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What exactly was stopping George from "handing off" the prequels??? — Page 2

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I have an attitude but it isn't a bad one. If you think differently to this, don't be afraid t say so (it's much better to talk straight than hide behind snide remarks, I always find).

That's some bad hat, Harry
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nightstalkerpoet said:

With TPM... so much was jam-packed into it, and it had such a different feel from the OT, that a lot of people had to see it two or three times just to wrap their heads around it. A lot of reviews these days contain "I saw The Phantom Menace like 5 times in theaters". I don't think that was the case with AotC. Some people didn't like TPM, and didn't come back. Some people came back hoping AotC was better, and decided it wasn't. Most people saw it once, shrugged their shoulders, and waited for RotS to figure out where the hell this was all heading. A small minority loved the film and followed the SW trend of multiple viewings.

Generally though, it succeeded because it was a Star Wars movie. 

I think this is a pretty fair assessment. The unfortunate thing about Episode I for me was that I don't think the marketing did a good job of preparing people for the type of film they were going to see. The trailer for Episode I is still the best thing to ever come out of the prequels, I wanted to see that film! I still do! It was the spirit and feel of Star Wars, but also fresh and original. The film that we got was decidedly different; I still feel like it's not the film previewed in the trailer. And keep in mind, I actually did like Episode I when it came out, and still do to a large degree. I don't think it's a very good Star Wars prequel, but I derive enjoyment from it. But it's not what I wanted or expected, and I mean that in a neutral way. The film was always destined to get bad reviews because even though I say I enjoy it, I also realize it's not a particularly great film, but I don't think audiences were prepared for this silly, whimsical children's fantasy film, they were expecting something a bit darker and a bit more grown up.

That's the reason Episode II got good reviews at first, but now is often regarded as the worst of the series. I loved AOTC when I first saw it, mainly because it was the Episode I that I was (sort of) expecting, and the basis of most positive reviews were that it wasn't Phantom Menace, it was daker and more "Adult"...but while I saw Episode I four or five times in theaters, I only went back to Episode II once, and every time I watched it I liked it less and less. The reason being, once the excitment of having a serious, darker film that actually set up the events of the OT wore off, I realized it was one of the worst acted, written and directed movies I have ever paid money to see. The film simply sucks. But after Episode I, it seemed like a breath of fresh air. Phantom Menace had so much backlash that anything would have seemed better, but in retrospect I feel like at least George Lucas was genuinely trying with Episode I, while Episode II really just feels like he had no idea what to do with the film and just sort of threw it out there. I get the feeling of absolutely no confidence or enthusiasm went into that film, and maybe it's because the backlash of Episode I was such a sucker punch for Lucas that it took away his confidence and joy in making a follow-up, but he was now obligated to even if he didn't want to. I mean, there is no way he could have predicted the negativity people had for him and Episode I, I am sure he was genuinely shocked and felt like shit for a few months. I mean, he was a god before Episode I, it was shocking to us, and he seemed to be really excited about making Episode I, so I get the impression that the backlash was as unpredicted for him as it was to us. People accuse Lucas of sometimes loathing his fans, and I tend to agree sometimes, but I think part of the reason is that he felt kicked to the curb by them, not that he is correct--he's not, and we still made him rich anyway so he laughed all the way to the bank--but I think there is a lot that Lucas either denies feeling or doesn't open up about.

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No, you simply can't predict how lousy some people will behave.

I think the bad criticism for TPM didn't come from whether it's a bad film or not. Sixteen years of hype guarantees that no film can ever live up to expectations. Thankfully, the film's target audience hadn't had sixteen years' anticipation (because they weren't that old!) and loved the movie.

Anyone expecting something dark from TPM really needs their head checking (I'm sure they were very pleased with The Matrix, though).

That's some bad hat, Harry
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It's not that it wasn't dark. It's that it was so very childish, and again I mean that in a neutral way, it's a film meant to appeal to ten year olds, while the other films were the sort of films that adults make for themselves that also appeal to ten year olds; Spielberg was the king of that genre too, and I feel Pixar and Peter Jackson have been doing decent jobs of it too. If it was darker it would have helped it's rep, and I also think it's silly to say its dumb to expect the film to be dark, there was every reason to excpect it to be darker than it was, it's almost silly to have expected it to be as light and kid-friendly as it was, but that's not the root of the problem. The backlash came from the fact that Episode I wasn't a great film, it was always going to get mediocre reviews, but the fact that it was child-friendly by Return of the Jedi standards made things twice as bad and amplified the negativity that was already there. Really, Episode I isn't terrible, it just wasn't all that good, and people hadn't waited 16 years for something that was "meh." So, viewers were guilty of exaggerating things, but the film was guilty of being a bit lousy as well. Put those together and you have the cinematic disappointment of a lifetime--sort of unfairly earned, but also unable to really defend itself because it's sorta poor in the first place.

