Repeathttp://www.spout.com/groups/Repeat/132/discussions.aspxen-USSpout RSSRe: Star Warshttp://www.spout.com/groups/Repeat/Re_Star_Wars/132/6909/1/ShowPost.aspxWed, 11 Apr 2007 16:13:21 GMTcdd0f780-13db-4d93-b0f4-ada579d02ae7:6909Risselada1<p>I wasn&#39;t around when <em><a href="http://www.spout.com/films/32762/default.aspx">Star Wars</a></em> first made it&#39;s debut.&nbsp; I was born a few years too late.&nbsp; But I came to discover them and entertained a mild obsession for many years (is anyone interested in a huge collection of the Star Wars Collectable Card Game?).</p><p>I agree that the original, Episode IV is my favorite.&nbsp; I guess a lot of people would say <em><a href="http://www.spout.com/films/10456/default.aspx">Empire Strikes Back</a></em>.&nbsp; Maybe better directing, better writing, more depth and emotion.&nbsp; But the first one was the only one that can stand on it&#39;s own.&nbsp; Of course it points to so much more, but at the time Lucas didn&#39;t know if he&#39;d be able to make any more after the first one, so it had to stand on it&#39;s own.&nbsp; I like that.</p>Star Warshttp://www.spout.com/groups/Repeat/Star_Wars/132/6864/1/ShowPost.aspxTue, 10 Apr 2007 04:39:57 GMTcdd0f780-13db-4d93-b0f4-ada579d02ae7:6864gothere1<p>When I was 7, the first Star Wars (okay, now known as <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/32762/default.aspx" title="Star Wars (1977)">Episode IV</a>) was released in theaters. It was a watershed moment for me as for many others. I owned the soundtrack album on vinyl,&nbsp; the figurines, a viewmaster with short segments to watch over and over. I saved my allowance for several weeks to afford the $14 X-Wing toy spaceship. Call me a geek or a clich&eacute;, but it left an indelible mark on my psyche relating to good and evil, technology, and optimism. Star Wars become the first movie that I watched several times - I think I saw it five or six more times in the theater. This was quite a feat for a 7-year old in the days before cable as we know it, VCRs, DVDs, and DVRs. </p><p>Now that we have all this stuff, and that the following two movies - <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/10456/default.aspx" title="The Empire Strikes Back (1980)">The Empire Strikes Back (Episode V</a>) and <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/28717/default.aspx" title="Return of the Jedi (1983)">Return of the Jedi (Episode VI)</a> - as well as the second wave - <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/133662/default.aspx" title="Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)">Episode I,</a> <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/207075/default.aspx" title="Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002)">Episode II</a>, and <a href="http://www.spout.com/films/227046/default.aspx" title="Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith (2005)">Episode III</a> - have all come out, I can now watch each of them to my heart&#39;s content. Okay, I&#39;m not 7 anymore, and these films certainly don&#39;t have the pull they once had. Still, I was as excited as many others to see all these films made. Ewoks aside, I enjoyed all these movies and find myself watching them, or parts of them as it happens, on cable when they&#39;re on. I&#39;m even starting to enjoy the second wave a bit more than I did after a first look.</p><p>This experience however simply reaffirms my feelings about the original Star Wars. It&#39;s the best of the series, the one that started so much madness and delight. It still takes me back to an age when I wanted and needed heros, to the 70s when the heros weren&#39;t so clean cut, and the special effects weren&#39;t so perfect. When outer space, only rarely depicted in this way previously, was magical and fresh. I&#39;ve found that it&#39;s a movie that to this day, I can watch again and again with great pleasure and nostalgia. </p>