Det er nu muligt at se et nyt 1 minut langt tv-spot til den forestående afslutning på “Star Wars”-sagaen, “Episode III: Sith-fyrsternes hævn”.

I fimen følger man Anakin Skywalkers endelige fald til den Mørke Side og dermed afslutningen på Jedi-riddernes æra. Anakins ven og læremester Obi-Wan må i sidste ende stå overfor sin elev, der nu er blevet mægtigere end nogensinde før.

“Episode III – Sith-fyrsternes hævn” rammer alverdens biografer i næste uge, 19. maj.



Vis kommentarer (117)
Gravatar

#51 filmz-sanjo 19 år siden

"If there is no struggle, there is no progress"
Gravatar

#52 BN 19 år siden

#45 og #48 (old son):

jeg kommer nok til at modsige, men det er jeg ikke spor ked af ;-)

De følgende to anmeldelser giver nemlig et væsentlig andet billede af episode III (og af episode I og II) end det, DU serverer for os:

By B. Alan Orange

(Spoiler Free…Sort of. I won't tell you what happens. But I might tell you a little bit about what doesn't happen. Is that against the rules?)


I used to be the smiling guy, but I will smile...

No more!

Yesterday, I was ecstatic; excited that I was getting to see the last Star Wars film two weeks before its proper release. I was running around, humming Darth Vader's ominous theme everywhere I went. I was happy. Joyful. Wow, this was a big deal. I love Star Wars. I've never had a bad word to say about the prequels. Ever. The little idiosyncrasies never bothered me. I'm not too concerned with the continuity of the series. When I go to the theater, I want to have fun. And Episodes I and II, despite their epic cinematic failures as far as dialogue and dumb humor is concerned, were enjoyable bouts of digital abandoned. I've always said so. Check the history on this site. I even hold an affinity for a certain Jar Jar Binks, if only because he was this gargantuan fool. The one guy that showed up to the biggest party of the year and ruined it for everyone (I certainly can identify with that). He was the sole embodiment of geeks everywhere, yet the nerd culture was so consumed with acclimating itself into the dictionary of cool at the time, the majority of them failed to notice they were stoning one of their own.

Yes. I had a lot of preconceived notions about this final (as far as theatrical releases go) chapter of the Star Wars Saga. I think everyone does. I've staid away from all the spoilers. The K-Mart books and the Internet Advanced reviews. I didn't want to know anything. And I succeeded. I was frosty; fresh and clean walking into that theater. Thing is, much like every living sole that is going to see this on opening day, I knew the entire storyline before finding my perfect seat. I didn't know the details, but I knew what had to happen. It's almost impossible not too know. This is a history even my Mother is familiar with, and she can't remember or keep track of events from one movie to the next. I was prepared for what was going to happen on screen. What I wasn't prepared for was how it would affect me. Or make me feel.

I thought I was going to come out of that screening room elated. On top of the World. I guessed that I'd rush to my car, ready to call my brother and a couple of my friends, screaming, "My God, that was awesome!" Instead, I stumbled into the sunlight, disaffected. The film left me feeling rather melancholy. Angry, almost. I didn't want to call anyone. I just wanted to go lie in a ditch somewhere, and stare at the sky. And die. Revenge of the Sith left me feeling a bit finished inside. I guess, what I'm trying to say is, this isn't an easy ride. I can't quite sum up my interior experience in words.

Don't get me wrong. It's not a horrible film. I'm not going to pull out one of those age-old clichés like, "George Lucas punched my childhood in the kidneys!" Or, "He did it too me a third time!" You know, those geek lines that rate super high in the Star Wars lexicon. Seriously, they're up there with, "I have a bad feeling about this." And, "You Don't know the Power of the Darkside." Saying, "George Lucas raped my virgin mouth with his prequels!" Is synonymous with, "May the Force Be With You." I'm surprised Lucasfilm hasn't slapped a trademark on this "rape" chestnut. They could have made millions off it in T-shirt sales alone.

Revenge of the Sith isn't a bad film. It's quite the opposite.

Thing is, this isn't supposed to be a rousing Whoopti-Doo. It's not supposed to be a fun summer thrill ride. The fact I left the film feeling completely, unequivocally depressed means the sonvabitch made something that surpasses Pop Entertainment. Yeah, I guess, for the most part, George got it right. He nailed the aura and emotional arc usually associated with a funeral pyre. I don't even really want to talk about the goddamn thing. Revenge of the Sith wiped me out both physically and emotionally. So much so, I'm not going to rush back to the theater to see it anytime soon. The next time I watch the movie is going to be when I'm broken hearted, and I want to feel ten times worse than I already do. I'm glad I didn't see this with a buzz on, I would have been crying like a little bitch through the last twenty minutes.