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I don't believe it's any more childish than ROTJ. I think there's a certain kind of fan who will say that any OT film is better than the prequels simply by dint of the fact that others still had a say in the OT whilst the prequels exhibited total control by Lucas - and we all know how highly regarded he is by a lot of internet forum posters.

I don't believe Peter Jackson makes films for kids, though. From a child's point of view (if I may dare to be so bold) he makes films that are long and boring with quite a few frightening moments. King Kong? Dull as ditchwater until they land on the island. Then it's scary scenes with the natives (not at all child-friendly) and sub-par CGI dinosaurs. Lord Of The Rings? Again, for any kid (and even some adults) it has incredibly long sections where not much of interest really happens (a lot of talking and walking) and then scenes with Orcs that, as with the natives in King Kong, are terrifying for kids.

Pixar are amazing, though. I think we all have our favourites where they're concerned but mine would be Up.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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I think that it's to TPM's credit, though, that there's no darkness in it. Lucas absolutely didn't want Anakin to be anything other than an innocent kid, the point being that anyone can go bad in life, it doesn't have to be there from the start - and with him, the capacity to do so much wrong in later life only came from an admirable quality in youth: attachment to the ones he loves. So the only darkness is really in the character of Palpatine, who's manipulative tactics are only appreciated in retrospect once we've seen episodes two and three.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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If Lucas had deleted midichlorians, "ex-squeeeeeze me", poo jokes and fart jokes from the movie, I firmly believe fans wouldn't have been so hostile. They may not have loved the movie but those things seem to be the common denominators that pushed everybody over the edge. It's the difference between mob unrest and a full scale riot. And, speaking as someone who enjoys the prequels, those things are indefensible. Maybe the whiners did behave like children but you can't argue they didn't have a point at least on those elements.

All I really want is each film as it was originally seen and heard in theaters; no fixes, corrections, "improvements" or modifications necessary.

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Well...I could argue it! Midichlorians sets up nicely for the reveal in ROTS and that famously "Faustian" scene at the opera. Poo and farting either make you laugh or they don't. Lucas didn't invent them; people have been laughing at scatalogical humour since time immemoriam. What's so pathetic is that there was such a backlash from certain people (I won't even grace their number by calling them a demographic) about such things. I mean, really, how much time can one person have on their hands?

That's some bad hat, Harry
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Easterhay said:

I don't believe Peter Jackson makes films for kids, though. From a child's point of view (if I may dare to be so bold) he makes films that are long and boring with quite a few frightening moments. King Kong? Dull as ditchwater until they land on the island. Then it's scary scenes with the natives (not at all child-friendly) and sub-par CGI dinosaurs. Lord Of The Rings? Again, for any kid (and even some adults) it has incredibly long sections where not much of interest really happens (a lot of talking and walking) and then scenes with Orcs that, as with the natives in King Kong, are terrifying for kids.

Fair enough. Maybe Harry Potter is a better example, especially the latter installments. I didn't see the early HP films in theaters, but when I went to the last three or four it was prettty much an equal balance of kids, teens and adults (not parents, people like me who went to see it because they wanted to see it).

I always just have a very vivid memory of a 14 year old girl crying with emotion in the seat in front of me during the end of Return of the King--genuinely being moved by the story and characters TO TEARS--can you imagine that? That's something people sometimes talk about but never actually witness, and she was actually crying with emotion. By contrast, I have a very vivid memory of an an entire movie theater laughing their asses off when Darth Vader went "NOOOOooo" in Episode III. I'm not making any of this up, and people laughed at a lot of dialogue they weren't supposed to be laughing at elsewhere in the movie. Even though I feel like I am one of the few people here that actually really like Episode III that to me was a perfect example of why LOTR won armfulls of Oscars for being really good and the prequels won armfuls of Razzie's for being really bad.

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Easterhay said:

Well...I could argue it! Midichlorians sets up nicely for the reveal in ROTS and that famously "Faustian" scene at the opera. Poo and farting either make you laugh or they don't. Lucas didn't invent them; people have been laughing at scatalogical humour since time immemoriam. What's so pathetic is that there was such a backlash from certain people (I won't even grace their number by calling them a demographic) about such things. I mean, really, how much time can one person have on their hands?

