THE TEN: The Phantom Menace
Marcus celebrates the tenth birthday of Episode I in this new DVDActive article...
Welcome to
But where to begin? Well, with the tenth anniversary of Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace on the horizon, a look at some of its highlights seemed a great place to start. After all, every saga has a beginning…



Seriously, has there ever been a teaser trailer quite as good as the one for Episode I? Has there even been one better than the theatrical trailer? In the build up to The Phantom Menace, these two trailers as well as the equally epic Tone Poem TV spots were literally like something from a Galaxy Far, Far Away, promising to bring something special to our big screens. A true event that built a mass excitement that hasn’t been equalled since.
I must have watched these trailers at least a hundred times. They absolutely capture the right level of excitement and are just pure Star Wars magic. Every line is a classic: ‘Loss of communication can mean only one thing... Invasion!’, ‘I sense much fear in you’, ‘You believe it’s this... boy?’, every frame was like something no other movie could offer at the time and frankly both of these trailers should be considered the way to do trailers the exact right way.


Now, I’m not a Menace basher, so don’t mistake this selection as a pop at Episode I only being good for forty five minutes. These forty five minutes are featured for the sheer amount of Lucas crammed into the roller coaster ride of an extended introduction to the new prequel era of Star Wars and the speed it flies by at.
In three quarters of an hour, Lucas throws out a ludicrous amount of Star Wars action. We’re in space, we meet our first couple of proper Jedis, one of whom is a younger Obi-Wan Kenobi. We are introduced to our first batch of aliens, the Neimoidians, we see a Sith Master, we get a battle droid scrap with some Droidekas as a side order. We get to see two skilled Jedi. Seriously that alone is still loads to take in for any Star Wars fan and the stuff Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan do with their sabers in the first battle are still some of the coolest Jedi moments ever.
It doesn’t stop there though. We meet a Queen (the future Mama Skywalker), our Jedis stow aboard an invading ship and visit our first new planet, Naboo. We see a seemingly good guy version of Palpatine, there’s an invasion army, we meet Jar Jar Binks (‘Meesa called Jar Jar Binks’), who despite a few motion issues still holds up as some incredibly impressive CGI work from ILM. Then we get our first breather, a little trip under water to Oota Gunga to meet the Gungans and Boss Nass (‘Weesa no like tha Naboo’), but before we can get too comfortable we’re off again in a Bongo avoiding giant fish and Godzilla sized monsters. ‘There’s always a bigger fish’.
Reaching our next location, Theed, our Jedi, along with their new Gungan friend, save the Queen and her entourage. ‘Yous guys are bom-bad’. Once again there are some awesome saber skills. Then we get a faceoff with some battle driods (‘I’ll handle this’) with even more of that sweet saber action and we’re back off into space in a shiny royal starship, where we meet an old friend, R2-D2, for the first time, who goes outside the ship, saves all aboard and sees us on our way—and all that’s over simplifying these opening events. At the time, having this as the first forty five minutes of new Star Wars in sixteen years was one hell of a way of throwing us all back in to the deep end of universe we love.
Now I’m not saying this is the best forty five minutes in movie history, hell I’m not even saying it’s the best forty five minutes of a Star Wars movie, but it’s a hell of a way to introduce you to the Star Wars galaxy and every time I see it, it still blows me away.


Taking a few steps back and going for a slightly more personal selection. The Jedi master Qui Gon Jinn pulls a lightsaber move at (40:39) that has always struck me as ludicrously cool.
After entering into a little skirmish with a handful of battle droids, Qui Gon slashes a Battle Droid in half and with one fluid motion turns his saber off and slides it onto his belt then without blinking, casually lifts his arm and uses the force on two more approaching droids. It’s the tiniest of moments in the grand scheme of things but it’s one of those things I've always adored in the Phantom Menace and just had to be included in this article.


Turning the action up to eleven, what would a listing of Phantom Menace highlights be without the Podrace. Lucas gets bashed for everything he ever does post Empire Strikes Back but there’s no denying that he can do this sort of stuff in his sleep better than most directors can do on a keg of Redbull.
Everything about this set piece is awesome. The designs of the pods, the aliens piloting them, the course itself, with its jumps, its bumps and its nasty canyons. You get the nice touches with the Tuskens, the whiz by with the Jawas and the sound mix on a good 5.1 system has always been jaw dropping (bring on the HD mix Mr. Lucas).
The Podrace is genuinely a classic Star Wars event and it’s great from the first Jabba spit, through ‘diddi crash it?’ right up to the ‘crowds are going nuts’ Skywalker win. That kid really must have Jedi powers.


