Darth Maul in Southeast Asia, Honing Wushu Skills

Filed under: Prequels — Trilogist at 10:04 pm on Friday, November 10, 2006

For a guy who was summarily chopped in half and dropped down a bottomless techno-pit, Ray Park has done pretty good notwithstanding. He’s managed to pick up the pieces … and resume a good career. He’s currently in Malaysia, practicing his skills and working on his next film.

“We want to come up with stuff you’ve never seen before. This time I want to be the good guy!” said Park who is more known for his villain roles as Darth Maul, the Toad in X-Men (2000) and the Headless Horseman in Sleepy Hollow (1999). 

He added that he was confident that shooting on the delayed Iron Fist movie would begin next year. Park will act as Danny Rand, one of the characters developed by Marvel Comics, the same company which created Spider-Man, Daredevil, The Hulk and Fantastic Four.

Star Wars Coming to the Two and a Half Inch Screen!

Filed under: Classic Trilogy, Prequels — Trilogist at 9:52 pm on Friday, November 10, 2006

DATELINE New York … (I’ve always wanted to start a story that way) CNN Money reports that News Corp. (dba Fox movies) is closing in on a deal with Apple to sell its films on the iTunes Store.

Personally, I don’t see this iPod video thing going too far, but Apple is trying to stretch out of the home office and into the living room with products like the iTV, and higher resolutions on their movie downloads (near DVD quality). Something tells me this is gonna catch on, and they’ll give Microsoft a run for their money (Xbox 360) for a slice of the American living room.

Star Wars on iTunes?

Filed under: Classic Trilogy, Prequels — Fish at 8:22 pm on Friday, November 10, 2006

CNN is reporting that Apple and News Corp., the parent company of 20th Century Fox, are in talks to bring movie downloads to the iTunes Store.

Fox, of course, owns the distribution rights to the Star Wars films. Currently iTunes movie downloads are at SD resolution, so there wouldn’t be any quality advantage over a DVD. However, there has been some speculation in the Apple community that Steve Jobs might have HD downloads in the works. The “iTV” prototype that was previewed at the “It’s Showtime!” Apple event a few months back has HDMI and component video outputs, often used to connect to HDTVs. Also, Microsoft has introduced 720p HD movie downloads as part of its Xbox Live service this week.

Apple certainly doesn’t want to fall behind in this race. The Microsoft Zune media player is being released as a director competitor to the iPod. The iTV will be released in Q1 2007 and there will be much speculation about HD iTunes downloads until then. Apple has a history of being secretive with new product launches and content additions to iTunes, so we probably won’t know about any HD downloads or deals with Fox until they actually happen.

What’s the Best Viewing Order For the Saga?

Filed under: Classic Trilogy, Prequels — Trilogist at 9:31 pm on Monday, November 6, 2006

So if you didn’t own the the Star Wars DVDs, but decided to get the gang together during the weekend to watch the Saga in a Star Wars marathon, what order should you watch them? If your children are to be introduced to the films in the future, what order should they see them? If you decide to rent the Saga on Netflix, how are you going to shuffle the queue?

The singular question was considered by a fan on fanpop.com, and the problem was analyzed thoroughly. The options are to watch the films:

  • in episodic order (I - II - III - IV - V - VI)
  • order in which the films were released (IV - V - VI - I - II - III)
  • in alternating order (I - IV - II - V - III - VI)
  • in flashback mode (IV - V - I - II - III - VI)

Of the choices, the most novel and interesting was the flashback mode.

This viewing order is really interesting. You begin with the Original Trilogy and watch Episode IV, ‘A New Hope’ followed by Episode V, ‘The Empire Strikes Back’. But instead of watching Return of the Jedi, you hold off and instead watch the three Prequels. Only after you have finished the prequels do you watch Return of the Jedi to cap off your marathon.

Why it works: This approach tries to reconcile the biggest problems with the chronological and episodic viewing orders: plot and cinematic continuity. The oldest episodes are placed first in the viewing order while the newer episodes are nested in the middle. The climactic finale provided by Episode VI, however, is still retained. Additionally, some of the key dramatic twists are still preserved such as the surprise revelation in Empire Strikes Back about Luke’s parentage. The prequel is preceded by a nice cliffhanger from episode V and episode III also serves as a nice cliffhanger before the final culmination of episode VI. The special effects continuity is mostly contained since episodes IV and V have the most dated appearance (episode VI holds up relatively well against the space battles from the Prequels).

Star Wars in Glorious High Definition

Filed under: Classic Trilogy, Prequels — Fish at 7:42 pm on Friday, November 3, 2006

Ok, Cinemax is going to be running all six movies in HD on November 10th. Set your HD DVRs, as these broadcasts should look a lot better than a DVD on HD sets.

I’ll sit back and be bothered that DirecTV doesn’t carry the HD feed of Cinemax. Of course, I’m sure there will be torrents and such floating around for illicit downloading fun. (Not that we endorse that or anything).

« Previous PageNext Page »