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The Merits of the Prequel Trilogy and the "Saga" — Page 6

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CO,

The problem with your way of thinking is that if Lucas would've gone that route, he would get accussed, as he does now for the Prequels, with have little to no substance in terms of character.

What it essentially comes to down to is that there are two versions of the Prequels that would've essentially worked, your idea which I think reflects the majority of the Star Wars fanbase who aren't too crazy about the Prequels and the version we have now.

And for you, you don't want to sacrifice the Original Trilogy, whereas Lucas wanted to turn the Original Trilogy, especially Vader, on it's head.

Hell, I even questioned why he didn't have Anakin as a teen in Episode I but I saw the thematic devices he used that were the starting point of him sliding to the Darkside and I agreed with every point because it was exactly the opposite I think people were thinking when they wondered what young Darth Vader was like.

Man, that was an amazing run-on sentence.
Twisted by the Dark Side, young Skywalker has become. The boy you trained, gone he is. Consumed by Darth Vader.

-Yoda; Episode III Revenge of the Sith.
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Originally posted by: COThen jump to ROTJ, and it is alien-fest. Now if you do an alien or creature right like Yoda or Jabba, it can come as cool as hell, and gives that richness to the movies. But ROTJ is littered with so many aliens in jabbas palace, and then you have the Ewoks, and then you even have aliens on the rebellion now!

Sorry for the tangent, but I thought the RotJ alienfest was a nifty way to add something new to the mix ... i.e, aliens everywhere. It was the color palette (very lush) and the wall-to-wall aliens that gave Return of the Jedi its own style, separate from the other two films. I think the alien-fest was one of its greatest assets ... and, because of that, I'm one of the few who didn't even hate the Ewoks!

But I'll wholeheartedly agree that non-humans have a hard-time delivering a credible performance. It's the reason I hate Darth Vader as the villain in The Empire Strikes Back. You can have all the James Earl fantasic voice in the world, but the character has absolutely NO facial expression. I found him laughable and utterly unable to carry an entire movie as the heavy. (Back in his rightful position as supporting villain in RotJ - - as he was in Star Wars - - I found Vader much easier to swallow.)



Ok, um end of tangent ... Now back to your regularly scheduled thread ripping the P.T. a new, ahem old one.


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Well, I'm probably in the minority on this, but I would have loved to see the prequels done by 3 different directors. Seeing the new dvds reminded me how different the 3 originals are from each other, in tone and look, and it's one of my favorite things about the 1st trilogy. The whole consistency thing does nothing for me. The prequels had so much story and explaining to do, a little cinematic variety might have been good.
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Originally posted by: Tiptup
First, please, this thread is for precise reasoning about the prequel trilogy from an artistic standpoint and nothing else. Many of you, like CO, have been doing this, but then again, some of you have clearly not. Sure, if you want to state your unsupported opinions, you can do so, but I would ask that you don't get into meaningless screaming matches over them (it serves nothing). Go-Mer, this means you. Please, stop responding to people who say nothing apart from how they hate the prequels. That’s their opinion. If you find what they say offensive, it is better to just ignore it. I don't find it offensive in the least, in fact, I have been maintaining that taste is subjective. I certainly didn't mean any of my posts to sound like I was shouting at anyone.
Originally posted by: Tiptup
Now, Go-Mer, you're a very interesting person. You seem exactly like the side of myself that seeks to be open and enjoy whatever a given author may have intend with his art, and yet you come to conclusions that are very different from mine. When reading your opinions, it seems like I can only come to the same conclusions if I dismiss logical cohesion and simplicity in art as something unimportant. In other words, I believe you are strongly moved by the emotional scenes portrayed in the prequel trilogy, as I tried to be many times, but when it comes to a logical context or foundation for those scenes you're willing to accept quite a lot of useless nonsense. Now, that's either because you're a very emotionally oriented person and logical beauty is unimportant to you, or you really, really, really enjoy thinking about far-fetched and convoluted/confusing logic (perhaps therein lies the logical beauty for you). First of all, if I was worried about "logical beauty" I would have given up at the concept of light sabers. Instead of stopping at "well lasers wouldn’t just stop at one end" I rolled along with it for the sake of enjoyment. Second, I really do enjoy figuring out ways apparent inconsistencies could make sense. Like what if the light saber is really spitting out some supercharged plasma that is somehow held in shape by a magnetic field or something? That would also explain why they cast shadows. I'm sure you aren't getting hung up on the concept of the light saber, or you would have hung it up with ANH too, so what are the logical inconsistencies you would have to look over to enjoy this as much as I do?
Originally posted by: Tiptup
When I watch a movie and look for logical beauty within it, I am looking for a good story or ethical/philosophical meanings, not ways to remove seeming contradictions. For instance, the killing of “younglings” seems dramatic and horrible for me, until of course I try and understand a logical context for why on earth it is happening at all. Then my mind immediately starts to get sick of the whole thing. The emotional beauty disappears. I'm not sure I understand, you mean you are looking for a reason for Anakin to have slaughtered the younglings?
Originally posted by: Tiptup Sure, you guys can claim to CO that the original trilogy can work as a continuation of the "Anakin" saga. That all three of the movies are actually about a pair of twins working to "resurrect" their father from the opening scene in Star Wars to the closing scene in Jedi (as George Lucas tries to now claim), and you can jump through a million logical hoops to prove how this might work as the focus of the films as well. But where is the remaining beauty after you have tortured the films in this way?

