- Post
- #160341
- Topic
- Radio Drama Scripts??
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/160341/action/topic#160341
- Time

Tim Lehrbach
- User Group
- Members
- Join date
- 6-Sep-2004
- Last activity
- 6-Nov-2011
- Posts
- 127
Post History
- Post
- #160336
- Topic
- Found this quote from Lucas about the Fans from May '05
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/160336/action/topic#160336
- Time
1. Why do the Prequels suck Mr. Lucas?
"Because the older generation controls the media, and they are mad they aren't just like the originals. They refuse to accept that I had this whole backstory planned out in detail, and it was always my vision to have Anakin create C-3PO, the midichlorians where always the origin of the Force, I wanted everyone in the OT to sound old and vague by never explaining it in detail, when I filmed ROTJ, Hayden haden't been born yet so we had to wait for that, in the meantime we grabbed some old guy named Sabastian Shaw, who we thought might closely resemble Hayden by the time we made Sith, unfortunately shaw's peformance wasn't good, so I decided to CGI Hayden's head onto Shaws body for emoting purposes."
2. Why did you make so many changes to the OT Mr. Lucas?
"It was always my vision to have these films look this way, we just didn't have the technology back then to do it, for example, back in 77' we never could have made Greedo shoot first, or Luke scream when he's falling in Cloud City, or make Des Webb act like he was in pain properly after Luke cut the Wampa's arm off, and that noise Obi-Wan makes to scare the sandpeople off...that is a noise only just now we are able to create, and Luke was supposed to have a green saber in ANH..and, and, and...."
3. You know there are alot of fans out there that would like the unaltered OT released in DVD, why is it you don't wan't to release it?.
"Because as I said before the Special Editions are my original vision, and cuz I don't wanna, I need to be a prat, and refuse to acknowledge that those films exist anymore, I don't really give a shit the vast majority of fans that grew up on that stuff, helped make be the rich famous person I am today, which in turn help me develop the technology to sufficently screw with these films.....what was the question again?...Oh and by the way, due to fan demand we have decided to release Ewoks, Caravan of Courage on DVD."
4. Do you plan to make more changes to both the prequels and OT?
"Yea, well I suppose I will, because the more I sit and evalute the OT film effects the more flaws I find, when I compare them to the PT effects...I may eventually have to CG the entire OT so that it matches more closely. originally we where goig to make more changes to the 2004 OT DVD boxset, but becuase It took so long, I decided to release it incomplete anyway, and deemed it good enough at the time, most fans will understand that it has a few minor issues, such as the sound is off, the color hues, Luke's green saber in ANH...no, that was intended...my bad."
5. Is it possible that the Original Trilogy fans are just uptight, and want to complain.
"Yes, I think that's the case, there's no valid reason they shouldn't like all the changes I've made to these films...They need to get a life, then someday when they create a successful film, they can take their own films and fuck with them all they want, and arrogantly snub their noses at the people that made me, I mean them so rich and succesful."
- Post
- #160025
- Topic
- redeeming lucas
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/160025/action/topic#160025
- Time
Originally posted by: Adamwankenobi
Exactly.
Perhaps someday I may see how it feels to have something done as Lucas did to the OOT. But, at this moment in time, I don't really care if he makes changes to the PT. I guess you could say that I welcome change.
Exactly.
Perhaps someday I may see how it feels to have something done as Lucas did to the OOT. But, at this moment in time, I don't really care if he makes changes to the PT. I guess you could say that I welcome change.
Any change to the Prequels would be welcome, but even those should be preserved in thier original versions...to me it makes about as much sense as taking a famous painting like the Mona Lisa making a copy of it, then Da Vinci painting corn rows into her hair and a Hummer in the background, then refusing to acknowlegde the original painting, saying it doesn't exist anymore...(being dramatic.)
