How to fix Episode III
Moderator: Vympel
Personally, I believe Ep. III's troubles began with Ep. 1. It seemed a total rehash of IV's self-contained "in-case-it-bombs" plot. So instead of having three movies to tell the story of Anakin's life as a Jedi, the Clone Wars, the rise of the Empire, and the fall of Anakin Skywalker, we get two. I don't think that's enough time (unless we're talking LOTR run-times), and I think it really showed.
But if we're only talking about Ep. III changes, I would redo the Battle of Coruscant, taking out all the worthless buzz-droid and R2-elevator jacking out to focus on more important things, like establishing Anakin and Obi-Wan's brotherly relationship, then expand on Anakin's dreams, the reasons for being so angry over being refused a mastership, and change Palpatine so he's not some cackling maniac. Personally, I thought it would have been better if: 1. Palpatine had done no fighting and Anakin had instead, and 2. Have Padme shoot Vader on Mustafar, saving Obi-Wan and mutilating Vader, just to give her a purpose in the movie besides baby-carrier.
But if we're only talking about Ep. III changes, I would redo the Battle of Coruscant, taking out all the worthless buzz-droid and R2-elevator jacking out to focus on more important things, like establishing Anakin and Obi-Wan's brotherly relationship, then expand on Anakin's dreams, the reasons for being so angry over being refused a mastership, and change Palpatine so he's not some cackling maniac. Personally, I thought it would have been better if: 1. Palpatine had done no fighting and Anakin had instead, and 2. Have Padme shoot Vader on Mustafar, saving Obi-Wan and mutilating Vader, just to give her a purpose in the movie besides baby-carrier.
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Agreed. The most one could do to fix Episode III is to first fix Episodes I and II. Considering what it was saddled with, the relative success of RotS is a minor miracle. Story-wise, TPM was a complete and utter waste of time focusing on largely superfluous events. Would *anyone* miss the pod race? The Life Aquatic with Qwi-Gon Jinn? The Battle of Endor revisited? TPM isn't horrible, but it should be Star Wars 0, not Star Wars I.
I was *relieved* with how good Episode III was, all things considered. Its biggest flaws began years before the opening crawl.
I was *relieved* with how good Episode III was, all things considered. Its biggest flaws began years before the opening crawl.
I read it a long time ago and as a case study in paranoid delusions on the part of the author, it ranks right up there with Lee Harvey Oswald's diary. The whole book can be summed up as follows:Galvatron wrote:Well, I definitely called that one. You never even bothered to read it, did you?Elfdart wrote:Not that pile of horseshit again.
Lucas didn't do what I wanted with his movies, so he's a liar and an asshole.
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EDIT: I had a post here, but removed it, as I am going away for a couple of weeks and did not want to start a discussion I could not finish before that. My apologies.
"But there's no story past Episode VI, there's just no story. It's a certain story about Anakin Skywalker and once Anakin Skywalker dies, that's kind of the end of the story. There is no story about Luke Skywalker, I mean apart from the books."
-George "Evil" Lucas
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To be honest, I think that any criticism of Star Wars movies which spends time attacking George Lucas' personality absolutely reeks of a poisoned well, and does not really indicate fairness.
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
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"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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That doesn't sound any less like an attack on GL to me.Galvatron wrote:I'd be happy to leave his personality out of this. His own words are damning enough without having to delve into his psyche.
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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We attack them primarily by examining the flaws in their work, not by looking at their personal histories. If their personal histories are brought up, it should be as a side-note. When someone studies a person's life and career history and brings that up as a form of film criticism, it's a red-herring and suggests a loss of objectivity. I know I've always hated the style of film review which spends a lot of time discussing the critic's personal opinion of the creator. That type of film review is utterly useless (something I mentioned when discussing Adam Sandler's new film).Galvatron wrote:I'm not sure why that matters. Do we not attack Gene Roddenberry? Berman and Braga? The Wachowskis?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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Okay, I can agree with that. However, if one wants to know WHY their work is flawed and the information is available to find out, what's the harm in discussing it?
For example, a lot of TNG's kookiest foibles can be traced directly back to Gene Roddenberry and his utopian worldview. Is that an attack?
For example, a lot of TNG's kookiest foibles can be traced directly back to Gene Roddenberry and his utopian worldview. Is that an attack?
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None, as long as it's not done as a way of establishing that the work is flawed.Galvatron wrote:Okay, I can agree with that. However, if one wants to know WHY their work is flawed and the information is available to find out, what's the harm in discussing it?
Of course it's an attack. The question is whether it's taking the place of a legitimate criticism of the content of TNG itself. One can tear apart TNG's idiotic utopian worldview without ever knowing who Gene Roddenberry was, and a critique along those lines should reflect that fact. Going after Gene Roddenberry should only be done AFTER one has independently established the foibles in question.For example, a lot of TNG's kookiest foibles can be traced directly back to Gene Roddenberry and his utopian worldview. Is that an attack?