‘How feel you?’ Getting to the meat and potatoes of this first chapter in the bigger Star Wars story, we come to the scene that starts the dark side ball rolling.
Anakin being testing by the Jedi Council is handled with just the right amount of Star Wars drama. I love the look and lighting of this scene, the orange of the sunset adding a warm glow to the important moment, despite playing off of the coldness of the Jedis' attitude. I love Anakin’s little ‘What’s that got to do with anything?’ pop at Yoda when being asked if he misses his mother but Yoda breaking into the speech ‘Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering’ is classic Star Wars stuff and made all the better that it echoes Vader’s speech to Luke in The Empire Strikes Back.
Generally I don’t much like the Jedi Council scenes in Episode I, but this scene stands out enough to warrant a mention. If only the dialogue wasn’t delivered by such a rubbish looking Yoda puppet (which thankfully should be changed to CGI the next time we get a proper Phantom Menace re-release).


I’m a sucker for movie homages and in-jokes and The Phantom Menace if full of ‘em. Of course there’s the Lucas re-cycling of dialogue ‘I’ve got a bad feeling about this’ etc and there’s the joy of spotting vehicles and faces from the Original Trilogy but Lucas threw another batch of items for us to have fun with—the Easter Eggs. From the expected 1138 reference (on the back of a droid) through the (and I'm yet to be convinced) Indiana Jones watching the pod race to the slightly less obvious but still brilliant ‘It’s working... It’s working’ E.T Anakin dialogue, there’s loads. Some of which I’ve included here:



No matter how much bad press Menace gets, there’s one thing that we can all agree on. DARTH MAUL IS A LEGEND. He literally owns every scene he’s in just by standing there and when the Sith apprentice does move we just sit back in awe. Bad has never been this damn cool.
Stand out moments for me begin with his first appearance as a hologram (‘Not for a Sith’). That badass stare, those folded arms, you know this character is going to be special. Following that you get the only Maul dialogue scene and then his arrival on Tatooine in one of the top three best ships in the Star Wars Universe, the Sith Infiltrator. Him stepping out of that red interior is great, but still not as great as slightly later on when he drives off on his speeder which is just brilliant. The way he disappears out of sight off the ledge is effortlessly cool and just as you have enough time to think ‘What?’, he re-appears, dust cloud behind him travelling off like the smoothest biker ever.
But then of course there’s the obvious one. Maul just standing behind the slide doors as the Duel of Fates kicks—it's still every bit as exciting as it was the first time. Off goes the hood and then comes the saber ignition and of course the always great second blade. I’ll go into the actual Jedi/Sith three-way a little later on, but Maul behind the energy barriers looking at Qui-Gon like a caged animal ready to fight, Maul blocking Qui-Gon’s attack as captured in the screen caps as well as stabbing Qui-Gon and turning to fight Obi-Wan before his fallen master has even hit the ground is just the red and black sugar sprinklings on an already perfect cake.


Okay, here is where I lose a batch of you (if I haven’t already). I don’t and never have had a problem with Jar Jar Binks. I will admit out of the handful of cuts I’d make to Menace the Binks is involved in a few (the lake dive being the biggest eye roller of the lot) but generally I like Binks’ involvement in this first adventure.
Firstly I have a lot of affection for some of his throw away lines ‘Weesa go under water now okiday’, ‘Diddie crash it?’ and ‘Weesa going hooooome’ are great and his ‘Steady, Steady’ to the Gungan army behind him is genuinely a moment I love. Okay, so there’s a few too many ‘How Wude’’s and maybe the constant tomfoolery in the closing Battle of Naboo is a little overcooked, but I don’t take this personally. He’s generally no more annoying than C3-PO was in the prequels and I for one feel that there could have been a lot more growth in the Jar Jar character if the hate hadn’t become such a big deal so early on. Don't get me wrong, Jar Jar isn't my favourite thing about Menace, not by a long chalk, but it just wouldn't be the same without him for me, despite the many claims to the contrary.