Darth Vader was NEVER originally intended to be Anakin Skywalker or Luke’s real father until the preproduction of Empire Strikes Back. This is historical fact. Likewise, Princess Leia was NEVER originally intended to be Luke’s sister until George Lucas decided to go that route when writing the story for Return of the Jedi. This is historical fact. Therefore, to pretend that elements from the earlier movies somehow foreshadow these ideas is pretending only. Oh I agree, this "saga as a whole" was not something Lucas intended from the beginning. He set out to make the original trilogy, and initially the "prequels" were nothing more than a rough outline upon which he could hang the events he was going to tell in the classic trilogy. Sure he talked about even doing more than 6 films early on, but he was clearly fleshing this out as he went. Even so, I think it has all come together remarkably well in the end.

I don't see how the beauty is being tortured. I mean sure, the dynamic for an audience member is different for a first time viewer if they go into ANH knowing Luke and Leia are Vader's children. Are you saying that it works this way from a logical narrative standpoint but just isn't "beautiful" anymore?
Originally posted by: Tiptup
The original trilogy is about Luke Skywalker. It is about giving form to classic themes from our world’s mythology. Darth Vader was originally just a villain in this context. To force the “saga” of Anakin as the supposedly “true” focus of the film does not work in any artistic way whatsoever. It doesn’t even emotionally work since all of the emotional elements from the original Star Wars have nothing to do with Darth Vader being anything more than the totally awesome villain. Sure ANH worked on that level of simply good vs. evil, but in the context of the whole saga, it now has the added benefit of depth. I'm not sure I understand what you mean about how it doesn't work artistically or emotionally. To me relating to Vader makes the emotions involved with ANH and the rest of the saga for that matter resonate deeper for me. When I had just seen ANH back in the day, before I even knew there would be any sequels, Vader was just this evil machine thing. The bad guy, the one to vanquish and do away with. Now he's this evil machine that used to be the nicest boy in the galaxy. Suddenly there is a part of me that roots for that kind person to come back. While that dynamic isn't intentionally addressed in ANH, the "point of view" Obi-Wan tells Luke works well enough as foreshadowing. Obviously Anakin was always going to be a fallen hero, even if he wasn't going to become the villain at first.
Originally posted by: Tiptup
Wow, that is quite the lengthy explanation, but it totally missed the point unfortunately. I guess I should have been clearer with my question. I did not ask for a logical way in which the Midichlorians can function with a traditional idea of the force. I had already figured out that entire train of thought on my own after my very first viewing of the Phantom Menace.

