Wer war eigentlich bei den prequels Synchronregisseur?
Tobias Meister, von dem auch die Dialogbücher stammen und der Darth Maul in EP1 und Yoda in EP2 und 3 gesprochen hat.
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Wer war eigentlich bei den prequels Synchronregisseur?
In der März Ausgabe der Wired (US) war ein netter Artikel zu den 74 dos and donts zu den Star Wars Sequels, den man auch hier lesen kann:
74 Things Every Great Star Wars Movie Needs | Underwire | Wired.com
Leider werden nicht allen Beiträge ganz angezeigt, oder zumindest mein Browser ignoriert den "Show/Hide" Button. Aber zumindest den ersten Eintrag von Chris Hardwick, der auch der Beste ist, kann man vollständig hier nachlesen:
Comedian Chris Hardwick on the Epic Story That Shaped a Generation | Underwire | Wired.com
The Force requires no explanation.
Where it comes from. How it works. It doesn’t matter. And it’s time to stop piling on about midi-chlorians—they’ve taken more abuse than a Bothan spy. Instead, let’s remember what the galaxy felt like before we ever heard of them. What it felt like was mysterious. We forget how crucial the idea of mystery was to the original trilogy. Apart from the crawl, setting the stage for civil war, we were completely on our own. Our brains were exploding with questions. Who is Obi-Wan Kenobi? Why is he our only hope? What’s up with this Lord Vader, and good God, what is going on under that helmet?
We knew nothing. Which is precisely why we were so willing to bond with a young moisture farmer named Luke Skywalker—he knew nothing either. Unaware that the droids his uncle had just purchased were critical pawns in the war raging across the galaxy, Luke was driven out into the desert not just by curiosity (“I wonder if he means old Ben Kenobi?”) but by a deepening sense of his own destiny. And we couldn’t help but wonder, was it a coincidence that this kid ended up with the one beep-boopy robot that could turn the tide of a galactic war—or was it fate?
This idea—that a cosmic force was guiding Luke along a path predestined yet shrouded in mystery (“Difficult to see. Always in motion is the future.”)—was the special sauce of Star Wars. The Force surrounded us and penetrated us and bound us all together. And yes, maybe that does sound a little porny now, but those were simpler times. But the Force was far from *simple. Nowhere was this made more clear than on Dagobah, a training ground where a tiny green Confucian would ask questions but rarely give answers. Yoda’s lessons often gave way to deeper philosophical moments about good and evil, fathers and sons, love and hate. And yeah, I spent three years debating exactly what the hell happened in that cave. Do you remember what that felt like? Three years between Empire and Jedi. Years spent wondering if Vader was telling the truth about being Luke’s father. What Jabba would do with his carbonite slab of Solo. What Yoda meant when he told Obi-Wan, “There is another.” Another? Seriously? Another what?! I’m finally wondering again. In just a few years, I will once more travel to a long time ago, to a galaxy far, far away. I have no idea what will happen when I get there. It’s a mystery. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.
wie fändet ihr es wenn Ahsoka (dann schon im hohen Alter) noch bei der jede Ausbildung Teilnimmt ?
wie fändet ihr es wenn Ahsoka (dann schon im hohen Alter) noch bei der jede Ausbildung Teilnimmt ?
Es würde mich überraschen wenn Han Solo eine große Leinwandpräsenz in Episode VII bekommt. Selbst Luke Skywalker wird da wohl eher nicht im Vordergrund stehen. Zumindest in Action Szenen.
Es sei denn man setzt auf computergenerierte Stuntmen bei den Lichtschwert/Blaster-Kämpfen, aber davon sollte man imo lieber die Finger lassen.