‘We'll handle this.’ Two Jedi vs. a Sith. That’s the way to end a Star Wars movie. I remember the first time seeing this on the big screen and just grinning like a school kid at the many, many elements that took Star Wars lightsaber action and put it in the hands of fully fledged masters.
First off, it’s the sheer speed of it all. The lightning fast moments between moments that makes the entire event so memorable. Not only do you have lightsabers cuttings through the air like never before, you have Maul force throwing things to open doors, Obi-Wan doing jedi jumps or Qui-Gon delivering Jedi back hand punches to knock back a skilled Sith.
The energy and sheer thrills just continue to grow as the battle progresses. After Maul drops Qui-Gon, the excitement builds as we wait eagerly for that energy barrier to drop so Obi-Wan can take on Maul. If the speed so far wasn’t impressive enough the saber battle takes another jump in pace and the duel between these two is still as mind blowing ten years on as it was the first time I saw it back in '99. The sabers fly at almost untraceable speeds, there are back flips and a saber getting cut in half and it just raised the bar on everything we’d come to expect from the Star Wars lightsaber battle. It’s just Star Wars at its most exciting.
Of course it’s not just what we’re seeing. The Duel of Fates score pushes it all further into classic territory with the choir and the instruments making this all the more epic and even though I miss the to and fro of dialogue in the Original Trilogy’s lightsaber duels, what do these guys really have to talk about anyway?


The last shout out is for those lesser spoken about elements of Episode I; those faces in the crowd and those little moments that just don’t get enough love. So here goes.
The Neimoidian with his eyes and mouth sealed up, TC-14, ‘I’ve got a bad feeling about this’, Driodekas, Padawan braids, Qui Gon’s saber going through a door, Sio Bibble, Jar Jar’s ear flip on Tatooine, Watto ‘Letame take you out back’, ‘Little bitty accidenty’, Captain Tarpals ‘Here taken dissen one’, Lott Dodd, those little droids that walk past the background while the Neimoidians talk to Sidious, all the astromech droids that were lost trying to repair the hyper drive, Ben Quadrinaros, Pit Droids, the little critter Jabba flicks off the balcony, Sebulba ‘Poodoo’, Watto again, Maul’s Probe Droids, Maul’s Speeder, C-3PO, Shmi, Watto again, the second pod race lap, Yaddle (man she's weird), the Wookies that cheer in the senate, Yarael Poof, Ki-Adi-Mundi, Plo Koon, Palpatine’s little Mr. Bean-esq tongue poking out after he tells little Anakin he’s be watching his career closely and after he tells Padme he’s been voted in, the tubby Gungan, Panaka shooting out the window, the Gungans coming out of the mist, the unloading of the Battle Droids, the Gungan who gets blasted to atoms saving Jar Jar, Padme’s little slip after telling Nute Gunray his occupation has ended and the Vader breaths at the end of the credits. You all played your part and I salute you.

So there we have it. A celebratory look at probably the most debated Star Wars movie out of the bunch. Personally, I love it more now than I did ten years ago and I was big fan then. It’s not perfect, it’s not the best of the saga and it’s got its fair share of problems but taking this wander around ten years on, I miss the excitement that it brought and the enjoyment I’ve had with the many re-watches and debates over its impact since.
Happy Birthday Phantom Menace and may Lucas grace us with a Blu-ray edition soon.
Editorial by Marcus Doidge
THE TEN
, an all new regular feature for the all new DVDactive. But what isTHE TEN
you ask? WellTHE TEN
can be anything. It can be the best or worst of movies, it can be moments that make a movie memorable, it can be ten related items or ten of the most random things ever caught on celluloid.THE TEN
can be whatever the contributors of DVDactive want to put out there and hopefully you’ll like what we have to share... whatever it might be.But where to begin? Well, with the tenth anniversary of Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace on the horizon, a look at some of its highlights seemed a great place to start. After all, every saga has a beginning…



Seriously, has there ever been a teaser trailer quite as good as the one for Episode I? Has there even been one better than the theatrical trailer? In the build up to The Phantom Menace, these two trailers as well as the equally epic Tone Poem TV spots were literally like something from a Galaxy Far, Far Away, promising to bring something special to our big screens. A true event that built a mass excitement that hasn’t been equalled since.
I must have watched these trailers at least a hundred times. They absolutely capture the right level of excitement and are just pure Star Wars magic. Every line is a classic: ‘Loss of communication can mean only one thing... Invasion!’, ‘I sense much fear in you’, ‘You believe it’s this... boy?’, every frame was like something no other movie could offer at the time and frankly both of these trailers should be considered the way to do trailers the exact right way.