What I was actually asking about the artistic method behind the film. You were supposed to explain why any of that stuff you typed up about Midichlorians should actually matter to anyone. In what way are any of the Star Wars movies enhanced by talking about Midichlorians? To me it served no purpose other than to waste time in the movie and make the force into an overly confusing subject. Normally, in aesthetics, you have simplicity tying together a number of complex concepts, yet George’s introduction of the Midichlorians actually did the exact opposite.
I think the more thought provoking the Force concept has become, the better it's gotten. There is something to be said about showing both sides to any given coin, which is what the scientific perspective does for the more mystical side of the Force. Everything about this "whole saga" is about showing different sides to the same things. In the prequels we have the "Good" establishment and the "Bad" rebels (separatists). In the classic trilogy we have the "Bad" establishment, and the "Good" rebels. The prequels start out with 2 Sith Lords in hiding waiting to take the galaxy back from the Jedi, while in the classic trilogy we have 2 Jedi in hiding waiting to take the galaxy back from the Sith. Even the Jedi and the Sith are similar in almost every way... but opposite. The beauty of the full saga together is like the beauty of a yin yang. To me this is much more meaningful than either side of the coin on it's own.

To me that's the beauty and meaning I find in the "whole saga".Originally posted by: Tiptup
Same thing goes for the mountainous Jedi jumping found in the prequels. Even the longest jump that Luke made in the original trilogy does not compare to what occurred in the prequel films. So, I ask, what was the point? What was added to Star Wars by introducing something so extreme and inharmonious? Just to have something “new”? Sorry, that explanation is bullshit. Old concepts can be just as compelling as new ones and more moderate, force-jumps would have been just as dramatic. Though, this isn’t really a problem when analyzed as a film-by-film basis. It is simply a “saga” problem from my point of view.
I agree he didn't -have- to make Jedi in their prime able to jump such amazing heights, but I don't see why it would be "bad" to have done so. The logic is that Luke isn't going to be quite as good as the Jedi we see jumping all over the place in the prequels. It also explains why their swordsmanship is superior as well. Are you saying this is a logic flaw or some kind of artistic flaw?Originally posted by: Tiptup
Also, Go-Mer, I would like you to answer the last question from my first post if you can. Thank you.

Sorry about that, I started to ramble about Midichlorians, and before I knew it, it was nap time.
Originally posted by: Tiptup
Originally posted by: Go-Mer-Tonic
Here is a quote from Lucas I saved from a while back about how Anakin turns to the dark side:

Lucas: The message is you can't possess things. You can't hold on to them. You have to accept change. You have to accept the fact that things transition. And so, as you try to hold on to things or you become afraid of -- that you're going to lose things, then you begin to crave the power to control those things. And then, you start to become greedy and then you turn into a bad person.
Hmm, yes I find that to be a virtuous lesson to teach. In your mind, which points of the prequel trilogy embody that concept in a truly meaningful way?
To me it's the reasons Anakin falls to the dark side. I'm no film scholar, but Lucas starts out with an almost overly virtuous Anakin in TPM, and shows how his inability to cope with the prospect of change ended up being his undoing.Anakin: But I don't want things to change.

Shmi: But you can't stop the change, any more than you can stop the suns from setting.
It's set up by his fear of losing his mother, ratcheted up a notch with his inability to save his mother from death, and delivered by his choice to turn to the dark side in an attempt to save Padme.

As far as talking about minds being closed, I don't mean to insult anyone. It's just apparant from some of your own words that some of you aren't open to the possibility that I could say anything that could change your mind for the better regarding the prequels or whatver else. I am reasonably sure that you all came to these conclusions after considering plenty of arguments from plenty of other Lucas apologists, and at the end of the day, you guys are probably right about that. It doesn't make your opinions "wrong" at all.