"It's not evil for God to do it. Or for someone to do it at God's command."- Jonathan Boyd on baby-killing
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
"you guys are fascinated with the use of those "rules of logic" to the extent that you don't really want to discussus anything."- GC
"I do not believe Russian Roulette is a stupid act" - Embracer of Darkness
"Viagra commercials appear to save lives" - tharkûn on US health care.
http://www.stardestroyer.net/Mike/RantMode/Blurbs.html
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In that sense, I think I've been staying on course and attacking Lucas insofar as I believe his personal issues directly affect the product he's selling.
Take, for example, the crumbling of his marriage and how it directly affected his stated plans to make nine films. I can't fault the man for wrapping things up in ROTJ because knowing WHY he did so actually makes me sympathize with him.
I guess I'm just left wondering why biographical information about George Lucas is suddenly taboo, especially where it relates to Star Wars. Or am I misunderstanding?
Take, for example, the crumbling of his marriage and how it directly affected his stated plans to make nine films. I can't fault the man for wrapping things up in ROTJ because knowing WHY he did so actually makes me sympathize with him.
I guess I'm just left wondering why biographical information about George Lucas is suddenly taboo, especially where it relates to Star Wars. Or am I misunderstanding?
We've already been over this bullshit: Both George Lucas and Gary Kurtz agree that their statements about 9 or 12 movies were meant to show how much material they thought they had, not a plan -and certainly not a promise- to do 9 or 12 movies.Galvatron wrote: Take, for example, the crumbling of his marriage and how it directly affected his stated plans to make nine films. I can't fault the man for wrapping things up in ROTJ because knowing WHY he did so actually makes me sympathize with him.
Your amateur psychoanalysis is shit for the birds, too. Lucas began ROTJ in 1981 -2 years before his wife ran off with another man.
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Yes, we have been over this. And you neglected to answer me the last time I quoted Lucas himself about it, as you requested.Elfdart wrote:We've already been over this bullshit: Both George Lucas and Gary Kurtz agree that their statements about 9 or 12 movies were meant to show how much material they thought they had, not a plan -and certainly not a promise- to do 9 or 12 movies.Galvatron wrote: Take, for example, the crumbling of his marriage and how it directly affected his stated plans to make nine films. I can't fault the man for wrapping things up in ROTJ because knowing WHY he did so actually makes me sympathize with him.
The strain of making TESB had already taken its toll on their marriage by 1980, motivating Lucas to wrap up the saga with ROTJ. Now it's obvious you haven't read that book.Elfdart wrote:Your amateur psychoanalysis is shit for the birds, too. Lucas began ROTJ in 1981 -2 years before his wife ran off with another man.
Oh blow it out your ass. Just because I don't clutch a pdf file like a fundie clutches his bible doesn't mean I haven't read it.
I asked where and when did George Lucas plan or promise nine or more Star Wars films (as opposed to considering them), and you shifted the goalposts to "Lucas thought about making more films, so he's a liar, WAAAAAAAH!"
If these phantom sequels were anything more than running something up the flagpole to see if it flies, why weren't there any outlines, treatments, rough drafts or production sketches for them?
I asked where and when did George Lucas plan or promise nine or more Star Wars films (as opposed to considering them), and you shifted the goalposts to "Lucas thought about making more films, so he's a liar, WAAAAAAAH!"
If these phantom sequels were anything more than running something up the flagpole to see if it flies, why weren't there any outlines, treatments, rough drafts or production sketches for them?
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Re: How to fix Episode III
No problem here. George Walton Lucas Junior would cut your ideas very quickly however. He always wanted to portrait the swashbuckling styles of old pirate movies. That means point-blank broadsides, swinging in ropes, charging the enemy with melee weapons and short-range pistols, looking him in the eye and so forth. It works only so far, of course.MKSheppard wrote:[*]Make the Battle of Coruscant less of a chaotic point blank battle -- there's no reason for everyone to be trading shots at 100 meters distance; the only reason Endor ended up like that was because of the Death Star's poor targeting capability.
[*]Delete the stupid broadsides. Show Republic Navy personnel in Republic Navy uniforms which resemble Imperial uniforms directing fire from main battery command points.
[*]Make the Battle of Kashykk less of a wankfest; have the Wookiies and Trade Feds actually use real tactics; instead of charging at each other.
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True, it's your blatant ignorance of its content that means you haven't read it.Elfdart wrote:Oh blow it out your ass. Just because I don't clutch a pdf file like a fundie clutches his bible doesn't mean I haven't read it.