Now, I’m not a Menace basher, so don’t mistake this selection as a pop at Episode I only being good for forty five minutes. These forty five minutes are featured for the sheer amount of Lucas crammed into the roller coaster ride of an extended introduction to the new prequel era of Star Wars and the speed it flies by at.
In three quarters of an hour, Lucas throws out a ludicrous amount of Star Wars action. We’re in space, we meet our first couple of proper Jedis, one of whom is a younger Obi-Wan Kenobi. We are introduced to our first batch of aliens, the Neimoidians, we see a Sith Master, we get a battle droid scrap with some Droidekas as a side order. We get to see two skilled Jedi. Seriously that alone is still loads to take in for any Star Wars fan and the stuff Qui-Gon and Obi-Wan do with their sabers in the first battle are still some of the coolest Jedi moments ever.
It doesn’t stop there though. We meet a Queen (the future Mama Skywalker), our Jedis stow aboard an invading ship and visit our first new planet, Naboo. We see a seemingly good guy version of Palpatine, there’s an invasion army, we meet Jar Jar Binks (‘Meesa called Jar Jar Binks’), who despite a few motion issues still holds up as some incredibly impressive CGI work from ILM. Then we get our first breather, a little trip under water to Oota Gunga to meet the Gungans and Boss Nass (‘Weesa no like tha Naboo’), but before we can get too comfortable we’re off again in a Bongo avoiding giant fish and Godzilla sized monsters. ‘There’s always a bigger fish’.
Reaching our next location, Theed, our Jedi, along with their new Gungan friend, save the Queen and her entourage. ‘Yous guys are bom-bad’. Once again there are some awesome saber skills. Then we get a faceoff with some battle driods (‘I’ll handle this’) with even more of that sweet saber action and we’re back off into space in a shiny royal starship, where we meet an old friend, R2-D2, for the first time, who goes outside the ship, saves all aboard and sees us on our way—and all that’s over simplifying these opening events. At the time, having this as the first forty five minutes of new Star Wars in sixteen years was one hell of a way of throwing us all back in to the deep end of universe we love.
Now I’m not saying this is the best forty five minutes in movie history, hell I’m not even saying it’s the best forty five minutes of a Star Wars movie, but it’s a hell of a way to introduce you to the Star Wars galaxy and every time I see it, it still blows me away.


Taking a few steps back and going for a slightly more personal selection. The Jedi master Qui Gon Jinn pulls a lightsaber move at (40:39) that has always struck me as ludicrously cool.
After entering into a little skirmish with a handful of battle droids, Qui Gon slashes a Battle Droid in half and with one fluid motion turns his saber off and slides it onto his belt then without blinking, casually lifts his arm and uses the force on two more approaching droids. It’s the tiniest of moments in the grand scheme of things but it’s one of those things I've always adored in the Phantom Menace and just had to be included in this article.


Turning the action up to eleven, what would a listing of Phantom Menace highlights be without the Podrace. Lucas gets bashed for everything he ever does post Empire Strikes Back but there’s no denying that he can do this sort of stuff in his sleep better than most directors can do on a keg of Redbull. Everything about this set piece is awesome. The designs of the pods, the aliens piloting them, the course itself, with its jumps, its bumps and its nasty canyons. You get the nice touches with the Tuskens, the whiz by with the Jawas and the sound mix on a good 5.1 system has always been jaw dropping (bring on the HD mix Mr. Lucas).
The Podrace is genuinely a classic Star Wars event and it’s great from the first Jabba spit, through ‘diddi crash it?’ right up to the ‘crowds are going nuts’ Skywalker win. That kid really must have Jedi powers.


‘How feel you?’ Getting to the meat and potatoes of this first chapter in the bigger Star Wars story, we come to the scene that starts the dark side ball rolling.
Anakin being testing by the Jedi Council is handled with just the right amount of Star Wars drama. I love the look and lighting of this scene, the orange of the sunset adding a warm glow to the important moment, despite playing off of the coldness of the Jedis' attitude. I love Anakin’s little ‘What’s that got to do with anything?’ pop at Yoda when being asked if he misses his mother but Yoda breaking into the speech ‘Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to anger, anger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering’ is classic Star Wars stuff and made all the better that it echoes Vader’s speech to Luke in The Empire Strikes Back.
Generally I don’t much like the Jedi Council scenes in Episode I, but this scene stands out enough to warrant a mention. If only the dialogue wasn’t delivered by such a rubbish looking Yoda puppet (which thankfully should be changed to CGI the next time we get a proper Phantom Menace re-release).


