Woh woh, un peu de respect pout Lucas. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img]
D'ailleurs, pour wax22, me rappelle que Lucas avait dit que la conception immaculée devait surtout être vue plus ou moins comme une métaphore. Enfin il en resortait quelque chose analogue à ça.
Allez, quelques citations de
GL compulsées sur
GL's pronouncements :
<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR> The midi-chlorians have brought Anakin into being as 'the chosen one' who brings balance to the universe. The mystery around that theory is that we don't yet know whether the chosen one is a good or a bad person. He is to bring balance to the Force; but at this point, we don't know what side of the Force needs to be balanced out. - Extract from The Making of Episode 1, Random House, 1999.
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<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR> Q: The first three films in the series were in a sense, morality plays, but you've taken it a lot further in the new one, because there's almost a quasi-Christian element here that Anakin is the result of a virgin birth and he is the chosen one. How intentional was that? A: It wasn't really meant as a virgin birth, more as a metaphor for life.
Q:So, you weren't trying to invent a new religion there? A: No, no. The idea is that the hero, throughout mythology, has always been the result of a special birth. Usually, as with Hercules, the father is a God. Every hero has a mysterious birth.[slight editing by wedge45] - Extract from Barry Norman's Film Niight 07/99
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<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR> I've been very conscious about not making movies religion-specific. When I brought Star Wars out, it seemed most religions used it to demonstrate their own beliefs - not only Judeo-Christian but also Eastern. And in many cases, people have said they're much more Eastern than Western in nature. The ideas of virgin birth, the freeing of slaves - the issue of Immaculate Conception is a motif that runs through all religions, all stories about the local deity or the local hero. It's the same thing with Hercules. Most heroes are conceived in an unusual way. And in this particular case, it's actually not Immaculate Conception, it's conception by metaphor. - source?
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<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR> (When asked if the use of red in Maul's makeup represents the flames of Hell) Yes. It's a motif that I've been using with the Emperor and the Emperor's minions. I mean, red is an aggressive color. Evil is aggressive. - Extract from Time interview (Bill MMoyers) 03/05/99
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<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><HR> [Re prequels]:The part I am working on now is mostly about Darth Vader, who he is, where he came from, how he became Luke and Leia's father, what his relationship to Ben is. In Jedi the film is really about the Redemption of this fallen angel. Ben is the fitting good angel, and Vader is the bad angel who started off good. All these years Ben has been waiting for Luke to come of age so that he can become a Jedi and redeem his father. That's what Ben has been doing, but you don't know this in the first film. - Extract from The Annotated Screenpllays (Laurent Bouzerou), 1997
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Ces citations fourmillent d'indices qui pourraient intéresser wax22.
Si tu doutes de tes pouvoirs, tu donnes du pouvoir à tes doutes.