of fact, there are several mentions to that line

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Sunday, July 12, 2015, 22:40 (3425 days ago) @ Vortech

I found it quite amusing.

Star Wars *OT*

by General Battuta, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 23:22 (3425 days ago) @ Claude Errera

Counterpoint: it owned

Star Wars *OT*

by Avateur @, Sunday, July 12, 2015, 23:52 (3425 days ago) @ General Vagueness
edited by Avateur, Monday, July 13, 2015, 00:11

I believe him when he says the special editions were how he originally wanted the movies to go, because he did the same kind of thing with all of them and all the prequels. I think he never had an eye for subtlety or minimalism or downplaying things and was forced into a bit of that by the technology and by the people he worked with and it happened to turn out well. I contest the claim that the action was bad, I thought the duels and battles were just as good as in the original movies aside from one or two (or maybe three). For the actors, I think he was saying that they were good actors, not that they gave good performances. I would add that a very good actor can deliver a good performance even if the script is bad-- their lines won't be very good, but they can still be delivered well, with good intonation, pacing, diction, volume, accent, body language, and whatever else, and the actor can still hit all their marks and do whatever they're required to do physically and do it well, and I think the prequels are good examples of that, you have a lot of less than great lines with almost paradoxically beautiful delivery.

Nah, the special editions just seem to be him adding random things left and right just because he could. He adds in rocks that make no logical sense in certain scenes, some creatures that absolutely serve no purpose other than to clutter the scene and take away from the overall atmosphere, etc. While he may have wanted some of these things originally, the random, out-of-place inclusions in the special editions are sloppy at best and frivolous at worst.

There's no contesting that he had editors and other people who could tell him no with the originals. The prequels were probably given a single draft, and no one had the balls to tell him no about anything.

We can agree to disagree on the action and battles (especially the horrible lightsaber battles).

As for the acting, while some of them are great actors, the point I was making is that they didn't come off as great actors because of the material they were being given and by how Lucas was directly telling them to act and display emotion (primarily with nothing to work with aside from green/blue screen) on top of the horrible script. And I don't just disagree with you, but I'd dare to say you are absolutely 100% beyond a shadow of a doubt empirically and objectively wrong when you say that the lines are delivered beautifully. Those movies are some of Natalie Portman's worst as far as acting goes (and, again, I am totally not faulting her or any of the other actors for that based on behind-the-scenes materials from those god awful movies), not to mention the other actors. The deliveries are largely as soulless as the material itself, and a lot of that is because Lucas was actually telling them to deliver it that way.

Edit: GV, what I'm trying to say about the delivery of the acting and what you're saying is, well, you're breaking my heart! :(

Star Wars *OT*

by Avateur @, Monday, July 13, 2015, 00:00 (3425 days ago) @ General Vagueness

Being hopeful and being excited are two different things. Hope is great, hope makes life worth living, hope doesn't need evidence, nor should it. Excitement, on the other hand, should be backed up by something, I think.

I find I'm so excited, I can barely sit still or hold a thought in my head. I think it's the excitement only a free man can feel, a free man at the start of a long journey whose conclusion is uncertain. I hope I can make it across the border. I hope to see my friend and shake his hand. I hope the Pacific is as blue as it has been in my dreams. I hope.

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"I don't like sand."

by Ragashingo ⌂, Official DBO Cryptarch, Monday, July 13, 2015, 00:41 (3425 days ago) @ Avateur

Yeah. Not a beautiful delivery. In general I'd say adult Anakin pretty terrible in almost every scene!

Star Wars *OT*

by Claude Errera @, Monday, July 13, 2015, 03:30 (3424 days ago) @ General Battuta

Counterpoint: it owned

Okay, that's two people I thought had reasonable taste in things I like, totally disagreeing with me. Maybe I should watch it again.

Star Wars *OT*

by General Battuta, Monday, July 13, 2015, 11:33 (3424 days ago) @ Claude Errera
edited by General Battuta, Monday, July 13, 2015, 11:43

Maybe! It's not a very pleasant movie, but I think it's a good expression of Bay's interests, so I respect it. It's all about how the ideas people usually think of as 'Bayhem' - money, men, muscles, cars, models - are actually toxic, vile attempts to cover up for insecurity and need. I think a lot of Bay's work is satire of this stuff.

