When was attack of the clones written




















The original three are still pretty good movies with just some fridge logic problems that can be ignored. See below. This has gotten so annoying. He had a gun on Han and was planning basically to kidnap him. No one thinks Han is in the wrong for shooting first because the situation was already life threatening. No need to wait for the bounty hunter to shoot first.

Just like there is no need to constantly re-edit these movies in the first place. Who cares? Not in those movies. The more a movie, game, or book is hyped, the more suspious I am. I was very much prepared going into the theatre to be disappointed. The opening shot was very much original Star Wars, dynamic and interesting, but the plot and characters were so bad that everything went downhill once people came on screen. Another person trying to escape with important information but is captured but manages to send a droid off with that information.

Another desert planet where our young hero is stuck and trying to get by but finds the droid with the important information. Due to this, hero gets whisked away on an adventure where they will have to learn about the force and grow, but first they have to call the Milenium Falcon a piece of junk.

I was so glad to be forced to watch A New Hope again. Maybe that is the awakening force, forcing audience members who may have again developed amnesia to watch this forty year old movie again. Rey is so much of a Mary Sue that it is frankly painful to watch her. Due to the fact that this is just a remake of A New Hope, it brings up comparisons of pacing to the original, so I end up comparing Rey to Luke at first. Then Han Solo. Then Luke again.

She is a better pilot than Luke with basically no flying experience. Luke at least knew how to fly a ship. We have no indication that Rey has experience. Then in one movie, she manages, without a Jedi master helping her, to handedly fight a Sith Lord with master training in a light saber fight, practice telekinesis, and mind control.

The only possible answer I would accept for why she outpaced Luke so much and without any reasonable setup in the The Force Awakens is if she was literally the Force itself. But if that is not the answer, then she is way too OP on just the Force use. By making her this powerful and capable without a reasonable background, as a woman, I felt like Disney was trying to pander to my genitals.

Those organs are incapable of thought though, so I feel like they very much missed the mark in creating a powerful and interesting female lead. Jyn was better and she had almost no characterization at all. All of it was just unrealistic. It reminds me of something I heard from the writers of Stranger Things.

In their first imagining, they introduced Eleven by having her burst a door open with her powers. Then they rethought that. They realized they had eight hours to bring the audience up to that level, so instead we got intrigue and heightened awareness of Eleven, the intensity growing and growing until we were surprised by how serious things got.

The other big example is Person of Interest. It started out as an idea of a weekly case but by the end we were facing the end of the world as we know it.

And then the two start fighting. This is the critics versus the average movie goer. At least she has problems and flaws. I have no issue with diversity, but this again felt like pandering. It seems forced. We need a Hispanic man! We need an African-American man! We need a Chinese man! We need a man that no one can easily identify as any one ethnicity! That kind of diversity is a little disgusting to me. I compare it to something like Firefly and see immediately how far short it falls.

There are a lot of women in Firefly and two black characters. Disney seems to avoid the African-American woman entirely. So the question becomes for Disney, what is with the one female character? Are women rare in the Star Wars universe? We really only had Leia in the first trilogy. We really only had Padme in the prequels.

Women make up a large part of the population that I know of since evolutionarily you can have one male to a large number of women and it still work out. One woman to a large number of men is a problem. So where are all the women in Star Wars?

If Disney really wanted to get with the times, then they should have more female roles, not just a flat lead, and they should provide more variety based on something other than marketing. Danny Glover was not hired for Lethal Weapon because he was black; he was hired because he was the best man for the job. Disney also has a history of avoiding the very delicate subject of sexual orientation, unless it makes no sense, like Beauty and the Beast, which supposedly takes place in a time when being openly gay would problably result is ostrizaton or death.

Disney is just too inept to do it well. Kylo Ren is quite possibly the worse super villain ever. Superman and Suicide Squad.

First off, he is, as a lot of people call him, Darth Emo, who throws hissy fits like a teenager. Because you want to look imitating and with that face, how could you?

It was like time pauses as he takes off the helmet and a professional hair stylist invisibly cleans, dries, and quaffs his hair. Oh, wait. Not as cool as Han shooting at Vader and Vader just deflecting the shots with only his hand and snatching his pistol out of his hand with the force. So how is Kylo so much more powerful than Vader, the one who was meant to bring balance to the force?

No answer? Because it looks cool is not an answer. The main threat of the movie. The first time I saw it was that awful Predators movie, which could have been good, but had to have bigger, badder predators than all the previous movies.

Then just six months later, I was given a free ticket to see Independence Day: Resurgence and a-freaking-gain it had to have a bigger, badder mothership. This is not original. Brilliant, I tell you!

It seemed self-explanatory to me. I believe it is a psychologically accurate portrayal of a woman falling in love with a man suffering from Bipolar Disorder, an occurrence which happens much more frequently than you would imagine. Critics often say that George Lucas gave little thought to the prequels, but George Lucas gave far more thought to the prequels than his critics have given.

Most action movies only portray a normal, stereotypical love story in which a male protagonist saves a damsel in distress, falls in love with her, seduces her, and sleeps with her. Attack of the Clones portrays a much more emotionally complex and nuanced love story than any other film I have ever seen.

And that love story is not even the main plot; it is only a subplot. Attack of the Clones contains so many action sequences: the assassination attempts, the aerial chase through the skylanes of Coruscant, the confrontation between Obi-Wan and Jango, the chase through an asteroid field, the droid factory battle, the Colosseum battle against the monsters, the battle of Geonosis, ect. Attack of the Clones contains so many plot twists: the discovery that an entire star system was mysteriously erased from the Jedi Archives, the discovery that a clone army for the Galactic Republic was made in secret, the discovery that a deceased Jedi Master ordered the creation of the clone army, ect.

I cannot understand why anyone would hate Attack of the Clones, as so many fans of the original trilogy do. I think it is a psychologically accurate portrayal of a woman falling in love with a man suffering from Bipolar Disorder, an occurrence which happens much more frequently than you would imagine. The romance on the other hand is very strange. Hayden Christensen and Natalie Portman have no on-screen chemistry either. Critics often say that George Lucas gave little thought to the Prequels, but George Lucas gave far more thought to them than his critics.

Most action movies only portray a normal, stereotypical love story in which a male protagonist saves a damsel in distress, falls in love with her, and sleeps with her. Either sleeping excessively or experiencing insomnia Anakin wakes up early because he cannot sleep.

Extreme restlessness and extreme depression Anakin is constantly active, has intense bursts of energy, throws things, weeps bitterly, and massacres the Tusken Raiders when his mother dies. How would it be out of character for Yoda to enforce monastic celibacy? Issue 2A. Available Stock Add to want list This item is not in stock. Issue 2B.

Available Stock Add to want list Add to cart Fine. Issue 3A. Published May by Dark Horse. Issue 3B. Issue 4A. Issue 4B. Add to cart Very Good.



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