I just enjoy debate more when I think there's a chance it will make a difference is all.
Your focus determines your reality.
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Wow. Star Wars fans have a mature discussion about the prequels! Major kudos to all involved here. Long may it continue in the same vein.

“What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one.”

Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death

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Although I cringe at the thought of anyone new to Star Wars watching the films 1 thru 6 their first time out, I actually revel that good old Episode 4 (ahem, aka Star Wars) will stand out as not part of the bunch.

Heheh, good.

It's not part of the bunch.


It's a stand-alone film (and in a class by itself, imho). I'm actually gratified it might seem out of place among the saga of six episodes. And it certainly might seem puzzling as having nothing whatever to do with the Anakin story.

But Darth Vader was a lot better before his back-story was dragged into it. And Star Wars does deserve to be considered separate and apart from that hokey story.



Because it is.


If it stands out like a sore thumb, I say ... (in my best Mr. Burns voice) Exxxxcellllent.




As for it not being as likeable as the others when considered in the context of a six-pak saga, I love the irony in that. Neither Empire nor Jedi nor Clones nor Sith nor Phantom Menace would have triggered a world-wide phenomena of adoration had any of them been the first Star Wars movie unleashed on the world.


Not as likeable!!. Feh!


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Okay, I realize I'm coming at this the wrong way. While I truly love the OT more, and I will watch just the trilogy more often the all six, I don't mind seeing all six as a "saga." Like Go-Mer said, there are some interesting parallels and opposites. But I refuse to comprehend this "saga" as 1-6. And, yes, I have tried to watch it this way, with the most current special editions and all that crap. To me, though, it will always be 4-6, 1-3 when I watch all six together, because the trilogy is the story. The prequels are the behind the scenes information. You still get the same yin-yang relationship that Go-Mer speaks of, but it preserves the real story rather than making it be seen in context of what came before it. You see, what's interesting about prequels is that, you've seen the real story, and then you watch the prequels, and then it's supposed to cause you to look at the real story in a different way, in a different context. I'm not going to get into the argument as to whether or not the prequels were able to accomplish that. But it loses something when you watch the backstory first. Because you come in from that perspective, it's not as meaningful as it would be if you came in first from the real story and then watching the prequels already knowing what you know is supposed to happen. I mean, the first time I watched ROTS, I enjoyed it a lot, and it grabbed me a lot because I knew that Anakin was going to become Darth Vader, and my mind had fun trying to put the pieces together as to how that was going to come about. That's an experience you can't have if you watch it before you watch the real story. And as much as guys like Go-Mer and Jumpman try to say it should be watched in numerical order, you know you were both indoctrinated into the prequels with your knowledge of the real story already cemented in your minds. There's no way you'll know if you would have actually liked the prequels or Star Wars in general if the first three Star Wars movies you ever saw were the prequels. I'm not saying you wouldn't, but you came in with the same perspective we did, and so you enjoyed the prequels for the same reasons we might have (assuming anybody besides me occasionally enjoyed them to any extent at all).

There is no lingerie in space…

C3PX said: Gaffer is like that hot girl in high school that you think you have a chance with even though she is way out of your league because she is sweet and not a stuck up bitch who pretends you don’t exist… then one day you spot her making out with some skinny twerp, only on second glance you realize it is the goth girl who always sits in the back of class; at that moment it dawns on you why she is never seen hanging off the arm of any of the jocks… and you realize, damn, she really is unobtainable after all. Not that that is going to stop you from dreaming… Only in this case, Gaffer is actually a guy.

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That's the thing about backstory in general. It's almost always meant to be enjoyed in the context of already knowing what came "after" in time.

Stories are not necessarily told chronologically. Oftentimes, as with Star Wars and ... oh, Lord of the Rings is another good example ... the main story happens at a certain point in time, and the back story that is told later, but "happens" before, illuminates the main story ... having a completely different - and purposefully different effect than had the events simply been told in the order that they (fictitiously) happened.