That's a dirty trick. There's not supposed to be any crying in Star Wars.

Maybe I feel sick at my stomach because I know this is the last time I'll ever see a new Star Wars movie for the first time. That ate at me while watching the film. Still, a huge part of me is glad it's all over. It was the exact way I felt at the end of Jedi, when I was a kid. "Shheew! I'm happy I don't have too worry about that any more." I have to face it; I'm suffering from Post-Star Wars depression. And the fact that the whole thing ends on a down note is tearing away at my insides. You thought Empire Strikes Back had a bummer conclusion, that's nothing compared to what happens here.

I don't know too much about George Lucas' private love life, but damn, he must have been f*cked over, hardcore. Watching Sith, you can just feel that his heart was ripped out of his chest. He equates a love relationship with having his legs and arm cut off, catching on fire, being burned alive, and then locked inside this robotic shell of his former self. That's sadistic. And gruesome. Advanced word of mouth has called this is a dark, fun film. It's dark, all right, but there's nothing fun about it. To fully understand the impact of the Vader death and re-birth, you almost have to have had your heart obliterated by a member of the opposite sex. I can identify. Maybe that's why the movie left me feeling so empty. And alone.

I don't really have any problems with Revenge of the Sith. I have a deep-seated feeling that we'll be seeing the same thing that happened with Attack of the Clones, as far as the nerdcore fans go. If you remember, they all seemed to love Episode II when it came out. They thought the Yoda fight was awesome. Then, a few weeks after its release, they all backtracked on their original views and lambasted the thing. They said the Dooku-Yoda saber fight went against the integrity of the characters. They complained about the love scenes. They complained about the fact that R2D2 could fly. It's a slippery slope, though. With a new film, you want to see new things. Lucas gives us new, cool things, but then the core base of jerk-offs complains about it. If they had a problem with R2D2's flying mechanism in the last film, they're going to have a good ol' fashion sleeping bag blowout when they see the things he can do in this latest chapter. (I personally liked all of the R2D2 scenes, even though they were a bit goofy.)

Basically, I‘m disappointed in the film's certain disregard for beloved figureheads that have been hyped in promo after promo, but sadly don't account for much screen time. I wanted more Chewbacca. I wanted more C3PO. I wanted more Vader (though, I feel that his bit is played quite well considering the scheme of things). These three staples of the Star Wars Universe clock about five minutes apiece at the maximum. I wanted to see Qui Gon Jinn in ghost form. We were supposed to get an explanation about Yoda and Obi-Wan's ability to meld with the force and become one with it when they die. That explanation is written off fairly lightly. It takes Old Ben something, like, twenty years to figure out the process, and its never explained how Anakin learns this power in order to come back a fresh faced spook at the end of the newly revised Jedi. I guess Obi Wan and Yoda retrieved him from the netherworld when he passed away.

These are minor gripes, and I have a feeling we'll see a lot more of Chewbacca in the TV series that should be headed our way in a couple of years. The film slyly sets that up. Mostly, though, I'm angry that Jar Jar Binks only gets one line. What's that about? The poor bastard. I really wanted to see him brandish a Lightsaber and clear his name. That would have been awesome…For no one but me…

I said earlier that this review was Spoiler Free…Well, that's kind of an oxymoron. The thing that surprised me most about Sith is that there are no big reveals or surprises. At all. And about the digital projection: I'd heard that the digital version was longer, with an extra scene of Yoda heading to Dagobah. I can't confirm or deny if it's any longer or not, but the digital version does not contain a scene of Yoda arriving on his planet of exile. That's a fib.

Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. It made me feel like dogsh*t. Like the hottest girl; her fist punching me in the face. Ouch. It hurts, and it's going to take me a while to deal with my feelings on this one. That its irked up any emotional residue from my gut at all means that it's a neo-masterpiece in the Sci-Fi genre. Where do I place it in the order of the six films? I don't. Each Star Wars film means something different to me, and I don't really like one more than the other.

I sure as Hell won't be watching Revenge of the Sith in a means to get my smile back.

(hentet fra http://www.movieweb.com/movies/reviews/review.php?...

