Dignan Wrote:Kev Smith writing a Star Wars television show? Hmmm. It just might work. Maybe.Gotta love that movie. And the debate about whether the independent contractors working on the second Death Star were innocent victims.....CLASSIC!
If nothing else, it could retain the episodic cliff-hanger feel of the science fiction serials( Flash Gordon and the like) which inspired the holy trilogy. And Smith is an ace writer.
"Empire had the better ending- Luke gets his hand cut off and finds out Vader is his father, Han gets frozen and taken away by Boba Fett. It ends on such a down note. That's what life is, a series of down endings... all Jedi had was a bunch of muppets."
jimbow8 Wrote:Gotta love that movie. And the debate about whether the independent contractors working on the second Death Star were innocent victims.....CLASSIC!
Blake Wrote:Even better is that George Lucas makes reference to that in the Attack of the Clones commentary. He basically says the Geonosians are the "contractors" referred to in Clerks. Pretty funny.I rarely listen to commentaries. Maybe I'll listen to that one some time.
Blake
nijimeijer Wrote:Officially, he kept tight control, but when it came time for him to make his prequels, he walked all over some of the concepts and history set forth in the Expanded Universe.
As I said--it's his world, and he can obviously do what he will with it. I suppose it's something, however, he should have included as "off limits" to those working in the EU. But some of the smaller things really just add up to contradictions and problems all around that could have been avoided had he, you know, paid attention.
Scott Hajek Wrote:The history of Boba Fett was done well in one short story by Daniel Keyes Moran, but with AOTC, that story is pretty much scrap. It's still good, but doesn't fit any more.Tell me more.
Mike Hanson Wrote:And the first stricture he put upon all the people involved, was that they could not write anything whatsoever that took place during the thirty years preceding Episode Four: A New Hope. As you've now surmised, this was so that he could conceive and create the prequel trilogy of The Phantom Menace, Attack of the Clones, and Revenge of the Sith.
dejo Wrote:Well, there are some books with stories that take place during that timeframe. For example, "Han Solo and the Lost Legacy" (a paperback I happen to have a first edition of). For others, check out this page: STAR WARS: The Novels - What Happened When?