* * * * * ** *

I, too, appreciate the yins and yangs of the prequel story points as they relate to the O.T. story points. But it doesn't change the fact that I find the prequels to be terrible films. Interesting story comparisons are simply not enough to make them good entertainment, imo. And were it not for their relation, storywise, to the Star Wars triliogy, they would hold no interest whatsoever.


I laugh to think of anyone watching these films for the first time in Chron Order. Hahaha, who would make it past the second one? How many hours of film can you watch before saying, "Hey, when's the good stuff? Why is this Star Wars crap so famous anyway?"

I know that not only would I not fall in love with the first trilogy ... if I managed to sit through it at all, you'd have to Clockwork Orange me to make me sit thru another three films!


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Yeah, that's just my point. It would be really interesting to be able to find out how the prequels would have performed at the box office if they hadn't been Star Wars films, or if they had been the first and only Star Wars films. The prequel lovers love to point out how much money the prequels brought in, but that's because it had a built-in fanbase that was HUGE. The original Star Wars managed to bring in all those people before Star Wars in name was enough to bring people in. It did it on its own merits as a film. And I really wonder if the prequels could have done that on their own without being connected to the Star Wars mythos.

There is no lingerie in space…

C3PX said: Gaffer is like that hot girl in high school that you think you have a chance with even though she is way out of your league because she is sweet and not a stuck up bitch who pretends you don’t exist… then one day you spot her making out with some skinny twerp, only on second glance you realize it is the goth girl who always sits in the back of class; at that moment it dawns on you why she is never seen hanging off the arm of any of the jocks… and you realize, damn, she really is unobtainable after all. Not that that is going to stop you from dreaming… Only in this case, Gaffer is actually a guy.

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Gaffer,

Obviously, the first time I saw Episode I, it helped that I had a pre-existing knowledge of Star Wars. Given all that, when I looked at it a second time, I still thought it was a good film that clearly had more to tell in the sequel, even if it were Star Wars or not.

How would Episode I faired if it remained the way it was and was released on the same day back in 1977? I think it would've done gangbusters just the same. Our generation will never know. But, I do know that Episode I is much better than the crap Hollywood throws out every weekend.

It's no masterpiece but it's not the worst of the worst. It's inventive in places. It still has one of the best one and one fights I've ever seen in film. The reveal of Coruscant still gives me goosebumps. The podrace still kicks all kinds of ass. And it is also the film I discovered the lovely Natalie Portman. You especially can't go wrong in that department.

For me, Episode I is just really fun...with or without the Star Wars name. It kind of reminds me of Willow, a film that I still like. I don't know what you guys think about that particular film but that film still works wonders on me.
Twisted by the Dark Side, young Skywalker has become. The boy you trained, gone he is. Consumed by Darth Vader.

-Yoda; Episode III Revenge of the Sith.
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Go-Mer and Jump, just wondering if you guys have seen any of the prequel fan edits?
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Sluggo,

Don't care to. Although, I wish the Planet Core sequence was dropped or shorten. I heard about the one that cut Jar Jar totally out or minimized him greatly. Still, not interested.
Twisted by the Dark Side, young Skywalker has become. The boy you trained, gone he is. Consumed by Darth Vader.

-Yoda; Episode III Revenge of the Sith.
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I saw The Phantom Edit, it just seemed to cut out a few important bits of exposition while suprisingly keeping a lot of the Jar-Jar bits.

It was sort of like watching the theatrical version of Lord of the Rings after first seeing the extended editions.

I kept missing the things that were dropped. It kept throwing off the pacing for me.
Your focus determines your reality.
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Hmmm, I'm trying to get it about Episode I. I just can't see why anyone found it entertaining. Even when people eloquently give their reasons, I simply cannot seem to connect those dots.

I confess I found the movie better after I'd seen Sith. The ploddingness, the pointlessness, the roundabout story, the wooden performances, the needless set pieces that advanced nothing ... all seemed more artful than anything in the final film of the 28-year saga.


But Phantom Menace simply did not pass the sleep test.

