A New Collecting Magazine Hits the Stands

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Cool & Collected is the name of the new magazine that just began its run this winter, prompted by a successful Kickstarter campaign.  The tagline for the magazine is, “The magazine for pop culture collectors.”  The first issue has an article about everyone’s favorite bounty hunter, Boba Fett!

A magazine, you ask?  Well, for the Kickstarter generation, you may not realize this, but people used to have to spend considerable time looking for the things they liked to collect.  Looking at this magazine brought to mind memories of how collecting used to be and how far it has come.

A review and look inside the first issue can be found here.  For a better look, you can purchase from the link above. 

We all know that the Internet has changed the way we acquire and process information.  Long gone are the days when it was necessary to read the morning paper and wait for the televised evening news to tell you what was going on in the world.  Now, everything (whether you want to know it or not) is just a click away. Read More

How Do You Celebrate May the 4th?

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“May the 4th be with you.”

Say it out loud once or twice and you’ll either get it, or Star Wars is not really a big influence in your life.  If you’re like me, May the 4th is way more exciting than the other second tier holidays.

Sweetest day?  Presidents Day?  Earth Day?  International Talk Like a Pirate Day?  I’d rank May the 4th way above these… in fact, I’d put it in the realm of Valentine’s Day and St. Patrick’s Day.  You don’t get work off, but you celebrate with something a little cheesy, fun, or crazy.

So, HOW do you celebrate May the 4th?  I have some suggestions.  I’m probably going to do nearly all of them, but you can pick and choose.  If you really wanted to go all out, it could be like Christmas, Halloween, Valentine’s Day, and Memorial Day all rolled into one.  Dress up, give gifts, smooch a cute girl in a Twi’lek costume and remember those Star Wars people and things we have lost over the last year.  RIP Clone Wars and Lucasarts 🙁

  1. Quote Star Wars lines to anyone and everyone who will listen.  They are applicable in all situations.  Someone says they’ll try to make it to your Star Wars party?  “Do or do not, there is no try.”  Someone calls you an idiot?  “I find your lack of faith disturbing.”  They get angry?  “I can feel your anger.  It gives you focus, makes you stronger.”  *you may want to duck at some point.
  2. Send Star Wars e-cards, memes, and tweets.  Quotes are good for this as well. www.starwars.com/ecards has even done some work for you, or you can always google it.
  3. Change your facebook picture to your favorite Star Wars character.  If you have photoshop skills this becomes even more fun.  While you’re at it, photoshop all your friends into Star Wars characters… they’ll thank you later.
  4. Lots of places have Star Wars related festivities.  Check your local libraries, restaurants, bars, comic book stores, etc.  I’m going to Star Wars Trivia at a local pizza place; Empire Pizza… you should not be surprised at this name.
  5. Check with your area 501st garrison.  I’m lucky enough to have one in my area.  Shout out to the Carolina Garrison!  If they aren’t doing something in your area… MOVE!
  6. Throw a party and serve Wookiee cookies, blue milk, or any creation you can come up with.  Cake is always good.  Other suggestions you say? Tie fritters?  Boba Fettucine?  Pizza the Hutt?  Why am I doing all the work?
  7. Watch the Star Wars movies for the 124th time.  If you don’t have all day, just watch this and this one too (PG-13).
  8. Finally, due to the alignment of the planets, May the 4th is also FREE COMIC BOOK DAY!  Go to your local comic book store and buy something.  Anything.  Support these hard working people or when you really need them they may not be there for you.

In all seriousness… go buy a comic and be a kid for the day.

Leave your thoughts and how you plan on celebrating in the comments section.

 

~kknight – is a lifelong Star Wars fanatic that is incredibly excited to be working with T-bone.  May the 4th be with you all!

Vader’s Floating Cup

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In both the Marvel Comics adaptation and the novelization of Episode IV by Alan Dean Foster (writing as Lucas) Vader does something a little odd. He reaches out with the force to make a cup float to him. This is during the Death Star scene where Vader chokes Admiral Motti.

The novel simply states: A huge metal-clad hand gestured slightly, and one of the filled cups on the table drifted responsibly into it.

This can be found right before the line “Don’t try to frighten us with your sorcerer’s ways…” which is actually spoken by General Tagge in the book (not Motti). In fact, he’s also the one who gets choked by Vader. The comic version is similar but the dialogue is closer to the film version.

In an interview I did with Alan Dean Foster, I asked him about this scene and here’s how the questions went:

T: This is obscure, but do you remember a scene where in the conference room on the Death Star, Vader chokes Admiral Motti (In your novel it’s Tagge) and before he does it, he floats a cup over to himself using the Force. Was it in the script?