I do laugh at such things in certain contexts. Problem is, there wasn't any poop or farts in the OT, (at least not yet!) so it feels really out of place in the prequels.

Lucas even unwittingly undermined the ending of Episode III by having Obi Wan deliver baby Luke riding on the back of the same kind of creature that farted on Jar Jar in TPM. Not what you want the viewer flashing back to at such a emotional moment.

Where were you in '77?

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I actually think the latter instalments of Harry Potter are the very films you wouldn't show to kids, to be honest. My two have yet to see the final one, for example.

I've heard a lot of people found the end of ROTK moving (that line "You bow to no-one" gets a lot of plaudits), I just remember feeling "When is this going to end?". A whole cinema laughing at one line in ROTS, though? Well, that's a new one on me, I must say. Maybe the acoustics made it sound like it was more people than it truly was. I saw the movie twice at the cinema and not a titter did I hear at that scene. Just goes to show you, eh?

I wouldn't attach too much importance to the Oscars, you know, zombie. A lot of that voting is purely political. I'm not saying LOTR didn't deserve its awards - it probably did - but I think to ignore the technical achievements of the SW prequels was petty and undeserved. These are the same people who showered Titanic with awards, remember.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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How many did flash on the fart gag when they saw the eopie in ROTS? I didn't. In fact it never even occured to me before you said it, Silverwook. (It'll occur to me when I watch it next, though! Cheers for that :)).

That's some bad hat, Harry
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It hit me like a hammer opening weekend in the theater. Had to bite down to keep from laughing. ;)

Movie audience reactions can be mixed and varied. One reason I don't think test audience screenings are of much use to a filmmaker.

Where were you in '77?

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Easterhay said:

I actually think the latter instalments of Harry Potter are the very films you wouldn't show to kids, to be honest. My two have yet to see the final one, for example.

 

Depending on the age. I mean, when we say "kids" it's a big difference between 7 and 12. I might think twice before showing the final three films to a seven year old (although I probably would anyway...when I was 7 I watched Terminator and Robocop and Aliens, and they all scared me to death and I loved them for that, so I'm of the mentality that it's okay to be scared of movies).

I've heard a lot of people found the end of ROTK moving (that line "You bow to no-one" gets a lot of plaudits), I just remember feeling "When is this going to end?". A whole cinema laughing at one line in ROTS, though? Well, that's a new one on me, I must say. Maybe the acoustics made it sound like it was more people than it truly was. I saw the movie twice at the cinema and not a titter did I hear at that scene. Just goes to show you, eh?

 

I agree about ROTK. I love that film, and I remember being really annoyed by the 5 endings. I still think the ending with Sam is a mistake. But nonetheless, it was a very moving cinematic experience for the majority of the audience. And with ROTS: Yeah, people laughed at "younglings", even when it was a very serious scene involving murdered children, and they laughed at the romantic dialogue too.

I wouldn't attach too much importance to the Oscars, you know, zombie. A lot of that voting is purely political. I'm not saying LOTR didn't deserve its awards - it probably did - but I think to ignore the technical achievements of the SW prequels was petty and undeserved. These are the same people who showered Titanic with awards, remember.

Sure, who cares about technicalities. The prequels got technical awards. But when you get awards for stuff like acting and directing--you may not agree with it completely, because everyone has an opinion. But I think there is some sense of consensus that you've made a decent film if that happens. No one is giving Spice World a best picture Oscar. And no one is giving Return of the King a Worst Picture Razzie. But the fact that ROTK got a best picture nod and ROTS a worst picture nod--that indicates the general reputation a film has. And when it's that extreme--the best and the worst--it tends to count a lot. People aren't idiots. If everyone is saying a film is great, it's probably worth watching at least (some exceptions given, but that's besides the point), and if people say a film is awful it probably is not all that amazing. So these are useful indicators and why I bring them up. Obviously there is no accounting for taste, but I think it's kind of cheap to say "I'M NOT CRAZY, THE REST OF YOU ARE CRAZY!". I think Temple of Doom and Kingdom of the Crystal Skull are the best Indy films, but I do recognize that everyone else thinks they are the worst, and not without good reason.