- Post
- #160023
- Topic
- redeeming lucas
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/160023/action/topic#160023
- Time
In fact I don't care what Luca wants to do with future versions of his movies, as long as he could just acknowledge that his original films have the right to be preserved as well, and leaves the option available for people to buy it unaltered if they so desire...istead he gives us this "they are my films, and in my mind the originals don't exist anymore" I only hope someday the guy develops a grain of sentiment, and respect for the preservation of films in an unaltered format.
- Post
- #160020
- Topic
- redeeming lucas
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/160020/action/topic#160020
- Time
My kids like them, and that's what matters to me....Hell, my 13 yr old daughter thinks AOTC is the best one (go figure), and she also likes Harry Potter, that Narnia stuff and the OC...even though I don't get the younger generations taste, I just smile and figure kids look at these films different than we do.
My 4 yr old son is a little more like I was at his age, and likes ROTS, but always laughs at the Vader "nooo" and Palpatine hamming it up before he zaps Mace, even though I'd like to tell him I don't think it was intended to be funny, kids have a different take on these movies then we do.
Adam and the younger generation can love these films all they want, but need to understand that when they get older, they might understand a little better if someone takes something you grew up on and alters it in not such appealing ways.
- Post
- #159799
- Topic
- A list of strange interpretations in the Prequels.
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159799/action/topic#159799
- Time
I've had big problems with how old Anakin and Obi-Wan were supposed to be in the prequels...which I feel has led to a rolling stone of other problems (mainly in 1 & 2).
Based on apperance I'd have to say Obi-Wan appears to be 70+ in ANH when he dies. And Anakin in ROTJ appears to be 50+ when he appears as a ghost.
Going on those assumptions and the roughly 19 year gap between PT and OT, my guess is Obi-Wan should have been at least 50 years old in ROTS , and Anakin 30+.
I think by Lucas making these two characters too young in the PT, he really short-changed the stories for I & 2 and in turn effected Episode 3 to an extent. (below)
And as I've said before, Lucas turned two classic OT characters Yoda & Emperor, into cheap entertainment devices with their uncharacteristic lightsaber skills, Yoda is hardly unconfrontational...A Jedi uses their power for Knowlege and events never for attack..... tell that to Yoda while he grabs his little green stuff, poses like Jet Li, and flips around with a bad attitude....So much for the image I had of those two being like mystic sage's, using their knowlege, and having powers above fighting and flipping.
And as far as some things that people wanted to see in the prequels:
The relationship between Anakin and Obi-Wan: Basically non existant in TPM, since Obi-Wan didn't even discover him, and then in AOTC Anakin was busy trying to overcome Padme' with crappy romantic dialogue. Only in Episode 3 do we get a taste, and Obi-Wan is sent to deal with a loose plot point in Grievous for almost the entire film.
Anakin, Bail and Kenobi's exploits during the Clone Wars: This was mostly explained away as happening between 2 & 3, and Bail is thrown in rapidly to fill plot points....I won't even get into the Clone Wars itself, just the fact there needs to be a cartoon to explain things, says enough...
The rise of the Empire: Way too rushed, in ROTS, we see order 66, and a declaration of a new Empire from Palpatine (duing a Bush imitation), and before you know it we see Star Destroyers and Vader standing on the bridge looking out onto a Death Star in construction...
The manipulation and fall of Anakin: Luckily this is a strong point in Episode 3 as far as getting extended dialogue between Palpatine and Anakin, some of it is pretty good, but again considering the amount of carefull manipulation Palpatine has done up this point, he is quick to throw "I know the darkside" at Anakin, and I don't think it's a very feasable fall to the darkside, I love my wife, but I'm not sure that I would turn into a massive child serial killer for the chance of "possibly" saving her life, even if there was a 100% guarentee, I'm pretty sure she wouldn't be for that option either...Is it even possible to die from a broken heart?
