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”It’s Almost Over”
SARAH S: My STAR WARS clan, the people who have been hanging out for so many years, we keep saying, “Wow, this is our last year for us planning a line.”
OBI-SWAN: Are you going to do a line at Best Buy?
SARAH S: When I think back to the planning we did in 1998, 2007 doesn’t seem that far off. Three years for a STAR WARS fan, at this point, is nothing.
HERC: I just want to ask if anyone can describe the relief of Sarah’s face that it might actually end.
SARAH S: Frankly? Yeah, I am. I have to be honest, recently, I packed up all my STAR WARS stuff and put it in storage. Everything except two posters and a couple action figures. I just decided it was time to have the “adult” apartment. I mean, I live with STAR WARS every day. I have STAR WARS tattoos. My film company with my friend is called Mutual Friend George Pictures.
HERC: (has another coughing fit) NERD!
SARAH S: I’m ready for the end. I’m ready for the end of it.
OBI-SWAN: I’m ready to only watch it... once a week.
CARL: I should have brought this up when we were discussing the films versus the television idea... I’m going to be relieved when it’s over, too. I’m actually five years ahead of Sarah as far as getting toys away from me. I did that back in ’99.
FROSTY: Back to 2007. What have you heard about that box?
HELLBOY: Hopefully it will be...
HERC: It’ll be encrusted with semen when Obi-Swan gets hold of it.
HELLBOY: Hopefully it will be given to a company that knows how to handle these sorts of big box sets.
MORIARTY: Obviously, right now, the gold standard is a complete movie series is that ALIEN set.
CARL: We’ve got the LORD OF THE RINGS sets, too.
MORIARTY: LORD OF THE RINGS, I would set right next to ALIEN in terms of the way they were handled, but they’re doing it film-by-film instead of all at once. Also, with LORD OF THE RINGS they had total cooperation across the board. On the ALIEN films, you’re dealing with four different directors. You’re dealing with a lot of very particular people who are dealing with approval issues. With LORD OF THE RINGS, there’s never an approval issue. Everybody at New Line was pretty gung ho to get that shit on disc. ALIEN is trickier. STAR WARS, at least, you’re under one banner... under one company. It’s not like Richard Marquand is gonna kill something. Or Irvin Kershner is gonna add a clause to overrule George.
CARL: George isn’t the problem. I think it’s whoever puts this DVD together, if they can get direct access to George and circumvent some of the people under George... it would be a much better set.
MORIARTY: It really depends on how into the format he is and how into DVDs in general he is. Again, there’s that bridge to fandom that George always seems a little hesitant to cross. He’s willing to go with you to a point. And then... “You nerds are on your own, ‘cause I can’t even get in there and I’m afraid of you all.”
SARAH S: Carl and I have talked about being tired of fans. I think George is tired of fans. I think he’s tired of us. I think he’s been tired of us for a while now.
At this point, we all took a brief break, and Mr. Beaks took over recording the meeting.
MORIARTY: The thing that I’m curious about is right now we’re hearing from many directors that RETURN OF THE KING sort of raised the bar for them a bit. In terms of, whether you like the film or not, in terms of action and special effects being used the way they were, James Cameron has said that the whole reason he’s ready right now is because RETURN OF THE KING got him crazy. He saw it, and he was like, “Oh, fuck, I’ve got to do that!” And I’m hearing from people that Spielberg is the same way; he’s mental about RETURN OF THE KING, and he wants to play. So, Lucas, for the first time ever, is making a film in the shadow, absolutely start to finish, of LORD OF THE RINGS being in theaters. How do we think that’s going to affect Episode III? Do we think Lucas as a filmmaker is going to want to step up, or is he going to try to do his own thing, and put all of this aside? Or can he at this point with fandom being the way it is?
