Before September of last year, I didn't know what a spoiler was. Now, I can't get any more spoiled for episode III. For episode II i was pretty much spoiler free except for the first 3 chapters I read from the novel which isn't even in the movie. Episode I, well I was seven and found out about the movie a month before it came out.
I'm trying to go spoiler-free...but as each day passes I more and more get the urge to just read all the spoilers. I have a general idea of what's going to happen, but no details. I really don't want to be spoiled cause I ruined Ep. II for myself in a bad way cause I was reading the script.
I have stumbled onto some spoilers here that I wish I hadn't read. Oh well.
Me too......I have a basic idea of the order of the story but i aint read the screenplay or looked at the graph novel or main novel and i stay out the finished thread shots thread nowadays.
It aint easy but it can be done...i learned my lesson after seeing TPM where we got it in August in the uk and by then i knew the soundtrack,every line and had seen every most scenes with the 2 sets of trading cards....it wasnt a great cinematic experiance after all that personally.
Okay. Heres something for everyone to read.
It is not possible to be spoiled for a movie like Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith.
You can know (and kind of have an idea in your head) of what's gonna happen, but it doesn't even get you close to the experience of seeing the movie.
I'd be willing to be ANYTHING, that somebody that, for instance, didn't know that anakin's gonna fall into lava, saw the movie, they wouldn't be any more shocked than someone who was spoiled.
Actually seeing this stuff happening on the screen is so amazing, that it doesn't matter if you knew what *physicaly* was going to happen.
I read the book of Attack of the Clones before seeing the movie, and it didn't prepare me at all for the awe I was in while watching it.
Theres no such thing as being spoiled. Knowing information is one thing. Seeing the movie is a completaly different thing.
In fact, it might be that some people would enjoy the movie MORE when they are spoiled, because they'll have an image of what it looks like in they're head, and then the movie will be so much greater than what they imagined.
I have a feeling that that's what's going to happen to all of us during Obi-Wan vs. Anakin. We all know what happens, but actually seeing it will blow us off our feet.
What do you mean their is no such thing as being spoiled? knowing what happens is being spoiled even though reading is not the same experience as watching it, it's still being spoiled. When you see the movie, that's not being spoiled, that's seeing the movie. I think you got the wrong idea of what spoilers are