Pain & Gain starts with Mark Wahlberg doing curls while strapped to a gigantic billboard bicep. It's pretty unsubtle, but pretty funny.

The Transformers movies are also funny (though I will never recommend them) because Optimus Prime is clearly a supervillain, and Bay seems to want the audience to see through the rhetoric about Freedom and Protection to realize he's a monster. Every movie he makes Prime more despicable. I wonder if it makes him sad that no one catches on.

edit: in Transformers: Age of Extinction, Optimus Prime beats up a fellow robot while shouting 'Let me lead you!', 'We're giving you freedom!', and 'You defend my family or die!' Afterwards he says 'Now we're going to prove who we are' and one of his followers says 'Man, you just want to die for the guy.' Bay is really angry at his audience.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Monday, July 13, 2015, 14:08 (3424 days ago) @ General Vagueness

We don't know anything substantial about the story.


I don't want to know anything more about the story.


Oh I get that, I'm just saying you can't know if it's good if you don't know what the story is yet.

Of course. I never said I knew it would be good. At this point I feel like I have many reasons to think it is likely to be, and that excites me.

To be fair, I had forgotten they got him as the writer on this one. Still, has he never written anything you didn't like?


I've liked everything I've seen that he's worked on.


fair enough

Has Harrison Ford not signed on to any movies you didn't like?


Sure; a few. See my comment to Cody about that quote.


Your quote to Cody was that you don't think he's lying. I don't think he's lying either, but I don't know that his sensibilities and yours line up. You're saying now that they don't always line up; if I was you that wouldn't only make me excited, I would also consider the possibility of this being a case where his thoughts don't line up with mine.

I revise my statement. I've always appreciated Harrison Ford. His early work is fantastic (even the non-action stuff like American Graffiti and Witness). There are a few movies he's done that I'm not sure I'll like, but I haven't watched them in part because they weren't well received, but Ford is the kind of actor who can be better than the movie he's in. Actors (and writers, for that matter) have a limited amount of control over making a film good. Being involved in something that won't turn out as well as you'd like it to is precisely the situation he was worried about with the new Star Wars, which is why your logic is silly--you assume that his judgment of scripts is necessarily reflected in every movie he's made. Good scripts get changed. Good scripts can get made into lousy movies. That said, bad scripts seldom get made into good movies. The man has starred in some of my favorite movies, so when he calls a script remarkable, that's an endorsement.

...

Nearly every blockbuster movie since Star Wars has been influenced by Star Wars. It's hard to describe the effect that movie had on the culture. I've not been very engaged either, but the prequels felt like a betrayal of my faith in Lucas as a creator. The mucking with the originals upon rerelease should've been the canary in the coal mine, but I wanted to believe. I'm not going to let my disappointment in that quell my excitement over what looks like an good faith effort to right the Star Wars ship.


Weren't you one of the people complaining about people who said they felt they were owed something other than the final game by Bungie or other developers? Yet here you are talking about George Lucas's betrayal, like there was some kind of agreement between you, like you knew him. Maybe I'm reading "a betrayal of my faith" wrong, but any way I look at it it seems melodramatic.

I think you're reading it wrong. He betrayed my faith in him as a creator. It's another way of saying I lost confidence in his judgment and his abilities as an artist. If he decided the make documentaries, or art house films about migrant workers or something, I wouldn't feel justified calling it a betrayal just because he's not making space operas any more. If Bungie decides that what will work best for them as a studio involves making a game for a different platform, that's not a betrayal. That's a business decision. (If I felt differently, I would have been part of the crowd that ditched Bungie in 2000.)

I'm not being cynical. I don't think they're deliberately misrepresenting the movie. If you mean "why are you so pessimistic?", I don't think I'm even being pessimistic, I'm trying to be realistic. I don't say stuff like this because I think something will be bad or to make other people think things will be bad, and in this case it's not even really about lowering expectations, it's about encouraging people to think things through. Maybe there's more material out there than I've heard about, AFAIK it's the video above, one teaser, some stills, some vague quotes like the one you gave, and a list of people working on it, and I don't think that's enough to have an informed opinion.


I've stated all the reasons I'm excited, and I don't need any more information--I know enough to be hopeful about Star Wars again, and that a big deal for me because the franchise was a very important part of my childhood.