That's where you live on Hollywood Boulevard for a week, or more, waiting for the premier of the movie. You stay awake for 36 hours before the film opens at midnight, but you take a healthy dose of hallucenogenic, recreational drugs for the event. The lights go down, "Star Wars" blasts across the screen, there's tons of excitement ... but, before long, you are sitting in a comfortable chair in a darkened theater.

If you fall asleep ... it's a bad Star Wars movie.


Phantom Menace failed my test.



(The test is not foolproof: while only two have failed the sleep test, I consider three of the movies to be lame ... oh, and it's not the threequels.)


* * * * * * *

Still, I don't think I'd like the 6 films as a single saga even if the prequels were good. The Anakin story, even if well told, just does nothing for me.



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Originally posted by: CO
. Then there are many fans who enjoy the PT because it is SW, nothing more nothing less. If it was another SciFi/Fantasy Trilogy, we probably would have watched it once, and said it was OK and moved on. But EVERYONE of us here tried to love it 1-6, or atleast I know I tried.
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Thats how I feel, I enjoy them because they are SW if they werent I would have watched them once or twice like I do with most Sci fi/fantasy films I own, then maybe never watched them again, but because they have links to the Original Trilogy and have characters I love from the Original Trilogy in them and like the stories. I watch them more than I would other Sci/fantasy films, I have though never tried to love it 1-6 though as I have never wanted to give it that much commitment, all I have ever wanted from these films is to be entertained and not to get to indepth about it all...
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Okay, so many of us legitimately feel that the main reason many of us bother with the prequels in the first place is because they have a bearing on the classic trilogy which we all pretty much love across the board.

It may not be as great as if the prequels themselves were as compelling to many of you on it's own, but it's at least a start. At the end of the day, you guys are choosing to entertain the prequels, even if mostly because of the merit of the classic trilogy.

And it seems most of you agree that while you may not think the execution was all that great, that the story points Lucas hung the prequels on are substantial in the way they relate to the classic trilogy at the very least.

Some have brought up the idea that the prequels never grabbed them, or didn't pass the "sleep test". I think a lot of that has to do with the fact that we had seen the classic trilogy already and knew damned well that Palpatine was a bad guy and that Anakin would fall from grace and even become Darth Vader.

But Lucas was creating the prequels intentionally to be the beginning of the story, not the end of the story that explains events of the past in flashback. The prequels play it off like Palpatine is really a good guy in TPM and while there are some uneasy moments with Palpatine in AOTC (like where Yoda looks at him with a puzzled look) but by and large, the narrative doesn't reveal that Palpatine is the Sith lord until ROTS. Likewise, episode I and II really utilize Anakin as a hero.

I think this made at least the first two prequels into an exercise of "waiting for the Sith to hit the fan". We see all the players, we know what's going to happen, so the feeling is like: Well let's get on with it already.

One thing I was able to do that really improved my appreciation for the characters and their plight in the prequels was to force myself to unlearn what I had learned about the outcome in the classic trilogy. Short of a partial lobotomy that's really impossible, but I endeavored to consider how I might feel about the story if I took the stance that Anakin was the hero and that for all I knew he might prevail in the end.

I found that when I looked at TPM as the story of the Trade Federation's invasion of Naboo instead of the beginning of the story of Darth Vader, I was able to invest myself in that movie's resolution better. In AOTC, I went into the romance without constantly reminding myself that it would all end badly, and I didn't go out of my way to incriminate Palpatine with that one camera shot at the funeral in the end.

It sounds silly, but I ended up really giving a huge crap about all the characters. I ended up rooting for them all the way up until it all falls apart in ROTS, and I have to tell you, I ended up an emotional wreck the first time I saw ROTS. As someone mentioned earlier it was like a nightmare that the characters couldn't wake up from, and by the end of it, I was just about spent.

And then the release of the final montage with Luke and Leia being delivered was sort of like an angel coming down to wipe my tears away as if to say: It's all going to be all right.

