Star Wars III

Topics which don't fit comfortably in any of the other forums go here. Spamming is not tolerated.
Forum rules
- Please use the forum attachment system for jam images, or link to the CG site specific to the Jam.
- Mark threads containing nudity in inlined images as NSFW
- Read The rules post for specifics
User avatar
Tears
Regular Poster
Posts: 295
Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2005 5:28 am
Location: keeping watch for the minions of sanity
Contact:

Post by Tears »

Not necessarily, it could just be that Obi Wan believes that the Sith deal only in absolutes... it would be perfectly reasonable for the Jedi to hold such an opinion about their age-old enemies.
Warning: this poster is addicted to ellipses...

I have a web comic called Tears of Eternity if you don't look you'll never know if you would have liked it.

User avatar
Sortelli
Cartoon Villain
Posts: 6334
Joined: Sat Aug 10, 2002 7:15 pm
Location: in your grandpa's clothes, I look incredible
Contact:

Post by Sortelli »

Only Sith deal in absolutes.
Obi Wan deals in absolutes by noting that only Sith do so.
Ergo: Obi Wan is a Sith!

OR George Lucas is logically invalid and does not exist.

User avatar
Tears
Regular Poster
Posts: 295
Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2005 5:28 am
Location: keeping watch for the minions of sanity
Contact:

Post by Tears »

Sounds a bit like a roleplay chatacter I had once who lived by the maxim 'There are no absolutes.'


(She also had a long complicated explanation as to why this wasn't a contradiction... it involved limit theory... you probably don't want to know.)
Warning: this poster is addicted to ellipses...

I have a web comic called Tears of Eternity if you don't look you'll never know if you would have liked it.

User avatar
Risky
69
Posts: 3833
Joined: Tue May 04, 2004 8:41 am
Location: San Francisco
Contact:

Post by Risky »

Sortelli wrote:Only Sith deal in absolutes.
Obi Wan deals in absolutes by noting that only Sith do so.
Ergo: Obi Wan is a Sith!
OR George Lucas is logically invalid and does not exist.
He was quoting Yoda, and Yoda meant "Only deal in Sith absolutes", but he Yodaed it.

Er..

It's worth noting that from the very beginning Obi was a CRAPPY jedi, they say so several times. That's why Anakin turned evil (according to Obi's ghost?). It's also worth noting that Obi didn't say "Sith only deal in absolutes", so they are free to also deal in moral relativism without disproving Obi's statement.

User avatar
Sortelli
Cartoon Villain
Posts: 6334
Joined: Sat Aug 10, 2002 7:15 pm
Location: in your grandpa's clothes, I look incredible
Contact:

Post by Sortelli »

True, a Sith's ability to apply nuance does not contradict Obi Wan, it just makes him suck more.

User avatar
Risky
69
Posts: 3833
Joined: Tue May 04, 2004 8:41 am
Location: San Francisco
Contact:

Post by Risky »

I really enjoyed the movie, nonetheless. I even made fun of that line to the person I saw the movie with, as we were walking out of the theater, and I cringed at each scene of particularly bad acting, including the stuff in the suit at the end, but as a fan of the series I can't believe how many loose ends they managed to tie up, and how many "cool thing"s there were.

One thing that REALLY ticked me off was Kashykk(sp). There was like, one lake and one 'street' in the entire film? Did I miss something? Geez, the forest moon of Endor was a billion times cooler than that.

User avatar
Levi-chan
Cartoon Hero
Posts: 1498
Joined: Mon Feb 14, 2005 8:34 pm
Location: THE TOOBS

Post by Levi-chan »

That, and the battle of Kashyyk didn't really add anything to the story, and looked more like pillow-shots for the next scenes.

And have you thought of how many freakin days the clones used up trying to gain that beach? It wasn't even that big. Jeebus.

User avatar
Joel Fagin
nothos adrisor (GTC)
Posts: 6014
Joined: Mon Mar 29, 2004 1:15 am
Location: City of Lights
Contact:

Post by Joel Fagin »

Levi-chan wrote:That, and the battle of Kashyyk didn't really add anything to the story.
It's just... texture. There's a war on. Here's some of it. I'm glad they didn't try to do anything big with it. I sure the temptation was there but it's just background and not part of the central plot.

