Heart of the City by Steenz for September 20, 2011

  1. Ahm8 perceptor
    perceptor3  about 13 years ago

    Why?

    Money. Money. Money. Money. Money. Money. . .

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    zero  about 13 years ago

    No, Dean. He obviously doesn’t.

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  3. Carnac
    AKHenderson Premium Member about 13 years ago

    What would Yoda say?

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    KEA  about 13 years ago

    I have a laserdisc box set of the original trilogy. bwa-ha-ha-ha

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    poihths  about 13 years ago

    Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e. Becau$e.

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    Dillithamir  about 13 years ago

    I ask the same question…. but I don’t want the answer…. ’cause the answer is always something to do with money..

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    rhaacke  about 13 years ago

    The answer can’t be money. At least not if George isn’t fooling himself. Everyone hates the changed versions so fewer people are going to buy them.

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  8. Flagfeetani
    ninetoes  about 13 years ago

    If the comments are any indication, geeks make up a good portion of the readership. Myself included, and I’m with Dean on this one.

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  9. Thinker1
    Fan o’ Lio.  about 13 years ago

    Who is this George Lucas guy everybody is so upset about?

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    burleigh2  about 13 years ago

    Yeah… but now they BLINK! ;-)

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  11. Thrill
    fritzoid Premium Member about 13 years ago

    I have mixed feelings. Yeah, I prefer the originals (Han shoots FIRST!). But in the larger sense I don’t have a philosophical problem with a creator going back and changing his creations, particularly when (as with some of Lucas’s changes) the technology to do what he wanted didn’t exist the first time around.

    It used to be common practice for authors to make changes to their novels (some large, some small) between the first edition and subsequent editions. Why not with movies? I think the Director’s Cut of “Blade Runner” is vastly superior to the original studio release (although I can live without the Final Cut). Slightly different case there, because the studio originally would NOT let the movie be released the way Ridley Scott wanted, but would you deny him the right to make “corrections” after the fact, on the basis of “the way it was released, for better or worse, is the way it must remain”?

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    runar  about 13 years ago

    Why does a dog lick his bleeeps? Same reason.

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  13. Nuke
    docnuke  about 13 years ago

    Which would you rather have – a sci-fi series with an active creator who, despite criticism, makes the odd tweak here or there because, as a creative person, he’s never quite satisfied…

    Or would you rather have a sci-fi series that was sold to a corporate studio interest decades ago and handed over to hack writers and directors to play willy-nilly with the history of the universe and characters.

    Cry all you like about the changes Lucas makes to “Star Wars,” at least he’s not blowing up Tatooine and having his prequels exits in an “alternate timeline” ala the new “Star Trek.”

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  14. Yukiface
    Dampwaffle  about 13 years ago

    George Lucas has the perfect right to alter his vision any way he likes. If you don’t like it, vote with your pocket book and don’t buy the bloody thing. That said, in many cases the “director’s cut” of a movie is a superior product. Such is the case with the First Star Trek movie (IMO the theatrical release was an abortion but the Robert Wise Directors Cut is far superior) and also the case with Blade Runner and all three extended editions of the Lord of the Rings movies. I’m not going to buy the new release but that’s only because I don’t own a Blue Ray player. I got burned with Laserdisc, HD DVD and Beta Max so I never upgrade to BlueRay.

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  15. Sixshotprofile
    Decepticomic  over 3 years ago

    “Dear Dean

    So… it’s you again. The last time you wrote me letters complaining about my work, I told you to $%&* yourself. Looks like neither of us learned our lesson.

    George Lucas"

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