sábado, 9 de enero de 2016

JJ ABRAMS SE DEFIENDE DE LAS CRÍTICAS A SU STAR WARS

...O lo intenta, por que los "argumentos" son de pena:

Que si Star Wars tenía muchas influencias, por eso la suya es solo influenciada por las anteriores, que si para presentar nuevos personajes NECESITABA (?) copiar la estructura original, que si Maz Kanata NO SE PARECEN EN NADA a Yoda...

Aquí tenemos al nuevo Zack Snyder: No solo toma las decisiones ANTINATURALES, sino que además no se corta un pelo en intentar justificarlas. Hasta el año que viene, claro, como con Star Trek.

¡Pues nos va a gustar la muerte de Han Solo el mismo día que nos convenza que Superman es un asesino rompecuellos!


“It was obviously a wildly intentional thing that we go backwards, in some ways, to go forwards in the important ways, given that… ‘Star Wars’ is a kind of specific gorgeous concoction of George [Lucas]’s that combines all sorts of things.

Ultimately, the structure of ‘Star Wars’ itself is as classic and tried and true as you can get. It was itself derivative of all of these things that George loved so much, from the most obvious, ‘Flash Gordon’ and Joseph Campbell, to the [Akira] Kurosawa references, to Westerns — I mean, all of these elements were part of what made ‘Star Wars.'”



“I can understand that someone might say, ‘Oh, it’s a complete rip-off!’

We inherited ‘Star Wars.’ The story of history repeating itself was, I believe, an obvious and intentional thing, and the structure of meeting a character who comes from a nowhere desert and discovers that she has a power within her, where the bad guys have a weapon that is destructive but that ends up being destroyed — those simple tenets are by far the least important aspects of this movie, and they provide bones that were well-proven long before they were used in ‘Star Wars,'” he continued.

What was important for me was introducing brand new characters using relationships that were embracing the history that we know to tell a story that is new — to go backwards to go forwards.



So I understand that this movie, I would argue much more than the ones that follow, needed to take a couple of steps backwards into very familiar terrain, and using a structure of nobodies becoming somebodies defeating the baddies — which is, again, I would argue, not a brand new concept, admittedly — but use that to do, I think, a far more important thing, which is introduce this young woman, who’s a character we’ve not seen before and who has a story we have not seen before, meeting the first Storm Trooper we’ve ever seen who we get to know as a human being. 




To see the two of them have an adventure in a way that no one has had yet, with Han Solo; to see those characters go to find someone who is a brand new character who, yes, may be diminutive, but is as far from Yoda as I think a description of a character can get, who gets to enlighten almost the way a wonderful older teacher or grandparent or great-aunt might, you know, something that is confirming a kind of belief system that is rejected by the main character; and to tell a story of being a parent and being a child and the struggles that that entails — clearly ‘Star Wars’ has always been a familial story, but never in the way that we’ve told here.”



And yes, they destroy a weapon at the end of this movie, but then something else happens which is, I think, far more critical and far more important — and I think even in that moment, when that is happening, the thing I think the audience is focused on and cares more about is not, ‘Is that big planet gonna blow up?’ — ’cause we all know it’s gonna blow up. 

What you really care about is what’s gonna happen in the forest between these two characters who are now alone,”



“I knew that, whatever we did, there would be a group of people — and I was just hoping and praying that it would be smaller than not — that would take issue with any number of things.

But I knew we weren’t making the movie for any other reason than we believed that it could be something meaningful and special and entertaining and worthy of people’s time.”

5 comentarios:

OLGERD VLADISLAV dijo...

Lo mejor la caricatura de Jar Jar Lost.LOL!
Respecto a los "argumentos" del criminal ese metido a enterrador de sagas, le digo lo que decía el gran Clint en una película:
-Joder matame, pero no me aburras, joder

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mf37sK5s_gQ

Ari dijo...

Después de haberse cargado sagas míticas como Star Wars y Star Trek, ¿cuál será la próxima víctima de Jar Jar Abrams? ¿El Señor de los Anillos? ¿Harry Potter? ¿James Bond? ¿¿¿¡¡¡FAST AND FURIOUS!!!??? ¡¡¡¡¡¡CORRED INSENSATOS!!!!!!

PEDRO ANGOSTO dijo...

Para LOTR ya llega tarde... ;-P

herb_b dijo...

A mi me parece tan razonable casi todo, que ha muchas cosas de las que dice, ya habia llegado antes de que las dijera el... claro que a mi me gusta la peli :P

Anónimo dijo...

"Para LOTR ya llega tarde... ;-P"


Eso decían con las precuelas... ;-P ;-P