------------------------------------

Dear Fellow Star Wars Fans,

Today I was given the pleasure of seeing a sneak preview of Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. At about the thirty minute point in the film I realized that while I wasn't that big a fan of Star Wars: Episode One - The Phantom Menace and I loved Star Wars: Episode Two - Attack of the Clones, I sort of felt that these movies really lacked the gravity and depth of the original three episodes. However, it was at the thirty minute point that I also realized that both of those films really had been leading up to this last installment. We had to see Annakin Skywalker as a young boy and we had to see the relationship between himself and Padme develop over an elongated period of time. Sure, George Lucas could have cut right to the chase and given us the darkly poetic Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, but that would have done nothing but take away from the mythic story he has been weaving since he started crafting it in the 1970s. So it is with complete and utter praise that I feel I can tell you that Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith is not only a remarkable achievement but an awesome movie and a fitting third installment in the prequel portion of the trilogy.

The look of this movie is so amazingly seamless that I was honestly in awe of it's pacing. It starts off fast and I kept thinking that it was about to slow down. It gives you breathers but even then all they serve to do is offer more plot information and take these characters many levels deeper. I know that many have scoffed at the way Hayden Christensen played Annakin in Star Wars: Episode Two - Attack of the Clones, but in this movie Lucas gets into the heart of his conflict. Truthfully, it seems to be about the heart of human conflict entirely. It is all spoken about very briefly between Annakin and Palpatine. The subject is good and evil and how those very notions are open to the subjective points of view of the people exploring them. This two and a half hour film is rich in every aspect and it never seems to get muddled in the story it's telling or the points it is making. I am willing to bet that most of the people going to see the film already know most of what is going to happen, yet still there is so much that happens that we don't know, that it makes seeing what we do know have that much greater resonance.

I am sure that there are going to be purists who take many issues with the way this film was made. They are going to not like this movie for one reason or another. These are people who you are never going to win over, but thankfully they continue to attend movies like this in the hopes that they will finally find whatever it is they are looking for. I am not the biggest Star Wars fan, and by this I mean that I love the films but I don't really get into all the supplemental materials. This fact alone might make some people reading this dismiss my review entirely. That is fine. I do however know a thing or two about filmmaking, the film marketplace and movies in general. So I will say this, Star Wars: Episode One - The Phantom Menace was Luscas's first directorial effort in many years and to me it seemed like more a product of the film marketplace then something really close to his heart. Star Wars: Episode Two - Attack of the Clones seemed to be Lucas's way of appeasing the fans, carrying the story line through and starting to explore life issues that were close to his heart. With Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith, I get the sense that Lucas really made this film for himself. It was not only a story he had to make but one he felt compelled to make. This is his story. The great work of his life and he has wrapped it up on his own terms. I feel that through Star Wars he has found himself again. Why else would he be talking about making personal films along the lines of THX 1138 now that this one is finished?

In closing, I would like to say that it seems like the great directors of the 1970s are having something of a resurgence. Their work seems to be more charged, more well done and more grand then ever before. How else to explain the magnificence of Martin Scorsese's The Aviator? Or Warner Bros. mea culpa with Paul Schrader's version of the Exorcist 4? Or the twilight years prolificness of William Friedkin? George Lucas, the ultimate independent, the man who left Hollywood, quit the DGA and funds his own celluloid dreams can count himself right alongside this merry pack of renegades. Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith is a dazzling pastiche of humanity mixed with the hi-tech which in the end shows the enormous heart of not only the creation but the creator.

Yours Sincerely,
Evan "Mushy" Jacobs
[email protected]

(hentet fra http://www.movieweb.com/movies/reviews/review.php?...
http://www.amazon.com/First-Album-Beautiful-Night/dp/B00D3RUKFM/
Gravatar

#53 myggen 19 år siden

Jeg tror jeg vil undlade at citere en hel anmeldelse, men det er ikke svært at finde en, der ikke er begejstret, fx. denne her.

Jeg faldt i øvrigt lige over et citat fra den ene af de ovenfor citerede anmeldelser, som lige skal med her: "I'm glad I didn't see this with a buzz on, I would have been crying like a little bitch through the last twenty minutes." :)
Kværulant extraordinaire
Gravatar

#54 filmz-Mifan 19 år siden

Sådan er det jo med film. Især film som denne, som virkelig deler folk i to. Nogen synes om dem, andre gør ikke, og så skal vi bruge et par måneder på at argumentere for, hvorfor vi synes som vi gør. Der er ikke rigtig nogen der tror på, at diskussionen fører til noget, men man får da luft for sin holdning. :)
Star Wars chat kan aldrig bare være:

"nørj den var fed"
"naa, det var ikke lige noget for mig"
~ Mifan
Gravatar

#55 BN 19 år siden

#53 myggen:

nu er det jo også enormt relevant i den her sammenhæng at finde en dårlig anmeldelse, når "old son" foroven lige er kommet med det. Min pointe var at give et eksempel på det modsatte synspunkt som kontrast til "old son"'s indlæg ... Selvfølgelig kan man også finde en lang stribe dårlige anmeldelser, hvis det er dét man vil.

