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Matum

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Reviews6

Matum's rating
Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith

Star Wars: Episode III - Revenge of the Sith

7.6
8
  • May 28, 2005
  • Ian McDiarmid rocks

    So much has been said in these comments that there's few left to add, but I'd like to pinpoint Ian's performance as the greatest amongst all. His gestures and, particularly, the modulation of his voice in every line (especially before he reveals as Darth Sidious) is a spectacle in its own. No one could have played a better Palpatine! Kudos to you Ian! On the other side, I didn't like Natalie, Cristopher (Dooku) and Samuel (Windu). They are great actors, but they just didn't play well this time.

    Next there's the CGI FX. Why is it that the old models are *still* much more convincing as real-things? Is it the dirt on them? Is it that they are not "perfect" as mathematical CGI drawings? It's a bless that Empire Strikes Back was done in the 80ties, I just can't imagine how deceiving and cartoonish CGI made AT-ATs would have looked...

    May the force be with you!
    Battlestar Galactica

    Battlestar Galactica

    8.7
  • Mar 21, 2005
  • Had you believed Star Wars if Luke smoked Marlboros?

    The Six Million Dollar Man

    The Six Million Dollar Man

    6.9
    10
  • Oct 17, 1999
  • The neverdated story.

    The six million dollar man is one of the greatest series ever. I can't understand why it doesn't have a full troupe of fans like other series, because it unarguably deserves it. Its permanence during its 5 seasons proofs this. I remember watching the episodes during my childhood and being fascinated by this man with extraordinary force! I ask myself who can be emotionless enough not to be amazed by a man who can run at the speed of a car, or jump to/from a 5-story building! For those of you who haven't heard, TSMDM is about an astronaut and test pilot who crashes and has some of his lost limbs rebuilt using bionics: he gets kind of iron/electronic legs, a right arm, and a telescopic eye (which makes him capable of seeing with super zoom and also in the infrared portion of the spectrum). All these replacements contribute to make him "better than he was before: better... stronger... faster."

    Recently, when I realized that TSMDM was being showed again in the Sci-fi channel, I wondered myself if that mystic would still penetrate my mind, after 20 years. I've read many opinions that states that any movie was maybe Ok for its time, but bad or old fashioned nowadays. You can not consider art as if it were a technology: art is just timeless GOOD or BAD, and simply fulfills our expectations at certain moments or not, but are us who changes, not the art itself. The Six Million Dollar Man is the Good type, because besides the hero, it has good, interesting, and -most important- credible arguments (a point where "The Bionic Woman" lacks). I like specially the episodes involving robots, perhaps the toughest enemies that Steve Austin has to confront; the ones involving nuclear weapons are among the classics too; and the multipart episodes with The Bionic Woman are a great novel themselves.

    The acting is performed by Lee Majors as TSMDM and Richard Anderson as the everlasting Oscar Goldman. Maybe someday one of them enters the IMDB and, why not, they find themselves reading this comment; then the following words are for them: Thank you for stimulating my imagination yesterday and today, thank you for all the fun I feel when watching your adventures, and thank you for adding your little chunk of happiness to my life, contributing to make it better than already is.
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