thenammagazine
Super Freak
Anyone seen Hershel Walker recently. He looks like he hasn't aged in 30 years.
You could look that good too with a little anabolics and HGH.
Anyone seen Hershel Walker recently. He looks like he hasn't aged in 30 years.
Well damn, sign me up!You could look that good too with a little anabolics and HGH.
Wow, I've just been reading through the May 1974 rough draft of Star Wars posted here:
https://starwarz.com/starkiller/2010/03/the-star-wars-rough-draft/
Amazing stuff, a lot of which ended up in The Phantom Menace.
1. 10 year old Force prodigy on Tatooine (originally Luke's little brother who is cut down by a "Sith Knight" who travels to the desert planet by himself in a chrome ship hunting Jedi.) Then Luke's father cuts the Sith Knight in half with a lightsaber. Very Darth Maulish.
2. 14 year old Princess with handmaidens.
3. Palpatine invading a planet at the beginning through the guise of a trade embargo
And so on. It totally makes me look at TPM in a whole new light.
Wow, I've just been reading through the May 1974 rough draft of Star Wars posted here:
https://starwarz.com/starkiller/2010/03/the-star-wars-rough-draft/
Amazing stuff, a lot of which ended up in The Phantom Menace.
1. 10 year old Force prodigy on Tatooine (originally Luke's little brother who is cut down by a "Sith Knight" who travels to the desert planet by himself in a chrome ship hunting Jedi.) Then Luke's father cuts the Sith Knight in half with a lightsaber. Very Darth Maulish.
2. 14 year old Princess with handmaidens.
3. Palpatine invading a planet at the beginning through the guise of a trade embargo
And so on. It totally makes me look at TPM in a whole new light.
Wow, I've just been reading through the May 1974 rough draft of Star Wars posted here:
https://starwarz.com/starkiller/2010/03/the-star-wars-rough-draft/
Amazing stuff, a lot of which ended up in The Phantom Menace.
1. 10 year old Force prodigy on Tatooine (originally Luke's little brother who is cut down by a "Sith Knight" who travels to the desert planet by himself in a chrome ship hunting Jedi.) Then Luke's father cuts the Sith Knight in half with a lightsaber. Very Darth Maulish.
2. 14 year old Princess with handmaidens.
3. Palpatine invading a planet at the beginning through the guise of a trade embargo
And so on. It totally makes me look at TPM in a whole new light.
It's why I don't get the people who insist that SW has always been about Luke. It's always been Anakin/Vader's story.
It's why I don't get the people who insist that SW has always been about Luke. It's always been Anakin/Vader's story.
And if you read that draft "Luke Skywalker" is actually the name of the Obi-Wan Kenobi character and "Annikin Starkiller" is the person who obviously became the character we now know as Luke.
Not so sure. That version would've unfolded though with the rise and fall of Anakin still.
Maybe I simply need to read more then. I'm squeezing it in through seeing to clients at work and have read about a quarter of it so far. As of now "General Luke" sounds like Kenobi and "Annikin Starkiller" (who is introduced to us looking up at the Tatooine sky with his binoculars) sure seems like Luke.
But its really playing as if the events in TPM are the opening act of the film, and in breaking up the story into six parts he really did go back and stay true to much of his original story origins.
That's fascinating.
Maybe I simply need to read more then. I'm squeezing it in through seeing to clients at work and have read about a quarter of it so far. As of now "General Luke" sounds like Kenobi and "Annikin Starkiller" (who is introduced to us looking up at the Tatooine sky with his binoculars) sure seems like Luke.
But its really playing as if the events in TPM are the opening act of the film, and in breaking up the story into six parts he really did go back and stay true to much of his original story origins.
That's fascinating.
I'm honestly surprised, given your level of geek (not intended as a slight) that you didn't already know about this.
Only retroactively, in my view. Clearly the OT is Luke's story. Yes, it culminates with Vader's death, so ROTJ wraps up Vader's story arc, but for the first two films he's simply the antagonist (albeit a charismatic one with key connections to other major players of course). It isn't until ROTJ that Vader does anything more than chase down the key rebels and try to convert his son to the dark side, and even there the change in Vader's perspective doesn't happen until the very end. So, he's a pretty static character in Star Wars and Empire. If all the movies were always about him, first and foremost, then it seems like he would've experienced more change and development in those other films.It's why I don't get the people who insist that SW has always been about Luke. It's always been Anakin/Vader's story.
I'm honestly surprised, given your level of geek (not intended as a slight) that you didn't already know about this.
Only retroactively, in my view. Clearly the OT is Luke's story. Yes, it culminates with Vader's death, so ROTJ wraps up Vader's story arc, but for the first two films he's simply the antagonist (albeit a charismatic one with key connections to other major players of course). It isn't until ROTJ that Vader does anything more than chase down the key rebels and try to convert his son to the dark side, and even there the change in Vader's perspective doesn't happen until the very end. So, he's a pretty static character in Star Wars and Empire. If all the movies were always about him, first and foremost, then it seems like he would've been more than a one-trick pony in those other films.
I'd never read the actual draft before, only seen references in other literature to "Jedi Bendu," "Starkillers," various twins and Sith organizations and whatnot. But that draft proves that Lucas really did go back to his original outlines and work some pretty significant portions of them into the prequels where he could.
I'm honestly surprised, given your level of geek (not intended as a slight) that you didn't already know about this.
I'd never read the actual draft before, only seen references in other literature to "Jedi Bendu," "Starkillers," various twins and Sith organizations and whatnot. But that draft proves that Lucas really did go back to his original outlines and work some pretty significant portions of them into the prequels where he could.
I don't know about that. If the performances felt too unnatural, I don't think I could have much of an affinity for the OT, or for any movie for that matter where characters are supposed to behave as if they existed in a real world (exceptions for obviously stylized movies like Raising Arizona, Brazil, or Fear and Loathing), or unless a character is supposed to be a real eccentric type (like Stansfield in the Professional). You can encounter a goofy situation or deliver a goofy line naturally (like McGregor in the prequels) or awkwardly/stiffly (like Portman in the prequels). On the whole, the OT crew behaved more believably and thus made the dramatic component more compelling to me. The officers on the Death Star could've been German officers in a WWII period piece. Luke's uncle and aunt felt like they could've been having dinner on the Walton's. I didn't feel that way for much of the PT, and it goes beyond the fake environments and CG characters (though they no doubt contribute to it).
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