avoidz said:
xhonzi said:
Thanks for posting the interview, mania. But is it just me, or does Kazanjian not really sound like he knows of what he speaks? He looks at the blank space in the matte painting and thinks it's unfinished? Clearly, he must know how matte paintings work/worked? And I thought his comment about the ships' proximity to Jabba's was interesting... can Jabba's be seen in the painting? I looked at the painting for a solid 30 seconds and couldn't find anything looking like a palace...
So we have Lucas saying it was Hamill, Hamill saying it wasn't and then saying it was, and Kazanjian saying it wasn't. Whom do we believe?
I think what Kazanjian is saying about the Milliennium Falcon and X-Wing being so close to Jabba's Palace is they are relatively close, not actually right next to; in the same general vicinity where they might be spotted (since Jabba and at least Boba Fett know what the Falcon looks like).
I don't quite get why Howard doesn't recognize a matte painting with a black space for a live-action plate on it. Maybe he's been looking at too many CG effects over the years and forgotten.
Luke's first appearance in Jabba's Palace and the lightsaber fired from Artoo in the Skiff scene works much better than seeing that cut scene in the cave which is kind of pointless.
The Vader scene, obviously sounding and looking like something concocted from unused Empire and Jedi footage doesn't add anything new, and the dialogue is forgettable.
"The blacked out area on the left looks like it was never finished - whatever it might have been."
I read that as he assumes whatever was going to be inserted into the black area wasn't finished (or was shot but never composited perhaps). I think it's part of the sandstorm thing perhaps, so we'd be seeing the ships after the rescue. He was obviously thinking it was part of the Luke sabre scene (and perhaps it was - who knows!)
There's nothing like polarising people, it's good marketing to shift units!
And remember - he's talking about his day job from almost 30 years ago, not his wet dream.