The force ghosts: After ROTJ, I didn't know what to make of that, weither all Jedi had the power, it only lasted for a certain period of time or what...All I know is Qui-Gon discovered some secret and told Yoda...who told Obi-Wan....Safe to say it's still not explained.
the extinction of the Jedi order: Palpatine I guess had some trigger called, order 66 (homage to 666?)ingrained into the Clones while they where being made (sponsored by the mysterious Sifo Dyas) , they then proceed to kill off almost all the Jedi in what seemed like a day. Anakin kills children, and the Clones kill most of the Jedi....shouldn't that have been turned around? did we even need to see Jedi children?.
All of these important plot points to the OT seemed rushed, unsatisfatory in explanation or explained away as happening between Episodes .
I'd like to here some other takes.
- Post
- #159711
- Topic
- phantom menace first thoughts
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159711/action/topic#159711
- Time
I never went in expecting the prequels to be better or worse as the OT. But knowing what Star Wars was about, and viewing them as impartially as I could, I didn't feel (at least after the first 2) that they were of good substance, I supposed I am quilty of being biased though, at least of thinking I would enjoy them. I'll admit both 1 & 2 had some good moments here and there, but based on judging the first two on just being movies (Star Wars or not), I didn't come away feeling they were all that great.
Episode 3 really had a chance to be even better than it was, I just felt some moments here and there really took away from it being a great film, as it stands to me, it's an entertaining film, but with some tweeking, could have been so much better...
Thinking about things, I almost wish Lucas had only made episode 3, since it probably could have stood by itself (with a few changes) without the first two drawn out air-filled backstories.
- Post
- #159463
- Topic
- phantom menace first thoughts
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159463/action/topic#159463
- Time
I've heard the argument that I'm using my old expectations of the OT to compare the prequels with, so I've set my self up to be dissapointed, which is complete bullshit. I enjoy movies from all generations, and don't judge films based on if they are black & white, have outdated special effects or outdated acting or if it has 5.1 THX stereo surround or not, I can recognize weither a film I watch is enjoyable, has a good story and acting and overall is of good quality or not...I can say without hesitation, the prequels lack all the essential qualities the OT had, other than effects/technology, they just don't have the quality depth of story, enjoyable characters or imaginative dialogue including humor. It all just comes off as forced creativeness.
Lucas is a great storyteller, but I think since and partially during ROTJ he's lost touch with alot of essential qualities, which made his other films so classic.
And If anyone was wondering, I was 6 when I saw ANH for the first time.
- Post
- #159104
- Topic
- If the Prequels had been made first would they have succeeded?
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159104/action/topic#159104
- Time
To make a long story short, the Queen and Anakin would echo Han and Leia's love/hate relationship, Qui-Gon and Anakin end up joining Obi-Wan on his crusade......no Gungans, no Midichlorians, no Immaculate conception and the Mandalore would have been the Invasion army not the droids..ect.
But this is the wrong thread for my Episode I.
- Post
- #159092
- Topic
- phantom menace first thoughts
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159092/action/topic#159092
- Time
But after AOTC, I felt like it was all over for salvaging the prequels, they forever would be a blackmark on the once proud franchise...I remember thinking how much worse it was than TPM....The love story was complete drivel, the Yoda CG was inconsistant, Obi-Wan's mullet was laughable, the sets looked like they were out of Star Trek TNG series, the Geonosis arena battles were a joke, the droid factory scene was an embarassment, and Cartoony Yoda posing like Crouching Tiger and fighting like Sonic the Hedgehog was so over the top I felt they completely destroyed any credibility the puppet once had.
I didn't hold up any hopes for ROTS, and thought it was OK after I left the theatre, after multiple viewings it's easily the best of the three and about roughly as good as ROTJ In my book.
For all its lame Gungan and droid antics I still think TPM is more faithfull to the OT than AOTC is.
- Post
- #159090
- Topic
- Wookies vs Ewoks in ROTJ.
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159090/action/topic#159090
- Time
- Post
- #159088
- Topic
- Wookies vs Ewoks in ROTJ.