Horseshit. You asked for my best five quotes w/dates AFTER I disputed your unrealistic condition that they MUST be stated as "promises." And anyone who read that thread knows it.Elfdart wrote:I asked where and when did George Lucas plan or promise nine or more Star Wars films (as opposed to considering them), and you shifted the goalposts to "Lucas thought about making more films, so he's a liar, WAAAAAAAH!"
Because he was making the whole thing up as he went along and never got that far?Elfdart wrote:If these phantom sequels were anything more than running something up the flagpole to see if it flies, why weren't there any outlines, treatments, rough drafts or production sketches for them?
Sorry, but I have better things to do than memorize the paranoid ravings of a complete fucktard when reading them once a year ago was more than enough.Galvatron wrote: True, it's your blatant ignorance of its content that means you haven't read it.
Leave out the word "promise". Where does he say in any of your quotes that he is in fact going to make nine Star Wars movies. He speculated that it would take more movies to finish the story, but he also thought that what ended up being THREE movies (ANH, TESB and ROTJ) could all be done in one. It's just an idea that maybe he would do more. Kurtz himself admitted that there were no concrete plans. The only people who believe there were are those who are dumb enough to believe fanboy gossip and those who think George Lucas is a liar because he considered and rejected an idea almost 30 years ago. And obsessive-compulsives who write 500-page pdf exercises in paranoia. Oh, and the people who read 500-page pdf exercises in paranoia and take them seriously.Horseshit. You asked for my best five quotes w/dates AFTER I disputed your unrealistic condition that they MUST be stated as "promises." And anyone who read that thread knows it.
Great, so you admit that the phantom sequels weren't really planned by George Lucas.Because he was making the whole thing up as he went along and never got that far?
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"Star Wars is a story, divided in three trilogies. It's a long movie of 18 hours, divided in nine parts."Elfdart wrote:Leave out the word "promise". Where does he say in any of your quotes that he is in fact going to make nine Star Wars movies.
-George Lucas, Premiere, September 1990
Is that not clear enough for you, or are you using Clintonese to argue the definition of what "is" is? Also, notice the date of the above quote.
Then why was he STILL saying it was nine movies as recently as 1994?Elfdart wrote:He speculated that it would take more movies to finish the story, but he also thought that what ended up being THREE movies (ANH, TESB and ROTJ) could all be done in one. It's just an idea that maybe he would do more. Kurtz himself admitted that there were no concrete plans. The only people who believe there were are those who are dumb enough to believe fanboy gossip and those who think George Lucas is a liar because he considered and rejected an idea almost 30 years ago.
"It wasn't long after I began writing Star Wars that I realized the story was more than a single film could hold. As the saga of the Skywalkers and Jedi Knights unfolded, I began to see it as a tale that would take at least nine films to tell -- three trilogies -- and I realized, in making my way through the back story and after story, that I was really setting out to write the middle story."
-George Lucas, Splinter of the Mind's Eye second edition introduction, 1994
Can't have none o' that readin' and writin' shit, now can we?Elfdart wrote:And obsessive-compulsives who write 500-page pdf exercises in paranoia. Oh, and the people who read 500-page pdf exercises in paranoia and take them seriously.
OF COURSE I DO! That doesn't change what he actually said!Elfdart wrote:Great, so you admit that the phantom sequels weren't really planned by George Lucas.
Seriously, are you just fucking with me? You have the most impenetrable wall of ignorance I've encountered in years. You can't be for real.
He didn't say he was going to make nine movies now did he. Concession accepted.Galvatron wrote:"Star Wars is a story, divided in three trilogies. It's a long movie of 18 hours, divided in nine parts."Elfdart wrote:Leave out the word "promise". Where does he say in any of your quotes that he is in fact going to make nine Star Wars movies.
-George Lucas, Premiere, September 1990
He was writing in the past tense. He didn't say he believed as of 1994 that he would need nine movies. It would be kind of stupid if he did since he already stopped with ROTJ.Then why was he STILL saying it was nine movies as recently as 1994?
"It wasn't long after I began writing Star Wars that I realized the story was more than a single film could hold. As the saga of the Skywalkers and Jedi Knights unfolded, I began to see it as a tale that would take at least nine films to tell -- three trilogies -- and I realized, in making my way through the back story and after story, that I was really setting out to write the middle story."
-George Lucas, Splinter of the Mind's Eye second edition introduction, 1994
Not when it's delusional fanboy masturbation. For some reason, you and this OCD retard think you can read George Lucas' mind based on second hand quotes, and that YOU know what he was or wasn't thinking -and all because he didn't write it down for you. Well guess what, Numbnuts -most filmmakers change their minds about what they will or will not do in their movies and no, they don't always write it down when or how they made their decisions, nor talk about it in interviews. You have no idea whatsoever when Lucas decided to make the villain the hero's father in Star Wars, or how many movies he really intended to make. For all you know, Lucas could have decided to add those plot points to a space adventure story bouncing around in his head back in the 1950s when he watched The Searchers.Can't have none o' that readin' and writin' shit, now can we?
