Ringan
Explorer
The quote from Lucas is taken from an original story in the New York Times. I'm not a Lucas apologist by any means but it does shed some light on his perspective about filmmaking as a whole.
You either die a hero, or you live long enough to see yourself become the villain.This kinda change is rampart in literature. I know pretty many writers whose stories were great... but not the newer stuff. Musicians too. Some can hold to the spark of creativity but others loose it. Or go soft.
That sort of thing just makes me want to like the movies more. I've never changed my opinion of a movie from like to dislike (or hate) just because someone else said it was bad. But I have liked something more as a result of being told it was bad.To anyone whoever says they weren't bothered by the prequel trilogy, I send this link: Star Wars: Episode 1 – The Phantom Menace |
It is two videos 70 minutes in length total telling one person's opinion of why The Phantom Menace is a bad movie.
That sort of thing just makes me want to like the movies more. I've never changed my opinion of a movie from like to dislike (or hate) just because someone else said it was bad. But I have liked something more as a result of being told it was bad.
I believe this is part of the role I play as a member of the lowest common denominator. I'm the guy who likes all that popular stuff that people with more refined tastes think is crap. So when people keep telling me that something is bad and I shouldn't like it, then I start to like more. Perhaps it's out of some kind of pride out of being a member of the group that keeps hollywood in business. People like keep the millions of people in the movie businesses employed. I'm an important member of the economy!
Yea!
Then go watch the reviews and report back how it convinced you The Phantom Menace was good (that hurt to type). It's not like they are 70 minutes of "It's the suxxor. F-- Lucas." It is 70 minutes (well, 60ish minutes with 10 minutes of weirdness) of criticism that is backed up by logic and actual clips from the film. He doesn't just say the plot doesn't make sense. He explains why and in what ways it doesn't make sense.That sort of thing just makes me want to like the movies more. I've never changed my opinion of a movie from like to dislike (or hate) just because someone else said it was bad. But I have liked something more as a result of being told it was bad.
My favorite part of the video is a pseudo man-on-the-street interview where he asks the MOTS "Without describing his costume, his looks, his role in the films or any actions he takes in the films, describe the character of Han Solo." The interviewees describe Han in various way: thief with heart of gold, ladies man, dashing scoundrel, etc. You can fill in your own descriptions quite easily, correct? Now try the same thing with Qui Gon Jinn. The best one of the MOTS interviewees came up with was "stoic".
Also note that they've now finished reviewing the whole trilogy:To anyone whoever says they weren't bothered by the prequel trilogy, I send this link: Star Wars: Episode 1 – The Phantom Menace |
Yes, it does take a while to watch all six videos (but there is a storyline that kind of hooks you). (heavy emphasis on the "kind of" part.)Also note that they've now finished reviewing the whole trilogy:
Star Wars |
The review trilogy feels like a saga on its own.
Heh. That is so not my experience when dealing with the Internet. People can't even figure out there's a 'show more' button on YouTube. I went five years without noticing that Shlock Mercenary had forums. My mom thought Twitter only had one page, Lady Gaga's. Before the changes to the EN World forum layout I regularly noticed members who hadn't realized there was a front page with news.I didn't feel the need to point out the existence of the other reviews. People can click around and find things on their own.