CARL: Well, it’s probably all of the above. If it does affect it, I can only see it affecting it in positive ways. It shows that, look, here are films that are pretty dark, and they don’t have fart jokes, and are extremely successful. The last two – THE TWO TOWERS and RETURN OF THE KING – both outgrossed ATTACK OF THE CLONES at the box office. I know that’s just box office; there’s also the critical acclaim that came with them. I think it couldn’t help but have a positive effect. But at the same time, he’s set up two films already, and he’s setting up this third one that’s basically the missing link between the first two prequels and A NEW HOPE. So, he doesn’t have too much that he can play with here. But what I think where it may come in as a positive is that… he might have more confidence in the fact that he can be as dark as he wants to be with III, and get away with it.
MORIARTY: Can you hear us, George? Can you hear us?
OBI-SWAN: I think a lot of that depends on the rating. LORD OF THE RINGS was PG-13. He may be contractually obligated to turn in a PG.
CARL: Which is going to be a huge issue, because I don’t see how it can be PG at this point.
FROSTY: Right. Well, I’ve heard many times that he’s contractually obligated, and we’ve talked about this, for a PG rating, and I don’t see how it’s going to happen.
MORIARTY: Which is what happens when you sign “Happy Meal” deals. You get locked in with your licensers. Because toy manufacturers have a real problem with manufacturing toys for PG-13 and R rated films.
OBI-SWAN: Also, on that note, I think that if he is absolutely saddled with a PG, I think he can do it because it just means he has to be more operatic, less graphic. I think it can be done.
FROSTY: But that’s going to defeat the entire… I just… (goes speechless with disbelief.)
CARL: The MPAA will bend it for him. They did it with CLONES.
BEAKS: Yeah, the point is moot. It’s going to go PG. But it’s got to go darker than that. They could give it a PG-13 on content alone. Thematic… pervasive darkness, or whatever. Severe depiction of very bad weather, or some shit. I’d just rather… I mean, he’s not making LORD OF THE RINGS; he’s making STAR WARS. And STAR WARS was never LORD OF THE RINGS.
CARL: I agree.
BEAKS: So, just finish it the way you think it needs to be done. If there’s still an artist in there, someone who really cares about these stories, bring it out! Let’s see what you’ve got left. It’s your last chance to redeem yourself.
FLMLVR: If anything, I think it’s going to make him focus on the acting more. He’s going to work with the actors more, which I heard he did.
MORIARTY: I hope that’s true.
BEAKS: If Stoppard has indeed worked on the script, then he’s already addressing the dialogue problems. I mean, ATTACK OF THE CLONES had some of the worst dialogue, outside of HOUSE OF THE DEAD, that I’ve heard in the last few years.
MXYZLPTLKyzlptlk: Oh, there it is! Thank you!
BEAKS: So, he’s addressing that. But the acting… well, Ewan can direct himself, but—
CARL: I heard that he let the actors adlib this time, which he’s never done. Gave them a little more freedom.
BEAKS: Well, he let Harrison ad-lib.
MORIARTY: He didn’t let him, per se, but Harrison did it anyway.
CARL: The dynamic between Hayden and Ewan could be very good. I think Hayden stumbled over the dialogue in ATTACK OF THE CLONES. We’ve seen him in things like SHATTERED GLASS.
SARAH S: SHATTERED GLASS! He was great!
CARL: He’s not a bad actor at all.
SARAH S: MY LIFE AS A HOUSE.
CARL: Heck, I thought he was great in that horrible Canadian television show he was in.
BEAKS: Well, here’s the thing. How was he in THIS IS OUR YOUTH in London? The Kenneth Lonergan show.
MORIARTY: He got nice reviews.
BEAKS: That would’ve been the real proving ground, because that’s a great play.
MORIARTY: He got very respectful to good reviews.
HELLBOY: Part of the problem with the acting in these films, especially with people coming in on the second film like Hayden, or even Natalie Portman to an extent, is that they have to learn how to handle nothing being there. Some actors just can’t do it. Ewan McGregor seemed to be able to get into it—
SARAH S: He’s older!
CARL: He’s also much more gifted.
HELLBOY: I think it’s a special talent. Some people just can’t do it. They need to react to a set, or whatever, and we all know that it’s all about the “digital backlot” now. So, hopefully, someone like Hayden will have gotten it together, and understands the process now, and can kind of go for it.