Being hopeful and being excited are two different things. Hope is great, hope makes life worth living, hope doesn't need evidence, nor should it. Excitement, on the other hand, should be backed up by something, I think.

My hopes are intertwined with my excitement for the new Star Wars movie. I'll never understand how fan sites seem to attract people who object to fans who act like fans.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Cody Miller @, Music of the Spheres - Never Forgot, Monday, July 13, 2015, 14:44 (3424 days ago) @ General Battuta

Maybe! It's not a very pleasant movie, but I think it's a good expression of Bay's interests, so I respect it. It's all about how the ideas people usually think of as 'Bayhem' - money, men, muscles, cars, models - are actually toxic, vile attempts to cover up for insecurity and need. I think a lot of Bay's work is satire of this stuff.

This line pretty much sums up the film's satire for me:

"If you're willing to do the work, you can have anything. That's what makes the U.S. of A great. When it started, America was just a handful of scrawny colonies. Now, it's the most buff, pumped-up country on the planet. That's pretty rad."

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:03 (3424 days ago) @ Avateur

Nah, the special editions just seem to be him adding random things left and right just because he could. He adds in rocks that make no logical sense in certain scenes, some creatures that absolutely serve no purpose other than to clutter the scene and take away from the overall atmosphere, etc. While he may have wanted some of these things originally, the random, out-of-place inclusions in the special editions are sloppy at best and frivolous at worst.

hmm, I may have to look more closely

As for the acting, while some of them are great actors, the point I was making is that they didn't come off as great actors because of the material they were being given and by how Lucas was directly telling them to act and display emotion (primarily with nothing to work with aside from green/blue screen) on top of the horrible script. And I don't just disagree with you, but I'd dare to say you are absolutely 100% beyond a shadow of a doubt empirically and objectively wrong when you say that the lines are delivered beautifully. Those movies are some of Natalie Portman's worst as far as acting goes (and, again, I am totally not faulting her or any of the other actors for that based on behind-the-scenes materials from those god awful movies), not to mention the other actors. The deliveries are largely as soulless as the material itself, and a lot of that is because Lucas was actually telling them to deliver it that way.

Well I didn't mean to say it was all beautiful. (Since it was pointed out to me how Hayden Christensen isn't so much Anakin Skywalker as he is The Incredible Wooden Man, and I first listened for it, it's hard not to hear it.) I meant there are gems in there; oddly enough, or fittingly enough, it seems like aside from Anakin the more powerful the character the better they acted their part. I mean, can you really say Christopher Lee and Ian McDiarmid didn't at the very least do a competent job with what they were given? That's a good point about the green screens, you see the difficulty of acting against that mentioned in interviews about a lot of effects-heavy movies including the prequels, and it makes me a little more optimistic about the new one with it being more physical.

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It's written by Matthew Stover...

by CruelLEGACEY @, Toronto, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:11 (3424 days ago) @ ZackDark

Who is by far my favorite Star Wars author. He's done 4 or 5 of them and they're all stellar. "Traitor" is one of my favorite books, period.

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I recently read the novelization for Revenge of the Sith

by CyberKN ⌂ @, Oh no, Destiny 2 is bad, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:20 (3424 days ago) @ ZackDark

Gotta say, that movie was definitely thrown under a bus by someone. The book is astoundingly better than it. Even Anakin is great.

I remember reading that before the movie came out (Over ten years ago now), and it was pretty good. I distinctly remember wondering why the book had so many good one-liners that were omitted from the movie.

General Grievous: You fool! I've been trained in your Jedi arts by Count Dooku!
Obi-Wan: Really? I trained the man who killed him.

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Star Wars *OT*

by CruelLEGACEY @, Toronto, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:23 (3424 days ago) @ General Battuta

The Transformers movies are also funny (though I will never recommend them) because Optimus Prime is clearly a supervillain, and Bay seems to want the audience to see through the rhetoric about Freedom and Protection to realize he's a monster. Every movie he makes Prime more despicable. I wonder if it makes him sad that no one catches on.

edit: in Transformers: Age of Extinction, Optimus Prime beats up a fellow robot while shouting 'Let me lead you!', 'We're giving you freedom!', and 'You defend my family or die!' Afterwards he says 'Now we're going to prove who we are' and one of his followers says 'Man, you just want to die for the guy.' Bay is really angry at his audience.