You expect logical consistency from the "Lucas Raped My Childhood" set?Darth Wong wrote:I thought you said he silenced all dissenting opinions.Galvatron wrote:Kurtz did. Kershner did.Elfdart wrote:The only time anyone was in a position to "stand up" to Lucas was during the filming of ANH.
Scroll to page 219 and start reading...
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I guess the math involved eludes you.Elfdart wrote:He didn't say he was going to make nine movies now did he. Concession accepted.
He wasn't speaking in the past tense in 1990. Scroll up and read that quote again. So yeah, he was full of shit. Concession accepted.Elfdart wrote:He was writing in the past tense. He didn't say he believed as of 1994 that he would need nine movies. It would be kind of stupid if he did since he already stopped with ROTJ.
Fuck mind-reading. I can compare what he actually said then and what he said later and see the contradictions plain as day.Elfdart wrote:Not when it's delusional fanboy masturbation. For some reason, you and this OCD retard think you can read George Lucas' mind based on second hand quotes, and that YOU know what he was or wasn't thinking -and all because he didn't write it down for you.
Well guess what, Douchebag, Lucas did. There's a huge paper trail here that he can't deny. Nor can you.Elfdart wrote:Well guess what, Numbnuts -most filmmakers change their minds about what they will or will not do in their movies and no, they don't always write it down when or how they made their decisions, nor talk about it in interviews.
Yeah, I'd have no idea only if I've managed to ignore what he's actually said over the past 30 years. And Luke's father was still a separate person as recently as the first draft of TESB when his ghost appeared on Dagobah.Elfdart wrote:You have no idea whatsoever when Lucas decided to make the villain the hero's father in Star Wars, or how many movies he really intended to make.
Did he say he was actually going to make those movies? No, he didn't.Galvatron wrote: I guess the math involved eludes you.
Oh no! A middle-aged man slept between 1990 and 1994 and didn't commit to memory how many movies he thought could be made from Star Wars! The bastard!He wasn't speaking in the past tense in 1990. Scroll up and read that quote again. So yeah, he was full of shit.
Yeah, because honest people say the exact same thing and remember exactly what they said years before. If there's ever a discrepancy between what a person says in separate interviews, it means (a) he's a liar and (b) you can tell what he was thinking thirty years ago.Fuck mind-reading. I can compare what he actually said then and what he said later and see the contradictions plain as day.
So you've seen where George Lucas wrote down all his decisions about Star Wars? Even the paranoid fuckwit you linked to doesn't go that far.Well guess what, Douchebag, Lucas did. There's a huge paper trail here that he can't deny. Nor can you.Well guess what, Numbnuts -most filmmakers change their minds about what they will or will not do in their movies and no, they don't always write it down when or how they made their decisions, nor talk about it in interviews.
You have no idea because you have know way of knowing what was going through Lucas' head before, during and after he made the movies. The quotes might offer clues, but just because he didn't write something down and keep notes on everything doesn't mean he wasn't thinking of it.Yeah, I'd have no idea only if I've managed to ignore what he's actually said over the past 30 years. And Luke's father was still a separate person as recently as the first draft of TESB when his ghost appeared on Dagobah.
Whether something does or does not appear in a first draft means less than Jack Shit. Many of his ideas were only discussed with one or two cast and crewmembers and weren't used (like the idea described by Mark Hamill that Lucas was going to have a mother wookiee reading a Star Wars children's book to a baby wookiee), so why is it so far fetched that he came up with an idea, but didn't run it by anyone before deciding to use it? Now I remember: If Lucas has a faulty memory and maybe he didn't record every thought for posterity, there goes the paranoid conspiracy theory about George Lucas trying to suppress hidden knowledge that only the scholarship of a fucktard like Michael Kaminski can reveal.
Elfdart, saying whether or not Star Wars is going to be 3, 6 or 9 movies isn't something GL is just going to forget. They are his baby and his bread and butter, basically his entire reason for being who he is.
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I interpreted that as the fanboys saying "well, GL listened to Spielberg (who, incidentally, actually knows how to make a movie), so he should listen to me, too!"MKSheppard wrote:So the fact that Empire Strikes Back is considered to be the best SW movie flies by your head?Elfdart wrote:It's funny watching people use Spielberg, Kurtz, Kershner, even Lucas' ex-wife as ciphers for the idea that Lucas should have taken advice from them.
The more control that Lucas has over a project, the shittier it is; it's only when he has someone who can stand up to him and control his more stupid ideas that he does good work.
There's a difference between taking advice from somebody with demonstrated ability, and listening to some random fanboy living with his parents.