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Old 05-18-2005, 07:52 PM   #41 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Locobot
I dont know, life tends to imitate art more than we think. Would we be having this discussion if the movie came out with Clinton in office?
Who can say.

I do know that it is human nature to pay more attention when it is things we disagree with than when it is things we agree with.

I also know that on one site that I used to spend time on, the right leaning there were hypersensitive to things that were said when Clinton was in office.
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Old 05-18-2005, 10:20 PM   #42 (permalink)
is awesome!
 
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Well I don't remember seeing such effects-ladden commercials for McDonnell Douglass previous to the BushII presidency. Those commercials are certainly star wars influenced, wouldn't be surpised if they were ILM productions.


Maybe Darth Sideous is actually....
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Old 05-27-2005, 05:17 PM   #43 (permalink)
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Really.. Who the hell is George Lucas?

He made Star Wars, big deal. I think my neighbor had an absolutley ridiculious political opinion too, but it didn't make the news.

Who cares...
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Old 05-27-2005, 07:24 PM   #44 (permalink)
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why on gods green earth would anyone as creative as george lucas want to ruin his legacy of brilliance on the big screen with politics?
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Old 05-27-2005, 08:17 PM   #45 (permalink)
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Perhaps, as David Brin suggests, both The Empire and The Rebellion are evil, just flip sides of the same elitist-worshipping coin? Below is the first page of an essay by Brin about the lessons of the Empire. Follow the link; the whole article is well worth reading.

Link

Quote:
"Star Wars" despots vs. "Star Trek" populists

Why is George Lucas peddling an elitist, anti-democratic agenda under the guise of escapist fun?

By David Brin
- - - - - - - - - -

June 15, 1999 | Well, I boycotted "Episode I: The Phantom Menace" -- for an entire week.

Why? What's to boycott? Isn't "Star Wars" good old fashioned sci-fi? Harmless fun? Some people call it "eye candy" -- a chance to drop back into childhood and punt your adult cares away for two hours, dwelling in a lavish universe where good and evil are vividly drawn, without all the inconvenient counterpoint distinctions that clutter daily life.

Got a problem? Cleave it with a light saber! Wouldn't you love -- just once in your life -- to dive a fast little ship into your worst enemy's stronghold and set off a chain reaction, blowing up the whole megillah from within its rotten core while you streak away to safety at the speed of light? (It's such a nifty notion that it happens in three out of four "Star Wars" flicks.)

Anyway, I make a good living writing science-fiction novels and movies. So "Star Wars" ought to be a great busman's holiday, right?

One of the problems with so-called light entertainment today is that somehow, amid all the gaudy special effects, people tend to lose track of simple things, like story and meaning. They stop noticing the moral lessons the director is trying to push. Yet these things matter.

By now it's grown clear that George Lucas has an agenda, one that he takes very seriously. After four "Star Wars" films, alarm bells should have gone off, even among those who don't look for morals in movies. When the chief feature distinguishing "good" from "evil" is how pretty the characters are, it's a clue that maybe the whole saga deserves a second look.

Just what bill of goods are we being sold, between the frames?

Elites have an inherent right to arbitrary rule; common citizens needn't be consulted. They may only choose which elite to follow.

"Good" elites should act on their subjective whims, without evidence, argument or accountability.

Any amount of sin can be forgiven if you are important enough.

True leaders are born. It's genetic. The right to rule is inherited.

Justified human emotions can turn a good person evil.

That is just the beginning of a long list of "moral" lessons relentlessly pushed by "Star Wars." Lessons that starkly differentiate this saga from others that seem superficially similar, like "Star Trek." (We'll take a much closer look at some stark divergences between these two sci-fi universes below.)

Above all, I never cared for the whole Nietzschian bermensch thing: the notion -- pervading a great many myths and legends -- that a good yarn has to be about demigods who are bigger, badder and better than normal folk by several orders of magnitude. It's an ancient storytelling tradition based on abiding contempt for the masses -- one that I find odious in the works of A.E. Van Vogt, E.E. Smith, L. Ron Hubbard and wherever you witness slanlike super-beings deciding the fate of billions without ever pausing to consider their wishes.

Wow, you say. If I feel that strongly about this, why just a week-long boycott? Why see the latest "Star Wars" film at all?

