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Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Star Wars Greyscale: Rogue One

*Editor's note: This was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 4/23/2020*

“I know what I have to do but I’m not sure if I’m strong enough to do it.” It’s a Kylo Ren quote but as I snuggled in my blanket pile, finally watching The Rise of Skywalker, I felt it.
I felt it because I didn’t want to actually watch this stupid movie but I did, to finish the journey I started March of 2019. Welcome back to Star Wars Greyscale.




Star Wars Greyscale: The Last Jedi

*Editor's note: This was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 5/14/19
And we arrive at the end, everyone. The Last Jedi and the last Star Wars Greyscale, at least for now. Let’s do this.



Illustration for article titled Greyscale Star Wars: The Last Jedi

Star Wars Greyscale: The Force Awakens

*Editor's note: This article was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 5/09/19*

Sorry about the last post everyone! It’s been a hectic week and I’ve just now had brainpower and time to do this.
Illustration for article titled Star Wars Greyscale: The Force AwakensAfter a long and arduous road, we have finally reached the current trilogy. New trilogy, new director/producer, and new mythos. Admittedly, with the final movie due in November, I’m still unsure of how I feel about Abrams at the helm of these movies. I know that I’ve personally called things a little too early and to quote Speed Racer, there’s still a lot of race left.






Star Wars Greyscale: Revenge of the Sith

*Editor's note: This article was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 4/30/19

Oh, where do I even begin on this one? Oh, Revenge of the Sith, you strange little thing....







Star Wars Greyscale: Attack of the Clones

*Editor's note: This article was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 4/23/19*




Illustration for article titled Greyscale Star Wars: Attack of the Clones

My history with this one is pretty simple. Nerdling GJ eagerly awaited its release and my oldest sister managed to get tickets opening weekend and we rushed off to the theaters. My eyes ate up every frame, especially the ones with dreamy Hayden Christensen on it (Don’t you judge me!) and poured over how this build onto the Star Wars mythos. Over the years, my feelings have soured toward it for many reasons, mostly because this was the first movie where I thought “Wow, the Jedi are kinda jerks.”. It’s probably my 2nd least favorite of the franchise.

Star Wars Greyscale: The Phantom Menace

*Editor's note: This article was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 4/16/19*

Illustration for article titled Star Wars In Greyscale: The Phantom Menace
Confession time: This is actually the movie I was the most excited to watch. Does that make me a bit of a masochist? Of course, I’m a Star Wars fan.




Star Wars Greyscale: Return of the Jedi

*Editor's note: This article was posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 4/09/19

And in a blink of an eye, we are at the end of the first trilogy! All we have left are, *Looks at notes* The movies no one likes, the one that’s a reboot/sequel/remake and umm, That One. This is going interesting. But enough of that, let’s get into Return of the Jedi!

Star Wars Greyscale: The Empire Strikes Back


*Editor's note: This article was originally posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 3/26/19
Another week, another movie! The Empire Strikes Back!!

Star Ways Greyscale: A New Hope



*Editor's note: This article was originally posted on Observationdeck.kinja on 3/19/19
Some personal history with this one: I first watched A New Hope when I was six years old. My big sister and I was at my aunt’s house during one of the brief periods where she had cable, I was sick and we found the marathon right before they started it (Incidentally, these were the same condition when I first watched The Princess Bride). It was the first time I had really seen or even heard anything Star Wars. What a lasting impression it left. I watched all three movies in one day and the lengthy commercial break between episodes 5 and 6 was excruciating for my young heart. I fell in love that day.

I’m not crying, you’re crying.
After years of consuming Star Wars media, it’s hard to see the franchise with fresh eyes. Even rewatching them now, it’s quite tricky to separate the future movies and Rogue One completely and watch this as a solo movie (No pun intended). Nevertheless, I watched A New Hope and finished it with some interesting thoughts.

One of the things I’m most struck with now is how old A New Hope feels. No, this is not an attempt to make older fans feel ancient but rather it feels older than its 1977 release date. Watching it reminded me of the old black and white from my parents’ childhoods that I watched with them on Saturday afternoons, like Tarzan or The Day The Earth Stood Still. (“Mark Hamill looks like an extra from a surfer movie” might have been a note I made while watching). I could easily see both the movies and shows that influenced A New Hope as well as the media it would go on to inspire.

This experiment also allowed me to really appreciate the movie from a more technical side, such as the sound designs. The Williams score is frequently praised but this viewing gave me the chance to enjoy the ambient noises in the movie, such as on the Death Star, the layering of sounds aboard the Jawa transport unit, the chattering in the Mos Eisley bar. These factors working along the score help fill in the universe the crew worked so hard to build.

The cinematography and sets are also working overtime in greyscale. I’ve watched this twice and both times, I constantly noticed and remarked over new details. Even with most of its color stripped away (No blue milk, guys!), A New Hero is a pulpy, sci-fi flick with stunning visuals. Vader looks even more like an unstoppable wall of black menace as he seemingly absorbs all light around him. Leia’s stark white is a beacon of innocent in the cold, evil Death Star and the infamous two suns setting scene remains a moving iconic moment. As for the special effects added in the restoration, my past feelings of annoyed acceptance turned to actual anger because they’re so jarring and gratuitous in greyscale.

Use the force, Luke
The attack on the Death Star didn’t really wow me but mostly because even in color, the scene is primarily in black and white, save the rebel flight suit and other splashes of color.
The lightsaber fight also looks a little goofy and not in a fun way but I’m hoping that’s a problem the prequels won’t encounter (Especially since the prequels are goofy for entirely different reasons)
Some random bulletpoint thoughts of the movie.
*I’ve just noticed how long it takes for our heroes to appear onscreen. Leia and Vader don’t show up until minute 6, Luke until minute 18, and another 30 for Han. The movie cleverly uses R2-D2 and C-3P0 to lead up to our second protagonist, Luke. I mean, people complain often about how the hero doesn’t suit up until the third act but waiting nearly 20 minutes for our protagonist to show up is unique
*I can see how people didn’t trust Obi-Wan. In the past, I’ve noticed how he constantly tells half-truths (the occasional outright lie) but now I see how manipulative and shifty he is.

*Anyone else notice that Millie Bobby Brown looks like a young Carrie Fisher?
*I adjusted my brightness to its original settings as the credits were rolling and somehow had forgotten how colorful it is. I went back to Luke saying goodbye to Han and it maybe melted my brain a little.




Next up is Empire Strikes Back, which I feel l won’t thrive in greyscale as much as A New Hope did but more on that next week…..

Star Wars Greyscale: A Prologue

*Editor's note: this was originally posted on Observationdeck.Kinja on 3/05/19*


A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away, (or in this case, 1970’s California) George Lucas, inspired by some of his favorite 1940s serials, wrote of the fantastical adventures of Young Luke Starkiller, which in turn was told by ancient beings called the Whills (hence the “A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away” at the beginning of the story every movie).

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