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#episode vi
atomic-chronoscaph · 1 year
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Return of the Jedi - Production paintings by Ralph McQuarrie (1983)
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pedroam-bang · 11 months
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Star Wars: Episode VI - Return Of The Jedi (1983)
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swsource · 1 year
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Star Wars: Episode VI – Return of the Jedi (1983)
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ginalongillustrations · 6 months
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The Jedi
Luke Skywalker
Star Wars: Return of the Jedi
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darth-memes · 11 months
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STAR WARS: EPISODE VI - RETURN OF THE JEDI CAME OUT 40 YEARS AGO!
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anakin-obiwan · 2 years
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STAR WARS EPISODE VI, Return of the Jedi.
Original ending.
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mandofury · 2 years
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The duel between Vader and Obi was fantastic. All the emotions, symbolism, and pure show of their strength in wielding the force was chef's kiss. At the end where Hayden's and James's voices mixing together to create those haunting roars of "OBI WAN" is absolutely phenomenal
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liskantope · 1 month
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I was thinking the other day about last words a movie character utters before their death, particularly in the Star Wars films, and it sent me on the following rambling train of thought. I hate cliche last words, and overall the first two trilogies do pretty well at avoiding them (I guess the sequel trilogy as well? I don't know the lines there as well, but I approve of Luke going out with "See you around, kid") with the stark exception of Shmi's last line being a drawn-out "I love you".
But two of my favorites are the ones from Episode VI: Yoda letting out his last breath on the enigmatic "There is another Skywalker" and then Anakin's final utterance being, of all things, "Tell your sister you were right". And I only recently appreciated the connection that both lines are referring specifically to Leia, and that there is even a similar gist to them: they can both be interpreted as implicit exhortations for Luke to bring Leia along with him into the Jedi arts.
And the interesting thing is that this winds up having little relevance in the movie (which in turn ends the original trilogy and even the six-part tragedy of Anakin Skywalker), because there's no time to get Leia into training as a Jedi or even to properly explore her relationship to the Force beyond being able to sense things and communicate with Luke over long distances. (I suppose that the early 80's was a more sexist time anyway: women were more likely to be recognized for their ability to communicate, intuit, and be sensitive rather than any capacity to duel with a lightsaber, do superhuman acrobatics, perform telekinesis, or acquire deep religious wisdom. So that didn't exactly help either.)
But what makes this much worse is that this was one of the few enticing threads left dangling by the first six movies that was just begging to be followed up on in a sequel trilogy, some of the only low-hanging fruit for sequels (which otherwise seemed to have mostly superfluous motives), at least to my view, and yet... the sequel trilogy just threw this opportunity away. Leia's a war general and can sense Luke at one point and did that much-derided Mary Poppins thing that one time. But I wanted to see her channeling ancient Jedi wisdom and wielding a lightsaber and making things move through the air. One of the only things I'll ever give J. J. Abrams or the disaster known as The Rise of Skywalker any credit for is that Abrams did briefly insert an explanation there as to why we don't see Leia performing as a Jedi: she was training soon after Episode VI and then quit after receiving a prophecy. But it comes across as an afterthought shoehorned in to address questions/criticism from fans (Abrams wrote the first in that trilogy as well but didn't seem to have considered such an arc for Leia then), and I would rather it hadn't been necessary in the first place.
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comicchannel · 8 months
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Star Wars The Black Series Kenner Luke Skywalker (Jedi Knight) Hasbro F7080
Link para compra BR: https://amzn.to/45ARVHD
Buy here: https://amzn.to/3qN95CY
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atomic-chronoscaph · 9 months
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Warwick Davis and Carrie Fisher on the set of Return of the Jedi (1982)
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pedroam-bang · 4 months
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John Conrad Berkey - Return Of The Jedi: Death Star Battle (1983)
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80smovies · 2 years
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capturingdisney · 1 year
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GEORGE LUCAS ASKED FOR A MONSTER IN A PIT -- AND THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT HE GOT.
PIC(S) INFO: Spotlight on early concept art for Jabba's Rancor by the late, great Ralph McQuarrie (1929-2012), plus paintings of the creature's final design, from "STAR WARS: Return of the Jedi" c. late '70s/early '80s. Lucasfilm Ltd.
OVERVIEW: "The concept for the rancor in "Return of the Jedi" was described by its creators as "a cross between a bear and a potato." It was first to be played by an actor in a suit, but no one was satisfied with the results. The rancor was then made as a rod-operated puppet, filmed with a high-speed camera to slow its movements down to give the illusion of a much larger creature.
PART II: A combination of matte painting, cartoon rotoscoping, and CG elements were added around the creation to make it look bigger and more menacing. Some of these changes were later omitted or replaced with CG effects in the 2004 DVD release of the original trilogy."
-- STAR WARS (official site)
Sources: https://monsterlegacy.net/2013/03/05/monster-gallery-star-wars-episode-vi-return-of-the-jedi-the-rancor/#jp-carousel-250, starwars.com, Pinterest, various, etc...
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darth-memes · 11 months
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STAR WARS: EPISODE VI - RETURN OF THE JEDI CAME OUT 40 YEARS AGO!
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short-wooloo · 1 year
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Seeing the 40th anniversary re release of ROTJ in theaters
Dad's complaining that it's the version with Hayden
Get over it old man
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