Re: #44 - Disney Buys Lucasfilm
Erm... wasn't he?
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Erm... wasn't he?
I'm getting CG Star Destroyers coming out of the ocean. No reason.
Googled it. Hasn't been done.
I'm saying: Green light!
Years ago, two producers had the rights to do a US version of Space Battleship Yamato over at Disney. That would have had, most likely, a refitted USS Arizona coming up out of the ocean and flying off into space.
Darth Praxus wrote:Lucas says that he thinks Abrams "understands" Star Wars. God help us all.
http://www.theforce.net/story/front/Geo … 152597.aspCould be worse...
Lucas could have been hired on as creative consultant
I hope he is. If Disney have half a brain, they'll pay very close attention to everything Lucas suggests so they know what not to do.
I thought I read somewhere else that Lucas hadn't even spoken with Abrams yet? Wouldn't it be difficult to make that kind of judgement then?
Years ago, two producers had the rights to do a US version of Space Battleship Yamato over at Disney. That would have had, most likely, a refitted USS Arizona coming up out of the ocean and flying off into space.
I thought that was the sequel to U-571?
‘Star Wars’ writer Lawrence Kasdan wants spinoff film to ‘start fresh’
Fans were relieved this week to learn that Lawrence Kasdan would be writing another “Star Wars” movie. After all, it was Kasdan who penned “The Empire Strikes Back,” the film that is almost universally regarded as the best in the series. It was partly for the fans, Kasdan said, that he decided to return to “Star Wars” — just not the fans you’d expect.
Interesting, does one dare to hope? New Hope?
This doesn't really bother me. Drew at Hitfix rightly pointed out that Arndt is being used to establish framework for the other films as well and as we get deeper into Pre-Pro on each movie individually, expect to see this sort of thing. JJ still has to direct these things and while serving fandom, he also has to work his own sensibility to it, so this shouldn't be a shock.
Apparently there were two very specific plot points that Kasdan and Abrams agreed on but Arndt didn't, so it's easy to see who won.
So Disney's totally rushing this thing you guys: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/s … ney-651482
I don't see why they wouldn't want to move it to 2016. As is, it and Avengers II will be warring at the box office and probably diminishing each other's profits to at least some considerable degree.
I doubt even Disney expects us to open in the summer of 2015. My guess is they'll move it to Christmas.
Does Disney have anything substantial set for a 2015 release at this stage? Without Star Wars, where do they make their profit in the financial year?
Does Disney have anything substantial set for a 2015 release at this stage? Without Star Wars, where do they make their profit in the financial year?
Avengers 2, Ant-Man, and 2 Pixar movies should hold them over.
Ya, but they want it out in Summer so they can sell the toys all through the Fall shopping season
I doubt even Disney expects us to open in the summer of 2015. My guess is they'll move it to Christmas.
It's still a problem, because the head of a project personally assuming that they'll eventually have to push the deadline, while making everyone working on the project behave like they're not going to push the deadline, is a bad idea. You get way worse results by telling someone they have X amount of time, and then, after they've started, giving them an additional Y amount of time... than you do by budgeting the totality of that time up front, and saying they have X+Y amount of time from the get-go.
This happens in visual effects all the time, but you can apply it to any complex project.
Say you want me to build you a box. We determine the specifics, what it has to carry, how big it has to be, etc., and it turns out there's a number of ways to build it. I could do a fancy one-piece carving that would take ages but be really spectacular, or I could make it out of cardboard and hot glue and put wood-pattern stickers on it afterward, or any of a hundred other variations based on how long I have to do it.
So I ask you how long I have to work on it, and you say I have 24 hours.
No problem.
I know a lot about making boxes, so I know the exact way to give you the best possible result in 24 hours flat. This box has almost nothing in common with the 48-hour version of the box, because every aspect has to be slightly different (and faster, with attendant short cuts or simplifications, probably including working with different materials) than the slightly nicer box. The first hour of working on the 24-hour box might end with me having the rough box shape already made, and I'm already committed to the framework boards and initial assembly. Meanwhile, an hour into the 48-hour box, I'm still making precise measurements and prepping the parts of the box that will later be joined.
That doesn't mean the 24-hour box isn't going to be good, I know what I'm doing, I'm good at making boxes on whatever timeframe you want. But depending on your time scale, the whole process looks different, and every constituent step does as well.
