Sorry George, coming up with that excuse after 20 years
He has maintained this since the early 2000s. Lucas was always very open about his influences and the kind of films he wanted to make. The fact is, a lot of people who don't like certain films in the PT or the PT as a whole do not like the kind of film he wanted to make. It's melodrama. Overt melodrama. A lot of silent film influences, too, so you get these very overwrought facial expressions in Attack of the Clones which owes a lot to Metropolis and stuff like that. You know Anakin is angry when his mother dies in his arms because he looks at the camera like he wants to murder it, as the music rises to a shrill crescendo.
Star Wars is a weird film franchise because people approach it with such harsh preconceptions instead of trying to understand what Lucas as a filmmaker was trying to make. What he was trying to convey. There's also an effort to downplay Lucas's well demonstrated chops as a director before he made Star Wars. There is an effort to claim that he didn't intend the political themes in Star Wars despite him making very political student films. Lucas is an art film director, basically, making weird space opera films for children intended to teach children moral and life lessons. The PT is designed to teach children how to deal with fear, and how they, like Anakin, could be pulled to the dark side. Star Wars is Lucas's sincere art. They're not always perfect, but they are always sincere.
This is what Kayne West meant when he talked about the Prequels vs the Sequel Trilogy. All six Lucas films are the product of an artist working with a huge team that trusted him, and he them. They were in uncharted territory, making films for the sake of art, really. The merch existed to fund more films. Lucas wasn't making these movies so he could live a cushy life. He had a genuine passion for making movies. This is sorely missing from Star Wars without him. The entire purpose of these movies has changed. Star Wars 1-3 exist because Lucas wanted to tell the story of Anakin Skywalker that existed in his head. Star Wars 7-9 exist to make money, even if the people involved did work hard and they didn't necessarily make BAD films.
There's a surprising amount of practical effects in the prequels, even in something like Attack of the Clones that looks like a cartoon now. Its not on the level of Hobbit trilogy, for example, which is very much a cartoon. But I know what you mean.
Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith suffer from compositing issues due to the bleeding edge digital cameras used. Chroma is lower resolution than luma. So you have issues with getting a clean mask to mix the backgrounds and the foregrounds. It's why The Phantom Menace has a much cleaner image. It was shot on cameras. And it looks beautiful. Attack of the Clones was so revolutionary for filmmaking, but it suffered for being at the bleeding edge. I think the film has some amazing scenes, though.
I was going to make my own thread, but since this is here I guess I'll just ask here. Do you think George really intended for Vader to be Luke's father from the beginning? I have to think he didn't, considering he got James Earl Jones to voice him. It's obviously a black voice.
No, originally Anakin Skywalker was a different character. Lucas had a general plan in place by the time he was making Return of the Jedi, but he was really loosy goosy for the first two films. Merging the two characters was a massive, out of left field twist. And it worked. JEJ was never meant to be the face under the mask, though. He didn't want to be credited on the film because he viewed his performance as "special effects", not traditional acting. This was a complex issue back then because the Exorcist had an uncredited actress doing the demon voice, for example. But he was given credit as the voice.