I like hearing the Collider crew's take. From tweets, I don't think Harloff is as crazy about Rogue One as some of the others at Collider
He's CLEARLY being facetious / joking about Trump.AgMarauder04 said:
Worst thing in 2016? Oh come on. Drama Queen.
Ehrlich is talking about the filmmakers use of a dead person as a character as being unethical. I think that's a little extreme, but he kind of has a point in that they're ascribing a performance to someone who had no say so in the matter. It's this weird grey area in that that person isn't around to agree to be in the movie, yet they used him anyway.jabberwalkie09 said:If this CGI character is indeed Tarkin, it's like Ehrlich totally forgot that in ANH he destroyed an entire planet after Leia told him the location of what turned out to be a former rebel base on Dantooine. An entire planet with all inhabitants.TCTTS said:
That obviously wasn't clear to me, and now I can see that as an explanation. Though, while I understand that Disney/Lucasfilm owns the character, would they have to ask Peter Cushing's estate to use his likeness in a film?TCTTS said:
Ehrlich is talking about the filmmakers use of a dead person as a character as being unethical. I think that's a little extreme, but he kind of has a point in that they're ascribing a performance to someone who had no say so in the matter. It's this weird grey area in that that person isn't around to agree to be in the movie, yet they used him anyway.
Won't be surprising to see many actors criticize this - they want to protect their jobs!jabberwalkie09 said:That obviously wasn't clear to me, and now I can see that as an explanation. Though, while I understand that Disney/Lucasfilm owns the character, would they have to ask Peter Cushing's estate to use his likeness in a film?TCTTS said:
Ehrlich is talking about the filmmakers use of a dead person as a character as being unethical. I think that's a little extreme, but he kind of has a point in that they're ascribing a performance to someone who had no say so in the matter. It's this weird grey area in that that person isn't around to agree to be in the movie, yet they used him anyway.
TCTTS said:
It's all about intent, though. They're intending him to be no different than a real, living actor.
TCTTS said:
Definitely seeing a lot more sobering reactions now that actual reviews have hit. All I really care about is it being better than TFA, and it certainly sounds like it is.
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Rey's theme and the closing bit are definitely better than anything in Michael Giacchino's Rogue One score, but somehow Rogue One is more consistently a good Star Wars score than John Williams' Star Wars: The Force Awakens. At some moments it feels like the music from Clone Wars or Rebels, borrowing bits from Williams' iconic Star Wars themes while making them their own.
Giacchino pulls at your emotions in his own signature way, and if you like his style, you will like what he does in his Rogue One compositions.
CJS4715 said:TCTTS said:
Definitely seeing a lot more sobering reactions now that actual reviews have hit. All I really care about is it being better than TFA, and it certainly sounds like it is.
Seeing same. It seems fans of the universe like it and others are less enthusiastic. I wonder if it's the fact that maybe other reviewers were expecting to get "Star Wars". There is definitely something to the "pacing" concern - seems the middle of the movie suffers some.
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Nonetheless, what it lacks is any real originality. It seems more an act of homage to its predecessors than a film with a mind of its own. Whereas JJ Abrams's The Force Awakens managed to break new ground (in spite of featuring many of the original characters), Rogue One feels like a formulaic retread. It's rousing and entertaining but the force isn't really with it. You can't escape the dispiriting feeling that we've seen it all before.
All I need to know. Since this includes most of us, the rest of the world can sod off for all I careQuote:
Seeing same. It seems fans of the universe like it