BEAKS: Let me address that. With actors, it’s about having a sense of play. It’s not about being older, it’s not about where you are in your career, it’s about having that sense of play. If you’ve got that, you can deal with things that aren’t there. You can become inventive, and also have fun with it. That’s something Ewan can do. Great actors all have a great sense of play. I didn’t see that with Hayden in the second film. Maybe he was intimidated, because he seems to be a decent actor elsewhere.
MORIARTY: I think McDiarmid directed himself from PHANTOM MENACE on. McDiarmid is in a better movie than anyone else. (Laughter.) And that’s just the truth: McDiarmid is doing a better film than anyone else.
HELLBOY: And as bad as everyone says Hayden is, Sam Jackson… he just sucks.
DARTH TARDY: I agree with that. He’s having problems with STAR WARS.
HERC: Sam Jackson was such a god! He was, like, one of the best actors in the world.
SARAH S: No, Natalie Portman. My god!
”The Portman Rumor and THE GREAT JALEPENO CAPER”
MORIARTY: Did we address the… Natalie Portman rumor in the last Jedi Council?
All: No.
MORIARTY: I’ve heard this several different places now, including from (censored). So, take it with a grain of salt, it’s a rumor. I’m not saying it’s absolutely correct. The rumor is that Portman hit the set on this one, and, right away, started butting heads with Lucas. Hard. She definitely did not want to be doing this movie.
SARAH S: She’s such a little spoiled brat. She really is. And I’ve heard this from other sets.
MORIARTY: Well, this is rumor, okay? And there’s a second part to the rumor: Lucas came thisclose to recasting. And the only reason he didn’t is because Keira Knightley wasn’t available. And she’s played the role. Thisclose. There was a conversation with her management. There was a conversation about scheduling. And if Keira had been open, she would’ve been in, and Portman would’ve been out. The result is: there’s very little Padme in this movie. They cut the role to the bone. She’s almost not in the film.
CARL: That’s true.
HELLBOY: He must’ve really loved directing the death scene.
OBI-SWAN: She’s there because she has a womb.
MORIARTY: That’s really it. She’s a womb with feet in this movie.
SARAH S: That just goes to everything I’ve ever heard with anyone else who’s ever worked with her. She’s just not… nice to work with.
MORIARTY: That’s a shame. How much of that can you blame on Lucas? If you don’t want to be there, you’re going to give a shitty performance.
SARAH S: This really bothers me, and it’s bothered me the whole time in the prequels. She’s always acted like this was a burden. She’s always put it out there that, “Oh, I’ve been miserable. Oh, my costumes! Blah, blah, blah!” She’s been so unhappy every step of the way. I was shocked, *shocked* to see in that bit, that footage that came out last week, where she was smiling and dancing. I was like, “What?”
JED: Maybe that was her last day of shooting.
CARL: Remember the incident on the set of THE PHANTOM MENACE, where the guy got fired because the squib went off and a spark hit her in the eye. Her dad was on set, pitched a fit, and Lucas had to fire one of the engineers.
HELLBOY: I hadn’t heard that.
MORIARTY: I’m just curious, because it reads in her performance. She’s just god-awful in the second one. She just never looks like she buys it.
SARAH S: I think that goes to the whole idea… Beaks and I were talking about this earlier. Actors and their craft: if they really are professionals, and rise above (despite not liking) what’s around them, and maybe they’re not getting the best direction from a director. That’s their craft. They still have to step up and do it. It’s not an excuse to me when an actor goes, “I wasn’t pushed enough this way,” or, “I don’t know what I’m doing.” It’s one thing not to have things to react to, but not to find it within yourself. You should know your character well enough to act.
BEAKS: No, it’s… certain actors, and let’s just face it, actors are stupid for the most part. (MORIARTY laughs.) They’re not the most mature people.
MORIARTY: You’re making friends, Beaks. We have actors in the room.
