Y en Star Trek 2 quitó buena parte digitalmente porque se dio cuenta de que estaba perdiendo el norte.En Super 8 los metía en una cueva sin luces. Después de eso te das cuenta de que no hay vuelta atrás.
No puede serese que está de espaldas, verdad??Vader
VERDAD ?????
When Disney released the first trailer for Star Wars: The Force Awakens, they made it a massive event, with a special theatrical release where fans could see the first footage on the big screen in 30 theaters across the country. Ever since then, many have been wondering when the second trailer will be released. If a report from Latino Review is correct, the footage will be attached to prints of Marvel's Avengers: Age of Ultron, arriving in theaters May 1. The trailer will reportedly include "all our classic heroes," which likely means we'll get our first look at Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Leia (Carrie Fisher). Ironically, a Fandango poll from late December revealed that Star Wars: The Force Awakens was the most highly-anticipated release of 2015, just behind Avengers: Age of Ultron.
Naturally, this has not been confirmed by Disney or LucasFilm, but the site also reports that audiences in the U.K. will get to see the trailer on April 23, with New Zealand and Australian audiences getting the trailer on April 24. It is also believed that fans attending the Star Wars Celebration in Anaheim, which runs from April 16 to April 19, will be the first to get a glimpse at the trailer. We reported earlier this month that the first six movies will be screened at the Celebration, including the 3D debut of 2005's Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith. It should also be noted that Avengers: Age of Ultron's May 1 release is just a few days away from "Star Wars Day" on May 4th ("May the 4th Be With You"). It's possible that the first trailer will be released in theaters on May 1, with the online debut coming on May 4.
Many fans were disappointed that the first teaser didn't show any footage of classic Star Wars characters like Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Leia (Carrie Fisher), but, if this report is true, we'll finally get our first look at this trio in the next trailer. Are you excited that the next Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailer will arrive in just a few short months? Or do you think we should see it even sooner? Chime in with your thoughts below.
http://www.movieweb.com/star-wars-7-force-awakens-drones-mark-hamillEarlier this week, George Lucas revealed that he originally intended to make Star Wars Episode VII before selling LucasFilm to Disney for $4 billion back in 2012. While it was always assumed that he had plans for the next three chapters in the Skywalker family story, it has become quite clear that he hasn't had much input on the new sequels. Out promoting his latest project Strange Magic, an animated fantasy adventure he created, he reveals that he knows nothing at all about the story of Star Wars: The Force Awakens.
Asked back in early December if he'd seen the Star Wars: The Force Awakens trailer yet, he revealed he hadn't. And he seemed rather aloof about the whole thing. Asked if he had any interested at all in the new trilogy, he stated, 'Not really.' Now, in an interview with Screen Rant, he says he has seen the trailer, and his tune has changed somewhat. Though, don't ask him what happens to the Skywalker family as they head into a new generation. He says:
"I haven't seen anything; I mean I saw the trailer, it looks great, it looks interesting. But as I've said before: one thing I regret about Star Wars is that I never got to see it, you know? I never got to be blown away by the big ship coming over the thing, or anything. But this time I'm going to be, because I have no idea what they're doing."
Back in 2013, it was revealed that George Lucas had spent an entire year mapping out a new trilogy before the big sale to Disney. It was believed that Michael Arndt was working from this blueprint when he first started to pen the screenplay. As famously reported, Michael Arndt left the pre-production process early on, with J.J. Abrams and Lawrence Kasdan doing a massive overhaul on the script. It is not known how much of the Lucas blueprint remains within the finished movie, and it may be as much of a surprise to us as it is to George Lucas when it finally hits screens this December. While the creator of this universe isn't actively involved with any of the upcoming films, he is available for consultation.
Like an Imperial probe droid, personally owned drones caused quite a problem on the set of Star Wars: The Force Awakens. They were spotted flying over various shooting locations, making it even more difficult for director J.J. Abrams to keep everything locked in his infamous mystery box. He did a pretty good job of keeping all of the actors away from the prying eyes of these robotic paparazzi machines, but the occasional image or photo did eventually leak onto the Internet, as we saw over the course of last year. Speaking before a screening of his new film Kingsman: The Secret Service, Mark Hamill offered a sense of what his daily routine was like on Star Wars 7, as he set out to reprise his iconic role as Jedi master Luke Skywalker.
"You know, the security on it is just crazy. I'm surprised I can even admit I'm in it! ...I like being surprised. It's a whole different era now. When we made the original films, you had the odd reporter hanging around the studio bribing people to give them stories. Now, I said to them, 'Do I really have to wear this robe and this hood that covers my entire head to go from the trailer to the soundstage?' They said, 'Yeah, there's drones.' Seriously! There's drones flying over the studio trying to get pictures of whatever they can get pictures of."