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/159088/action/topic#159088
- Time
I have to believe back in 83' it would have been possible to show a computer in a tree house.
- Post
- #158991
- Topic
- Wookies vs Ewoks in ROTJ.
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158991/action/topic#158991
- Time
Budget wise i'm sure it would have cost him more money, but I hardly think that ROTJ would have lost money just by making Wookie suits vs Ewok suits...and is it any cheaper to hire dwarves over tall actors?
Is there something I'm missing from this?
- Post
- #158973
- Topic
- Why the saga has suffered because ESB was so good (IMO)
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158973/action/topic#158973
- Time
It really is a shame, what might have been...
Some interesting comments:
IGNFF: Well what were the original outlines for the prequels? Since they can be compared and contrasted now that the first one's out there, and the second one's soon to be out there. Were there major differences from what you saw, from the original outlines of prequel ideas?
KURTZ: Well a lot of the prequel ideas were very, very vague. It's really difficult to say. I can't remember much about that at all, except dealing with the Clone Wars and the formation of the Jedi Knights in the first place – that was supposed to be one of the keys of Episode I, was going to be how the Jedi Knights came to be. But all of those notes were abandoned completely. One of the reasons Jedi came out the way it did was because the story outline of how Jedi was going to be seemed to get tossed out, and one of the reasons I was really unhappy was the fact that all of the carefully constructed story structure of characters and things that we did in Empire was going to carry over into Jedi. The resolution of that film was going to be quite bittersweet, with Han Solo being killed, and the princess having to take over as queen of what remained of her people, leaving everybody else. In effect, Luke was left on his own. None of that happened, of course.
IGNFF: So it would have been less of a fairy-tale ending?
KURTZ: Much, much less. It would have been quite sad, and poignant and upbeat at the same time, because they would have won a battle. But the idea of another attack on another Death Star wasn't there at all ... it was a rehash of Star Wars, with better visual effects. And there were no Ewoks ... it was just entirely different. It was much more adult and straightforward, the story. This idea that the roller-coaster ride was all the audience was interested in, and the story doesn't have to be very adult or interesting, seemed to come up because of what happened with Raiders of the Lost Ark and the Indiana Jones films – and the fact that that seemed to make a lot of money and it didn't matter whether there was a really good story or not – that wasn't what this kind of film was about. We had serious differences about a lot of that.
IGNFF: How did you observe that change in George, because obviously he was the one who guided it towards that lack of depth...
KURTZ: Well, I think that he felt Empire was an ordeal for him – using his own money, it went over budget and over schedule a bit. Kershner was slow, we had some problems with Mark Hamill who had an injury – typical movie stuff, really. But even though it did cost a little more than was budgeted, there was no way it was ever going to lose money. He really didn't have to worry too much about it – the combination of the merchandising and the distribution would never be a problem.
IGNFF: It was never George's intention to direct Empire?
KURTZ: No, no. After Star Wars, he didn't really want to direct the others. I think he was unhappy that I – I'm the one that recommended Kershner, and had worked with him before. I think he was a good choice for Empire, I think he worked really well, but he wasn't the kind of director... George, I think, had in the back of his mind that the director was a sort of stand-in – that he could phone him up every night and tell him what to do and kind of direct vicariously over the telephone. That never happened. Kershner's not that kind of director, and even when George showed up a couple of times on the set, he found that it wasn't easy to maneuver Kershner into doing what he would have done.
So, on Jedi, he was determined to find a director who was easy to control, basically, and he did. And that was the result, basically – the film was sort of one that George might have directed if he had directed it himself... but maybe not, because it goes through so many interim bits, that if he had directed it probably would have been quite different.
IGNFF: For better or worse?