DR HFUHRUHURR: I’ll bet Beaks really loves Mexican actors!
(Laughter)
BEAKS: A director’s job is to get the performance out of the actor. He’s the one with the vision. He’s the one who’s got to tell them what they’re doing.
MORIARTY: I don’t think it’s the actor’s fault. I think if you look at the first trilogy, the reason EMPIRE is head and shoulders above the other two is because Irvin Kershner really loved those actors, and gave them the space, and knew how to create an environment where they not only came to play, but were supported in doing that. That’s Lucas’s great failing. He doesn’t know how to support those actors, and give them the equipment, whether it be in their heads or on the set, to do what they have to do.
BEAKS: And it should be no surprise that it’s the British actors who are the best at handling that.
FROSTY: I have to interject. Let’s ask Darth Tardy – since he is a working, professional actor – to answer the allegations made by Mr. Beaks.
DARTH TARDY: I have to agree with what MORIARTY said earlier. You have some actors who really can play with nothing, and they don’t need other actors in front of them. And there are actors who are great, but if they don’t have other actors in front of them, they can’t react. It’s like people playing sports. Maybe you’re a great passer in football, but you’re not great under pressure. Every time you get blitzed, you can never make a pass, whereas there are guys who can, *Bam*, they can just chuck the ball and hit it every single time.
MORIARTY: You have to point at the director when, as Herc says, you’ve got Samuel L. Jackson doing mediocre work in the movie. How can he be stranded? He’s Sam fucking Jackson!!!
OBI-SWAN: He acts mainly with Yoda.
MORIARTY: And that’s the thing. He looks in these movies like there really wasn’t anything on the page. He’s trying to come up with something, and there’s just nothing to hold on to.
DARTH TARDY: It’s because of what Dave Chappelle said. Sam Jackson can only be mad. (Laughter.) “I’m Sam Jackson. I’m mad, and I don’t need a reason why!”
BEAKS (imitating Jackson): “Yes, they deserve to die, and I hope they burn in hell!”
FLMLVR: Has anyone heard anything more about Grievous?
MORIARTY: The rumor is, this February… we were talking about this before we started rolling tape today, because I heard that February is when we get our first look at him.
CARL: Probably.
FLMLVR: I heard not until March.
MORIARTY: On the new cover of INSIDER, there’s a picture of a Clone Trooper on the cover. The rumor is that it’s a fold-out, and the fold-out is Grievous. I guess we’ll see when it hits stands, or when it gets shipped to people. I don’t know why you don’t show him early, instead of trying to make him a mystery. We all know about him now. Nick Gillard dropping his little hint, “If I were to say anything about what’s in the movie, they’d do me *grievous* bodily harm.” They’re playing with us at this point. They know that we know, so it’s a game of when do you release the image. I’d like to see him now.
CARL: I’d like them to release that, and I’d like them to release the title, too.
MORIARTY: When do we get the title? We know the timetable based on the last movies.
CARL: Last time, it was September.
SARAH S: PHANTOM MENACE was, what, September?
MORIARTY: Then it’ll be September this time, too.
CARL: The thing is, they know the title much earlier this time.
MORIARTY: The title is on some of the stuff that they’ve shown.
CARL: I’m waiting for that to leak out any day.
HERC: You want to hear what I heard (it’ll be called)?
MORIARTY: Yeah.
HERC: OH, MY ACHING TAINT.
(Laughter. There’s some confusion due to Hercules’s mangled pronunciation of “aching”. Meanwhile, FROSTY tells someone to “shut their goddamn mouth” for the seventeenth time this evening.)
OBI-SWAN: Let’s just go around the room, and have everyone say what they hope (the title) is. I think Hercules already gave his, but… online, when I read STAR WARS fans coming up with titles, they suck so bad. It’s just the worst. And they say it so earnestly, like…
MORIARTY: CHILDREN OF THE FORCE! (Laughs.)
OBI-SWAN: But, seriously—
MORIARTY: REVENGE OF THE SITH! RISE OF THE SITH! THE SITH STRIKE BACK!
