BronsonLee
Member
lol wtf that song from KUFFS is a banger
Boba Fett's movie should start with him getting killed
lol that would be pretty good. Then of course in the next scene he walks out from the side into the frame to canned applause as he talks to the audience and his theme music kicks in.
And this is his theme:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWfzZ0L2pv4
edit: Ok enough derail, sorry, got excited for this movie.
I'm not sure if this has already been posted in this thread, or if it would warrant a new thread, but Gareth Edwards initially had everyone in the film living after the final battle, because he assumed that Disney wouldn't allow him to kill off everyone.
Disney then gave him the go ahead to do what he wanted with the film, so they then redid the entire ending.
Really interesting.
http://www.theverge.com/2016/12/20/14022380/rogue-one-ending-original-different-gareth-edwards
Boba Fett's movie should start with him getting killed
7 out of 10
And Forrest Wittaker wasn't believable as that character.
Sorry. My opinion.
Oh, Whitaker was bad. Just bad. He sounds worse than in the trailer!
wonder if they will ever do a star wars spinoff film that actually bridges the gap between the 2 trilogies.
It's annoying as hell that lucas did 3 whole movies dedicated to the 'rise of anakin' and yet where we left off in eps3 and where we end up in Rogue 1/eps 4 is basically a completely different person in terms of mannerisms and temperment.
Riz Ahmed's perpetual WTF face helps those scenes immensely
Man, he's so good. Him in Nightcrawler? A+.
Why would Boba Fett be breaking the fourth wall?
What I'd like to see, as I mentioned vefore, would be an old Boba post-RotJ on his last assignment so that we could get Temuera Morrison back. He could pass the baton on to another younger bounty hunter. He had a daughter in Legends.
I think Jyn's a lock (it was her idea) and MAYBE Cassian (since he probably asked around for people to volunteer)
I don't think they'd know Bodhi since he just gave callsigns, never his name
No fucking way they know Baze & Chirrut
POOP POOP ON THE FLOOR
I'd like to see a conversation between Whitaker's character in this and Eddie Redmayne's in Juipiter Ascending.
Boba Fett's movie should start with him getting killed
Pretty sure Cassian said it sarcastically the first time, then Jyn threw the line back at the rebel fighters the second time.For real? You had no problems with the opening of the film and first few acts? The cheese level of some of the dialogue "Rebellions are built on hope!" ? Actors like Forest and Mads being completely wasted and having little to do in the film at all?
It opens with him flying at the side of Jabba's Barge and just as he hits you get the record scratch and the voice over.
"Yeah, that's me. I guess you're probably wondering how I ended up here..." and then it flashes back to young Boba Fett.
Boba Fett falls into the Sarlacc pit.
*record scratch freeze frame*
Voice over: "Soooooo, yeah. I bet right now you're probably wondering how I got here, huh?"
The Ghost is also visible in the upper left corner of this shot [see the image at the top of this article], on a landing pad at the temple base on Yavin 4. Filoni says fans of the show may someday see Rogue Ones action retold from his characters perspective on a future season of Rebels. I already have some theories about the story behind it, Filoni says. I can imagine doing that entire [Scarif] battle from their point of view, whoever is on the Ghost at that point.
Hera Syndulla is the green-skinned alien Twilek who pilots the Ghost starship, and although she doesnt appear on screen in Rogue One, a General Syndulla is summoned to the briefing room over the intercom at the Yavin 4 base. Filoni credits sound designer Matt Wood, who also voices the character General Grievous, for that reference. We dont see Hera, but we know shes there. Although some fans are debating about that. We have the answer
The General Syndulla reference has created debate among Rebels fans, since Heras father, Cham Syndulla, is already a resistance general on the show and shes not. It turns out, this a tease of things to come on Rebels. I can clarify thats absolutely Hera being paged, not her dad, Filoni says. The movie gives that away, but I would rather have all the [references] be right. Hera will eventually become a general in the Rebel Alliance. But how? That storyline will remain a mystery for now.
I'm not sure if this has already been posted in this thread, or if it would warrant a new thread, but Gareth Edwards initially had everyone in the film living after the final battle, because he assumed that Disney wouldn't allow him to kill off everyone.
Disney then gave him the go ahead to do what he wanted with the film, so they then redid the entire ending.
Really interesting.
http://www.theverge.com/2016/12/20/14022380/rogue-one-ending-original-different-gareth-edwards
Boba Fett falls into the Sarlacc pit.
*record scratch freeze frame*
Voice over: "Soooooo, yeah. I bet right now you're probably wondering how I got here, huh?"
Taking Boba Fett as a dark edgy character seriously is a huge mistake lol.