Because I am forced to admit that demigod tales resonate deeply in the human heart.
I love Star Wars as space opera, but it falls apart as political rhetoric. Is it any wonder the best of the Star Wars movies is the one for which he didn't write or co-write the screeplay?
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Old 05-27-2005, 09:55 PM   #46 (permalink)
Pissing in the cornflakes
 
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Gee someone in Hollywood would say something bad about G.W. at a festival which last year gave Moore the best picture award?

Thats unpossible!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Locobot
I dont know, life tends to imitate art more than we think. Would we be having this discussion if the movie came out with Clinton in office?
No because it wasn't hip to protest Clinton's wars or use of force.
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Old 05-28-2005, 06:51 AM   #47 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dksuddeth
why on gods green earth would anyone as creative as george lucas want to ruin his legacy of brilliance on the big screen with politics?
Everyone has opinions, viable or not. Lucas didn't ruin his legacy by making poor analogies or biased opinions. Lucas ruined his legacy with 3 shitty movies.

No one cares what Lucas has to say. Really.
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Old 05-28-2005, 07:35 AM   #48 (permalink)
Pissing in the cornflakes
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Kurant
Everyone has opinions, viable or not. Lucas didn't ruin his legacy by making poor analogies or biased opinions. Lucas ruined his legacy with 3 shitty movies.

No one cares what Lucas has to say. Really.
I can never see Lucas without thinking of Jar Jar.

Which is also why I didn't spend any money on II or III, he still owes me back a ticket price for I.
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Old 05-31-2005, 10:25 PM   #49 (permalink)
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He had an opportunity to speak. He spoke on what he felt was a parallel between the movie the people were there to see- not just at some random time- and the current political landscape. There are so many things to speak on, and he chose to relate his new movie to it's roots, which were politically motivated. Since he wrote the original series under the influence of politics, and then also the prequel series that has now, some ten years later, made its way onto the big screen, it seems very reasonable to me that he make reference to his ways of thinking and inspirations and how they are easily compared to our current political situation, so many years later.

I think his comments were fine, based on the fact that this story was always a tale rooted in politics. He is simply pointing out that things are similar in some respects to the ways and reasons he originally wrote the story, well before any of this was happening.

I would only say he was doing this for publicity if he made such comments at every press conference, or any public speaking engagement. As of now, i'm unaware of other occasions where such parallels and comments were made.
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Old 06-01-2005, 01:10 PM   #50 (permalink)
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Well see, Star Wars is an archetypal story, and you can pretty much apply any of what happens to the real world. Hell, I remember one of my friend's saying that Episode One was about the United States' Israel Policy. With archetypes, I think it's rather erroneous to try and limit them to analogy, applicability, yes. To me, when you start in with analogy, you're automatically limiting yourself as a writer, and while the writing of George Lucas isn't that great, I don't think it's limited by analogy. A couple of reasons, Episode I was written during the Clinton administration and we all knew that Palpatine had to gain power of the Senate and dissolve it because we all knew he was the Emperor. So obviously he's going to go along in the vein of writers and history before him (Orwell, Shakespeare, rise and fall of Roman Empire, Hitler, etc.) to use as examples and waypoints to write and frame his story. While I do disagree with George Lucas and I find his line written for Obi-Wan "Only the Sith believe in absolutes," to be tasteless (because the Jedi have to believe in absolutes as well, because each act that's evil leads them down a path that few have been redeemed from, so in my mind, that line makes no sense whatsoever) to say that he had President Bush in mind when he began the story is jumping to some conclusions a little bit. Yes, subtle script lines like the ones mentioned above may have been intended as a way to take a jab at the President, but I think that's an irrelevant point going back to again, the overall story. Lucas is able to make that comment because of the applicability of archetypes to pretty much anything. Was it for publicity? Maybe, but how much more publicity does Star Wars really need? Honestly, I just saw on G4 TV two commercials, one for Episode III and then one for Star Wars Galaxies, back to back. Secondly, the reporter may have picked up on the applications and asked Lucas about it, thus giving us this article.
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Old 06-05-2005, 01:47 PM   #51 (permalink)
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Lucas' liberal politics have influenced Star Wars in at least a few ways already: He has already told us that the Nemoidian leaders of the Trade Federation are named Nute Gunray and Lott Dod for Senators Trent Lott (R-MS), Chris Dodd (D-CT), Newt Gingrich and Ronald Reagan (re-arranged to Gunray). 3 Republicans and one of the more conservative Democrats.