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Easterhay said:

I've heard a lot of people found the end of ROTK moving (that line "You bow to no-one" gets a lot of plaudits), I just remember feeling "When is this going to end?". A whole cinema laughing at one line in ROTS, though? Well, that's a new one on me, I must say. Maybe the acoustics made it sound like it was more people than it truly was. I saw the movie twice at the cinema and not a titter did I hear at that scene. Just goes to show you, eh?
I remember people laughing at Anakin's confession of murder in AOTC and Palpatine's Gollum moment in ROTS. Can't recall Vader's "noooooooo" either way but those two scenes definitely brought on unintended laughs in every screening of the movies I went to. If it was only one screening on one night in one town, hey, it happens. But for it to happen among your most core fans at the midnight premiere AND wide audiences in other screenings on multiple occasions... well, Lucas can argue "style" until he's blue in the face but if people laugh at something they think is fucking ridiculous, he has lost the argument. Period.

Easterhay said:

I wouldn't attach too much importance to the Oscars, you know, zombie. A lot of that voting is purely political. I'm not saying LOTR didn't deserve its awards - it probably did - but I think to ignore the technical achievements of the SW prequels was petty and undeserved. These are the same people who showered Titanic with awards, remember.
I understand your point but I resent that attitude. No offense. That was the biggest movie of the year it came out (nevermind it became the most successful of all time). That type of success should be rewarded. The mainstream had a positive reaction. This idea that the Academy should ignore "cinema for plebes" like Titanic just makes no sense to me.

All I really want is each film as it was originally seen and heard in theaters; no fixes, corrections, "improvements" or modifications necessary.

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Sounds like you watched ROTS in the presence of some very immature people, zombie. As for the "I'm not crazy, the rest of you are crazy" I understand what you mean but when the only carping I see about the prequels is either on internet forums or from people who tend to be around my age, then I tend not to put much value in said criticism.

As for awards for direction, I don't think any of the OT films got awards for direction either, did they? How about acting? I don't remember seeing Mark Hammill punching the air when he received an Oscar for delivering such deathless dialogue as "But I was going into Tosche station to pick up some power converters".

thecoloursblend. Sounds like you go to the same cinemas as zombie. I saw each of the prequels twice each - no laughter at any of those serious moments we've been talking about. Sounds like you went to lots of screenings in lots of different places, though. Maybe the audiences with whom I saw the films are not so easily amused. (I have absolutely no idea what "Palpatine's Gollum moment" is.)

As for Titanic, I thought it was a dreadful picture and still do. By the way, one of my favourite ever films is It's A Wonderful Life. Guess how many Oscars that received?



That's some bad hat, Harry
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Easterhay said:

thecoloursblend. Sounds like you go to the same cinemas as zombie. I saw each of the prequels twice each - no laughter at any of those serious moments we've been talking about. Sounds like you went to lots of screenings in lots of different places, though.
I saw AOTC three times and ROTS at least four. One of each of those was the midnight premiere. People laughed at those unintentionally funny moments in each screening.

Easterhay said:

Maybe the audiences with whom I saw the films are not so easily amused. (I have absolutely no idea what "Palpatine's Gollum moment" is.)
2:31: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pk4AiCnMqpg

All I really want is each film as it was originally seen and heard in theaters; no fixes, corrections, "improvements" or modifications necessary.

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Well, I can only refer you back to what I said before - I would question their level of maturity.

That link is telling me the video is unavailable. I did a Google search on Palpatine's Gollum moment and got nothing either.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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adywan said:

Easterhay said:

Of course, folk who post on internet forums don't have an ego, do they? No, nary a whiff of ego round here...

..or attitude... ;)

Easterhay said:

I have an attitude but it isn't a bad one. If you think differently to this, don't be afraid t say so (it's much better to talk straight than hide behind snide remarks, I always find).

Didn't the wink at the end give you a clue that there was no snide intent to my post and was meant in jest?

You seem to be so paranoid that everyone is attacking you, you are coming across as having a bad attitude and the only snide comments seem to be coming from you.

ANH:REVISITED
ESB:REVISITED

DONATIONS TOWARDS MATERIALS FOR THE REVISITED SAGA

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Well, perfect paranoia is perfect awareness apparently.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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Not at all - I can see how the absence of any hieroglyphics in my post might have given the wrong impression, though.

However, you might have unwittingly made it look as though it was an attack (although that's too strong a word, I think). Ergo, you said you put a wink at the end of your post to indicate humour and then in your next post you accused me straight up of looking like I have an attitude.

No harm done, anyway, adywan. All is cool as far as I'm concerned.

That's some bad hat, Harry
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Easterhay said:

Well, I can only refer you back to what I said before - I would question their level of maturity.
Works fine for me.

All I really want is each film as it was originally seen and heard in theaters; no fixes, corrections, "improvements" or modifications necessary.