Maybe it sounds silly, but I have never felt as much emotion in a film as I felt in ROTS on opening night.
Your focus determines your reality.
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Go-Mer, your partial lobotomy experiment is interesting, but I completely disagree with the theory that knowing the outcome causes disinterest.

Recall that when the words "DEATH STAR" appeared on the screen within the first 60 seconds of the original Star Wars, audiences knew how the film would end. There was suspense in the Death Star Battle and the trench runs, there was universal audience ebulation when Luke made the perfect shot and the Death Star exploded. Yet everyone knew it was coming. Sure, the details may have been surprising (e.g., Han Solo coming to the rescue at the last moment), but the outcome was assured from the start.

With the prequels, the outcome was also known from the start ... it's the details that were disappointing (e.g., Anakin turning to the dark side easier than most of us might choose to cheat on a diet).


And foreknowlege of character fates or not ... I don't think the publics 'meh' with Hayden's Anakin, Natalie's Padme and (aside from the hearthrob factor) Ewan's Obi-Wan had anything to do with foreknowledge of their fates ... rather it was from poor writing, the poorest acting of any of their careers, nearly zero chemistry, and hardly any fun.

The public's delight with Mark's Luke, Carrie's Leah and Harrison's Han was because of their characters, their chemistry, their fun together and their seemingly great friendship. It had little to do with them being heroes or knowing they would come out on top. Audiences loved the the original trilogy's trio, and enjoyed their high-spirited adventures.

Audiences loathed the prequel trilogy's trio and deplored their decidedly low-spirit escapades.




The trilogies were yin and yang alright ... just maybe not in the way you posited earlier.




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Originally posted by: Jumpman
Go-Mer,

CO's right. Episode IV was only meant to mimic the Saturday serial's he loved. He never really had anything but a backstory outline for the Prequels, just to give weight and context to the Original Trilogy.

He did mention that if he ever would go back and tell the backstory that they would be different in tone and style. But, he didn't have it all planned out. He had the highlights in outline form as CO said. But, there are hints in his outlines and drafts for the Original Star Wars of what the Prequels could shape up to be like if he made them. The biggest hint was the Prologue to the original Star Wars novel.

Still, I think you and I, are the only ones at the moment who believe that he made it work quite well, even if he didn't have it all planned out to the letter.

And what's this issue about the word youngling? It's just a word.


As far as youngling is concerned, I take it as this, a young jedi is called a youngling. A young "regular" kid is called a child. Much like Obi-Wan is a man and also a jedi, young Ani at the end of Episode I was a youngling and a child as well. That's my take anyway.

I wanted to take my girlfriend to see Episode III in the theaters. She wondered how come I liked Star Wars so much. She had only seen Episode I at that point and didn't like it too much. I convinced her that we would watch all six movies in order together (including the Clone Wars cartoons). So we watched I and II on DVD, and she liked II a lot more than part I. She and I really liked the romantic aspect of it. At that point she couldn't wait to continue the Saga. I tried to get us to watch both volumes of Clone Wars before going to the moves to see Episode III, but we ended up seeing I, II, III, Clone Wars 1 & 2, then IV, V and VI. It's a totally different (and IMO better) watching them that way. As soon as we saw the title "A New Hope" it was so uplifting after seeing the sad ending of "Revenge of the Sith". Her questions about the OT were totally different. Does Leia know Darth Vader is her father? Does she find out? When? Does Luke know? Find out? When? Brother and sister? Do they know? And we couldn't stop picturing Anakin inside the Darth Vader suit. And yes, that was a good thing. It was also really cool to see the Anakin we remembered from "Sith" at the end of Return of the Jedi. It even goes along with what Obi Wan says in ANH. "Your father was murdered and betrayed by Darth Vader", which from a certain point of view, was true. We had no problem believing that the good in Anakin all but died at the same time as Mace Windu, and the young ghost makes PERFECT sence. Her favorite SW films are II, III and VI.
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Obi,

If it's true that audiences loathed the Trilogy's trio, then how can the three films make 431 million, 310 million, and 380 million respectfully?