I set out making the 24-hour version of the box, and I get some boards, make some measurements, cut them to size, tack nail them together, paint finish over a stencil on each side, let that dry, then laquer the whole box and leave it to dry. I've left myself one hour at the end of the day for final touches, maybe gluing in a nice fabric lining on the inside so your 24-hour box looks as good as it possibly can.
At 23:50, while I'm gluing fabric to the third of six interior walls, you call me up and say "sorry about the rush, we've added 24 hours to your schedule, I want the 48-hour version of the box."
...
Well, there's absolutely nothing I can do to help you. Right now I could totally make you two 24-hour boxes, because I'm almost done with the first one, right on schedule. But I have no way at all of converting what I have into the equivalent half-way point of 48-hour box. A 48-hour box would be made of entirely different stuff, assembled differently, I'd have different materials and equipment prepared, and a different blueprint. I cannot double the quality of this box, I'd have to start over and begin on a double-quality box.
Meanwhile, you've just doubled your expectations.
So what do I do? I don't fuckin' know, I'll, uh, maybe I'll add molding around the corners, I can just tack that onto what I have... and, I guess, laquer it again? It's useless. This is an outstanding 24-hour box. It's not a bad 48-hour box, it's not a half-done 48-hour box - it's not a 48-hour box.
So after 48 hours, I hand you what you ultimately asked for: a 24-hour box, that I later found out I had 48 hours to work on. Does it look like a 48-hour box? Not at all. It'll do, probably, it is a box, but this doesn't represent how good I could have made a box for you in 48 hours, it represents the result of you changing the parameters of the entire creative process after most of the creative process was finished.
That is by far the best box-making analogy I have ever read.
Teague: master of the analogies
I really don't know what to think of Disney's move here. Since Lucas apparently had a draft written already, and then just handed it off as part of the whole deal, it might not be a big of a deal as people realize. Or, might be huge and bad and force them to rush a job. However, I highly doubt it. Disney, for all its other faults, understands the need to build a product, promote it and get it out. Hopefully, they learned something from John Carter and Tron: Legacy to allow them to see exactly what timing they need for what.
Naturally, there is always the potential that they will be overconfident in this product, trusting on brand recognition (Star Wars, Abrams, Disney) to push it through. I see that as a possibility as well.
As for merchandising, they promoted the stuffing out of Episode 1 even with little to no actually art or stills, so I wouldn't worry, holiday shoppers
Edit: Fixed my typo before Teague did
Last edited by fireproof78 (2013-11-01 17:20:32)
IIRC, Lucas just handed over treatments that Ardnt later expanded and then developed a screenplay from. The rumour that's been doing the rounds is that Ardnt's script was focused on the wrong characters from J.J.'s point of view and that he and Kasdan are doing a full, page-one rewrite on the thing.
I just remind myself that STAR WARS was a clusterfuck pretty much every step of the way and managed to turn out okay. It's tradition!
Wait, am I being optimistic? WHAT IS HAPPENING. HELP ME.
In the one-person / one shot FX production model (basically TV or low-budget model), the box analogy works fine. Truly, adding a second day on the afternoon of the first day accomplishes little.
But the analogy doesn't scale up to the feature factory world, or to adding a second year to the first year.
In feature production (at least in Star Wars scale productions) nobody's building boxes - everybody's sanding their corner of the piece of wood that comes thru the slot every morning, and then passing it down the assembly line. The "box" was designed long before you got your hands on it. One year or two, doesn't matter. You just sand the parts until the boss says to stop.
Adding time is no biggie in this scenario (assuming the pay also scales proportionately o'course).
Now you can sand your pieces of wood a little more carefully, or go home a little earlier...or keep working like a fiend because the total box order has been doubled along with the time. But that's really all that will change.
I have to confess that, considering the way blockbusters are made these days, I find myself looking at all these people worried about script delays and whether the movie will come out in 2015, and thinking "Why's everybody so worried? They've still got a year and a half."
Mike Ryan makes a good point here.
Empire HAD to hit that May 1980 release date or Lucasfilm was in jeopardy of going bankrupt. If anything, that situation was more dire than the one we're seeing now.
Do you know what movies had very little behind the scenes drama? At least that we know about? The Star Wars Prequels.
Hell, EMPIRE started shooting without even having a finished script.
Do you know what movies had very little behind the scenes drama? At least that we know about? Hitler.
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