KURTZ: I think probably for better. But, I don't know, because as I said, he had gotten into this mode of saying that the audience is interested in the rollercoaster ride and that he could make just as much money, and it doesn't have to be complicated, doesn't have to have as difficult a story. There are a lot of other people who do that all the time – that's they're kind of movie making philosophy, the sort of Jerry Bruckheimer approach to movies. A lot of Hollywood movies have been based on the idea that the story is the subtext of the action, so that's certainly nothing new. But it's not very satisfying, I don't think, personally. But, you can make a lot of money, and if that's what you want to do, then you do it that way.
IGNFF: And, overall, your opinion on Episode I would be?
KURTZ: Well, I don't know that I'm a very impartial observer. As I said, I knew what some of the history was about and what it could have been in terms of way back when we were talking about it, so in that sense just going to see the film and seeing the way it turned out was a disappointment because of my built-in connection to all of that past. That's not fair for the film, because the film isn't that film, or it isn't one of the ones that we talked about – it's a different film, with a different script. But I think I'm objective enough to say that even given that parameter and given the script that they ended up with, I felt it was very, very weak. It isn't very dramatic and I was very bored in watching it. There were no surprises ... nothing that was unexpected, and there wasn't anything that I was looking forward to. I was quite disappointed, actually.
I had a long discussion after that first time I saw it, because I saw it at the opening weekend when I was at a Star Wars Science Fiction Convention in Dallas, Texas – the big one. There were about 8,000 people. The next day, lots of people asked me about it, and I said, "Well, I'm not the one really to ask about it. You either like it or you don't." In talking to smaller groups, and some of the people I was with, it felt to me like the dramatic potential of the story and the way the story went wasn't handled as well as it might have been, and that's always a very subjective thing. There are lots of ways you can do it. Any ten filmmakers would have taken the same script and made it ten different ways. I'm not sure how valid that kind of criticism is. In the end, it's what you like or don't like. As I said before, there's no good or bad or right or wrong, so to say you don't like something is perfectly valid. To say it isn't great, because I would have made it better, is not so valid.
IGNFF: Do you think that he felt he'd outgrown the need for a set of controls... A "no-man"?
KURTZ: I don't know. I don't think we ever talked about it in those terms, but I think that he did chafe a bit under the idea of someone saying "that's not a good idea," some of the time. At the very end of Empire ... we decided at the very last minute – we pretty much locked the picture in the mix and just getting ready to make 70mm prints – and we decided that there had to an extra shot at the very end, to identify this rebel fleet.
If you remember how the end works, it's before you go into the medical department, who are working on Mark's hand. It's the establishing shot of the fleet, and we had a shot already of going into the window and showing Mark inside, and we just decided that it was confusing We didn't know exactly how that was sorted out, so we wanted a long shot at the beginning, and then one at the end that shows the whole fleet when the Falcon flies off. They weren't very difficult to do, and all the ships were there ... just pile up the composites, and they were rushed through, just to get it done. Very last minute. One of them wasn't particularly good, and George said, "Oh well, maybe we should just let it go."
I said, "It's worth at least one more go through. One bad shot can ruin the whole movie, basically." Which I really believe is true, and it just wasn't very good. It was just a compositing problem, had nothing to do with the individual shot elements – I can't even remember what shot it was, now. I think making a movie wears everybody down. You have to be really careful of the decisions you make at the very end, because you can kind of throw a monkey wrench in, very easily.
KURTZ: Well a lot of the prequel ideas were very, very vague. It's really difficult to say. I can't remember much about that at all, except dealing with the Clone Wars and the formation of the Jedi Knights in the first place – that was supposed to be one of the keys of Episode I, was going to be how the Jedi Knights came to be. But all of those notes were abandoned completely. One of the reasons Jedi came out the way it did was because the story outline of how Jedi was going to be seemed to get tossed out, and one of the reasons I was really unhappy was the fact that all of the carefully constructed story structure of characters and things that we did in Empire was going to carry over into Jedi. The resolution of that film was going to be quite bittersweet, with Han Solo being killed, and the princess having to take over as queen of what remained of her people, leaving everybody else. In effect, Luke was left on his own. None of that happened, of course.