It can't just be the Star Wars name alone. Star Wars name or not, you don't get those kind of numbers unless people like what they saw? People don't go back if they didn't like what they saw....
Twisted by the Dark Side, young Skywalker has become. The boy you trained, gone he is. Consumed by Darth Vader.

-Yoda; Episode III Revenge of the Sith.
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It can't just be the Star Wars name alone.


Now that, I must disagree with. I don't hate the prequels, but I do think that the mere fact that something has the Star Wars name on it means that many people will be interested regardless.

“What Orwell feared were those who would ban books. What Huxley feared was that there would be no reason to ban a book, for there would be no one who wanted to read one.”

Neil Postman, Amusing Ourselves to Death

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Originally posted by: Mike O
It can't just be the Star Wars name alone.


Now that, I must disagree with. I don't hate the prequels, but I do think that the mere fact that something has the Star Wars name on it means that many people will be interested regardless.


Absolutely.

The fact that they were the prequels to arguably the most famous film franchise of all time, and the fact that they recieved almost unlmited media attention and hype (it was almost made out to be an "event," not just merely a movie) practically guaranteed huge audiences. Yes, because it is Star Wars.

Harrison Ford Has Pretty Much Given Up on His Son. Here's Why

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Mike,

Sure, people would be interested in seeing it but again, it has to be good to warrant 431, 310, and 380 million. Not to mention DVD sales for the Prequels.

I'm not saying the Star Wars name didn't help because obviously, it did. But, not to those numbers. The reason those numbers are so high is because of the new generation of children who caught on to Star Wars with this trilogy and not the Originals.

This is why the Star Wars films will always have a generational gap.....
Twisted by the Dark Side, young Skywalker has become. The boy you trained, gone he is. Consumed by Darth Vader.

-Yoda; Episode III Revenge of the Sith.
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Yeah, the original trilogy could get any one of the prequel episodes through their first second, maybe even third weeks at the box office, but it was then carried by people like me who went back again and again because we loved the movies themselves.
Your focus determines your reality.
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Originally posted by: Jumpman
Obi,

If it's true that audiences loathed the Trilogy's trio, then how can the three films make 431 million, 310 million, and 380 million respectfully?

It can't just be the Star Wars name alone. Star Wars name or not, you don't get those kind of numbers unless people like what they saw? People don't go back if they didn't like what they saw....
I went back, as did many of my friends. I saw each of the prequels more than once in the theater, and I bought each DVD when it came out. But I still didn't like what I saw, especially after the initial excitement wore off. It was still a disappointment. However, I had to see all the films anyway, because they were all there was going to be. I enjoyed the parts that were good (and there were a few), and cringed or got bored through the rest. The prequel DVDs are on my shelf, mainly for reference, but I will still occasionally watch them again just to see the good parts. The original trilogy, on the other hand, I will watch over and over again for pure enjoyment.

Another thing to consider is the collector mentality of so many Star Wars fans out there. They have to have it, they have to see it, they have to experience it if it's Star Wars... even if it's bad. And there's also the stubborn tendency many of us have to not want to accept that anything with the Star Wars name on it could be bad, so we continue to buy into it. These are a couple of reasons why so many tickets were sold, and why so many people went back to the theater again and again.

--SKot

Projects:
Return Of The Ewok and Other Short Films (with OCPmovie) [COMPLETED]
Preserving the…cringe…Star Wars Holiday Special [COMPLETED]
The Star Wars TV Commercials Project [DORMANT]
Felix the Cat 1919-1930 early film shorts preservation [ONGOING]
Lights Out! (lost TV anthology shows) [ONGOING]
Iznogoud (1995 animated series) English audio preservation [ONGOING]

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I don't know, just because some of us would go back to see a movie we didn't like just because it had the Star Wars name on it, doesn't mean that's the only reason people went back.

I for one went back because I genuinely enjoyed them.
Your focus determines your reality.