Chipotlemonger said:Dekker_Lentz said:Chipotlemonger said:
You got me.
Chipotlemonger said:Dekker_Lentz said:Chipotlemonger said:
Dekker_Lentz said:AliasMan02 said:
At least in Legends, granting Jedi abilities through blood transfusion was tried and failed.
At some point I think Disney needs to fix the most glaring issues of the prequels. My suggestions.
1. Explain that midiclorians don't have anything to do with force strength or granting the force. They are just attracted to force users and generally speaking the stronger in the force you are, the more you find and that it is just a crude way to measure how strong someone in the force is.
2. Explain that the rule of two was just an ideological doctrine the Sith try to follow. That it isn't some hard and fast rule. There can be more than two Sith's at any point.
It's around 180 BBY so High Republic era.redline248 said:Which books?The Porkchop Express said:It's in a couple of bigger reference type books about a Jedi named Kibh Jeen, who fell to the dark side on some planet with a Sith temple. He killed his master and built up an army not unlike Maul in the Clone Wars era. When the Jedi finally stop him he says the Rule of the Two (one to wield the power, one to covet it) while he's dying.redline248 said:
By the way, here is the real question...and it's likely muddled b/c of the questions about what is canon and what isn't...
If Bane created the rule of two AFTER the Jedi thought the Sith were extinct...how did the Jedi Council know about it in Phantom Menace?
So, do they believe he was the last of the Sith...or what?
Chipotlemonger said:That's the thing though, he didn't have an adventure with her.Dekker_Lentz said:
Also, if Obi Wan knows about Leia and had an adventure with her, then does it seem odd for Yoda to mention her back to him?
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I was interested to see what the IMAX format looks like on a 16:9 and I found this description.TCTTS said:
Yeah, it's crazy that they haven't yet, though, considering the IMAX versions of the Marvel movies have been on Disney+ for a good while now. As someone who's not at all a fan of the sequel trilogy, I would instantly rewatch huge chunks of it if were available at home in the IMAX format. Same for Dune - one of my favorite movies of the past decade, shot in IMAX, but for some insane reason isn't yet available in the IMAX format on digital/Blu-ray. It should be standard practice by now to release IMAX versions at home, especially considering they fill up the 16x9 frame of all TVs/lose the black bars.
Quote:
Red is 16:9 like an HD television. Blue is 1.9:1 like IMAX. Green is 2.39:1 which is what it was filmed at and what the Blu-ray DVD is displayed at. So for 1.9:1 you'd have some small black bars. On a 1920 x 1080 television, the black bars would be roughly 35 pixels on the top and bottom. For 2.39:1, the black bars would be roughly 276 pixels on the top and bottom.
An all-new trailer for #TheMandalorian Season 3 will debut Monday night at halftime of ESPN's NFL Super Wild Card Game.
— Rotten Tomatoes (@RottenTomatoes) January 12, 2023
via @ESPNPR pic.twitter.com/6FqiUAcWDE
Whenever Mandalorian would switch to 16:9 for the big action episodes, it never failed to annoy me knowing that the whole show wasn't shown this way. It makes no sense for TV shows to not shoot everything in that format, even for prestige television.TCTTS said:
Yeah, for all intents and purposes, IMAX on 16:9 TVs is basically shown in 16x9. It's super close, with thin, hardly noticeable black bars at the top and bottom. So the image is still cropped, but at least essentially fills the screen. The only true, 1.43:1 IMAX release I've seen on digital/Blu-ray is for the Snyder cut of Justice League. It's the full IMAX image; basically a square inside a rectangle, with black bars on each side.
TCTTS said:
Yeah, for all intents and purposes, IMAX on 16:9 TVs is basically shown in 16x9. It's super close, with thin, hardly noticeable black bars at the top and bottom. So the image is still cropped, but at least essentially fills the screen. The only true, 1.43:1 IMAX release I've seen on digital/Blu-ray is for the Snyder cut of Justice League. It's the full IMAX image; basically a square inside a rectangle, with black bars on each side.
So, why does that one film [Justice League] have black bars on the sides then and how do you know others wouldn't?TCTTS said:
No, 1.9:1 only has very thin bars on top and bottom. They're hardly noticeable, and for all intents and purposes, 1.9:1 basically fills up a 16:9 TV screen. Check out any of the IMAX versions of the Marvel movies on Disney+ and you'll see. True, 1.43:1 IMAX is basically a square. Think of it as being a "taller" image. And the only movie that I know of that retained its true, 1.43:1 IMAX ratio for home release is Snyder's cut of Justice League. That's the only release that has black bars on the sides. Even the Nolan IMAX movies on Blu-ray are cropped from 1.43:1 to 1.9:1, and thus have no black bars on the sides.
Haha, didn't think about that until you said it.YouBet said:
Makes sense. Will ask again in a year when I forget.
It does seem like a bad choice on that Dune image to make the point. I would have expected an image where the IMAX image showed the bottom of a ship or something actually unseen rather than just more nondescript sky and rock.
A must watch... The Empire Strikes Back (bad lip syncing) pic.twitter.com/VuAbnYNlHK
— 80s Kidz (@80s_Kidz) January 15, 2023