"The ability to destroy a planet is insignificant next to the power of the Force."
And then at the climax the above prophecy is fulfilled. That is the message of the film, which is not particularly grounded. The fantastical defeats the material. It's not a question of runtime.
This is like when people claim nothing supernatural happens in The Shining.
Sure. In the original film, the Force clearly has effects, but they’re relatively minor. Everywhere else, the Force gets bigger and splashier.No is one saying the Force is not important to Star Wars. It's only that the first film had a more grounded feel to much of the technology than later installments.
This does not mean that the Force has no supernatural or impact on the rest of the series.
The grounded technology is there in any installment, regardless of what is done with the Force.No is one saying the Force is not important to Star Wars. It's only that the first film had a more grounded feel to much of the technology than later installments.
There is a far different feel in A New Hope than in the following films is all I'm saying. Nothing taking away from the supernatural.The grounded technology is there in any installment, regardless of what is done with the Force.
A New Hope takes place in 1970s SF World (as do early tie-in stuff such as the Holiday Special, the newspaper comic, the early Marvel comic, and the early novels); everything else takes place in The Mythic Landscape Of Star Wars, a different beast.There is a far different feel in A New Hope than in the following films is all I'm saying. Nothing taking away from the supernatural.
The grounded technology is there in any installment, regardless of what is done with the Force.
There is a far different feel in A New Hope than in the following films is all I'm saying. Nothing taking away from the supernatural.
I just think ANH takes a different approach to it than what occurred as the series progressed.believe the countering point is that the supernatural runs the table in Star Wars--the pivotal events in the film are largely due to / framed by the supernatural players. Everything else exists to support the actions of the supernatural players.
..or watch TPM and forget the other two. TPM ended clearly pointing to every direction and outcome of the next two movies.Episode 1 also feels very redundant with Episode 2 because it basically tells you everything you need to know, again
You could watch just EP2 and 3 and not be confused at all.
Much like Mary Sue, Gary Stu is almost always overused and meaningless. I'm so sick of both terms.
I am always amused by the comments that "Oh, the current Dudsney output is so mixed," and I'm sitting here going "It's always been mixed."
And it wasn't direct towards you. A general observation that I've had of Star Wars opinions since Disney took over.I had stated that I only have mixed feelings about the Disney Star Wars content. I don't know about anyone else.
Sure. In the original film, the Force clearly has effects, but they’re relatively minor. Everywhere else, the Force gets bigger and splashier.
"The Phantom Menace arguably comes closest to recreating Star Wars space opera, leaning very heavily on the faerie tale elements that are present but stylistically downplayed in the original, but even it can't help add to the soap opera family tree of it all (as noted above). Much as I've enjoyed Star Wars as a series, I sometimes wish it was just its own thing."
Yes, indeed. It has a pace all it's own.be clear, I love the movie. I've enjoyed every Star Wars movie to a greater or lesser degree. But none of them come close to being Star Wars (1977). That film captures the old fashioned space opera of it all in ways some entries don't even try. It's a singular experience, a sometimes alien creation, operating at its own pace and with its own set of rules, while harkening back to the serials of old.
It's always interesting to look at it differently. Vader as Luke's father adds a much different feel to the saga, and arguably led to greater excesses in the later films.The series could have continued in that vein, a lot of its imitators did. But The Empire Strikes Back injects a great deal more soap opera than space opera into the proceedings. To the benefit of that movie, arguably, but to the detriment of everything to come. The feeling of being dropped into a random movie serial is gone, in favor of the melodramatic reveal. Vader is Luke's father! Leia is his sister! C-3PO is his... brother? Kylo Ren is his nephew!
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