Dance would have made a great Tarkin.
I honestly thought they hopped over the uncanny valley perfectly. He was there; he didn't look "off" at all.If I cared more, I could take a closer inspection, but why would I do that when I don't closely inspect Tarkin's face normally?
I never found Tarkin's face in R1 to look too off. Maybe it's because I was fully aware it was CGI anyway.
Tarkin in Rogue One looked perfectly fine to me. When I first saw it I actually couldn't tell if it was CG or not. But yeah, no uncanny valley for me.
I had no idea Tarkin was in RoTS.
I thought it was incredibly obvious that it was CGI, and I saw it on release day with no idea such a thing would be in the movie. Didn't bother me a huge amount, but still
It was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.
Quote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.
Quote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 06:22:07 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series.Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.
Quote from: Töqi on March 28, 2017, 07:18:16 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 06:22:07 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series.Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.I hated Rogue One for many reasons:•It ruined Rogue Squadron•It ruined Dark Forces•It was an obvious cash grab•It ruined TFU•It failed to take into account the very canon fact the Death Star plans were complete before the clone wars•It oversimplified a complicated problemAnd others.It did the things it did well though, even if they did pack too much into too little time.It was clear to me that the villain was Director Krennic, and while he was under the thumbs of Vader and Tarkin, he was motivated to antagonise our heroes by himself. The fact that there were greater powers than he bearing down on him was simply a plot device to generate sympathy for the villain, and try to fix the fact the this complicated problem had been so oversimplified. In the moment it worked, only in review the flaw comes to light.Ultimately it's a fun flick, as long as you don't take it too seriously.
Quote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 28, 2017, 07:18:16 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 06:22:07 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series.Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.I hated Rogue One for many reasons:•It ruined Rogue Squadron•It ruined Dark Forces•It was an obvious cash grab•It ruined TFU•It failed to take into account the very canon fact the Death Star plans were complete before the clone wars•It oversimplified a complicated problemAnd others.It did the things it did well though, even if they did pack too much into too little time.It was clear to me that the villain was Director Krennic, and while he was under the thumbs of Vader and Tarkin, he was motivated to antagonise our heroes by himself. The fact that there were greater powers than he bearing down on him was simply a plot device to generate sympathy for the villain, and try to fix the fact the this complicated problem had been so oversimplified. In the moment it worked, only in review the flaw comes to light.Ultimately it's a fun flick, as long as you don't take it too seriously.The Geonosians had only designed the superstructure, the weapon was only a mere concept.Basically the Geonosians' contribution was "what if there was a big spherical space station that had some sort of powerful weapon? Let's make a detailed concept schematic."Then when the republic takes Geonosis, Poggle The Lesser gets the Geonosians to build some of the superstructure (Geonosians will kill each other if they have no tasks to complete), in exchange for some autonomy.Later the Empire sprays pesticide on Geonosis and kills all the bugs.Also TFU's story is basically a bad fanfic and I don't understand why people like it.
Quote from: Mmmmm Napalm on March 28, 2017, 08:28:49 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 28, 2017, 07:18:16 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 06:22:07 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series.Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.I hated Rogue One for many reasons:•It ruined Rogue Squadron•It ruined Dark Forces•It was an obvious cash grab•It ruined TFU•It failed to take into account the very canon fact the Death Star plans were complete before the clone wars•It oversimplified a complicated problemAnd others.It did the things it did well though, even if they did pack too much into too little time.It was clear to me that the villain was Director Krennic, and while he was under the thumbs of Vader and Tarkin, he was motivated to antagonise our heroes by himself. The fact that there were greater powers than he bearing down on him was simply a plot device to generate sympathy for the villain, and try to fix the fact the this complicated problem had been so oversimplified. In the moment it worked, only in review the flaw comes to light.Ultimately it's a fun flick, as long as you don't take it too seriously.The Geonosians had only designed the superstructure, the weapon was only a mere concept.Basically the Geonosians' contribution was "what if there was a big spherical space station that had some sort of powerful weapon? Let's make a detailed concept schematic."Then when the republic takes Geonosis, Poggle The Lesser gets the Geonosians to build some of the superstructure (Geonosians will kill each other if they have no tasks to complete), in exchange for some autonomy.Later the Empire sprays pesticide on Geonosis and kills all the bugs.Also TFU's story is basically a bad fanfic and I don't understand why people like it.They didn't explain that in the film, the idea was that the plans were complete.If there was more exposition on it in a book, then that isn't canon.