- Joel Fagin
Image

User avatar
KittyKatBlack
Cartoon Villain
Posts: 3182
Joined: Tue Dec 23, 2003 7:56 pm
Location: How the hell should I know? I just live here...
Contact:

Post by KittyKatBlack »

I haven't seen the movie, but I always wondered... how come in all these sci-fi movies all planets have one capital city?

We have tons of countries each with it's own capital cities. I mean it it's so freakin' hard for us to combine into a one-world government, how come it's easily managed by creatures that can't speak properly and still use animals for transportation?

User avatar
AsterAzul
Regular Poster
Posts: 999
Joined: Fri Apr 29, 2005 2:19 pm
Location: finding my way home
Contact:

Post by AsterAzul »

It's good storytelling. (But ridiculous.)

When you make a planet for a sci-fi story, it has to have a gimmick so that a person remembers it. So it'll be "the ice planet" or "the dirty planet with lots of bars" and of course it only needs one capital city. *rolls eyes*
I wish they would have some planets with variable gravity for a change. 1G, 1G, 1G. *sigh* Boring!

My friend and I had so much fun watching this in the theatre. The love scenes... *snort*
I think she wanted to murder me after I made that crack during the "killing the younglings" scene.

Most of the movie was "texture," really. A lot of great, well done scenes, and texture, and the lot. In fact, aside from the acting and pacing, it was a great movie.
Image

Jen_Babcock
Regular Poster
Posts: 649
Joined: Fri Dec 03, 2004 9:02 pm
Location: Los Angeles/ New York City

Post by Jen_Babcock »

I decided to re-watch the originals, b/c it had been a while, and there a couple of inconsistencies that bother me.

In A New Hope, Uncle Owen goes off about Anakin as if they were really close. He makes it seem that they grew up together on the moisture farm, when the new trilogy clearly shows that they did not.

In Return of the Jedi, Luke asks Leia if she remembers her mother. Leia says that she does- that she was very beautiful but very sad. Of course, she could be talkin' about Sen. Organa's wife, but they make it seem like they're talking about their birth mother.

Finally, I think it's a little weird that they decide to hide Luke from the Vader and the Emperor with Anakin's step brother, Owen, and his wife Beru. I mean, if Vader wasn't sure if his child (since he only thought there was one) survived childbirth, wouldn't he search around and see if it did? More importantly, in his search wouldn't he check to see if they left his baby with the only family he had (Owen and Beru) first?

I know- it's just a movie.
Image

User avatar
Jim North
Cartoon Hero
Posts: 6659
Joined: Tue Nov 04, 2003 10:55 pm
Location: The Omnipresent Here
Contact:

Post by Jim North »

Jen_Babcock wrote:In A New Hope, Uncle Owen goes off about Anakin as if they were really close. He makes it seem that they grew up together on the moisture farm, when the new trilogy clearly shows that they did not.
The only thing I remember him saying about Anakin was that he was afraid there was too much of him in Luke. I'd think it would be a reasonable statement for anyone who knew that Anakin had become Vader, whether they'd been close or not. Was there something else he said that I don't remember?
In Return of the Jedi, Luke asks Leia if she remembers her mother. Leia says that she does- that she was very beautiful but very sad. Of course, she could be talkin' about Sen. Organa's wife, but they make it seem like they're talking about their birth mother.
I've thought about this, and there are a few possibilities. First is the one you mention, which would appear to be the most reasonable and the one I prefer, personally. Second, it could be that she was shown holograms of Amidala when she was very very young and was told that she was her real mother . . . with time, the memories could have faded to the point that she remembered the hologams as being the real thing. And finally, it's possible that - like the Solo twins in the expanded universe - Luke and Leia's force powers were already semi-active inside the womb, and Leia managed to make enough of a connection with her mother to form and hold a picture of what she looked like in her mind.
Finally, I think it's a little weird that they decide to hide Luke from the Vader and the Emperor with Anakin's step brother, Owen, and his wife Beru. I mean, if Vader wasn't sure if his child (since he only thought there was one) survived childbirth, wouldn't he search around and see if it did? More importantly, in his search wouldn't he check to see if they left his baby with the only family he had (Owen and Beru) first?
This has bothered me a long time, too. Leaving Vader's son on Anakin's home planet with Anakin's only surviving family (through marriage or otherwise) and still carrying Anakin's last name . . . doesn't seem very reasonable at all. The only thing I've been able to figure is that they didn't think that Vader would be willing to go back to Tatooine after all the bad stuff that happened to him there. That still seems like a pretty huge chance they were taking, but eh, well.
Existence is a series of catastrophes through which everything barely but continually survives.

