First, scans (or rather photos, since I still don't have a functioning scanner) from The Art of Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith. I had to skim it quickly in order not to be spoiled, and still managed to come out with some ouch-major-plot-pointage, but them's the breaks. Meanwhile, I picked some of the ideas that DIDN'T make it into the movie:
I own all the Art of Star Wars books for the prequels, and since the first one the designers always wanted to design the secondary baddie as a female. I'm particularly fond of the Phantom Menace designs for a "Sith Witch", but female Grievous isn't bad at all, and neither is evil!Amidala (note the Sith-red highlights in her hair). Alas, once again the villain is male.
While Hayden's grown up nicely indeed, the concept art for his costumes is even better. The long hair was supposed to bring up memories of Qui-Gon, while the dark outfit is basically an all-human Vader image. I love how iconic it is - the perfect dark lord.
I understand that having Han Solo on the Wookiee world, being raised by Chewbacca's parents, would have raised even more groans than making Jango Fett a major character in AOTC, but...
Oh, who am I kidding. Little Han is freaking adorable <3
And while I'm posting Star Wars:
Females in the Star Wars universe
Star Wars, like Lord of the Rings, is a modern attempt at mythology. It reaches back to the fairytale conventions, with knights and princesses and Dark Lords. With one key difference: in LOTR, the lack of important female characters (Arwen the housewife, Galadriel thecoward hypocrite, Eowyn the drama queen) is a discord with me. In SW canon (because I don't read Extended Universe, and I'm most definitely NOT a Mara Jade fan), even the fact the token females are respectively a Queen and a Princess, I'm perfectly fine with it. The hell?
SW females play the roles given them by fairy-tale conventions: they're royalty, they are on the side of good, they fall in love with their rescuers. But at the same time, they take those stereotypes to the logical conclusion. Royalty means power and pride, and so they stand up to the dangers, they don't give up. They perform their role without losing personal dignity or taking the first chance to give control over to a male.
That's what I like most about Padme and Leia: they're strong. When I think of them, I see Leia back-talking Vader, Padme in the Senate. And at the same time, Lucas allows them to be human in private. I always loved that scene in ROTJ in the Ewok village, where Leia's vulnerability was emphasised by her hair falling down freely. Yes, they don't pilot starfighters or use lightsabers - because they're politicians, not pilots or Jedi. You don't have to cause physical damage to prove you're not a doormat. Queen, Senator, Rebellion Leader - those are all positions of power. They're the ones who tell the pilots and the Jedi whose arse to kick. And they're not overly sexualized either - the only instances of that are Padme's leather outfit in AOTC, explainable by her subconscious yelling "hello, hot Jedi to be seduced here!", and Leia's bikini, which I find a great visual way of showing how Jabba degrades her, by only valuing her body.
As I mentioned above, since the first prequel there's been the idea of a female Sith. Now that the third one's wrapped up, we know that won't happen. And I think this, too, goes back to the fairytale roots of Star Wars. When you have an evil Queen, she has to be the main villain of a story. With a well-rounded male and female main villain, you have either a lovers, siblings or parent-child dynamic, and all of those mean that the villain's image is no longer black and white, which in turn means he cannot be punished for his deeds outright. That's why Anakin, with his love for his children still in his heart, had to be redeemed. Male villains, it's much easier to treat as cannon-fodder.
Apart from the main cast, take the secondary characters. Even in the original trilogy - and remember the date of its making, before the politically-correct eighties and nineties got into swing - Mon Mothma's the head Rebel, which is hard to beat. There are a lot more females in the prequels: Aurra Singh and Zam Wesell are both bad-ass bounty hunters. Shmi is the mother archetype, yes, but still manages to influence the fate of the galaxy through her influence on Anakin. Padme has an entourage of devoted handmaidens, who can both blast you into oblivion and make up all those hairstyles.
No wonder I'm much more interested in writing and reading SW-gen than Tolkien-gen ;)
...I need a Star Wars icon.
I own all the Art of Star Wars books for the prequels, and since the first one the designers always wanted to design the secondary baddie as a female. I'm particularly fond of the Phantom Menace designs for a "Sith Witch", but female Grievous isn't bad at all, and neither is evil!Amidala (note the Sith-red highlights in her hair). Alas, once again the villain is male.
While Hayden's grown up nicely indeed, the concept art for his costumes is even better. The long hair was supposed to bring up memories of Qui-Gon, while the dark outfit is basically an all-human Vader image. I love how iconic it is - the perfect dark lord.
I understand that having Han Solo on the Wookiee world, being raised by Chewbacca's parents, would have raised even more groans than making Jango Fett a major character in AOTC, but...Oh, who am I kidding. Little Han is freaking adorable <3
And while I'm posting Star Wars:
Females in the Star Wars universe
Star Wars, like Lord of the Rings, is a modern attempt at mythology. It reaches back to the fairytale conventions, with knights and princesses and Dark Lords. With one key difference: in LOTR, the lack of important female characters (Arwen the housewife, Galadriel the
SW females play the roles given them by fairy-tale conventions: they're royalty, they are on the side of good, they fall in love with their rescuers. But at the same time, they take those stereotypes to the logical conclusion. Royalty means power and pride, and so they stand up to the dangers, they don't give up. They perform their role without losing personal dignity or taking the first chance to give control over to a male.
That's what I like most about Padme and Leia: they're strong. When I think of them, I see Leia back-talking Vader, Padme in the Senate. And at the same time, Lucas allows them to be human in private. I always loved that scene in ROTJ in the Ewok village, where Leia's vulnerability was emphasised by her hair falling down freely. Yes, they don't pilot starfighters or use lightsabers - because they're politicians, not pilots or Jedi. You don't have to cause physical damage to prove you're not a doormat. Queen, Senator, Rebellion Leader - those are all positions of power. They're the ones who tell the pilots and the Jedi whose arse to kick. And they're not overly sexualized either - the only instances of that are Padme's leather outfit in AOTC, explainable by her subconscious yelling "hello, hot Jedi to be seduced here!", and Leia's bikini, which I find a great visual way of showing how Jabba degrades her, by only valuing her body.
As I mentioned above, since the first prequel there's been the idea of a female Sith. Now that the third one's wrapped up, we know that won't happen. And I think this, too, goes back to the fairytale roots of Star Wars. When you have an evil Queen, she has to be the main villain of a story. With a well-rounded male and female main villain, you have either a lovers, siblings or parent-child dynamic, and all of those mean that the villain's image is no longer black and white, which in turn means he cannot be punished for his deeds outright. That's why Anakin, with his love for his children still in his heart, had to be redeemed. Male villains, it's much easier to treat as cannon-fodder.
Apart from the main cast, take the secondary characters. Even in the original trilogy - and remember the date of its making, before the politically-correct eighties and nineties got into swing - Mon Mothma's the head Rebel, which is hard to beat. There are a lot more females in the prequels: Aurra Singh and Zam Wesell are both bad-ass bounty hunters. Shmi is the mother archetype, yes, but still manages to influence the fate of the galaxy through her influence on Anakin. Padme has an entourage of devoted handmaidens, who can both blast you into oblivion and make up all those hairstyles.
No wonder I'm much more interested in writing and reading SW-gen than Tolkien-gen ;)
...I need a Star Wars icon.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-14 09:36 am (UTC)