[Movies] Star Wars vs Lord of the Rings: FIGHT!

Choose between living in two universes 1) Star Wars movies don't exist or 2) LoTR movies don't exist

  • I'd want to live in a universe with LoTR

    Votes: 9 37.5%
  • I'd want to live in a universe with Star Wars

    Votes: 15 62.5%

  • Total voters
    24
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Ok, it's time to throw down.

Considering just the first three films of each series (Star Wars 4, 5, 6 vs LoTR 1, 2, 3):

If you had to choose right now and couldn't have both, would you rather live in a universe with no Star Wars, or one with no LoTR?
 
Lord of the Rings. At least it's not constantly tinkered with and made worse.

EDIT: Plus, I was more of a Star Trek guy than Wars.
 
Totally ignoring George Lucas and his ride off the crazy train for me it's Star Wars. Han Solo was my childhood idol. I thought the ships were great. My friends and I spent many hours of our youth in lightsaber battles. And on more than one occasion I tried to use the force to move an object in my general vicinity. To date I have not accomplished it. I definitely think LotR's is a better series but something about Star Wars was magical.
 
Star Wars for me.

If the LoTR movies were more faithful to the concepts in the books, my choice would be different, easily. But as it stands, I'd rather keep SW than LoTR.
 
LotR for me. I grew up on the books, whereas I didn't see Star Wars until I was 16. The movies made the story even more exciting than it already had been, for me. Yeah, there were changes made, but who cares? They were awesome.
 
I think the real question is, which universe would you rather die quickly in. Neither seem terribly conductive to long life spans :p
 
I like how people are confusing the question within the first few posts.

My Answer: LotR universe. Multi-tude of reasons. Mostly becase: Magic > Force
 
I like how people are confusing the question within the first few posts.

My Answer: LotR universe. Multi-tude of reasons. Mostly becase: Magic > Force
I'm thinking you are. I'm talking about living in a world where the movies don't exist. Not in the universe the movies portrayed.
 
Star Wars for me, just like so many others because of Han Solo. And the coolest of cool fighters, the X-Wing!
Gandalf confronting th Balrog or the Witch King ist great, but in my world those scenes gets beaten by Yoda lifting an X-Wing out of the swamp.
 
Star Wars changed movies forever.

Lord of the Rings just got a bunch of Oscars it didn't deserve and pumped some money into New Zealand.
For the better though?

I'd like to see what the Lord of the Rings movies would have been like in a world where Star Wars hadn't come along and basically created the summer blockbuster.
 
I can't choose!

I love LotR (just marathoned the extended blu-rays and the love has deepened). I find them well acted, well paced and they took the right parts from the books.

I also love Star Wars and this love has grown watching Jet experience it.

So, it's a toss up.
 
I can't choose!

I love LotR (just marathoned the extended blu-rays and the love has deepened). I find them well acted, well paced and they took the right parts from the books.

I also love Star Wars and this love has grown watching Jet experience it.

So, it's a toss up.
No no no. You must choose. It must be one or the other.

You take the blue pill and...wait, no, hang on...
 
My film professor marks Star Wars as the official start of the death of cinema.

In a way he's right. As witnessed by the current trend of films, explosions win out over character development every time when it comes to the film going experience.

Kind of sad, really.
 
Easy question. Rather have Star Wars and no Lord of the Rings. Even though I love the LOTR movies and rewatch those more regularly than I rewatch Star Wars.
While the LOTR books have been incredibly influential on fiction and even science fiction in books and movies, the same can not really be said, to the same extent anyway, of the LOTR movies.
Without the Star Wars movies, we don't have ILM (So, no Jurassic Park, no Terminator 2, basically CG Animation as we know it is gone), which means we don't have Pixar, and even just as far as purely creative influence and not the physical, technical ramifications, its inpired a tonne of science fiction and fantasy, we don't have Firefly, we don't have Alien (And we probably wouldn't have Lord of the Rings anyway).
Without the Lord of the Rings movies, not a whole lot changes. Mo-Cap is less prominent in movies, movies are shorter, and maybe Game of Thrones wouldn't have gotten turned into a TV show (Which is admittedly a huge blow)

Plus, without the Star Wars movies, we don't have any Star Wars comics, books or toys.
But without the Lord of the Rings movies, we still have the Lord of the Rings books.
 
My film professor marks Star Wars as the official start of the death of cinema.

In a way he's right. As witnessed by the current trend of films, explosions win out over character development every time when it comes to the film going experience.

Kind of sad, really.
The kids (14-16, couldn't tell) sitting behind me (and not shutting the fuck up) tonight when I went and saw Chronicle were pretty impressed by the Battleship trailer.
 

North_Ranger

Staff member
I'll be honest, back when I first saw Star Wars (at the tender age of 10-12, I think), I loved the movies to bits. Seriously. I watched Return of the Jedi so many times that in the end the video tape just snapped. I loved the visuals, the story, the music, the characters who while archetypes were also memorable without being walking clichés or cardboard cutouts. I loved how the films felt like they were taking place in this strange yet oddly familiar universe; that when you were watching them, you really were there.

Then came the re-mastered versions in movie theaters. I went to see them because I wanted to see the movies on the silver screen. They were still fantastic, but somehow all of the CG characters added just didn't seem to fit the movie. Like they were there only for showing-off (eg. turning the white walls of Cloud City into views of sunset) or forced comedy (the scene in New Hope where Luke's floating car startles a humongous lizard thingie in Mos Eisley, leaving a Jawa hanging by the reins "comically"). They started feel more like distractions than adding anything new and poignant to the film.