He compared working on Star Wars: The Force Awakens to his days making the first sequel Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back. Back then, the security wasn't so tight. But they did run into the occasional snafu:
"We had a little of that on 'Empire Strikes Back'. We were up in Finse, Norway and [someone] bribed a couple of emergency helicopter pilots that were looking for a couple that were stranded while skiing to buzz-bomb our set and take pictures. They appeared in the newspaper The Sun. They didn't get much. They had pictures of snowmobiles and they wrote 'Strange, alien machinery on the set of 'Star Wars 2′!' as they called it. It was crazy! It was just snowmobiles with really identifiable logos on the side."
By now, we all know that the Star Wars: The Force Awakens actors can't really offer any insight to the actual story. Mark Hamill did, however, have this to say about coming back to the franchise:
"The most interesting aspect from my point of view is that [Star Wars] is now in the hands of the generation who were fans. It's the next generation of filmmakers who were sort of weened on these pictures."
After the sight of John Boyega dressed in the iconic armor of Imperial Stormtrooper sent a certain, racist portion of Star Wars fandom up a wall, the franchise may soon be courting more buzz on the diversity front.
UK paper The Mirror has a report claiming that British actress Amybeth Hargreaves will appear as a Stormtrooper in JJ Abrams’ secretive Star Wars Episode VII: The Force Awakens. The news comes from a BBC journalist who attended the industry-heavy Spotlight UK conference, so it’s about as unofficial as it gets.
The paper suggests any number of plot combinations that could put Hargreaves in the armor – including serving as an undercover agent or a double for Game of Thrones’ Gwendoline Christie whose part in the sequel remains unknown. Whatever the details, it appears in some respects the latest chapter in the Star Wars saga may be pushing the diversity of that world further than some had guessed but maybe not as far as others had hoped.
"Bienvenida a casa", le dice Marvel a la galaxia creada por George Lucas en la nota de prensa que acompaña a sus lanzamientos de enero. La Casa de las Ideas se ha tomado la compra de 'Star Wars' por parte de Disney (que, recordemos, la había adquirido a ella misma unos años antes) como una oportunidad para volver a retomar esa relación de ensueño que dejó escapar. Concretamente, se la dejó a Dark Horse, un sello rival que se encargó de mantener viva la llama de los tebeos 'Star Wars' desde principios de los años 90. Ahora, por decisión salomónica de Disney, todos los cómics, novelas y videojuegos que formaban parte del llamado Universo Expandido pasan a conocerse como 'Legends', una suerte vistazos a mundos paralelos que en ningún caso formarán parte del canon oficial. Y, sólo para demostrar lo en serio que va, la compañía le ha encargado a uno de sus guionistas estrella y a su dibujante más preciso una serie regular ambientada entre 'La guerra de las galaxias' (George Lucas, 1977) y 'El Imperio contraataca' (Irvin Kershner, 1980).
El número uno de 'Star Wars' se parece bastante al sueño húmedo de todo fan fatal al que las precuelas dejaron un agujero del tamaño de Alderaan en el corazón: Jason Aaron lo ha afrontado como la segunda parte de 'La guerra de las galaxias' que siempre le hubiera gustado escribir, con un Luke aún incapaz de comprender el alcance de su poder y un Han al que aún no se le nota la verdadera razón por la que continúa al lado de un desastroso grupo de rebeldes (spoiler: es Leia). Por su parte, John Cassaday canaliza a su mejor Ralph McQuarrie en cada viñeta y logra clavar incluso las expresiones de los personajes más complicados, como cierta bola de pelo que, cómo no, tiene un momento estelar ya en este primer número. Plagado de guiños juguetones (C-3PO afirmando tener "un muy buen presentimiento sobre esto") y al menos dos cameos asombrosos, 'Star Wars #1' saldrá publicado en España el próximo mes de abril. No obstante, si realmente no puedes esperar, y si no escuchaste nada de lo que Yoda tenía que decir sobre la paciencia, debes saber que ya está disponible a través de Comixology.