I’m a sucker for movie homages and in-jokes and The Phantom Menace if full of ‘em. Of course there’s the Lucas re-cycling of dialogue ‘I’ve got a bad feeling about this’ etc and there’s the joy of spotting vehicles and faces from the Original Trilogy but Lucas threw another batch of items for us to have fun with—the Easter Eggs. From the expected 1138 reference (on the back of a droid) through the (and I'm yet to be convinced) Indiana Jones watching the pod race to the slightly less obvious but still brilliant ‘It’s working... It’s working’ E.T Anakin dialogue, there’s loads. Some of which I’ve included here:



No matter how much bad press Menace gets, there’s one thing that we can all agree on. DARTH MAUL IS A LEGEND. He literally owns every scene he’s in just by standing there and when the Sith apprentice does move we just sit back in awe. Bad has never been this damn cool.Stand out moments for me begin with his first appearance as a hologram (‘Not for a Sith’). That badass stare, those folded arms, you know this character is going to be special. Following that you get the only Maul dialogue scene and then his arrival on Tatooine in one of the top three best ships in the Star Wars Universe, the Sith Infiltrator. Him stepping out of that red interior is great, but still not as great as slightly later on when he drives off on his speeder which is just brilliant. The way he disappears out of sight off the ledge is effortlessly cool and just as you have enough time to think ‘What?’, he re-appears, dust cloud behind him travelling off like the smoothest biker ever.
But then of course there’s the obvious one. Maul just standing behind the slide doors as the Duel of Fates kicks—it's still every bit as exciting as it was the first time. Off goes the hood and then comes the saber ignition and of course the always great second blade. I’ll go into the actual Jedi/Sith three-way a little later on, but Maul behind the energy barriers looking at Qui-Gon like a caged animal ready to fight, Maul blocking Qui-Gon’s attack as captured in the screen caps as well as stabbing Qui-Gon and turning to fight Obi-Wan before his fallen master has even hit the ground is just the red and black sugar sprinklings on an already perfect cake.


Okay, here is where I lose a batch of you (if I haven’t already). I don’t and never have had a problem with Jar Jar Binks. I will admit out of the handful of cuts I’d make to Menace the Binks is involved in a few (the lake dive being the biggest eye roller of the lot) but generally I like Binks’ involvement in this first adventure.
Firstly I have a lot of affection for some of his throw away lines ‘Weesa go under water now okiday’, ‘Diddie crash it?’ and ‘Weesa going hooooome’ are great and his ‘Steady, Steady’ to the Gungan army behind him is genuinely a moment I love. Okay, so there’s a few too many ‘How Wude’’s and maybe the constant tomfoolery in the closing Battle of Naboo is a little overcooked, but I don’t take this personally. He’s generally no more annoying than C3-PO was in the prequels and I for one feel that there could have been a lot more growth in the Jar Jar character if the hate hadn’t become such a big deal so early on. Don't get me wrong, Jar Jar isn't my favourite thing about Menace, not by a long chalk, but it just wouldn't be the same without him for me, despite the many claims to the contrary.

‘We'll handle this.’ Two Jedi vs. a Sith. That’s the way to end a Star Wars movie. I remember the first time seeing this on the big screen and just grinning like a school kid at the many, many elements that took Star Wars lightsaber action and put it in the hands of fully fledged masters.
First off, it’s the sheer speed of it all. The lightning fast moments between moments that makes the entire event so memorable. Not only do you have lightsabers cuttings through the air like never before, you have Maul force throwing things to open doors, Obi-Wan doing jedi jumps or Qui-Gon delivering Jedi back hand punches to knock back a skilled Sith.
The energy and sheer thrills just continue to grow as the battle progresses. After Maul drops Qui-Gon, the excitement builds as we wait eagerly for that energy barrier to drop so Obi-Wan can take on Maul. If the speed so far wasn’t impressive enough the saber battle takes another jump in pace and the duel between these two is still as mind blowing ten years on as it was the first time I saw it back in '99. The sabers fly at almost untraceable speeds, there are back flips and a saber getting cut in half and it just raised the bar on everything we’d come to expect from the Star Wars lightsaber battle. It’s just Star Wars at its most exciting.
Of course it’s not just what we’re seeing. The Duel of Fates score pushes it all further into classic territory with the choir and the instruments making this all the more epic and even though I miss the to and fro of dialogue in the Original Trilogy’s lightsaber duels, what do these guys really have to talk about anyway?