ADF: As I recall, the floating cup was my invention. A way of illustrating Vader’s casual mastery of the Force.

T: What would he have done with it? Maybe a little mechanical straw would come out? 🙂 I guess what I’m asking is – was it just done for effect?

ADF: I didn’t think that far ahead. At the time, nobody knew whether Vader’s mask was fixed, whether he could breathe without it, or even if he was human (as opposed to being an alien, or a droid).

Matthew Yenkala, an expert on all things Marvel, wrote in with some  clarification:

The novel came out around the same time that the Marvel series was commissioned–late 1976. Shortly thereafter Thomas & Chaykin were shown a rough cut that included both the Biggs scenes and the Jabba scene–hence their presence in the comic. (Ironic that after the movie came out some readers wrote in and complained about Marvel “tampering” with the story by “adding” these “unauthentic” elements!) T&C were also given the script and the novel. Therefore the novel WAS present in their source material and consciousness.

Here is what is specifically said on the topic in the “STAR WORDS” letters page of Marvel issue #4, after a reader, generally praising the comic, comments on the lack of exposition in the comic compared to the novel (this was before the movie came out):

“You hit upon one of Roy & Howie’s greatest problems….Even spreading the adaptation over 100 pages, there was much that had to be left out. Only thing is, we think you’ll find when you see the movie that the comic book is closer to the spirit of the film itself than to that of the paperback, from which Roy took only a few phrases. He and Howie based the comic almost entirely on the film script, and many of the things you missed from the book aren’t in the movie either….Movies and comics, unlike straight prose, are VISUAL media, no matter how much dialogue they may contain, and they will always tell you less than a book–though making up for that loss, hopefully, by showing in pictures what books can only suggest. All three media have their own uses, their own problems, their own special virtues–and we encourage one and all to compare movie, paperback and comic book after they’ve perused all three.”

So there you have it; obviously one of these “few passages” is the cup scene (another would be the “Luke had heard of Wookiees….” line in the cantina scene).

It is worth noting that Marvel issue #1 contains a VERY enjoyable and enlightening pair of essays about the genesis of STAR WARS and Marvel’s involvement. One of them is the same as the promo piece in the colour section of the original paperback, but the other has not reappeared anywhere that I know of–though I am sure someone has transcribed it online.

Interestingly, this material puts the lie to a lot of other myths that have cropped up about the Marvel series, including the notions that Lucas had “little input” in the Marvel series and that “Marvel didn’t care about continuity.”

As it turns out, this scene with the cup is in both the Janusary 1, 1976 and March 15, 1976 versions of the script. In the January version there is even a second bit in which Vader uses the force to crush the cup. This part is not included in the March 15 revision.

Here’s an excerpt from the January 1, 1976 script:

MOTTI
It won’t be long before the Death Star
is completely operational, then we will
easily be able to destroy a planet or
an entire system … possibly even a sun.
No doubt there is a plan being built up
against us, but it cannot prevail. If we
were to destroy every planet that is even
suspected of being sympathetic to the
Alliance

TARKIN
The senate would not support the emperor.
A move like that would only aid the
rebellion.

TAGGE
Governor, the senate wouldn’t dare oppose
us. Now that we can take such definitive
action to enforce our will we need no
longer worry about legalities.

MOTTI
The Death Star is now the ultimate
power in the universe

Vader stirs slightly and a cup mysteriously floats into
his hand.

VADER
Don’t become too proud of your pretty
machines … for The Force of Others
is still the ultimate power in the
universe.

MOTTI
Don’t try to fear us with your sorcerer’s
ways. Even with your religious hocuspocus
you were unable to retrieve the
stolen data .. or find the hidden rebel
base .. you’re ways ahh …
Suddenly Motti chokes and starts to turn blue.

VADER
Your lack of faith is disturbing.

TARKIN
Enough of this, release him! These
arguments are pointless. Lord Vader we
still expect you to find the hidden
rebel base before this station becomes
operational. It is the Emperor’s will
… you were sent here to enforce it.

VADER
As the Emperor wills it, so it shall be.
You will have the location of the rebel
fortress and I will have the stolen data
destroyed.

He raises his hand and crumples the metal cup before him
without touching it.

 

1288

Utapau

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The history of the planet Utapau goes all the way back to George Lucas’ original drafts of the first Star Wars film, way back in the early 1970’s. Fans like myself were very pleased to see the planet finally make it into a film after all those years. It went through many phases of development but ended up as a green and swampy planet where some important events take place.

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