danoyse
Snikt. Stab. Repeat.
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ntcrawler said:Not entirely correct. The cast was called back for each movie to refilm scenes or make changes as Jackson saw fit. If he wanted to change the outcome of certain scenes or change the scenes or give chars different or more exposure, he could have. If he wanted to bring more attention to Legolas or Aragorn or make Gimlee toss the ring, he could have. But he didn't.
But he did change a great many things from the books--much to the chagrin of the fans. Don't think for a second that all of those fans welcomed them with open arms.
I saw Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, Christopher Lee, and Howard Shore at an appearance at Barnes & Noble in NY just after "Fellowship" opened. It was a Q&A with the fans...one of whom had already seen FOTR more than 30 times in the theater.
He prefaced info about the upcoming "Two Towers" to everyone with "I'm warning you now..." during which he detailed major changes being made in the next two movies, that the Scouring of the Shire being taken out, that the women characters were getting bigger roles, that Shelob was being moved to "Return of the King." About why characters were being taken out, changed, given a bigger or lesser focus.
And that was before he decided to cut Christopher Lee out of the theatrical release of ROTK.
He even dispelled the internet rumors that they didn't get along with the "Star Wars" crew, who was filming in Australia at the time--said how ILM showed them the special effects software they were using, and how they helped scout locations in New Zealand for the SW crew. They visited each other's sets, and were quite friendly with each other.
He wasn't asking the fans if they were OK with these changes...he basically said he was making them. That was it. He sounded very much like he'd read plenty of grief over the internet from the things he had done.
POTC is not an established franchise with as well known of a story base os LOTR, Star Wars, Spiderman, Batman, or X-Men. It does not have either the history or fanbase that these other franchises have.
But it became one as soon as they started talking sequel. Both Keira and Orlando wouldn't come back unless they had expanded roles, and Disney paid through the roof to get them back and keep them happy.
Orlando teenybopper success is more credited to Pirates than it is to LOTR.
Not entirely correct. Lucas did not write all three movies intending for them to be a trilogy. In fact, he didn't expect to make more than one film when he filmed ANH. when making sequels he could have completely changed the focus of the film or the roles of the characters and made Han the big hero who slays Vader and the Emperor, but kept the balance he originally established. The characters, their roles, and their place in the storyline all stayed consistent.
He'd written a lot more than 3 movies when the first was released. If you read the novelization to ANH, which was published in 1976, you can see the outline of what ultimately became Phantom Menace in the prologue.
Lucas was never going to change what he intended for this story--Luke was his favorite character when he wrote it. It was always a story about a man who turned bad who was redeemed by his children.
The big difference with Star Wars is that Lucas owned it from the beginning. He gave up his director's fee in order to have creative control instead. The studio couldn't tell him what character to make the focus instead because they had no rights over the story.
After the wild success of Empire Strikes back, Lucas could have realized that Han Solo was the most popular and loved character and potential cash cow and could have rewritten ROTJ to be all about him (of course the title would then be different). He could have had Luke die in the battle with Jabba the Hutt while Rescuing Han, who would then fight a duel with Vader, pitting the Falcon against his tie-fighter, blast him out of the sky (he was justified after the way Vader tormented him in the previous film) and then blast Palpatine's tower and been the big hero, but that didn't happen. Han overshadowed Luke, Han had "it" while Luke did not, yet Luke's role wasn't compromised.
Again, not really. Lucas owned the rights so he could tell it his way. And his way was Luke at the front of the story. If Fox owned it, they could make those calls...but it was never in the hands of Fox.
Harrison Ford wanted Han Solo to die in Return of the Jedi--Lucas wouldn't let him have that.
Harrison Ford was already a bigger actor than Mark Hamil and during the course of making Star Wars' original trilogy already had other big roles which propelled him forward, including Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Harrison Ford was working as a carpenter in Francis Ford Coppola's office when they were having story meetings for Star Wars. He didn't really reach star status until after Raiders.
In fact, he wasn't signed for Empire...and he did give a little grief about coming back. When his next film, "The Frisco Kid" flopped at the box office, he came back to Star Wars.

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