The last shout out is for those lesser spoken about elements of Episode I; those faces in the crowd and those little moments that just don’t get enough love. So here goes.
The Neimoidian with his eyes and mouth sealed up, TC-14, ‘I’ve got a bad feeling about this’, Driodekas, Padawan braids, Qui Gon’s saber going through a door, Sio Bibble, Jar Jar’s ear flip on Tatooine, Watto ‘Letame take you out back’, ‘Little bitty accidenty’, Captain Tarpals ‘Here taken dissen one’, Lott Dodd, those little droids that walk past the background while the Neimoidians talk to Sidious, all the astromech droids that were lost trying to repair the hyper drive, Ben Quadrinaros, Pit Droids, the little critter Jabba flicks off the balcony, Sebulba ‘Poodoo’, Watto again, Maul’s Probe Droids, Maul’s Speeder, C-3PO, Shmi, Watto again, the second pod race lap, Yaddle (man she's weird), the Wookies that cheer in the senate, Yarael Poof, Ki-Adi-Mundi, Plo Koon, Palpatine’s little Mr. Bean-esq tongue poking out after he tells little Anakin he’s be watching his career closely and after he tells Padme he’s been voted in, the tubby Gungan, Panaka shooting out the window, the Gungans coming out of the mist, the unloading of the Battle Droids, the Gungan who gets blasted to atoms saving Jar Jar, Padme’s little slip after telling Nute Gunray his occupation has ended and the Vader breaths at the end of the credits. You all played your part and I salute you.