DARTH TARDY: DEATH OF THE JEDI!
CARL: Actually, I think REVENGE OF THE SITH would make the most sense. First of all, it harkens back to the REVENGE OF THE JEDI thing. Then, it has that nice symmetry with REVENGE OF THE SITH and RETURN OF THE JEDI. Also, that’s what the film is about. Darth Maul says that at the beginning of THE PHANTOM MENACE. There’s a whole symmetry throughout all six films. And, also, if they use “Sith” in the title, then you’ve got STAR WARS films with the words “Clones”, “Sith”, “Empire”, and “Jedi” all in titles, and I think that’s great. But it probably won’t happen because it makes too much sense. (Laughter.)
MORIARTY: Right. We’re gonna hear it, and it’s going to be, like, THE GREAT JALAPENO CAPER. (Laughter.)
OBI-SWAN: Lucas is famous for coming up with a title that is the last thing you would ever expect, but then it kinda grows on you.
MXYZLPTLK: In some cases.
DARTH TARDY: Like a fungus.
”Expectations”
FROSTY: Swan, you don’t count because you like everything STAR WARS, so your opinion is very suspect.
MORIARTY: Not at all! OBI-SWAN speaks for pure fandom.
CARL: The two key words in ATTACK OF THE CLONES – “Attack” and “Clones” – speak STAR WARS to me. “Phantom” and “Menace”… nothing about those two names—
HERC: I love the title THE PHANTOM MENACE. I will say that.
HELLBOY: It’s very serial. That’s what I think I like about it.
MORIARTY: I actually like it, too. I like it as a serial title, and I really like the fact that they’re very 30’s.
CARL: Well, the acting style you can say is really 30’s. (Laughter.) And that may not be on purpose.
BEAKS: No. The 30’s was theatrical. This is just bad soap opera acting.
SARAH S: We need a title that will be easiest for me to abbreviate when I’m typing on my keyboard.
MORIARTY: ROTS. (Flmlvr’s) got a question: what kind of an uphill battle does Lucas face this time? Do you think there is, in terms of perception… because, with THE MATRIX, we really did see a dramatic response to RELOADED in terms of fan reaction. Fans just turned their backs on the fucking Wachowskis, and that was that.
CARL: I think it’s going to depend on the trailers.
FLMLVR: I’ve heard that, officially… Vader is going to figure prominently in the marketing. So, they’re not holding back Vader.
MORIARTY: Apparently, that was a big fight.
CARL: Here you have these guys like Jim Ward, and these brilliant marketing people, and then you have… arguably the most iconic film character of all time, and he’s in the film. Obviously, it’s a no-brainer. They’re going to use Vader on everything.
MORIARTY: Even on the promotional tape, the way Vader was used in that… that’s great! The minute you see him, you go, “Oooh! Vader!”
CARL: They used him in THE PHANTOM MENACE teaser poster.
MORIARTY: They did. And that’s the thing that got everybody hot and bothered. “Holy shit, it’s the shadow!” People went crazy.
SARAH S: I think the people who’ve already turned their back on STAR WARS… they’re already gone.
CARL: But you know what? They’re still going to see it.
BEAKS: I think we’ve seen a more dramatic fall off. I think we’re moving toward STAR WARS becoming a niche franchise in the mold of STAR TREK.
(Multiple groans of disagreement.)
BEAKS: We’re not down to those numbers yet, but… I think we’re going to see a softer opening then we’re used to for a STAR WARS movie.
FLMLVR: In terms of marketing, are we going to get THE PHANTOM MENACE, where it was like Taco Bell everywhere?
SARAH S: No. Again, this is why we have the stopgap DVD’s, the release of the original trilogy later this year. It’s going to remind everyone why they love STAR WARS in the first place.
MXYZLPTLK: But then you’re going to see them complaining again! “Why is Greedo firing first?”
BEAKS: My problem is that those versions don’t remind me why I like the movies. Those remind me why I’m mad at Lucas.
