Overall, I think the article paints a much more negative picture than what was actually apparent in the video (to be fair the video was obviously edited so there could have been some more stuff). He implied that he got some crap in high school, but that's not surprising for a child star. The article's wording makes it out as if TPM ruined his life, although he looked fine in the video and was able to joke about things. Jake admits to being a geek who read some SW books and played the rpg, but he came across as an okay guy.The Force is Not With Him: Anakin Skywalker 10 Years Later
by Claudine Zap July 24, 2009
The plucky kid with the pod racer from "Star Wars: Episode I" is not a kid anymore. And Jake Lloyd wants you to know that having a major role in a George Lucas film really put a damper on things when he was growing up.
OK, fine: The guy doesn't really deserve our pity, but think of it from his point of view. Ten years old, getting blamed for ruining the Star Wars series. (Well, that was mainly the fault of George Lucas, but the kid was there, wasn't he?) And people just won't let it go. The Sci-Fi Australia blog caught up with the glum "Star Wars" alum Down Under, who sounds more Eeyore than "Episode One."
While every word drips with sarcasm (he is 20, after all) the Anakin actor also can still speak geek. On college: "You'll never find more intelligent, charming people than the drunk students of the college world." 'Nuff said.
Hey, Jake, don't worry: We know how you feel. Jar Jar Binks pretty much ruined the whole Star Wars thing for us, too.
Here's the video of the interview.
He seemed to have a pretty balanced view of things, saying that he enjoyed watching TPM himself when he was a kid and understood that it was for younger audiences and the fans. He seems to "get it" more than all the cynical aging fanboys who bitched about how TPM was the worst movie ever and "raped their childhoods." Jake did say that going back to the movie now as a 20 year-old seemed a bit "creepy" though, which I don't get. The movie has its childish parts but I always saw it as for all-ages (that political stuff in the Senate which was also criticized by people who said that they couldn't understand it). At the end of the interview he says that he doesn't regret being in the movie.
The nerd-rage exaggerations are still annoying, especially when they're hypocrital. The Transformers movies were embraced, and they had just as much CGI and even more plot holes and bad writing than the prequels did. But those movies had cursing and Megan Fox being hawt so I guess they were totally different. Just for the record I enjoyed the first TF movie and thought RotF was okay; I'm just pointing out the inconsistency with people's attitudes.
The SW prequel bashers (who apparently appear in disproportionate numbers in the media) really do seem to live in an alternate universe. The movies made a lot of money, and Jake himself said that he's seen a lot of young children at conventions who loved them. I remember when ROTS actually silenced the criticism for a couple years (and I have no doubt that was in part because it had the most death and gore, regardless of its superior quality). But then the anti-Lucas bandwagon started up again with the new Indiana Jones (which was also a big hit despite fanboy claims of childhood raping) and fully resurrected with the animated Clone Wars movie (which was clearly made more for kids). It's such a fluctuating band wagon.