Presuming, of course, it's a good movie, which we all expect it will be.I think this film will be in the top 3 of all time box office once it's theatrical run is done.
Man...cannot wait! I'm probably in the minority, and who knows what the significance if any, having the remains of the skull in the helmet,(IF this rumor is true) but I would not be disappointed if a clone of Vader turns up.
Keep in mind a clone of vader from DNA would be hayden ChristiansenHe would no longer require the suit, helmet, or any of it.
Just see what he did in his audition for AotC...if George had just let him do his thing, all of them really, like he seemed to have done for the actors in the OT, we might have gotten better received movies (I won't say better, because I actually liked the PT, despite it's flaws).
Yea, but even in that one movie, the acting is far superior to all of the PT, despite having top notch actors in those movies (far more so than the OT).I do feel the need to point out that of the 3 movies that make up the OT, he only actually directed one, the first Star Wars and that was it.
That's fair, but anthony daniels is hardly what I would call an experienced actor. Especially compared to the heavyweights around himAnthony Daniels didn't seem to be a blue screen fan..
Here's Anthony Daniels at Emerald City Comic Con, describing his thoughts on filming the movie:There was one other aspect to the new films that Daniels felt was noteworthy, and asked aloud, “Do you know what we have in Episode 7?”
Several audience members made guesses at characters or items from the mythology, but the actor merely shook his head and grinned. “We have scenery,” he replied. “No more of the green screen. No more of the expansion of blue … and blue used to be my favorite color.”
The audience laughed and he continued, “The use of green screen? When necessary – yes. If you’re only coming out of the doorway of a great temple or something, you don’t have to build a whole temple. But having a reality to the set brings a reality to the performance. As an actor, you have something to react to.”
That's fair, but anthony daniels is hardly what I would call an experienced actor. Especially compared to the heavyweights around himAnthony Daniels didn't seem to be a blue screen fan..
Here's Anthony Daniels at Emerald City Comic Con, describing his thoughts on filming the movie:There was one other aspect to the new films that Daniels felt was noteworthy, and asked aloud, “Do you know what we have in Episode 7?”
Several audience members made guesses at characters or items from the mythology, but the actor merely shook his head and grinned. “We have scenery,” he replied. “No more of the green screen. No more of the expansion of blue … and blue used to be my favorite color.”
The audience laughed and he continued, “The use of green screen? When necessary – yes. If you’re only coming out of the doorway of a great temple or something, you don’t have to build a whole temple. But having a reality to the set brings a reality to the performance. As an actor, you have something to react to.”
I disagree with the "missing set" being the problem. I've been working in theatre for 20 years and any actor with even a little experience would have been trained without a set. The fundamental text for modern acting taught us that acting can be believable in an empty parking lot. Actors spend all of their rehearsal without a set. Either in a rehearsal hall or in their trailer.
If you can't make the dialogue work, there's no way the acting will be good.
So I blame the lack of "working the text" with the writers, director, and actors. I think that the director felt that if the effects are good, the audience will believe it.