MXYZLPTLK: I think it would be smart if he released the original trilogy, not special editions. I know he won’t, but I’m saying I think it would go over very well. And then everyone would be, like, “Wow, these are the STAR WARS movies I remember.” And then on the DVD, it would have the EPISODE III trailer, and—
SARAH S: We’re all jaded, jaded filmgoers, though. Again, not Joe Minnesota, but Jane Iowa who doesn’t watch these movies all the time, and can’t remember what she saw— they’re going to buy the widescreens of whatever, and they can’t remember what the original trilogy looked like. They’re going to get all excited again, and they’re going to go see the movie. They’re not us.
FLMLVR: I agree that they don’t notice all of the differences, but it’s obvious when you see something like Jabba that automatically takes you out.
CARL: By the way, I love the irony in that, after the first MATRIX came out, everyone was like, “Oh, the Wachowskis have stuck their dicks in George Lucas’s mouth and taken over.” Now, when we bring it up, everyone’s like, “Will STAR WARS fall to the level of THE MATRIX movies?” (Laughter.)
JED: Hey, I saw REVOLUTIONS three times, and I wept every time I saw it. So, there’s one Jedi still doing the bullet time thing.
DARTH TARDY: I have to say that I auditioned for the Wachowskis for Two and Three, and I remember just sitting there blowing sunshine up their ass about how they had done what Lucas couldn’t do. And they were very adamant with me that they weren’t sure that THE MATRIX (RELOADED and REVOLUTIONS) could do that. They said that they could very easily fuck up and not work. They were very adamant about that.
(More general talk about how the STAR WARS prequels might’ve hurt the franchise as a whole.)
DARTH TARDY: If EPISODE III really is great, to where the fans are like, “It’s a *good* movie,” I think that will help (the franchise). But it is at the point where, if a lot of fans turn around and say, “I and II sucked, and this is no better”, it’ll kill STAR WARS. Forver.
BEAKS: With (the prequels), the plot and intrigue… everything has gotten more labyrinthine. It’s not as simple as the original trilogy was. With the original films, everyone, especially kids, could follow them much more easily. I think, going back to Joe Minnesota, or regular moviegoers who don’t have time to delve into all of the minutiae… those guys are kind of tired of the prequels. I think they’re like, “Oh, I don’t know what’s going on in these STAR WARS movies anymore. I’m done with ‘em.” And that’s exactly what happened to THE MATRIX.
FLMLVR: Can EPISODE III step up and clarify what happened in EPISODE I and II for the people who didn’t really get what was going on, and redeem the series for people who walked away?
MORIARTY: I think as long as the duel delivers, people will walk away going, “I really like STAR WARS again.” I think so long as this film delivers the big beats, the little stuff will be relegated to fan gripes. And fans will either be upset of happy with the way all the loose ends were tied up. I think for most people, as long as this film really delivers with some good Darth Vader, and where he came from, and that sort of stuff, I think it’ll play. I think that that’s all it has to do well.
DARTH TARDY: And I think there’s a good chance that he’s going to deliver this time. I really do.
CARL: But it could be frustrating at the same time, like, “Damn it, why did I only get twenty minutes of Vader, and sixty minutes of ‘Yip, yip.’” (Laughter.)
FROSTY: I definitely think that this film… word of mouth on it is everything. Because if the film does deliver, then the word of mouth will spread, people will say positive things, and more people will go see it.
BEAKS: But it’s not a word-of-mouth film! It’s a front-loaded, make-everything-in-a-few-weeks film. It’s a sprint. Films like this are a sprint.
FROSTY: Yes and no. I have to say this. I use my parents as an example, and my parents just went and saw RETURN OF THE KING. My mom was mediocre about it, and my dad had to see it. My parents went and saw EPISODE I, but did not go to EPISODE II. If they want to see EPISODE III, it’ll be because of word of mouth. And they’re the difference.