IGNFF: So it would have been less of a fairy-tale ending?
KURTZ: Much, much less. It would have been quite sad, and poignant and upbeat at the same time, because they would have won a battle. But the idea of another attack on another Death Star wasn't there at all ... it was a rehash of Star Wars, with better visual effects. And there were no Ewoks ... it was just entirely different. It was much more adult and straightforward, the story. This idea that the roller-coaster ride was all the audience was interested in, and the story doesn't have to be very adult or interesting, seemed to come up because of what happened with Raiders of the Lost Ark and the Indiana Jones films – and the fact that that seemed to make a lot of money and it didn't matter whether there was a really good story or not – that wasn't what this kind of film was about. We had serious differences about a lot of that.
IGNFF: How did you observe that change in George, because obviously he was the one who guided it towards that lack of depth...
KURTZ: Well, I think that he felt Empire was an ordeal for him – using his own money, it went over budget and over schedule a bit. Kershner was slow, we had some problems with Mark Hamill who had an injury – typical movie stuff, really. But even though it did cost a little more than was budgeted, there was no way it was ever going to lose money. He really didn't have to worry too much about it – the combination of the merchandising and the distribution would never be a problem.
IGNFF: It was never George's intention to direct Empire?
KURTZ: No, no. After Star Wars, he didn't really want to direct the others. I think he was unhappy that I – I'm the one that recommended Kershner, and had worked with him before. I think he was a good choice for Empire, I think he worked really well, but he wasn't the kind of director... George, I think, had in the back of his mind that the director was a sort of stand-in – that he could phone him up every night and tell him what to do and kind of direct vicariously over the telephone. That never happened. Kershner's not that kind of director, and even when George showed up a couple of times on the set, he found that it wasn't easy to maneuver Kershner into doing what he would have done.
So, on Jedi, he was determined to find a director who was easy to control, basically, and he did. And that was the result, basically – the film was sort of one that George might have directed if he had directed it himself... but maybe not, because it goes through so many interim bits, that if he had directed it probably would have been quite different.
IGNFF: For better or worse?
KURTZ: I think probably for better. But, I don't know, because as I said, he had gotten into this mode of saying that the audience is interested in the rollercoaster ride and that he could make just as much money, and it doesn't have to be complicated, doesn't have to have as difficult a story. There are a lot of other people who do that all the time – that's they're kind of movie making philosophy, the sort of Jerry Bruckheimer approach to movies. A lot of Hollywood movies have been based on the idea that the story is the subtext of the action, so that's certainly nothing new. But it's not very satisfying, I don't think, personally. But, you can make a lot of money, and if that's what you want to do, then you do it that way.
IGNFF: And, overall, your opinion on Episode I would be?
KURTZ: Well, I don't know that I'm a very impartial observer. As I said, I knew what some of the history was about and what it could have been in terms of way back when we were talking about it, so in that sense just going to see the film and seeing the way it turned out was a disappointment because of my built-in connection to all of that past. That's not fair for the film, because the film isn't that film, or it isn't one of the ones that we talked about – it's a different film, with a different script. But I think I'm objective enough to say that even given that parameter and given the script that they ended up with, I felt it was very, very weak. It isn't very dramatic and I was very bored in watching it. There were no surprises ... nothing that was unexpected, and there wasn't anything that I was looking forward to. I was quite disappointed, actually.
I had a long discussion after that first time I saw it, because I saw it at the opening weekend when I was at a Star Wars Science Fiction Convention in Dallas, Texas – the big one. There were about 8,000 people. The next day, lots of people asked me about it, and I said, "Well, I'm not the one really to ask about it. You either like it or you don't." In talking to smaller groups, and some of the people I was with, it felt to me like the dramatic potential of the story and the way the story went wasn't handled as well as it might have been, and that's always a very subjective thing. There are lots of ways you can do it. Any ten filmmakers would have taken the same script and made it ten different ways. I'm not sure how valid that kind of criticism is. In the end, it's what you like or don't like. As I said before, there's no good or bad or right or wrong, so to say you don't like something is perfectly valid. To say it isn't great, because I would have made it better, is not so valid.