Huh... I never clicked to any of that. Almost makes me want to go back and re watch them. Almost... :)

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That was his?

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:26 (3424 days ago) @ CruelLEGACEY

"Traitor" was brilliantly executed! I loved every bit of the Vergere-Solo dynamic in there (not so much in "Destiny's Way").

Now I have to look up more SW novels by him. Finally something to read during my vacations!

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That was his?

by CruelLEGACEY @, Toronto, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:44 (3424 days ago) @ ZackDark

"Traitor" was brilliantly executed! I loved every bit of the Vergere-Solo dynamic in there (not so much in "Destiny's Way").

Now I have to look up more SW novels by him. Finally something to read during my vacations!

Yeah, Traitor is brilliant. It makes me sad how misunderstood it was by the other Star Wars authors. Troy Denning and Karen Traviss butchered Verger's teachings and Jacen's philosophies beyond recognition :(

On the bright side, you should definitely look in to Stover's other novels if you haven't already.


Shatterpoint - Clone Wars era, Mace Windu solo story. Great development of Mace's character.
Revenge of the Sith - Approximately 1 billion times better than the movie.
Luke Skywalker and the Shadows of Mindor - Takes place shortly after Jedi, Luke, Han, Lea, Chewy and the Droids on a classic SW adventure. Actually ties in to Shatterpoint as well.
Traitor - Takes a previously lousy character (Jacen) and turns him into my favorite SW character of all time in a single novel :)

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BOOM!

by CruelLEGACEY @, Toronto, Monday, July 13, 2015, 16:51 (3424 days ago) @ CyberKN

General Grievous: You fool! I've been trained in your Jedi arts by Count Dooku!
Obi-Wan: Really? I trained the man who killed him.

[image]

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Not to mention how almost every lightsaber duel is better

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Monday, July 13, 2015, 18:41 (3424 days ago) @ CyberKN

- No text -

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That was his?

by ZackDark @, Not behind you. NO! Don't look., Monday, July 13, 2015, 18:42 (3424 days ago) @ CruelLEGACEY

I actually gave Shatterpoint to a friend as a b-day gift. Might borrow it soon.

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+1

by CruelLEGACEY @, Toronto, Monday, July 13, 2015, 18:44 (3424 days ago) @ ZackDark

Totally. The Anakin/ObiWan vs Dooku is my favorite. Love how much tension, momentum, and back and forth there is in Stover's telling of it. So good :)

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Monday, July 13, 2015, 19:14 (3424 days ago) @ General Battuta

Maybe! It's not a very pleasant movie, but I think it's a good expression of Bay's interests, so I respect it. It's all about how the ideas people usually think of as 'Bayhem' - money, men, muscles, cars, models - are actually toxic, vile attempts to cover up for insecurity and need. I think a lot of Bay's work is satire of this stuff.

Pain & Gain starts with Mark Wahlberg doing curls while strapped to a gigantic billboard bicep. It's pretty unsubtle, but pretty funny.

The Transformers movies are also funny (though I will never recommend them) because Optimus Prime is clearly a supervillain, and Bay seems to want the audience to see through the rhetoric about Freedom and Protection to realize he's a monster. Every movie he makes Prime more despicable. I wonder if it makes him sad that no one catches on.

edit: in Transformers: Age of Extinction, Optimus Prime beats up a fellow robot while shouting 'Let me lead you!', 'We're giving you freedom!', and 'You defend my family or die!' Afterwards he says 'Now we're going to prove who we are' and one of his followers says 'Man, you just want to die for the guy.' Bay is really angry at his audience.

There can definitely be value in that, but I think that still plays into the misgivings people have about adapting the property-- I'm pretty sure Transformers wasn't supposed to be nearly that deep or nuanced originally, and adding that in makes it into kind of a whole different thing. Also I thought something similar about Spartan Ops (it's self-parody at times) and people told me I was giving the writers way too much credit, so....

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Monday, July 13, 2015, 19:43 (3424 days ago) @ Kermit
edited by General Vagueness, Monday, July 13, 2015, 19:49

I revise my statement. I've always appreciated Harrison Ford. His early work is fantastic (even the non-action stuff like American Graffiti and Witness). There are a few movies he's done that I'm not sure I'll like, but I haven't watched them in part because they weren't well received, but Ford is the kind of actor who can be better than the movie he's in. Actors (and writers, for that matter) have a limited amount of control over making a film good. Being involved in something that won't turn out as well as you'd like it to is precisely the situation he was worried about with the new Star Wars, which is why your logic is silly--you assume that his judgment of scripts is necessarily reflected in every movie he's made.

