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#STAR WARS REVISITED VS ORIGINAL MOVIE#
Watching the movie felt like playing an exciting video game, which I certainly enjoyed on an aesthetic level. By the time Revenge of the Sith came out, though, I had been suckered into the conventional wisdom that this was going to be the prequel that got it right, and, being in middle school, I more or less agreed. My peers and I were at that marketable age where we could read about characters and download trailers on the internet, but while my friends plastered their bedroom doors with posters bearing the skeletal visage of General Grievous, I read articles bemoaning the insane drop in quality between the original trilogy (the hatred had yet to begin its backwards creep towards Return of the Jedi) and the prequels. Therefore, by the time Episode III was imminent, I had read and internalized the overall negative opinion regarding the first two prequels, and had developed a healthy skepticism about the third.
#STAR WARS REVISITED VS ORIGINAL HOW TO#
This was a major step in my evolution as a moviegoer, because it taught me how to be critical about what I watched. Something imporant happened between the release of Episodes II and III that changed the way in which I approached movies: I began reading film reviews, mainly on the internet.