IGNFF: Do you think that he felt he'd outgrown the need for a set of controls... A "no-man"?
KURTZ: I don't know. I don't think we ever talked about it in those terms, but I think that he did chafe a bit under the idea of someone saying "that's not a good idea," some of the time. At the very end of Empire ... we decided at the very last minute – we pretty much locked the picture in the mix and just getting ready to make 70mm prints – and we decided that there had to an extra shot at the very end, to identify this rebel fleet.
If you remember how the end works, it's before you go into the medical department, who are working on Mark's hand. It's the establishing shot of the fleet, and we had a shot already of going into the window and showing Mark inside, and we just decided that it was confusing We didn't know exactly how that was sorted out, so we wanted a long shot at the beginning, and then one at the end that shows the whole fleet when the Falcon flies off. They weren't very difficult to do, and all the ships were there ... just pile up the composites, and they were rushed through, just to get it done. Very last minute. One of them wasn't particularly good, and George said, "Oh well, maybe we should just let it go."
I said, "It's worth at least one more go through. One bad shot can ruin the whole movie, basically." Which I really believe is true, and it just wasn't very good. It was just a compositing problem, had nothing to do with the individual shot elements – I can't even remember what shot it was, now. I think making a movie wears everybody down. You have to be really careful of the decisions you make at the very end, because you can kind of throw a monkey wrench in, very easily.
So basically George Lucas turned to the darkside, falling victim to the "it's good enough", the quicker, flashier, easier, more seductive ways to making a film, and became like the monopolizing executives he hated when starting out to make Star Wars.
The Irony...
- Post
- #158883
- Topic
- It's official, George is really losing it (claims more changes to the OT to come...)
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158883/action/topic#158883
- Time
Cleaned up mattes.
Improved saber effects/ laser blasts.
McDermid RE-SHOOTING his scene in ESB with the original dialogue.
This may seems strange but I'd keep in eyebrowless-Anakin.
- Post
- #158766
- Topic
- If the Prequels had been made first would they have succeeded?
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158766/action/topic#158766
- Time
For those who haven't seen early drafts before ANH look here:
Early SW Scripts
- Post
- #158597
- Topic
- If the Prequels had been made first would they have succeeded?
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158597/action/topic#158597
- Time
I'll put it this way, it always comes off like a grandfather exaggerating about walking ten miles to school every day and walking uphill both ways.
I have no doubt some ideas/characters he had written early on where used for the prequels, but the vast majority of the material he created for the PT screenplays came from doing it as he went along, and trying to fit things together between the two trilogies, I know some old cenceptual McQuarrie artwork was used in ROTS (Vader on Mustafar). but IMO he no more had the prequel backstory already planned out during the OT than most of us did.
Honestly, I wish the prequels would have been made a few years after ROTJ, I think CG dummed down the prequels to the point where the actors and depth of the character driven story almost seemed like it wasn't as important as before, Yoda and the Emperor were far more interesting when they wern't doing flips and wielding lightsabers, i'll take a puppet Yoda or Jabba to a CG version, and a Stormtrooper over a Battle Droid any day...It seems Lucas was far more inventive when he was more limited effects wise.
- Post
- #158307
- Topic
- HI-Res Poster Art
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158307/action/topic#158307
- Time
The image I remember seeing was even wider and in Hi-Res, I did have it but as I mentioned in the first post all my images where wiped out by corrupted zip discs...This thread definately has helped out alot.
I planned on using the trilogy image for a box set, I was also going to Photoshop the prequel posters and combine them all in the same way.
