It’s Star Wars Day, much to the delight of many and to the groans of people not impressed with puns. There’s so much that has already been said about the franchise, so I’m going to talk about Star Wars by… not talking about Star Wars, and instead talking about its cultural influence. Of course, there has been a lot that’s been said of that as well, but as the title suggests, Star Wars had its impact on the industry as well, for many reasons. Most of them having to do with Lucasfilm. The following films would not exist as we know them today without Star Wars, and some might not exist at all. The franchise’s impact on the industry is, of course, far wider reaching than what I am going to cover here. From groundbreaking effects (that still hold up, by the way), to some iconic imagery, to the simple act of putting the credits at the end (leading to the ever popular Post Credits scene), so much was different after that Wednesday in late May of 1977. Here are six films that would not exist without Star Wars.
And I am talking about the Original Trilogy… we’ll get to the prequels later.
05/14/2016
Harry Potter and the Wrath of Khan
valeriemclean1919 Dumbledore, Harry Potter, Kant, Movies, Nietzsche, Spock, Star Trek, The Wrath of Khan About Film, About Writing 0 Comments
No, this is not fanfiction.
First, an update: posting has been a bit light due to the clusterscrew of finals and coming home and such. Not sure how this is going to work over the summer, but I’ll try to have a decent output regardless of where I end up.
I’ve been thinking about Harry Potter (big shock), and particularly Dumbledore in Deathly Hallows. This has mostly come from a recent final that I’ve taken, in a line of thought that I want to continue beyond the scope of the exam. Partially because of the musing on Ethics and Nietzsche and Kant. Mostly because of the Star Trek.
Spoilers ahead for a 34-year-old movie and a 9-year-old book.
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