Marvel acompañará esta serie principal con otras dos novedades inminentes: 'Vader', un spin-off del Malote Galáctico Original (M.G.O.) escrito por Kieron Gillen y dibujado por Salvador Larroca; y 'Princess Leia', una miniserie de Mark Waid y Terry Dodson. En cuanto a las reediciones, puedes apostar a que van a llegar rápidas y furiosas: este mismo mes se publica el primer volumen de 'Star Wars: The Original Marvel Years', con esos tebeos setenteros cocinados al calor del fenómeno que, entre otras cosas, exploraban muy a tope una relación amorosa entre Leia y Luke. Ey: incluso en una galaxia muy lejana, hay cosas que están sencillamente mal.
La rebelión sí será televisada
La reactivación de la marca Marvel Star Wars parece la primera señal de que Disney se ha planteado 2015 como una gran gymkana de lanzamientos hasta navidades, cuando llegue J.J. Abrams con 'Star Wars: El despertar de la Fuerza'. Pero, en honor a la verdad, una serie de animación llegó primero: 'Star Wars Rebels', actual joya de la corona del canal Disney XD, supone un plan maquiavélico para introducir a las nuevas generaciones (criadas con el universo de colores y magia CGI de las precuelas) en la galaxia oscura, sucia y decadente que trajo el Imperio. Ambientada en los años posteriores a 'La venganza de los Sith' (George Lucas, 2005), la serie está desarrollando una mitología de personajes propia y continuando el buen trabajo de actualización conceptual que ya realizó 'Clone Wars', la anterior serie de sus productores ejecutivos. 'Rebels' es el producto Star Wars más moderno de nuestros días, pero eso no quiere decir que no incluya homenajes a la tradición: por ejemplo, un guest starring antológico del favorito de las damas, el caballero con más gusto al vestir en nueve sistemas planetarios, el mismísimo Lando Calrissian. Si no tienes edad suficiente para conocerlo, digamos solamente esto: es un jugador, un tramposo y un sinvergüenza. Te gustará.
El éxito de 'Rebels' se ha cobrado dos bajas colaterales, aunque hay que reconocer que siempre fueron series complicadas. Primero tenemos 'Detours', en la que los padres de 'Robot Chicken' (Seth Green y Matthew Senreich) le aplicaron su proberbial mirada iconoclasta y juvenil a la mitología galáctica. No sería nada que no hubieran hecho antes (y también con el sello de aprobación oficial de Lucasfilm), pero Disney ha decidido congelar los episodios ya terminados hasta después del estreno de 'Episodio VII', argumentando que no tiene mucho sentido lanzar una parodia justo antes de la gran apuesta de la franquicia. Las perspectivas para esa serie de imagen real con la que Lucas llevaba soñando desde 2005 pintan aún peor: pese a confirmar que ABC sigue estando interesada y nunca ha parado de generar ideas y posibles líneas argumentales, todo el mundo en Disney se encoge de hombros cada vez que alguien saca el tema. La versión oficial parece ser que el total de los esfuerzos en imagen real se concentrarán, de momento, en la gran pantalla. Es una lástima, porque veíamos perfectamente una versión de 'House of Cards' protagonizada por Palpatine...
Campo de batalla: Endor
En cuanto a los videojuegos, el gran lanzamiento de 2015 es, sin duda, 'Star Wars: Battlefront', nueva entrega de la saga que propulsará a la franquicia hasta el hiperespacio de la nueva generación de consolas. Aún es pronto para entrar en detalles (el lanzamiento del juego coincidirá con el estreno de 'Episodio VII', en plena campaña navideña), pero Electronic Arts ya ha confirmado campañas en Hoth y Endor. Mientras esperamos a que llegue este colosal AT-AT, podemos matar algunos minutos con juegos más pequeños: 'Galactic Defense' sigue siendo una buena opción para móviles (siempre y cuando te hayas cansado de los Angry Birds), mientras que los entusiastas de 'Minecraft' aún siguen paladeando en la idea de un pack con nada menos que 55 personajes, incluyendo a Bib Fortuna. Todo el mundo ama a Bib Fortuna.
Está bien, todo esto es simplemente una manera de hacer tiempo antes de que ocurra lo que todos estamos esperando: que Disney Infinity reciba en su seno el sello Star Wars, igual que hizo el año pasado con Marvel. La noticia está más o menos confirmada, pero aún falta una fecha que le ponga un lazito a todo. Por supuesto, Internet ya está lleno de fanart sobre el posible aspecto de las figuras de Han, Ben Kenobi o R2-D2, pero habrá que esperar. Y, si algo nos enseñó ese teaser de 'El despertar de la Fuerza', lanzado un año entero antes del estreno de la película, es a esperar.
¿Mujeres Stormtroopers? No me parece nada mal.
A Woman Stormtrooper May Be Next For ‘Star Wars: The Force Awakens’