So there we have it. A celebratory look at probably the most debated Star Wars movie out of the bunch. Personally, I love it more now than I did ten years ago and I was big fan then. It’s not perfect, it’s not the best of the saga and it’s got its fair share of problems but taking this wander around ten years on, I miss the excitement that it brought and the enjoyment I’ve had with the many re-watches and debates over its impact since.
Happy Birthday Phantom Menace and may Lucas grace us with a Blu-ray edition soon.
Editorial by Marcus Doidge
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ade66
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Join Date: October 2004
Location: Ireland
Posts: 16
You forgot the wookies and e.t's at the galactic senete debates the decisson of voting for a new chancellor you can pick out three E.T.
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Good call. That's actually one of my favorite easter eggs as well.
"One more round, my friend...."
Nice article, Mr D.
We saw Star Wars when it first opened in the UK when we were 5, and it made a big impression. After months of hype for Episode 1 (one of us hasn't uttered the title of the movie for almost 11 years, being so annoyed that Lucas rubs the Flash Gordon origins in fans' faces) that we were really p*ssed off that the Uk had to wait another couple of months for it to be released.
For that reason - and that we hadn't had a holiday in a while - we flew across the Atlantic and saw it in its' opening week. Once we came out, we really didn't know what to think, as though a devout Christian had just witnessed the second coming, only to find ol' JC dressed in a track-suit munching a McDonalds' burger.
Our brother was very interested to hear what we thought after we got out, and we called him across the Atlantic - all we remember from the conversation were multiple uses of the words: "It was just...there...".
On the plus-side, it introduced us the the delights of the mechanically-precessed delight that is Polish sausage, so it wasn't all bad.
Due to Lucas losing a bundle to piracy on Episode 1, he changed to worldwide (or near enough) release dates, meaning we didn't travel quite as far to watch Episode II, but was even more disappointed with the weakest of the entire saga.
The world will never see hype or anticipation on quite such a scale than it saw 10 years ago. It certainly seems far, far away these days.
THE WILSON BROS
We saw Star Wars when it first opened in the UK when we were 5, and it made a big impression. After months of hype for Episode 1 (one of us hasn't uttered the title of the movie for almost 11 years, being so annoyed that Lucas rubs the Flash Gordon origins in fans' faces) that we were really p*ssed off that the Uk had to wait another couple of months for it to be released.
For that reason - and that we hadn't had a holiday in a while - we flew across the Atlantic and saw it in its' opening week. Once we came out, we really didn't know what to think, as though a devout Christian had just witnessed the second coming, only to find ol' JC dressed in a track-suit munching a McDonalds' burger.
Our brother was very interested to hear what we thought after we got out, and we called him across the Atlantic - all we remember from the conversation were multiple uses of the words: "It was just...there...".
On the plus-side, it introduced us the the delights of the mechanically-precessed delight that is Polish sausage, so it wasn't all bad.
Due to Lucas losing a bundle to piracy on Episode 1, he changed to worldwide (or near enough) release dates, meaning we didn't travel quite as far to watch Episode II, but was even more disappointed with the weakest of the entire saga.
The world will never see hype or anticipation on quite such a scale than it saw 10 years ago. It certainly seems far, far away these days.
THE WILSON BROS
I really like the fact a lot of people have their very own "When I saw Phantom Menace for the first time" stories. It really was quite the event back in '99.
Technically the first time I saw any of it was in the background on VHS at a friend's house, although I wasn't paying attention because the quality was s**t and I didn't want it spoiled. I saw it on opening night at my local cinema and it wasn't even half full. My arse didn't bleed or owt, but JJB annoyed the cock off of me.
You should have released this on Monday...what with it being May the 4th...
It's been sitting around waiting to go live for a while, so we thought we'd do it now.
It's such a shame Maul was killed off. He's one of the best Star Wars baddies, so underused.
agreed Bradavon. Only if Maul had been around until Star Wars 3. Then Vader could have off'ed him. What a epic Battle that would have been!!
Yes, I know: Only One Sith and One Apprentice. Since when do the Sith play by the rules?
Yes, I know: Only One Sith and One Apprentice. Since when do the Sith play by the rules?
I have to agree about the trailers. The Phantom Menace ad campaign was the best ever, and has set the bar very high. The posters are fantastic too.
When I first saw the teaser and trailer, I really thought I was about to witness the greatest movie ever made. I hate to say it, but what a bemusing and crushing disappointment it ultimately turned out to be.
Jar Jar Binks was a huge miscalculation by Lucas, which failed miserably. It's no coincidence he virtually disappeared from Episodes 2 and 3. Lucas is well aware that the character is universally despised.
I actually hope Lucas does tweak the Prequels before their eventual Blu-ray release, especially Episode 1. He might actually improve them. A CG Yoda, less Binks and as much Darth Maul footage he can put back in, would be a good start.
When I first saw the teaser and trailer, I really thought I was about to witness the greatest movie ever made. I hate to say it, but what a bemusing and crushing disappointment it ultimately turned out to be.
Jar Jar Binks was a huge miscalculation by Lucas, which failed miserably. It's no coincidence he virtually disappeared from Episodes 2 and 3. Lucas is well aware that the character is universally despised.
I actually hope Lucas does tweak the Prequels before their eventual Blu-ray release, especially Episode 1. He might actually improve them. A CG Yoda, less Binks and as much Darth Maul footage he can put back in, would be a good start.
I still enjoy Phantom Menace, maybe more so than when I saw it back in 99. As Marcus has already pointed out it contains some fantastic set pieces. It isn't my favourite Episode and JJB does grate a tad (though I don't deplore him as others do) but I think its a great entry in the Star Wars saga.
Bradavon wrote
Quote: It's such a shame Maul was killed off. He's one of the best Star Wars baddies, so underused
Couldn't agree more with you Brad, such a great villian its a pity he didn't feature more through EP I-III. Can't wait to trade in my dvds for some new BDs, hopefully with some more new stuff as Daz said.
Bradavon wrote
Quote: It's such a shame Maul was killed off. He's one of the best Star Wars baddies, so underused
Couldn't agree more with you Brad, such a great villian its a pity he didn't feature more through EP I-III. Can't wait to trade in my dvds for some new BDs, hopefully with some more new stuff as Daz said.
Wow, I just watched this movie again last night and I get on to read this article. I enjoyed the movie thoroughly. However, Jar Jar was a frickin' douche, and that was bad. Jake Lloyd, who somehow isn't mentioned in the article, is one terrible actor. I cringe with every word he says.
