On 1/1/2020 at 2:29 PM, KalEl814 said:I dunno if nobody gave Lucas notes
Nobody gave Lucas notes.
I love the prequels in spite of their flaws. I also recognize that their worst problem was that George had no adversity to work through. There was no one on his staff that was willing to tell him no.
Heck, there was no one among his peers that was willing to tell him to dial it back a bit. The next problem was that the editors. George did a lot of editing on the OT< but so did other very talented editors. The editing team won an Oscar for ANH and of course one of them was George's wife at the time. This was a room of equals who could approach things and have to work out their differences. The PT just had people who said yes to whatever their boss wanted.
The Phantom Menace backlash took about two weeks to really gel in. Even then TPM was the fastest selling DVD of all time and it was the highest grossing movie of the year. So I guess everyone w
as hate
watching it all those times they went?
On 1/1/2020 at 1:39 PM, KommanderKeldoth said:Review from The Village Voice 1999:
Here's another review to consider:
"The Force is with us but let's try to keep our heads. These things are certifiable: " The Phantom Menace ," George Lucas's prequel to Star Wars the biggest grossing motion picture of all time, has opened. On the basis of the early receipts, " The Phantom Menace " could make more money than any other movie in history, except, maybe, Star Wars, the series that may last longer than the civilization that produced it.
"The Phantom Menace" is not a truly terrible movie. It's a nice movie. It's not, by any means, as nice as "Star Wars." It's not as fresh and funny and surprising and witty, but it is nice and inoffensive and, in a way that no one associated with it need be ashamed of, it's also silly. Attending to it is a lot like reading...a comic book. It is amusing in fitful patches but you're likely to find more beauty, suspense, discipline, craft and art when watching a New York harbor pilot bring the Queen Elizabeth 2 into her Hudson River berth, which is what "The Phantom Menace" most reminds me of. It's a big, expensive, time-consuming, essentially mechanical operation.
Gone from "The Empire Strikes Back" are those associations that so enchanted us in "Star Wars," reminders of everything from the Passion of Jesus and the stories of Beowulf and King Arthur to those of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn, the Oz books, Buck Rogers and Peanuts. Strictly speaking, "The Phantom Menace" isn't even a complete narrative. It has no beginning or end, being simply another chapter in a serial that appears to be continuing not onward and upward but sideways. How, then, to review it?
The fact that I am here at this minute facing a reproachful typewriter and attempting to get a fix on "The Phantom Menace" is, perhaps, proof of something I've been suspecting for some time now. That is, that there is more nonsense being written, spoken and rumored about movies today than about any of the other so-called popular arts except rock music. The Force is with us, indeed, and a lot of it is hot air.
Ordinarily when one reviews a movie one attempts to tell a little something about the story. It's a measure of my mixed feelings about "The Phantom Menace" that I'm not at all sure that I understand the plot. That was actually one of the more charming conceits of Star Wars, which began with a long, intensely complicated message about who was doing what to whom in the galactic confrontations we were about to witness and which, when we did see them, looked sort of like a game of neighborhood hide-and-seek at the Hayden Planetarium. One didn't worry about its politics. One only had to distinguish the good persons from the bad. This is pretty much the way one is supposed to feel about "The Phantom Menace," but one's impulse to know, to understand, cannot be arrested indefinitely without doing psychic damage or, worse, without risking boredom."
Oh, wait. That's a review of Empire Strikes back from The New York Times June 15th, 1980
https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/library/film/061580empire.html
Have a look at some more contemporaneous stuff from then:
http://www.acriticalhit.com/fans-react-empire-strikes-back-1980/