- Post
- #158153
- Topic
- HI-Res Poster Art
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158153/action/topic#158153
- Time
There was a link to the Hi-Res artwork posted somewhere, I can't find it any longer, anyone know the page it was posted on? Or better yet, can someone repost the image if they have it?
I'd really appreciate it.
- Post
- #158007
- Topic
- HI-Res Poster Art
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/158007/action/topic#158007
- Time
I know someone posted a link for this awhile back...I can't find it anywhere.
I'm looking for the artwork that has all three original trilogy posters combined into a wide landscape picture.
Another way of describing it is there is a small picture of this image that comes on the back of the Definitive Collection Laerdiscs.
- Post
- #157070
- Topic
- Yoda & Emperor PT vs OT
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/157070/action/topic#157070
- Time
Personally I would have liked if Palpatine would have been more subtle at revealing it at a later point to Anakin after he had already turned to the darkside, while talking to Anakin about the power of the darkside and simply turning around in his chair.
As it stands, one of my kids at first viewing thought maybe the lighting itself scarred Palpatine, instead of it revealing his true identity.
- Post
- #157055
- Topic
- Yoda & Emperor PT vs OT
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/157055/action/topic#157055
- Time
I believe McDiarmid wasn't thrilled about the lightsaber move either, but being the professional he is, did it without making a big issue out of it.
I understand the need to CG Yoda in the PT, because he does have to move around quite a bit, but I thought a more faithful way of doing this would be to take an exact replica of the original puppet, and use it for all closeup/talking scenes, then CG his movements walking from behind or a distance..ect.
I think the CG Yoda in ROTS is very well done, and at times doesn't even bother me that he is CG, but there still are times where his look and movement when compared to the puppet seem too far off, the AOTC Yoda is very inconsistant, and TPM Yoda looks completely different altogether (which they are changing for re-release thankfully).
There's no changing the CG aspect of Yoda in the PT, but hopefully using the Episode 3 model they will clean up AOTC quite a bit.
The ROTS Emperor acts far more over the top than I ever expected, and although McDiarmid face has changed a bit with age, the makeup is far more extreme...And if I may continue to bitch, I didn't totally agree with Palpatine's own lighting being directed back at him as the method for exposing his true identity, I've always liked the idea of the Dark Side decaying him over time, although it is a stretch to show an old normal looking Paplatine in ROTS, then in ESB showing a strange mutated Palpatine.
I have to think there was a more skillful method of revealing Palpatine's look.
- Post
- #157039
- Topic
- ANH Space Battle aka The Battle of Yavin
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/157039/action/topic#157039
- Time
In some SE scenes where CG replaced has replaced the X-Wing and Tie models, I felt it improved the scene dramatically (the Tie Fighters seem to benefit the most from CG), but in other scenes the artificial movement of CG models stand out more than the original model effects did...it all depends on the scene.
I still feel that some scenes in the OT look far more realistic with model effects vs CG in the PT, because they actually were using real materials and real movement vs artifical movement and design.
- Post
- #156800
- Topic
- Reasons to hate the Special Editions
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/156800/action/topic#156800
- Time
To me Episode 3 Anakin should actually be the look of Episode 2 Anakin, and Episode 3 Anakin should resemble Shaw's look, but again it's all conceptual flaws IMO.
- Post
- #156409
- Topic
- Idea: MY phantom edit
- Link
- https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/156409/action/topic#156409
- Time
One thing that bothers me to no end are the Jedi rat tails, it would almost be worth it to me to eliminate them from every frame of TPM and AOTC...I don't know if this bothers the hell out of anyone else, but I could never stand the look.
I haven't watched TPM for awhile, but I wonder if there is a way to completely eliminate the Gungan battle scenes, removing any reference to it and doing it without without adding subtitles to Jar Jar, since I don't like any of the altered versions of Jar Jar's voice I've heard so far...there are already 3 other action sequences going on at the end of TPM, giving the axe to the Gungan battle would be my preference.