miércoles, 26 de noviembre de 2008

beautiful photos



That seem these beautiful photos. are collectible?.
are really beautiful!!













miércoles, 12 de noviembre de 2008

photos


Nothing new, just old photos














sábado, 31 de mayo de 2008

Good





                                                    Obi Wan Kenobi    
                                                                                                                                      


                                                    Star Wars is everywhere




miércoles, 23 de abril de 2008

I LIKE THIS





encantadoras fotos

me encontre estas fotitos espero les gusten a mi me encantan !!!!

lunes, 17 de marzo de 2008

The beginning

Star Wars, The beginning



















"Episode IV-A New Hope," 

Though now known as "Episode IV-A New Hope," for many of us, namely those of us who first saw this exhilarating entertainment in theaters back in '77, this will always be the first "Star Wars." We will always think of it as just "Star Wars" - plain & simple, no pretensions, no aspirations to deep film-making or high art. This is where we first met them all: Luke, Han Solo, Princess Leia, Obi-Wan Kenobi (old 'Ben'), Chewbacca, the 2 robots C3PO & R2D2 and, of course, Darth Vader. They were instant pop culture icons; you got the sense you'd seen them before somewhere, but were sure this wasn't possible. But they'd been there before in our minds. We'd read about them constantly in science fiction novels and short stories - tales of outer space civilizations, of spaceships zooming through asteroid belts, of exotic-looking aliens hanging around space ports. We'd dream about them at night and try to imagine ourselves in their midst; up until then, we could only imagine such things - there were no projected images to realize such dreams. "Forbidden Planet" from 1956 came close, and then there were the "Star Trek" and "Lost in Space" TV series, both hampered by dime store budgets and cheesy sets. We ate 'em up since there was nothing else. Then Lucas made it real.

I remember when I first got wind of the upcoming movie, to open in May of 1977, I think. I saw the first publicized poster and bought the novel adaptation. On the poster, a young man stood with some light sword raised, a princess at his feet, numerous spaceships flying all over the place. I was in my mid-teens and felt the first pulse of building excitement as I realized all those fantastic tales I'd been reading the past few years were going to come alive on the big screen for me. It didn't disappoint. Luke Skywalker, who stood in for all the boys pretending to be on a galactic adventure, gets swept away from his mundane desert home smack dab into the middle of an honest-to-gosh galaxy-wide civil war! The strength of the narrative is / was amazing. There are no slow spots and you can't wait for the next scene during the entire experience; and, experience is the better description for it, rather than just 'movie.' You can't wait, for example, for the moment when Luke actually meets the princess; what will happen then? It's a textbook case of an exciting narrative and what I believe makes this superior to all the sequels (knowing that many feel "The Empire Strikes Back" is superior - I must disagree).

The one character you really can't wait to see again is the ominous Vader, naturally. The instant he steps into view during the first few minutes of the story, you just know this is the ultimate villain. This is the baddest of the bad, the coolest of the cool, the supreme uber-evildoer of the entire galaxy. You just know it by his stance, by his attitude, and by the electric chill that runs through your frail form as he steps down the corridor, moving into the annals of film history with one fell swoop. You can't wait to see what he does next, what nefarious action will send someone or some planet to its doom. Sure, he seems under the control of Tarkin (Cushing) here and later, the Emperor, but you just know he's simply biding his time until he takes over the whole damn universe. There is no precedent for Vader, and nothing close to him after. He's at his best here where there's still much mystery attached to his dark frightful form, a minion of Satan and Nazi stormtroopers all rolled into one.

This was also the movie-experience which catapulted Harrison Ford (Solo) into superstardom. He seems almost childish here, not really straining to create a character, and it's this flip charm that makes it work, against all odds. He really does appear to have stepped out of the pages of some juvenile space opera, laser guns blazing, all snide remarks and foolhardy bravado. But he also becomes the older brother figure to Luke, who cannot carry the story by himself. Hamill, whose movie career began & ended with Luke, epitomizes the center of destiny for a galaxy. Both humble and arrogant, he's perfect in the role. Fisher's main surprise is that she's not all sugar and sweet as one would expect of a princess. These three characters evolved in the next two films, but they were always at their best here, icons given life for a short period - but also forever in film. The same could be said for Alec Guinness as Kenobi, a first class act all the way. You almost believe this elderly warrior could topple an empire, given enough time. Unless he runs into Vader...