That's almost the opposite of what I was saying. I was saying that his judgment would be reflected in the scripts he made as a whole, which is why I asked if there were any that you didn't like. If it applied the same to every one then it wouldn't matter, you could look at one and apply it to all of them.

Good scripts get changed. Good scripts can get made into lousy movies. That said, bad scripts seldom get made into good movies. The man has starred in some of my favorite movies, so when he calls a script remarkable, that's an endorsement.

Here it sounds like you are just taking the movies you really like that he made and applying that to this with his positive comment about it.
I see your point about how not every movie will reflect his judgment, but that can be turned around-- what if this script has changed, what if it's poorly executed, what if there's some other hiccup?
Also, not turning out as well as you wanted isn't the only issue with quality. Beyond some technical aspects, a movie is like any other work in that quality is subjective. My point was very much about, not the movie turning out badly, but the movie not turning out in a way you like. Tons of people, including presumably George Lucas himself, thought the prequels were fine, while you obviously consider them garbage. That's a subjective thing, and something only you can decide, and something you can only decide once you've seen the movie. Please forgive me if this sounds obvious, but this was supporting the point that you're ill-informed on the movie as it stands, which you've now said is true.

I think you're reading it wrong. He betrayed my faith in him as a creator. It's another way of saying I lost confidence in his judgment and his abilities as an artist. If he decided the make documentaries, or art house films about migrant workers or something, I wouldn't feel justified calling it a betrayal just because he's not making space operas any more. If Bungie decides that what will work best for them as a studio involves making a game for a different platform, that's not a betrayal. That's a business decision. (If I felt differently, I would have been part of the crowd that ditched Bungie in 2000.)

Just out of curiosity, what do you think of the other movies he's made since the original trilogy, or have you seen any of them? I heard Red Tails was pretty good.

My hopes are intertwined with my excitement for the new Star Wars movie. I'll never understand how fan sites seem to attract people who object to fans who act like fans.

I'm fine with fans acting like fans, it's when they act like fanatics that I get worried. That's not to say you're doing that, but an extreme degree of excitement-- more than I've seen in this thread-- is what I'd call fanatical, and I'm sure you've seen it and seen those people become the most disappointed with the final product, whatever the product may be.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Quirel, Tuesday, July 14, 2015, 03:00 (3423 days ago) @ Cody Miller

Pain and Gain? That was a piece of shit. Really. (Wasn't even that fun as a piece of shit.)


Nah, look beyond the lame jokes. Underneath there's something poignant about Misdirected American Machismo.

[image]

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Tuesday, July 14, 2015, 18:31 (3423 days ago) @ General Vagueness

I revise my statement. I've always appreciated Harrison Ford. His early work is fantastic (even the non-action stuff like American Graffiti and Witness). There are a few movies he's done that I'm not sure I'll like, but I haven't watched them in part because they weren't well received, but Ford is the kind of actor who can be better than the movie he's in. Actors (and writers, for that matter) have a limited amount of control over making a film good. Being involved in something that won't turn out as well as you'd like it to is precisely the situation he was worried about with the new Star Wars, which is why your logic is silly--you assume that his judgment of scripts is necessarily reflected in every movie he's made.


That's almost the opposite of what I was saying. I was saying that his judgment would be reflected in the scripts he made as a whole, which is why I asked if there were any that you didn't like. If it applied the same to every one then it wouldn't matter, you could look at one and apply it to all of them.

You speak a version of English I don't understand. "As a whole" implies to me that there might be exceptions, but generally something is true. The bottom line: I respect and give credence to Ford's opinion when he says a script is remarkable.

Good scripts get changed. Good scripts can get made into lousy movies. That said, bad scripts seldom get made into good movies. The man has starred in some of my favorite movies, so when he calls a script remarkable, that's an endorsement.


Here it sounds like you are just taking the movies you really like that he made and applying that to this with his positive comment about it.
I see your point about how not every movie will reflect his judgment, but that can be turned around-- what if this script has changed, what if it's poorly executed, what if there's some other hiccup?