MORIARTY: I’m like you. I always use my parents as a litmus test. How excited are just regular film viewers? Because my parents… they don’t pay attention to what’s coming until it’s Friday and it’s in the theaters, or they see a commercial and go, “Oh, neat!” Either they want to see it, or they don’t. They don’t get hype, they don’t get caught up in campaigns, they don’t really give a shit. It’s just what do they want to see when something comes out. That’s most in line with regular moviegoers. And even my parents know that STAR WARS is coming, and that it’s the last one, and that they’re kind of interested. There’s a saturation level that you just can’t get around. It’s STAR WARS. It is what it is. It’s still one of the biggest cultural phenomena that’s ever been in terms of film. And this is that last one, so they’ll sell it a little more special.
DARTH TARDY: It’s got Darth Vader in it, and that’s the thing that it’s got going for it that the other two didn’t. Even if people hated the first two, if he does this one right, it still links you to four, five and six. If he does it right, it’ll bring a lot of people back.
FLMLVR: I think a lot of it also has to do with whether the duel has resonance, if you actually feel for the characters. If it’s just ten minutes of action, and it’s just Vader kicking ass, it’s not going to do as well.
HERC: My memory is that EPISODE I made $400 million and change, and EPISODE II made $300 million and change. I’d just like to do a quick poll. Who of you think EPISODE III will outgross EPISODE II? Let’s start with Moriarty.
MORIARTY: I think it’ll fall in between EPISODE I and EPISODE II. I don’t think it’s going to break I’s record. I think it’ll do well, and could do really well.
HELLBOY: I agree. I think the same thing. EPISODE I had the fact that it was returning, and it was this big deal… which you’ll never be able to duplicate again. But if he gets it right, and we do have Darth Vader, and we have the duel, and we have all these kinds of things—
FROSTY: I think it’s definitely going to make more than EPISODE II, but I don’t think it has any chance of hitting EPISODE I.
OBI-SWAN: I think it’s definitely going to make more than EPISODE II, but the reason I think it’s going to make more is that EPISODE II made $300 million *after* the “disappointment” of EPISODE I. I think the $300 million represents the fans who are still there. Sight unseen, I think EPISODE III will be better than EPISODE II. So, therefore, it has to make more than EPISODE II. Now, if it is a *great* film, if he *truly succeeds* at doing what people believe he can’t do, then I think it could come very close to THE PHANTOM MENACE. But that’s for the long run. Because I believe what Frosty said: part of the success of this movie is going to be on word of mouth. Part of it. But I also believe what Beaks says. It is a sprint, but the word of mouth is going to push it.
DARTH TARDY: I’m also going to add one more thing. Lucas seems to be pretty confident. Look at the fact that he’s extended the license another ten years, or something like that.
HELLBOY: Someone’s gotta pay for the Presidio.
DARTH TARDY: But if it fails, why extend the license?
CARL: People buy that crap anyway.
DARTH TARDY: I really think if EPISODE III is bad, that’ll be it for him.
CARL: Not for the collectors. Not for the die-hards.
DARTH TARDY: Really? All of my friends who were collectors, all of them are die-hards, and they don’t collect anymore.
MORIARTY: I don’t know any die-hard collectors anymore.
DARTH TARDY: But here’s another thing. We were talking about the cartoons earlier. I haven’t bought toys in forever, but I dug the cartoons, and I went out and bought the cartoon figures. And it’s things like that. I have to be honest. I never wanted to see STAR WARS as a cartoon or on television. I like it so much that I don’t care how he does it so long as he doesn’t screw it up.
SARAH S: This is my question for you: if it’s the movie you want, and it only makes $100 million, are you still okay?
MORIARTY: Oh, of course.
(The rest of the room agrees.)
BEAKS: Hell, PETER PAN only made $41 million, but that didn’t keep me from embracing it.
HELLBOY: It doesn’t matter what it makes.
I want to thank everyone who contributed to the council, and also all of you who sent in the other things I used to fill out this piece. We should see a lot more stuff, and a lot more frequently, between now and the actual release of the film. This is when it all starts to get really, really fun. Here’s hoping we continue to enjoy it as a group like this. It’s been a blast so far.
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