Zion wrote:Didn't one of the webdocs say that Neeson never recorded anything? That they tried the scene with someone else feeding the lines and it didn't really work when put into the film.
ki adi moonshine wrote:Well, you know Gabe? He says it WAS recorded. I even heard from someone else that he has actually heard it. I dunno, I think he has more credibility than Rick McCallum..lol
darthpsychotic wrote:I don't mean to pile on Ki-Adi-Morgan here - not at all, just pointing stuff out.
Please read what ArtMaul had to say about Liam Neeson, George Lucas, and Revenge of the Sith. Keep in mind that ArtMaul is someone who supplied a metric fuckton of spoilers to MF.
Treadwell wrote:No one had a problem with what we saw in the Original Trilogy, Obi disappeared, Yoda disappeared; they both came back as corporeal ghosts and were joined by Anakin Skywalker at the climax of the saga.
People handled that for 15 years or so without having a frigging coronary.
Seems to me no one was complaining back in 1977, 1980 and 1983 when we made those three films one of the most successful and well-loved movie franchises ever.
ETAndElliot4Ever wrote:That's because back when the OT was made, we didn't see assloads of Jedi killed without becoming spirits, you ignorant wretch.
ETAndElliot4Ever wrote:People could have just as well assumed that disappearing and becoming a ghost was just what all Jedi did when they died.
2Cleva wrote:DarthFist - If you're open to questions I have a couple - does the commentary explain what the Jedi thought process is when they are talking about their plans for the twins?
The Dark Shape wrote:Cutting Qui-Gon's voice-over pretty makes the 'revelation' a pretty huge deus ex machina. It's like Lucas saying, "Oh shit, it doesn't make sense for Jedi to suddenly come back as ghosts, does it?" Yoda literally says the twins have been split up, and then says, "By the way, Obi-Wan, Qui-Gon's back from the dead. Yep. Amazing huh?" It doesn't feel at all natural to the story.
It doesn't feel at all natural to the story.
Cheesus wrote:Exactly. It would have "worked" better for me if instead Yoda said something along the lines of "though meditation, I've discovered a way to become one with the Force. This will become important when we are ready to call upon the twins so I want to to spend time learning this."
Leaving Qui-Gon out of it would have helped loads.
AgentPendergast wrote:Why, oh why did GL simply not choose to record the scene with someone else's voice, however that voice may have sounded...?
Moiner007 wrote:Well Mr. Treadwell, you have certainly missed the point.
Moiner007 wrote:We're simply stating that not including this scene, but including the scene from Episode II where we hear Qui-Gon and the scene in Episode III where Yoda tells Obi-Wan about Qui-Gon is poor, sloppy filmmaking.
Moiner007 wrote:It's in the script. It's probably the biggest scene in the script.
Moiner007 wrote:You know when Lucas wrote this back in 94 or whatever, that his original treatment probably included this one great scene that sums up the entire Prequel Trilogy: The Sith are seeking immortality, and yet it is something they will never find.
The Sith are seeking immortality, and yet it is something they will never find.
Try reading one of many threads, including this one.
Raveers wrote:I'm still lost as to why a lot of people are so obsessed on wanting Qui-Gon in ROTS....we really do not need him in it...
So, Luke could've found Yoda, who went into hiding and no one knew he still exists, on his own?
So, Luke could've found Yoda, who went into hiding and no one knew he still exists, on his own?
Try denying that "Force Ghosts" was never part of the original story until Alec Guinness started getting pissed about his character's death.
VT-16 wrote:Try denying that "Force Ghosts" was never part of the original story until Alec Guinness started getting pissed about his character's death.
Hardcore Legend wrote:I had a hearty chuckle last night listening to Lucas on the commentary of ESB. He said that while the process of becoming one with the Force was a mystery in the OT, the three PT films would expand upon it and show how it works.
Uhuh....maybe in the super secret version you only show to friends. The rest of us got 30 seconds of dialogue in the final 5 minutes of the final PT film.
You call that exposition?
Hardcore Legend wrote:What kinda shoots that theory to shit is that Lucas planned a few minutes or atleast dialogue between QGJ and Yoda in ROTS to further expand on this. It's not as if he thought he had done a bang up job and the little interaction between Obi Wan and Yoda was just a bonus for the fans.
He intened more, certainly at the time of the ESB commentary, but was never able to do it.
Treadwell wrote:Lucas also "intended" at some point to have Palpatine tell Anakin he was his father, have Leia as turn out to be some kind of celestial deity and have Han be a green-skinned reptile.
Treadwell wrote:B) I don't see what the unrealised Yoda/QGJ scene said that is not established in the Yoda/Obi dialogue anyway.
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