What the eff if? That doesn't keep me from being excited about hearing him saying very nice things about the script. A good script is hard to find.

Also, not turning out as well as you wanted isn't the only issue with quality. Beyond some technical aspects, a movie is like any other work in that quality is subjective. My point was very much about, not the movie turning out badly, but the movie not turning out in a way you like. Tons of people, including presumably George Lucas himself, thought the prequels were fine, while you obviously consider them garbage.

Heh, find three people over the age of 30 who thought they were good.

That's a subjective thing, and something only you can decide, and something you can only decide once you've seen the movie. Please forgive me if this sounds obvious, but this was supporting the point that you're ill-informed on the movie as it stands, which you've now said is true.

Read my posts again. Where did I ever say that the new Star Wars movie is good? How could I know that? You keep responding as if I said that--I didn't. To be clear: As of now I've heard, read, and seen enough (which I bet money is more than you have) about the new movie such that I hope and expect it to be good, and therefore I'm excited about it. This wasn't true when the movie was announced, but every bit of info I've gleaned since then has gradually gotten me to this point, not least of which what I heard and saw last week. I wouldn't have gotten into this discussion had you not said "we know next to nothing about the script" when what I knew about the script has been a big driver of my excitement. I didn't expect the Perry Mason treatment regarding my admiration of the people involved.

I think you're reading it wrong. He betrayed my faith in him as a creator. It's another way of saying I lost confidence in his judgment and his abilities as an artist. If he decided the make documentaries, or art house films about migrant workers or something, I wouldn't feel justified calling it a betrayal just because he's not making space operas any more. If Bungie decides that what will work best for them as a studio involves making a game for a different platform, that's not a betrayal. That's a business decision. (If I felt differently, I would have been part of the crowd that ditched Bungie in 2000.)


Just out of curiosity, what do you think of the other movies he's made since the original trilogy, or have you seen any of them? I heard Red Tails was pretty good.

Haven't seen any and don't really care to. It's not just his artistic abilities I don't trust anymore. He's shown himself to be an idiot and an ass. I'm not interested in supporting him.

My hopes are intertwined with my excitement for the new Star Wars movie. I'll never understand how fan sites seem to attract people who object to fans who act like fans.


I'm fine with fans acting like fans, it's when they act like fanatics that I get worried. That's not to say you're doing that, but an extreme degree of excitement-- more than I've seen in this thread-- is what I'd call fanatical, and I'm sure you've seen it and seen those people become the most disappointed with the final product, whatever the product may be.

I don't think that's me, but better to be fanatical about something that to be coldly analytical to where I won't let myself savor the anticipation of something that has the potential to be awesome. I know all about disappointment. I'm not scared of it.

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Star Wars *OT*

by General Vagueness @, The Vault of Sass, Wednesday, July 15, 2015, 01:28 (3423 days ago) @ Kermit
edited by General Vagueness, Wednesday, July 15, 2015, 01:31

That's a subjective thing, and something only you can decide, and something you can only decide once you've seen the movie. Please forgive me if this sounds obvious, but this was supporting the point that you're ill-informed on the movie as it stands, which you've now said is true.

Read my posts again. Where did I ever say that the new Star Wars movie is good? How could I know that? You keep responding as if I said that--I didn't.

I was explaining, because you asked, how I had been making the point that you couldn't know if it was good or not yet. What I didn't say is that you're sort of acting like it is good, already.

To be clear: As of now I've heard, read, and seen enough (which I bet money is more than you have) about the new movie such that I hope and expect it to be good, and therefore I'm excited about it. This wasn't true when the movie was announced, but every bit of info I've gleaned since then has gradually gotten me to this point, not least of which what I heard and saw last week. I wouldn't have gotten into this discussion had you not said "we know next to nothing about the script" when what I knew about the script has been a big driver of my excitement. I didn't expect the Perry Mason treatment regarding my admiration of the people involved.

Well that strikes me as weird, because it seemed like you admitted you know next to nothing about the script, you just know someone who wrote stuff you like co-wrote it (not even wrote it, just co-wrote it) and an actor you like said it's very good. That may be enough for you and that's fine, but that's not a substantial amount of information, which is what I said.

I'm fine with fans acting like fans, it's when they act like fanatics that I get worried. That's not to say you're doing that, but an extreme degree of excitement-- more than I've seen in this thread-- is what I'd call fanatical, and I'm sure you've seen it and seen those people become the most disappointed with the final product, whatever the product may be.