Personligt morede jeg mig kosteligt over det den ene af de to ovenstående anmeldere skriver som hilsen til dem der har så evigt travlt med at proklamere, at de tre prequels aldrig blive ligeså gode som den gamle trilogi: "I'm not going to pull out one of those age-old clichés like, "George Lucas punched my childhood in the kidneys!" Or, "He did it too me a third time!" You know, those geek lines that rate super high in the Star Wars lexicon. Seriously, they're up there with, "I have a bad feeling about this." And, "You Don't know the Power of the Darkside." Saying, "George Lucas raped my virgin mouth with his prequels!" Is synonymous with, "May the Force Be With You." I'm surprised Lucasfilm hasn't slapped a trademark on this "rape" chestnut. They could have made millions off it in T-shirt sales alone."

http://www.amazon.com/First-Album-Beautiful-Night/dp/B00D3RUKFM/
Gravatar

#56 filmz-shaviro 19 år siden

#53, 54: Ja, men denne gang ser det ellers ud til der er længere mellem de 'negative' anmeldelser. Om det så er en god ting ved vi ikke før d. 19. :)
Gravatar

#57 myggen 19 år siden

#53: Rolig nu - jeg så ikke andet i old sons indlæg end hans egen holdning, og når du indleder dit indlæg med "De følgende to anmeldelser giver nemlig et væsentlig andet billede af episode III (og af episode I og II) end det, DU serverer for os", så synes egentlig det er relevant nok, med en anmelder der var mindre begejstret (og støtter old sons mening).

Men meningen med dit indlæg var måske at servere den endegyldige sandhed, som jo - baseret på de 2 anmeldelser - må være, at filmen er fantastisk ?
Kværulant extraordinaire
Gravatar

#58 Old Son 19 år siden

#52 Nu ved jeg ikke, om du har set den, men det tyder på, at da har høje forventninger til den - og jeg håber da for dig, at du ikke bliver skuffet. Selv blev jeg ikke skuffet, men jeg havde heller ikke forventet mig ret meget mere end en hormonpumpet gentagelse af II'eren, hvor alle sejl sættes til for at afslutte serien med et genoldigt knald. Og det er mere eller mindre, hvad jeg synes, jeg fik.

Det er jeg såmænd også fint tilfreds med. Jeg har bare aldrig været særligt begejstret for dialogen og skuespillet i denne nye trilogi, som I-III må siges at være. Star Wars blev ikke den helstøbte fantasy-fortælling i 6 afsnit, som den kunne have været. I stedet fik vi to vidt forskellige trilogier, som er hæklet sammen med en meget tynd tråd.

Og ja, det er så bare min mening. Forhåbentlig er der mange, der elsker de tre nye film. Og så længe Lucas er tilfreds, er alt jo palermo.
Wiggaaaar ajt fo sjissle ma dissle bizlle in de kissle aijt fo shir biatch!
Gravatar

#59 BN 19 år siden

#57 og 58

meningen med mit indlæg i #52 er den som jeg giver udtyk for i #55, nemlig: "Min pointe var at give et eksempel på det modsatte synspunkt som kontrast til "old son"'s indlæg" ... hvis du læser mine andre indlæg her på filmz.dk eller på filmzonen.dk vil du se, at min holdning er, at det der er godt for den ene, ofte kan opfattes som dårligt, og derfor er der for mig ikke noget der hedder 'endegyldige sandheder'.

Diskussion om film handler ikke om få ret, for mht. smag og behag findes der ikke noget der hedder faktum. Alt afhænger af øjnene der ser og ørerne der hører. Jeg diskuterer kun, fordi jeg ofte ikke forstår folks argumenter for at mene det, de gør. Og fordi det er interessant at høre andres meninger og at udfordre andres meninger...
http://www.amazon.com/First-Album-Beautiful-Night/dp/B00D3RUKFM/
Gravatar

#60 Old Son 19 år siden

#59 Glæder mig så til at høre din egen mening, når du har set den ;)
Wiggaaaar ajt fo sjissle ma dissle bizlle in de kissle aijt fo shir biatch!

Skriv ny kommentar: