Studios Prepare for Star Wars 68
Stephen Legge writes
"Here's an article from the Toronto Globe&Mail about studios
shuffling
their spring line-up in anticipation of a chaotic
Phantom Menance opening." Also worth noting, they've
moved the release date from the 21st to the 19th. It still
overlaps Linux Expo.
Are we gonna rent a theater out or what?
Episode I CG... Does it look good to you? (Score:1)
Is it just me or does most of the CG in the trailer look a little weak? Take the first scene, where the tanks roll over the top of the hill. While I have seen worse in other movies, its poor for something coming from Lucas. Where is the famous its-the-future-but-it-looks-old look? I can only hope that the trailers feature partially rendered FX...
Also, yoda. He doesn't look like yoda. I could believe that he was yoda's brother, or another of yoda's race, but the look isnt quite right, even for a younger yoda..
sigh... rant mode off...
Star Wars & Linux Expo (Score:1)
See Star Wars at night.
Problem solved.
--
We need a plan (Score:1)
I want to go to the Expo, but I MUST see episode one... We have to find someone in the area of the Expo to call around find out how/when they are selling the tickets...
Anyone willing?
This needs to be an organized effort or it probably won't work out for everyone.
Downloading the trailer (Score:1)
Or you could just scroll down and click on on of the "Download this movie" links.
Absolutely (Score:1)
I love Star Wars (and I will see it in it's first week), but it's formula. If I could only see one of "The Phantom Menace" or "The Red Violin" I'd see the latter.
Downloading the trailer (Score:1)
find the filename, and download it directly.
HTML, the Original Open Source!
...Or something.
Seeing the movie (Score:1)
Uh..... (Score:1)
Are you using the correct start page? (Score:1)
See the trailer (Score:1)
http://www.apple.com/quickti me/trailers/fox/episode-i/ [apple.com]
Some damn nice screen shots too.
Seeing the movie (Score:1)
That'd be "accept Federation control for the time being"... And yes, Palpatine is still just a Senator, especially since there's no Empire yet. Yet.
-cfw
--
Be prepared to stand in line a looooong time (Score:1)
In fact, a few of us have been considering flying to New York for the weekend to see it there, rather than wait the extra 2 months for a UK release...
Be prepared to stand in line a looooong time (Score:1)
Oh, there are lower-resolution versions available, but no-one's gonna download them, right? :-)
The Red Violin (Score:1)
I have no idea if it's a good movie or not, though.
Let's do it! (Score:1)
the cost of a full price ticket for every seat
in the theater to rent it. I'm sure we could find
enough takers at the Expo to fill every seat. Is
there anyone in Raleigh who could make the
arrangements?
Be prepared to stand in line a looooong time (Score:1)
Why Star Wars. (Score:1)
I was six when the original came out but I remember it well-- Even before I saw the movie I'd already ironed one of those decals from a Cheerios box of C3PO & R2D2 onto my shirt. You know, One of those cheap ones with sparkly stuff in it that smelled funny when you ironed 'em on would peel off REAL quick.
I don't know about the Time cover from '80 but had a Time cover from '83 (Jedi) similar to the one you describe hanging on my wall for a few years-- Lucas, surrounded by Star Wars guys and the caption was something like "Lucas Wraps It Up"
Ok, now that I've reminisced, I guess I need to say something relevent about computers. Uhhh... Boy, Lemonade Stand was fun on the Commadore PET, wasn't it?
W
-------------------
Depends (Score:1)
If LucasArts did not have that cursed deal with Micorosft it would be there and would be free... Least likely they render with NTs
Anyway, it does worth for someone of the deities to speak with LA...
prepaying tickets (Score:1)
Rent a theater? You can't. (Score:1)
Not to be too flippant =) (Score:1)
Then again, it is just a movie.
But it is Star Wars.
Could you just take a trip to Britain or something to catch it? When does it appear there?
AS
linux expo + star wars (Score:1)
Why Star Wars. (Score:1)
>who wonder what the big deal is, let me take you back a bit.
Very well put -- that takes me back to when I was 9 and it first came out. I'd already absorbed a heavy diet of ST:tOS, but Star Wars hit me like a bomb, just as it did the rest of the culture.
I still remember fondly how I first heard of it: my parents showed me an issue of Time magazine, with a little strip up in the corner that said "Inside: The Year's Best Movie?" (Yes, with the question mark. Little did they know.) And Mom and Dad said "Do you think you'd like to see this?"
Inside was a magnificent spread telling of a farm boy and a pair of robots and a grand adventure, with glorious pictures of space battles and 'droids. I was hooked. I told my parents "You bet!"
Three years later, when Empire came out, the cover story on Time magazine was Empire -- the cover illo was George Lucas surrounded by movie characters; I forget the caption. And up in the corner, showing the change from three years before, was a little band that said something about a major news story -- maybe something to do with the election, or the hostage crisis in the Middle East.
They'd learned. :)
There is a Giant Dearth of good SciFi (Score:1)
Well, that would certainly make it scifi and not SF - nobody AFAIK has ever done that realistically in film, and it's been damn rare in books.
That aside - does 2010 make the cut for "within the past ten years? That was pretty good (just no space combat). Lost In Space turned out not nearly as bad as it might have - the launch sequence was silly but the rest was far better than the original TV show.
Armageddon and Deep Impact were entertaining, in their way, but really bad on the technical accuracy scale.
Apollo 13 doesn't count - that was a historical drama.
A New Hope. (Score:1)
For those of us that grew up in the 60s, when the space program was new and we (we nerds, anyway) all dreamed of becoming astronauts when we grew up, the mid-seventies was a disaster. They cancelled the Apollo program, scrapping the hardware already built for Apollos 18 and 19. Skylab had come crashing down. Space was over, from what we could tell. The Shuttle was being delayed and delayed.
For the non-nerds, the seventies were just as bleak. Watergate and Vietnam were only recently over. We'd had one "oil crisis" where in todays dollars, gas had gone from todays' prices to two or three dollars a gallon. Jimmy Carter was President.
And then along comes this roller-coaster, revolution in filmmaking, feel-good (the good guys win) movie with the awsome John Williams music. It was just what we needed.
It's not the physics. (Score:1)
Realistic in the sense of real characters, characters who are affected by their experiences in the story. The basic characters in Star Trek, for example, never change. Compare that to Luke's transition from the beginning of ANH to the end of ROTJ. Or Solo's. (The bit with Greedo shooting first in the updated edition of ANH really weakened that, though. That was a mistake.)
Yeah, there have been some other scifi films that have had that character development -- Contact comes to mind. But that's not the same sort of spacefaring, lots of action, flick that we're looking for here. The classic Forbidden Planet (the inspiration for Star Trek, btw) comes close.
Part of Lucas' genius here is combining sheer technical cinematographic brilliance (the SFX, etc) and the classic fast pace of the old serial thrillers with some classic story lines. (Some have complained that he 'stole' his plot lines from other classic films or stories. Hey, they're just ideas. Steal from the best, I say.)
Magazine covers (Score:1)
Heh. Somewhere around I think I still have an old Newsweek cover, with a picture of the British battle fleet heading out to the Falklands, with the caption "The Empire Strikes Back".
Why Star Wars. (Score:2)
The first trailer appeared in late 76 or early 77. I don't remember the exact time, or even what the feature movie was, but I do remember seeing the trailer, and thinking "damn, I can't wait".
You have to remember that for us SF fans, things had been bleak for years. Star Trek had been off the air for years (except syndicated reruns some places), the Apollo program was long over with the first shuttle flight still years in the future, and cinematic SF had been a wasteland, with the high points, the high points, being the Nth sequels to Planet Of The Apes. There was no such thing as personal computers - there were a few, and expensive, "hobbyist computers" like the Altair, the SOL, possibly the Apple I. Most computer geeks (who were damned rare by comparison) programmed mainframes, as often as not using punched cards.
And into this cultural (ok, nerd culture) vacuum came Star Wars. The title "A New Hope" didn't show on the original film, but it was that to all of us nerdy SF, space, robotics, etc. fans who'd about given up on ever seeing again anything that lived up to "2001" or even - and this tells how desparate we were - the original Star Trek.
Sure, Star Wars was "scifi" (a somewhat derogatory term to true hardcore SF fans) what with the sounds in vacuum and aerodynamic manoeuvering of space vehicles, but that was OK, we also understood the need for popular dramatic appeal, and at least you didn't see the goddamn wires holding the spaceship models, and the robots didn't look like humans in cardboard boxes and heating duct. Heck, C3PO's design even paid homage to one of the classic SF films.
The release of subsequent episodes was nearly as exciting, but not quite the, revelation?, that the first was -- we had some idea what to expect, and we knew the characters. You youngsters that grew up with the Star Wars series on videotape don't, can't have the same appreciation.
Well, some of you perhaps do. The brief theatrical re-release of the (updated) originals a year ago may have damped some of the anticipation, but that aside it's been over two decades since theatrical release of a new Star Wars episode. And this one (with a couple of obvious exceptions) has all new characters, new worlds, and some new filmmaking technology. Still, it won't quite be the revolution the original was -- we haven't had the same dearth of scifi flicks in the last few years - the studios know now that you can make money on them if you're halfway serious about doing a good job. (Which still excludes some of the bombs we've seen).
But for us old geezers
Even if it is only a movie.
-- Al
Star Wars at the Expo (Score:1)
Seeing the movie (Score:1)
The trailer looks good.
I have one question, who is the Emporer?
I don't think it can be Palpatine, but it looks
like him??????
Any ideas
No renting out entire theaters (Score:1)
that says George Lucas doesn't want anybody
renting out entire theaters for TPM, and he's
threatened to limit distribution to those theaters
that do allow entire theaters to be rented out.
Here in Austin, TX, many theaters are not allowing
reservations for the theaters for TPM, no matter
who you are... the sames ones we've rented multiple theaters from many times in the past few montsh...
The Red Violin (Score:1)
We have to wait until the 17th of October! :-( (Score:1)
Why so late? Why is France going to be the latest place? Why am I in France?
Pretty obvious IMHO (Score:1)
The title scheme actually makes a lot of sense if you compare it to, say, European monarchies. (Please excuse me while I butcher this horribly -- it's quite late in my world.) JQ Royal can be Earl of Whichevershire and reffered to as just "Whichevershire." Likewise, we can have Anakin Skywalker, Darth Vader, and refer to him as Vader.
Oh, and Sidious' voice in the trailer matches the Emperor's.
Yes, I have the trilogy burned onto my retinas for quick reference. No, I guess that means I don't have a life.
The Red Violin (Score:1)
May I suggest that you go see the movie "The Red Violin".... it is very, very good movie. one of the best I have seen this year!