I don't think that's me, but better to be fanatical about something that to be coldly analytical to where I won't let myself savor the anticipation of something that has the potential to be awesome. I know all about disappointment. I'm not scared of it.

That's not quite what I'm doing, it's similar though. I have some reading to do to be sure of what I've heard, and hopefully if this ever comes up again I can give you a short version of how I approach things.

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Star Wars *OT*

by Kermit @, Raleigh, NC, Wednesday, July 15, 2015, 17:13 (3422 days ago) @ General Vagueness

That's a subjective thing, and something only you can decide, and something you can only decide once you've seen the movie. Please forgive me if this sounds obvious, but this was supporting the point that you're ill-informed on the movie as it stands, which you've now said is true.

Read my posts again. Where did I ever say that the new Star Wars movie is good? How could I know that? You keep responding as if I said that--I didn't.


I was explaining, because you asked, how I had been making the point that you couldn't know if it was good or not yet. What I didn't say is that you're sort of acting like it is good, already.

To be clear: As of now I've heard, read, and seen enough (which I bet money is more than you have) about the new movie such that I hope and expect it to be good, and therefore I'm excited about it. This wasn't true when the movie was announced, but every bit of info I've gleaned since then has gradually gotten me to this point, not least of which what I heard and saw last week. I wouldn't have gotten into this discussion had you not said "we know next to nothing about the script" when what I knew about the script has been a big driver of my excitement. I didn't expect the Perry Mason treatment regarding my admiration of the people involved.


Well that strikes me as weird, because it seemed like you admitted you know next to nothing about the script, you just know someone who wrote stuff you like co-wrote it (not even wrote it, just co-wrote it) and an actor you like said it's very good. That may be enough for you and that's fine, but that's not a substantial amount of information, which is what I said.

Final word from me: I think this has been a silly debate in that I somewhat agree with you--it's a good idea to keep your expectations in check. It's also silly to say someone is wrong for being excited about an experience they haven't had yet. Imagine we heard that for Halo 6, Joe Staten was the writing lead, Jaime Griesemer was designing the sandbox, and Marty was doing music and audio--would this information be reason enough to be excited? For a lot of people the answer would be yes, and I'd probably be one of them. Maybe we'd be opening ourselves up for disappointment, but here's the thing--we have to have reasons to want to experience something before we experience it and find out for sure if it's all that. And that's okay!

I feel I know more than you claim I do and less than you claim I have to know. One more time: here's why I am eager to see the new Star Wars.

1. George Lucas is not involved. For me he's now the anti-King Midas.

2. Harrison Ford has high praise for the script. That means something to me.

3. Lawrence Kasdan co-wrote the script. He's not just someone--he's someone who co-wrote what is arguably the best Star Wars script ever made into a movie.

4. The principal actors are returning to reprise their roles. Can't underestimate the importance of this.

5. Luke is now an elder Jedi, just as Ben Kenobi was. I love the symmetry of this without knowing anything else about the story.

6. Han and Chewie are together again on the Millenium Falcon, and it's clear this is a significant both as a cinematic event but also within the story. It's not just them who are "home." For all fans of a certain age this is a homecoming.

7. The emphasis on practical effects answers a big concern about the franchise. Practical effects were part of what made the original movies special. They provided some of the first cinematic views of a science fiction future that felt lived in and grounded, in no small part because of practical effects. Thematically and visually, those movies had ties to a world we knew. Lucas lost sight of this aspect of his work as his obsession with digital technology intensified. That the people who are now running the show are touting the benefits of practical effects tells me that they understand something fundamental about what made the original movies so good. It bodes well.

QED

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Star Wars *OT*

by CyberKN ⌂ @, Oh no, Destiny 2 is bad, Wednesday, July 15, 2015, 17:17 (3422 days ago) @ Kermit

Imagine we heard that for Halo 6, Joe Staten was the writing lead, Jaime Griesemer was designing the sandbox, and Marty was doing music and audio--would this information be reason enough to be excited?

Don't toy with my emotions, Kermit :(

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And we're 2/3rds there with Marty's new company!

by Funkmon @, Wednesday, July 15, 2015, 17:22 (3422 days ago) @ CyberKN

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