Then came the prequels :( And last month, when I tried to watch the originals (re-mastered) that I had taped on TiVo... I just couldn't find myself enjoying them as I had. Everytime I saw those added CGI effects, I remembered this:

And this:

And mother****ing this:


Those images were carved into my mind, and they actually took out a good chunk of the magic and enjoyment I had felt when watching the original trilogy. And reading the articles where George Lucas keeps saying he'll change more... I lost hope when it comes to Star Wars. For me, the movies I loved as a kid are gone.

Therefore, I choose the universe with LotR in it. And spare you the fanboyish rant why I loved them ;)
 
And mother****ing this:


Those images were carved into my mind, and they actually took out a good chunk of the magic and enjoyment I had felt when watching the original trilogy. And reading the articles where George Lucas keeps saying he'll change more... I lost hope when it comes to Star Wars. For me, the movies I loved as a kid are gone.

Therefore, I choose the universe with LotR in it. And spare you the fanboyish rant why I loved them ;)
I'm with you on jar jar and Anakin, but I thought Yoda's fight scenes were the best in the series, aside from the Darth Maul fight.
 
As for living in either universe...

Fact is none of you would live as the "heroes".

Star Wars: YOU would be Lars Owen.

Lord of the Rings: YOU would be a farmer living in the West Fold, or a respectable Hobbit living in Hobbiton with no inclination for any sort of adventure.

shitty farm or shitty planet. hmmmmm
 

North_Ranger

Staff member
I'm with you on jar jar and Anakin, but I thought Yoda's fight scenes were the best in the series, aside from the Darth Maul fight.
I just have to agree with Plinkett when it comes to scenes with Yoda and his lightsaber: in the original trilogy, Yoda was a wise old sage who did not need a lightsaber. The Force was his ally, he didn't need to resort to violence and weaponry. He was a philosopher, a sage, a scholar. Not a bouncing ball of green that looks like he should be going "Arriba! Arriba! Andele! Andele!".
 

North_Ranger

Staff member
a respectable Hobbit living in Hobbiton with no inclination for any sort of adventure.
I could think of worse ways to spend one's years. Good company, good food, lovely neighbourhood, tobacco/weed with no side effects... and no Sand People to f*** up your moisture vaporators.
 
I just have to agree with Plinkett when it comes to scenes with Yoda and his lightsaber: in the original trilogy, Yoda was a wise old sage who did not need a lightsaber. The Force was his ally, he didn't need to resort to violence and weaponry. He was a philosopher, a sage, a scholar. Not a bouncing ball of green that looks like he should be going "Arriba! Arriba! Andele! Andele!".
Agreed. Yoda was still old as fuck during the events of ep. I-III. I could buy it if it was perhaps 500 years earlier and he was only a Jedi Knight. Yoda was beyond using a lightsaber as much as a Jedi Knight was beyond using a blaster.
Added at: 07:55
I could think of worse ways to spend one's years. Good company, good food, lovely neighbourhood, tobacco/weed with no side effects... and no Sand People to f*** up your moisture vaporators.

I guess, I was under the assumption that the thread was involving the adventure aspect associated with the films. I think most people in the Star Wars universe were pretty much Lars Owen types - yeah there's cool technology and space travel, but look how long it took Luke to get his ass off on adventure.

As for Lord of the Rings, magic and adventure only exists for a very few. I guess it would be cool to live with the elves in Rivendell...
Added at: 08:01
Personally, I would want to live in the Star Trek universe. That universe has the greatest chance of an average asshole like me to actually do something that's different from current reality. You've got to be super smart to be a cadet in the Federation, but growing up in that universe, I'd imagine that joining the Federation would be akin to joining a civil service organization. I mean, being a captain would be impossible as hell, but I'd be content working in engineering or as a science officer.
 
As for living in either universe...

Fact is none of you would live as the "heroes".

Star Wars: YOU would be Lars Owen.

Lord of the Rings: YOU would be a farmer living in the West Fold, or a respectable Hobbit living in Hobbiton with no inclination for any sort of adventure.

shitty farm or shitty planet. hmmmmm
The 'heroes' in both universes can be very exceptional people, true. But I don't think that means even a fairly average person couldn't experience something akin to an 'adventure'.

In SW, if you are a human, join up with the imperial military and fight against the rebels, pirates, or other scum of the universe. Or desert and go over to the rebellion if that's more your thing.

I LotR, a Westfold farmer could travel to Gondor and become a mercenary against Mordor.

A hobbit probably wouldn't have many opportunities for questy type of things. Unless of course if a wizard manipulates a group of dwarves into pressgangin you for a mission where they send you first into the lair of a dragon.

I never quite understood what Gandalf was hoping to accomplish with that, by the way. Surely he didn't think thirteen dwarves and a hobbit had much of chance against a dragon that had soloed Erebor. I don't get it, unless if Gandalf was a bit more ruthless than he comes across in the movies.
 
I'm pretty sure he planned on meeting back up with them in Laketown, but his errand with the White Council proved to take longer than anticipated.
 
Yes, attacks on Dark Lords can involve unforseen complications. In fact, baser minds could speculate that Erebor was a suicide mission to keep Smaug from interfering with the White Council's assault on Dol Guldur.
 
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