Boba Fett's movie should start with him getting killed
...wait a sec
Boba Fett falls into the Sarlacc pit.
*record scratch freeze frame*
Voice over: "Soooooo, yeah. I bet right now you're probably wondering how I got here, huh?"
The visual guide states the reason his breathing was so laboured in Rogue One was that his lungs were filled with Geonosian Pesticide.Which Forest Whittaker performance was more inspired, this one, or Battlefield Earth?
that is the cage warrior leader concept art made much much later for the clone wars and are not tied to the original episode one concepts.
Boba Fett's movie should start with him getting killed
So would Bail Organa have been cool with Admiral Raddus just dragging his daughter right into the middle of a possibly suicidal battle?
Laurence Kasdan's original idea for a Boba Fett film was similar. At the very beginning Fett is tailing someone who kills him and then takes his armour - you never see their face, don't know who they are or why Fett was tracking them.
Kasdan wanted him to be more like the Eastwood "man with no name" character. He wanted to put some mystery back after the prequels ruined everything.
I'd pay to see it.
So I watched it today and I was wondering for half the movie who was "the bothans"... haha silly me, I forgot there were two Death Stars, so when do we get a movie about the bothans, I want to see them die too.
Which Forest Whittaker performance was more inspired, this one, or Battlefield Earth?
I swear I didn't see that other post. But I'm comforted by the fact that I'm not the only one who immediately thought that.
So why is it that in ANH Vader and co. don't just blow up the rebel ship? What's the point in getting the plans? It's the only copy?
They need to find the plans but also find the hidden rebel base. Vader can't just indiscriminately blow everything up if those two things are both kind of up in the air.So why is it that in ANH Vader and co. don't just blow up the rebel ship? What's the point in getting the plans? It's the only copy?
I was going to write a detailed review of what I liked and disliked, but midway through I realized all I was trying to convey was my obsession with Vader's design in this, and love for K2.
I can't get over how impacting I found Vader's hallway scene to be. The prequels left me with an overwhelming feeling that the Jedi just aren't important because there are so many of them. THIS film however, brought a whole new meaning to that. As a viewer, what I personally took away from this more than anything else, was how insignificant the struggles and problems of the rebels vs. empire are next to force users.
So many long drawn out scenes of people shooting at each other, and Vader shows up just to dance through the room dicing everyone up. It has been a LONG time since a Star Wars movie had me holding my breath to a gasp the way that did.
For all the shit I hate in this, it made Jedi feel unique and rare again. They are just on a completely different plane of significance in comparison to the petty problems the other characters face.
Eh, I thought Krennic more than held his own. And the way they wrapped it up was great considering Tarkin taking over his work and killing him in the blast explains why he's never mentioned in the OT.
Yeah, he can't be mentioned because he wasn't thought of at the time, but the movie created a story that perfectly explained why.
No, it's not even close. There's nothing convenient about how it wrapped up as it ends shortly before Episode 4 begins. However, Episode 3 starting to throw stuff that looks like the OT at the end, 20 years before the OT starts, is what's convenient. Leia didn't take the plans and sit on them for 18 years; it's a completely different scenario.
Plus, it actually enhances Episode 4 as Vader is noticeably more pissed at the beginning of ANH than at most points of any of the OT ("COMMANDER, TEAR THIS SHIP APART UNTIL YOU'VE FOUND THOSE PLANS!"). It's a louder, less contained version of himself, whereas later in the film and especially in 5, he's more of a calm badass who internalizes the anger more, at least verbally (obviously, he isn't above force choking someone to death). Watching Leia's ship slip away at the last second after annihilating the rebels on the ship is a very cool way of showing why he was audibly more irritated.
If anything, it felt like the fullfillment of a promise made in ANH.
They simply didn't have the SFX to show off Vader in the ANH as they did in R1, but for him to have the galactic reputation he does, it's kinda heavily implied he's still a bit more than just a middle manager.
Vader ripping those rebels a new asshole was so fucking good to watch though I do lament the lack of him killing anybody in the main cast.
I think they did themselves a disservice by so heavily featuring human CGI characters - I'm surprised they did it as they surely must know that shit ages terribly. Had they just shown Moff from behind I'd have totally bought it....and that "hope" line at the end. Brutal.
I'd like to see a conversation between Whitaker's character in this and Eddie Redmayne's in Juipiter Ascending.
It really helps that there were no lightsabers or jedi prior to that scene so we were seeing the galaxy and the fighting and flying from a non-force user perspective...and then Vader shows up.
It also helps that the directing and choreography are grounded and competent. Even Lucas could have ruined that scene if he was directing it. Thank god there were no cg flipping stuntmen all over this movie.