Emmett and I have this problem when we discuss Star Wars, every time I talk about "the first Star Wars blah blah blah" and he rejoinders, "You mean the fourth one?"
Heh. You should say, "No, the first one, before Darth Vader was Luke's father and before Leia was his sister."
We still argue with StY about the "Episode IV: A New Hope" thing, because we took him to see Star Wars, Empire, and Jedi when he was wee. It was only as an adult that he fell into the abyss of Clones, Revenger Siths and Phantom Menaces, and re-labeled his memories accordingly. He is really deep in the SW universe rabbit hole, but it keeps him out of the pool halls so we let him be.
Were we supposed to know that?
I thought so. But maybe the only people who know are those who saw it when it opened?
6 Classic Series You Didn't Know Were Made Up on the Fly
Except for Star Wars, I was pretty darn certain that all of those series were being made up on the fly as I watched them.
Anyone who thought Lost and BSG and X Files had a plan deserve to sup of the Kool Aid. I kinda forgive you if you thought 24 started out with a plan, just a really dumb one. Kinda.
Emmett and I have this problem when we discuss Star Wars, every time I talk about "the first Star Wars blah blah blah" and he rejoinders, "You mean the fourth one?"
Oh God, B. and I have so many misunderstandings (~arguments) about this. It's the FIRST film and it is called STAR WARS; deal with it, kid!
But then I do quote B. a lot in my film history lectures with reference to the amount of money Lucas is still making (and, to be fair, the durability of his storytelling), and also the new ways of watching movies on DVD. For a purist like me, who always likes to watch films in one sitting and even has trouble taking a pee break at home, his approach is really something. Whenever it gets too scary or too boring, he zooms. He's through Star Wars in about 45 minutes. The other day I come up to find him whizzing through a scene in "Jedi". I asked him what was going on. "Oh it's really boring. Yoda just dies".
I am absolutely certain that when I saw Star Wars, the Episode IV stuff WAS in the crawl, because all around me the audience was going "huh?". But this was in Scotland in early 1978, so certainly not an original release print.
Edit: this leads me to a related rant, which is about Lucas rewriting history (which he can do because he kept the negative rights). How scary is it that the original versions of all three original films all but disappeared. Han shot first!
Were we supposed to know that?
I thought so. But maybe the only people who know are those who saw it when it opened?
I saw it when it opened. But then I was 6 or 7, so it probably didn't register with me at all.
Seriously, though? Is that another common-knowledge thing that I've made it to almost 40 without knowing? It's like I live half in a cave.
I don't remember Episode IV stuff from the original run in the theater. But pretty early on, it became common knowledge that there were going to be 9 movies, and Star Wars was going to be the fourth.
I remember that Time did a big cover article on Star Wars and Lucas either when they announced that Empire was going to be made or when Empire was released (can't remember which), and that's when I first heard about the whole "Episode IV" thing, as well as Lucas's original 9-film planned saga. It was only after that that Lucas changed the title card for Star Wars.
I remember getting to arguments about the IV thing and hey, I was only 8 when I saw the movie, but I was pretty sure it wasn't there.