User avatar
[geoduck]
Cartoon Hero
Posts: 1451
Joined: Mon Feb 02, 2004 12:48 pm
Location: Pacific NW
Contact:

Post by [geoduck] »

AsterAzul wrote: I wish they would have some planets with variable gravity for a change. 1G, 1G, 1G. *sigh* Boring!
The problem being, of course, the expense of the FX. It's shame that we Americans are still pretty much locked into the "cartoons are for children" mindset. A lot can be done with animation...
"gooey-duck". A clam. Not a snail.
Image

User avatar
Steverules
Cartoon Hero
Posts: 1710
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 6:26 pm
Contact:

Post by Steverules »

Jen_Babcock wrote:exposes serious flaws in the Star Wars series.
**George Lucas calls upon his hordes of fans to silence Jen forever.**

Run, Jen, RUN!!!!!
Image

User avatar
Prettysenshi
Bork Bork Bork
Posts: 2269
Joined: Thu Jun 24, 2004 8:23 am
Location: Anywhere else but here....
Contact:

Post by Prettysenshi »

with all of the prequels inconsistancies with the original trilogy, it's no wonder why everyone's starting to wonder whether Lucas really wrote the entire series at once, or decided to make the prequels only after the original trilogy was done and he saw how popular it had became.

User avatar
Tears
Regular Poster
Posts: 295
Joined: Fri Mar 11, 2005 5:28 am
Location: keeping watch for the minions of sanity
Contact:

Post by Tears »

There's a world of difference between having a rough synopsis worked out and actually having a full script... I'd guess that he had synopses worked out for the prequels but not scripts.


(synopses plural of synopsis?... kind of sounds right to me, but does anyone actually know?)
Warning: this poster is addicted to ellipses...

I have a web comic called Tears of Eternity if you don't look you'll never know if you would have liked it.

User avatar
Caduceus
Regular Poster
Posts: 452
Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2004 10:16 pm

Post by Caduceus »

I think Leia saw her mother right after birth and just remembers it. What need do we have of any other explanation? These movies are fantasy and myth.
Caduceus
Marianne

User avatar
Caduceus
Regular Poster
Posts: 452
Joined: Mon Jun 07, 2004 10:16 pm

Post by Caduceus »

Jen_Babcock wrote: Finally, I think it's a little weird that they decide to hide Luke from the Vader and the Emperor with Anakin's step brother, Owen, and his wife Beru. I mean, if Vader wasn't sure if his child (since he only thought there was one) survived childbirth, wouldn't he search around and see if it did? More importantly, in his search wouldn't he check to see if they left his baby with the only family he had (Owen and Beru) first?
Vader thought his wife died on the lava planet. He didn't know any children were born.
Caduceus
Marianne

User avatar
Steverules
Cartoon Hero
Posts: 1710
Joined: Wed Oct 27, 2004 6:26 pm
Contact:

Post by Steverules »

I think the real dealbreaker was Darth Vader was such a little pussie when he was a kid. That little whiney blond haired kid was horrible. The young Boba Fett would kick his ass into next week. Little Annie looks like the honors kid in your first grade classroom who all the teachers love, whereas, the young Boba looks like the kid in your neighborhood that would set your cat on fire.
Image

User avatar
Risky
69
Posts: 3833
Joined: Tue May 04, 2004 8:41 am
Location: San Francisco
Contact:

Post by Risky »

steverules wrote:I think the real dealbreaker was Darth Vader was such a little pussie when he was a kid. That little whiney blond haired kid was horrible. The young Boba Fett would kick his ass into next week. Little Annie looks like the honors kid in your first grade classroom who all the teachers love, whereas, the young Boba looks like the kid in your neighborhood that would set your cat on fire.
I dunno about that, it makes his pussieness a lot more believable in "Jedi". I think if it was Boba vs. Anakin, Boba would still lose because Boba can't aim worth shit. He still can't in "Jedi". Only imperial stormtroopers are so precise? They can't hit shit. Blame Jango's genes. (aren't you a little short to be a jango clone?) Anakin wasn't nearly as whiny as Luke (whose nickname in the books was "Wormy"). He did take on Sebulba on the streets, after all. That was cool. And he spoke huttese.

Locked