Directed by
George Lucas 
 
Writing credits
George Lucas (written by)
Cast (in credits order) verified as complete
Mark Hamill...Luke Skywalker
Harrison Ford...Han Solo
Carrie Fisher...Princess Leia Organa
Peter Cushing...Grand Moff Tarkin
Alec Guinness...Ben Obi-Wan Kenobi
Anthony Daniels...C-3PO
Kenny Baker...R2-D2
Peter Mayhew...Chewbacca
David Prowse...Darth Vader
Phil Brown...Uncle Owen
Shelagh Fraser...Aunt Beru
Jack Purvis...Chief Jawa
Alex McCrindle...General Dodonna
Eddie Byrne...General Willard
Drewe Henley...Red Leader (as Drewe Hemley)
Denis Lawson...Red Two (Wedge) (as Dennis Lawson)
Garrick Hagon...Red Three (Biggs)
Jack Klaff...Red Four (John D.)
William Hootkins...Red Six (Porkins)
Angus MacInnes...Gold Leader (as Angus Mcinnis)
Jeremy Sinden...Gold Two
Graham Ashley...Gold Five
Don Henderson...General Taggi
Richard LeParmentier...General Motti
Leslie Schofield...Commander #1
rest of cast listed alphabetically:
David Ankrum...Red Two (voice) (uncredited)
Mark Austin...Boba Fett (special edition) (uncredited)
Scott Beach...Stormtrooper (voice) (uncredited)
Lightning Bear...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Jon Berg...Cantina Alien (uncredited)
Doug Beswick...Cantina Alien (uncredited)
Paul Blake...Greedo (uncredited)
Janice Burchette...Nabrun Leids (uncredited)
Ted Burnett...Wuher (uncredited)
John Chapman...Drifter (Red 12) (uncredited)
Gilda Cohen...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Tim Condren...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Barry Copping...Wioslea (uncredited)
Alfie Curtis...Dr. Evazan (uncredited)
Robert Davies...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Maria De Aragon...Greedo (uncredited)
Robert A. Denham...Hrchek Kal Fas (uncredited)
Frazer Diamond...Jawa (uncredited)
Peter Diamond...Stormtrooper / Tusken Raider / Death Star Trooper /Garouf Lafoe (uncredited)
Warwick Diamond...Jawa (uncredited)
Sadie Eden...Garindan (uncredited)
Kim Falkinburg...Djas Puhr (uncredited)
Harry Fielder...Death Star Trooper (uncredited)
Ted Gagliano...Stormtrooper with Binoculars (uncredited)
Salo Gardner...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Steve Gawley...Death Star Trooper (uncredited)
Barry Gnome...Kabe (uncredited)
Rusty Goffe...Kabe / Jawa / GONK Droid (uncredited)
Isaac Grand...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Nelson Hall...Stormtrooper (special edition) (uncredited)
Reg Harding...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Alan Harris...Leia's Rebel Escort (uncredited)
Frank Henson...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Christine Hewett...Brea Tonnika (uncredited)
Arthur Howell...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Tommy Ilsley...Ponda Baba (uncredited)
Joe Johnston...Death Star Trooper (uncredited)
Annette Jones...Mosep (uncredited)
James Earl Jones...Darth Vader (voice) (uncredited)
Linda Jones...Chall Bekan (uncredited)
Joe Kaye...Solomohal (uncredited)
Colin Michael Kitchens...Stormtrooper (voice) (uncredited)
Melissa Kurtz...Jawa (uncredited)
Tiffany L. Kurtz...Jawa (uncredited)
Al Lampert...Daine Jir (uncredited)
Anthony Lang...BoShek (uncredited)
Laine Liska...Muftak / Cantina Band Member (uncredited)
Derek Lyons...Temple Guard / Medal Bearer (uncredited)
Mahjoub...Jawa (uncredited)
Alf Mangan...Takeel (uncredited)
Rick McCallum...Stormtrooper (special edition) (uncredited)
Grant McCune...Death Star Gunner (uncredited)
Geoffrey Moon...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Mandy Morton...Swilla Corey (uncredited)
Lorne Peterson...Massassi Base Rebel Scout (uncredited)
Marcus Powell...Rycar Ryjerd (uncredited)
Shane Rimmer...InCom Engineer (uncredited)
Pam Rose...Leesub Sirln (uncredited)
George Roubicek...Cmdr. Praji (Imperial Officer #2 on rebel ship) (uncredited)
Erica Simmons...Tawss Khaa (uncredited)
Angela Staines...Senni Tonnika (uncredited)
George Stock...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Roy Straite...Cantina Patron (uncredited)
Peter Sturgeon...Sai'torr Kal Fas (uncredited)
Peter Sumner...Lt. Pol Treidum (uncredited)
John Sylla...Cantina Voices (voice) (uncredited)
Tom Sylla...Massassi Outpost Announcer / Various Voices (voice) (uncredited)
Malcolm Tierney...Lt. Shann Childsen (uncredited)
Phil Tippett...Cantina Alien (uncredited)
Burnell Tucker...Del Goren (uncredited)
Morgan Upton...Stormtrooper (voice) (uncredited)
Jerry Walter...Stormtrooper (voice) (uncredited)
Hal Wamsley...Jawa (uncredited)
Larry Ward...Greedo (voice) (uncredited)
Diana Sadley Way...Thuku (uncredited)
Harold Weed...Ketwol / Melas (uncredited)
Bill Weston...Stormtrooper (uncredited)
Steve 'Spaz' Williams...Mos Eisley Citizen (special edition) (uncredited)
Fred Wood...Cantina Patron (uncredited)