•It ruined TFU
Quote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:48:00 PMQuote from: Mmmmm Napalm on March 28, 2017, 08:28:49 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 28, 2017, 07:18:16 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 06:22:07 PMQuote from: Töqi on March 27, 2017, 08:58:20 AMIt was done very poorly in Rogue One and was a lazy attempt to use an already established villain as a crutch.I disagree, the plot of Rogue One was very closely entangled with Tarkin's grab for power and plot to replace the senate through direct fear.If he hadn't been in the film, his shadow would've been looming over it so heavily we would only feel like something was missing.The film itself was, unironically, a mistake. His relevance to the plot changes nothing; we learned nothing in Rogue One that we didn't already know about him from ANH, and the film fails to decide who the villain is. Vader is already established and does almost nothing but give fan service at the end; Tarkin is also established, and has almost no bearing on the plot except to fill that hole that you describe; Krennic neatly fits into the role of Generic Ambitious Bad Guy rendered impotent by the two most significant villains in the series.Really, it's kind of disappointing how well-received Rogue One was. It had a neat space battle, but it was so full of bad writing, flat characters, and told an utterly pointless story. Jyn could have been an incredibly compelling character, but they literally cut out her entire arc.I hated Rogue One for many reasons:•It ruined Rogue Squadron•It ruined Dark Forces•It was an obvious cash grab•It ruined TFU•It failed to take into account the very canon fact the Death Star plans were complete before the clone wars•It oversimplified a complicated problemAnd others.It did the things it did well though, even if they did pack too much into too little time.It was clear to me that the villain was Director Krennic, and while he was under the thumbs of Vader and Tarkin, he was motivated to antagonise our heroes by himself. The fact that there were greater powers than he bearing down on him was simply a plot device to generate sympathy for the villain, and try to fix the fact the this complicated problem had been so oversimplified. In the moment it worked, only in review the flaw comes to light.Ultimately it's a fun flick, as long as you don't take it too seriously.The Geonosians had only designed the superstructure, the weapon was only a mere concept.Basically the Geonosians' contribution was "what if there was a big spherical space station that had some sort of powerful weapon? Let's make a detailed concept schematic."Then when the republic takes Geonosis, Poggle The Lesser gets the Geonosians to build some of the superstructure (Geonosians will kill each other if they have no tasks to complete), in exchange for some autonomy.Later the Empire sprays pesticide on Geonosis and kills all the bugs.Also TFU's story is basically a bad fanfic and I don't understand why people like it.They didn't explain that in the film, the idea was that the plans were complete.If there was more exposition on it in a book, then that isn't canon.Literally all that was shown in AoTC was a hologram of the superstructure.It was explained in a book, Catalyst, which released in November and is canon.
Quote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PM•It ruined TFUHow? They're so unrelated.
Quote from: Luciana on March 28, 2017, 09:54:48 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PM•It ruined TFUHow? They're so unrelated.Totally fucked over the existence of Galen Marek.I'll have to watch it again and make exact notes of how and when, been a while since I've seen it.
Quote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 10:07:16 PMQuote from: Luciana on March 28, 2017, 09:54:48 PMQuote from: Fishcakes on March 28, 2017, 08:20:48 PM•It ruined TFUHow? They're so unrelated.Totally fucked over the existence of Galen Marek.I'll have to watch it again and make exact notes of how and when, been a while since I've seen it.UhThey stated before TFA came out that all the Star Wars stuff EU/video game was non canon unless specified otherwise. Besides, Galen Marek was an OP character that didn't quite fit in.