To many digital characters is part of the problem, um can you like use make and costumes mixed in?
Well, look at Clone Wars. It's pretty well done; the best part of the prequel era, in my opinion.
But imagine if Lucas were to create a follow-up animated show using the same designs, featuring the further adventures of Luke, Leia, and Han. I would definitely watch that, and I can't imagine I'd be alone.
Lucas would barely have to pitch it to Cartoon Network.
"Hey, you guys interested in a Luke/Leia/Han show?"
"Sending the contract now."
Yeah, Luke/Leia/Han, I'm there in half a heartbeat.There's a lot of story untold in the time (years?) between the movies. Luke's character growth for instance, largely happens off-screen. He's a greenhorn in ANH, on a quest to learn what it means to be a Jedi in ESB and there's a huge change that happens before ROTJ, when he suddenly appears pretty much as a mature Jedi. I'd love to see the process of that transformation someday. Plus, what happens post-ROTJ?
"our heroes do a lot of running around and get shot at by stormtroopers while a cardboard villain shakes their fist at them from inside the latest superweapon."
How old we gonna be when this gets made. We have to wait for the television industry to change to make sure it gets good ratings and we have to wait until the technology gets good enough to make this look like the moves. (Prequels unfortunately it seems).
Each season consists of 22 episodes. George Lucas has said he would like to make at least 100 episodes, regardless of the ratings.
I've never read the novels, but I'm not expecting them to use the novels necessarily. For my money, I think the way to go is a direction that the novels haven't taken (that I've ever heard of, although I guess elements of the following have appeared in various forms), namely that the ingrateful idiots of the restored Republic decide to outlaw the Jedi to forestall any more "issues" with the dark side, which sets Luke in opposition to the establishment.As a weekly series, it'd need some kind of overarching story hook to make things interesting. There's plenty of expanded universe material featuring those characters that's just bloody awful because there's no point or direction to go in. Besides Zahn trilogy, most of the early novels were just lazy and not really about anything besides "our heroes do a lot of running around and get shot at by stormtroopers while a cardboard villain shakes their fist at them from inside the latest superweapon." It wasn't until the last decade or so that they started to introduce long term plot lines and some semblance of narrative oversight.
"our heroes do a lot of running around and get shot at by stormtroopers while a cardboard villain shakes their fist at them from inside the latest superweapon."
Heh, that already sounds a lot more fun than the prequels.![]()
I don't think the story needs to end there at all, but I side with the philosophy that the dark side (and the light side) is a physical attribute of the cosmos that can never be eradicated. It's like gravity - it just is, and everyone needs to come to terms with it. Ignoring it is the worst option.I think Lucas has a point when he says the story ends with RotJ. Anakin is redeemed, the Sith are gone and the Ewoks get a lifetimes supply of roasted stormtrooper meat.
I don't think the story needs to end there at all, but I side with the philosophy that the dark side (and the light side) is a physical attribute of the cosmos that can never be eradicated. It's like gravity - it just is, and everyone needs to come to terms with it. Ignoring it is the worst option.I think Lucas has a point when he says the story ends with RotJ. Anakin is redeemed, the Sith are gone and the Ewoks get a lifetimes supply of roasted stormtrooper meat.
From that perspective, when Jedi and Sith fight, they're both wrong in a way. Both sides refuse to acknowledge that what the cosmos really wants is balance, not domination of one side over the other. But humans (and humanoids) resist that notion furiously, so they never learn. Star Wars is a farcical tragedy of beings who cannot come to terms with the true nature of reality.![]()
I've never read the novels, but I'm not expecting them to use the novels necessarily.
Well given that the story of Star Wars was (according to Lucas) the story of the rise, fall and redemption of Anakin Skywalker, then yes, I'd say you do have to end it there. The dude's dead. Game over. Finito. He is a former Dark Lord. Hence my saying that to tell a new story, it'd have to be...well, a *new story*, no?
when Jedi and Sith fight, they're both wrong in a way. Both sides refuse to acknowledge that what the cosmos really wants is balance, not domination of one side over the other.
How can someone be so completely oblivious as to the reasons for their own franchise's success?
- 50 scripts have been completed
- The episodes are an hour long
- Each is “bigger” than “any of the prequels were”
- They take place between episode 3 and episode 4
- The working title is Star Wars: Underworld and the show is about the “underneath of what is going on”, “the criminals, the gangs that are running like, you know Wall Street, basically running the United States”
- McCallum describes the show as “complex”, “dark” and “adult”
- The budget could be as much as $5 million per episode
- But the show just can’t be made for that at the moment
- The budget is high because there are lots of digitally animated characters
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