But I don't think Ep. 3 is anti-Bush. If 9/11 had never happened, we'd still have Ep. 3 and it would be the same movie. We just wouldn't be seeing Bush in it, we'd see more Hitler or Mussolini.

-Mikey
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Old 06-06-2005, 04:27 AM   #52 (permalink)
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I love it when people say the "stars" should shut up.... yet then start quoting Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Coulter, Nugent or whomever the star for the GOP happens to be now.

And yes, all those mentioned have 1 thing that every other star (Sarandon, Lucas, Streisand, etc.) have in common the need to sell product. And if it takes outrageous things to say they will deem it necessary to in order to get press (or in some cases create press).

If you tell me the stars on the left need to shut up... then you must accept me telling you the stars on the right must shut up.

In my opinion, they have as much right to speak as anybody and if they have the audience that listens it is because of their hard work and the respect they have commanded. NOONE has any right to tell anyone else to shut up, threaten or belittle another's right to speak. You can dismiss what they say, argue facts or ignore them.... but they have as much right to speak and to use their celebrity in any way they want. If people don't like what they say, then those people stop buying the product and they may go away or be quiet. But to tell, insinuate, or threaten people to shut up because they may have an audience and YOU don't like what they say.......is truly un-American and against everything I believe in.

I may not like what a person says or believes, but I have proven (by my enlistment in the Navy) I am willing to lay my life on the line for their right to say it.
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Old 06-06-2005, 05:10 AM   #53 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by pan6467
I love it when people say the "stars" should shut up.... yet then start quoting Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Coulter, Nugent or whomever the star for the GOP happens to be now.

And yes, all those mentioned have 1 thing that every other star (Sarandon, Lucas, Streisand, etc.) have in common the need to sell product. And if it takes outrageous things to say they will deem it necessary to in order to get press (or in some cases create press).

If you tell me the stars on the left need to shut up... then you must accept me telling you the stars on the right must shut up.

In my opinion, they have as much right to speak as anybody and if they have the audience that listens it is because of their hard work and the respect they have commanded. NOONE has any right to tell anyone else to shut up, threaten or belittle another's right to speak. You can dismiss what they say, argue facts or ignore them.... but they have as much right to speak and to use their celebrity in any way they want. If people don't like what they say, then those people stop buying the product and they may go away or be quiet. But to tell, insinuate, or threaten people to shut up because they may have an audience and YOU don't like what they say.......is truly un-American and against everything I believe in.

I may not like what a person says or believes, but I have proven (by my enlistment in the Navy) I am willing to lay my life on the line for their right to say it.
You have it exactly right. Everyone has the right to use their political position or fame to speak their mind. Taking this away from someone would be very un-American.

I never understood why Hollywood gets attacked when it goes political, yet the right does the same thing with their prominent people.
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Old 06-08-2005, 04:45 AM   #54 (permalink)
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The worst opponent in an informal debate is an intelligent person with a set of beliefs....this person cannot express THEMSELF or comment on topics/facts.

With that being said...the movie had an erie (spelling?) resemblence to where the USA is today. A leader who is not who you thought he/she is/was.
Better yet a leader who may not have his/her supporters in mind rather alternative incentives and motives.

Don't discredit Lucas...why? If that was the case we would have to discredit the Smirkster everytime he speaks.
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Old 06-08-2005, 05:03 AM   #55 (permalink)
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Left: Charlie Chaplin, Humphrey Bogart, Frank Sinatra, Matt Damon, Martin Sheen, Barbra Streisand and so on.

Right: Douglas Fairbanks, Charlton Heston, Bing Crosby, Drew Carey, Bruce Willis, Ah-nold, Mel Gibson, Demi Moore and so on

The list of "star right is just as prominent as that on the left and just as long. Hollywood and the media has always been diverse and at odds with government and why would this be? Creativity is spawned partially by rebelliousness and speaking out against what the artists find wrong in society. Hence, the arts and artists will always be attacked by someone (no matter what side the artist maybe or what the point of the art truly is).
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