exanda kane
Senior Member
For god's sake, use the plural of Jedi correctly; Jedi. I'm afraid it makes you look like an idiot and affects anything else you say.
Originally posted by Lord Knightfa11
High Noon is an epic... your right...look up there at the 5 things I posted... star wars fulfills each and every one. even if some of them dont have anything to do with jedis, they are all VERY Star Wars. This makes star wars an Epic...
You mean you used wikipedia? Here you use "Star Wars," as an adjective, yet fail to describe what that entails. What does Star Wars mean? Give the parameters for what you mean and EXPLAIN. Don't copy and paste from wiki; you look silly and ill-informed, especially when you have something like sustained elevation in there (Star Wars is NOT a piece of prose). If you want to shove Star Wars into the literary parameters of the Epic, then go and beat yourself up over it; at the end of the day, while it may contain elements of the Epic (or elements trying to aspire to an Epic, it is a very small part of the overall composition of the franchise. I repeat, it's a Western, fact.
and In an epic, there is always the temptation of evil for the Protagonist.
You mean the protagonist is flawed? Yeah, great, that suits Anakin Skywalker, of course! It must be an Epic. Err, no. Actually the capacity of for good and bad is inherent in tonnes of genres, so it's not particuarly clever to mention one and claim it to be fact. Classical Greek Tragedy involves a tragic flaw in a character, while Classical Medieval Tragedies involve the curse of fate; given that SW shrugs off fate as The Force, then it doesn't leave much room for logical analysis in the character department. Again, you speak ill-informed. And the documentary is wank.
I
also didnt say that Westerns are not epic at all, I just said that it wouldnt have quite the same kind of protagonist as an epic without jedis. Han Solo is not an epic samurai/Achilles type as much as Skywalker is, because Han Solo is not perfect, he is more pirat-y and scoundrelly and there arent very many skilled blaster types in the prequell (maybe padme, but she isnt exactly protagonist material either)
Again, I was clarifying for you that the traits of the Epic have become inherent in storytelling (note, not literature in this case, considering a great majority of Greek tragedies were told orally.) You aren't being clear on the type of protagonist you're on about now. I think you mean Han Solo is a Cowboy, and Luke Skywalker is the innocent aspiring cowboy. The relationship between Luke and Han is a tension inherent in Westerns. Plus, Pirat-y? What the hell are you on about. 😱
Fact that you are characterisating people simply because of the weapons they use is funny too. Come on, admit it. You don't have any welll formed opinions on this matter. You can't watch one documentary, cope and paste from wiki and expect to know what you are talking about.
And If you dont call star wars a piece of literature, I dont know what you would call it. it is one of the greatest stories of our generation and the generation before ours. kids will be outside playing with spraypainted dowels long after we are dead.
Maybe...call it like a Film? As, taking into consideration inflation, it is still the second highest grossing film in the US ever and is also the most important thing in US film history when considering "New, New Hollywood."
Apart from that, I'll say again that it isn't literature. It has a narrative from which the audience can place a story chronologically. Doesn't mean it is literature, especially when you realise that it takes as much from futuristic pulp serials as it does old myth, but mostly from the Western. In other words, SW is a Western set in front of a pulp mythos; not dense enough to have a commednable mythology,but at the same time not trying to attain one. Again, your reasoning is pretty pathetic for someone trying to debate issues of genre, especially switching mediums like hopping on different feet when it suits you.
Star Wars wouldnt be so popular if it was just Special Effects and [i]good sword coreography[i].
😆 You have seen A New Hope, right? What don't you stop trying to tell me what I already know (although I was unaware of good sword choreography in the original SW - which made it popular rememberr). Again, it shows bad reasoning from you. Come up with a good argument please, I can't run this show on my own.
If high noon was just guns would it be epic to a degree? No, all good movies must have a good story, which, any good story, I call literature.
Except that you're wrong. Call it what you want, but it makes you look silly.
For instance, would you have say a bad story, i.e. prose, published in a book was a bad story? You're muddling your mediums again. Film critcism was problematic when high-brow literary criticisms were used, because they are different mediums and even stories constructed from narratives if they are displayed as films, are films.
ANd my reference to lotr was to the book, not to the movie.
I realised kiddo.
Please, please, please get yourself a good argument together. This is embarassing.