Well, so that's how the entire galaxy at the end of Jedi knew the Empire was beaten.
They must have all seen the Deathstar explode in the sky, too.
They must have all seen the Deathstar explode in the sky, too.
I believe he worded it to say that the person on Tattooine and the person on Coruscant looking up in the sky see the same instant of time.
A similar effect happens in Star Trek Generations when Dr. Soran destroys the Veridian star with his trilithium probe. The star goes dark as soon as the probe detonates, which wouldn't happen no matter how close or far you are when standing on the surface of an inhabitable planet. It should take at least several minutes for the light reaching Soran and Picard to dim, but most filmmakers won't depict the dimming or desruction of a star that way because it would slow down the action and pace of the film.
Ugh. Such a downer. SPACE IS SILENT FOLKS.0/10 this movie had sound in space.
Ugh. Such a downer. SPACE IS SILENT FOLKS.
(I seem to recall that Victorian and Edwardian era sci-fi was a way to get sexual content through as it was fictional with aliens, so it didn't have to abide by social norms.)
Firefly and Serenity didn't have sound in space
It's hard to believe it'll be on Blu ray in about a month and a half. Remember when we had to wait five or six months (or longer in the case of The Phantom Menace, which wasn't released until the spring of the next year) for a new Star Wars film to come out on home video format?
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