I remember seeing the teaser for The Phantom Menace when I went to see Star TreK: Insurrection, ironically enough. I didn't want to see Star Trek anymore. Truthfully, I really love the Prequel movies, despite their numerous problems. I still watch The Phantom Menace periodically.
I was dying to see this film when it came out. My dad got me interested in the originals at age 6 or 7. For 3 Friday nights in a row he pulled out the next film and showed them to me. I loved them! I asked my best friends (who at the time we all in the same big family) if they'd seen Star Wars. A couple had once but didn't remember them well. I convinced them to pressure their parents. They did, and saw them again and by the time 1999 rolled around they were all hooked, ready for "Episode I". One of the girls in particular, named Angel, got really into Star Wars.
In junior year of high school I met a gal named Sara who was a year ahead of me. We shared a class. She had a Star Wars pencil holder and was getting really excited to Episode III which was opening that May. She told me that she had never heard of Star Wars before her dad took her to "Phantom Menace". She walked out saying 'I wish there were more films and he said, 'There are!'. She got hooked on all the books, games and films after that. Then of all the people in the state, especially since my friends above didn't go to the same school, I spotted a picture of Angel in Sara's locker! Turns out they've known each other as long as I've known the family and were best friends like I am with Angel's brother. Small world. Actually I saw 'Episode I' with Anthony, and our dads.
In junior year of high school I met a gal named Sara who was a year ahead of me. We shared a class. She had a Star Wars pencil holder and was getting really excited to Episode III which was opening that May. She told me that she had never heard of Star Wars before her dad took her to "Phantom Menace". She walked out saying 'I wish there were more films and he said, 'There are!'. She got hooked on all the books, games and films after that. Then of all the people in the state, especially since my friends above didn't go to the same school, I spotted a picture of Angel in Sara's locker! Turns out they've known each other as long as I've known the family and were best friends like I am with Angel's brother. Small world. Actually I saw 'Episode I' with Anthony, and our dads.
I remember seeing Phantom Menace 1 day after release. I could swear that we'd have not have gotten seats so easily, especially on opening week, but there it was. We had actually gone to see another movie about 1 weekend or 2 before, and they were having the pre-sales. So we figured we'd go ahead and nab them. As you could have guessed, opening day was completely sold out, but the next day wasn't so we nabbed them. My expectations were fulfilled, and I'm happy to say that the entire prequel trilogy rocked for me.
Bradavon wrote: It's such a shame Maul was killed off. He's one of the best Star Wars baddies, so underused.
I actually think Maul is so good because we get so little of him. Anymore and he would have started to get more dialogue and who knows what else. Plus Dooku was a great and interesting replacement for Episode II.
As for not mentioning Jake Lloyd. He was never gonna be on anyones 'best things about the Phantom Menace' list but in his defence, I actually like that Lucas gave us Anakin so young and let him just be a kid. It's just a shame the kid had some dialogue delivery issues along the way and his 'kidness' didn't quite work in the Naboo Starfighter stuff at the end
I actually think Maul is so good because we get so little of him. Anymore and he would have started to get more dialogue and who knows what else. Plus Dooku was a great and interesting replacement for Episode II.
As for not mentioning Jake Lloyd. He was never gonna be on anyones 'best things about the Phantom Menace' list but in his defence, I actually like that Lucas gave us Anakin so young and let him just be a kid. It's just a shame the kid had some dialogue delivery issues along the way and his 'kidness' didn't quite work in the Naboo Starfighter stuff at the end
The pod race is cool, yes, but the announcer (Greg Proops) has always totally annoyed the heck out of me. I just want him to shut up. Even his cartoony creature design bugs me. It totally takes me out of the excitement of the scene every time I see/hear him and, in my opinion, weighs the movie down into cheesy, kiddie-movie territory.
I agree. He sits alongside that annoying little furry thing they added to Max Rebo's band in Jedi. That one that we see all the way down his throat for no reason.
I wonder if SEs of the prequels will be released so that the stories tie up better with the original trilogy (instead of doing it the other way around, like the awful spirit ending at ROTJ on DVD).
Probably looking back at them it's Episode 3 that I think is the weakest (simply because it's the film that should have tied everything up, explained it, but decided that Darth Vader actually turned to the dark side because he was in love, not because he wanted power. The first two had problems but you thought "don't worry it'll be fixed in 3" but wasn't).
Probably looking back at them it's Episode 3 that I think is the weakest (simply because it's the film that should have tied everything up, explained it, but decided that Darth Vader actually turned to the dark side because he was in love, not because he wanted power. The first two had problems but you thought "don't worry it'll be fixed in 3" but wasn't).
flicster wrote: The pod race is cool, yes, but the announcer (Greg Proops) has always totally annoyed the heck out of me. I just want him to shut up. Even his cartoony creature design bugs me. It totally takes me out of the excitement of the scene every time I see/hear him and, in my opinion, weighs the movie down into cheesy, kiddie-movie territory.
Not to get off topic (but here I go), this character made me feel the same way as the news reporters in the finale battle scene in Spider-man 3. Like do we seriously need someone narrating what we're seeing?! Yes, I get it in the context of the scene, but they both still kill the scenes that they're annoying narrating for us. Wow ... this opened a sore I never knew I had!
Not to get off topic (but here I go), this character made me feel the same way as the news reporters in the finale battle scene in Spider-man 3. Like do we seriously need someone narrating what we're seeing?! Yes, I get it in the context of the scene, but they both still kill the scenes that they're annoying narrating for us. Wow ... this opened a sore I never knew I had!
As terrible as ths flick is, TPM turned out to be the best of Lucas' three prequels. Despite being hampered with Binks, there's no fireplace awkwardness that I wish I could just wish away, there's no, no, no ham-fisted gurning from the emperor and there's certainly noooooooooooooo anorexic Vader tottering around in high-heels....and it has Darth Maul.
Thank you for this! Great read, brought back some nostalgic memories. Always love to hear from fellow Prequel Trilogy-non-bashers.
wolfarcher wrote: Thank you for this! Great read, brought back some nostalgic memories. Always love to hear from fellow Prequel Trilogy-non-bashers. 
There are a few of us out there
There are a few of us out there
Marcus1138 wrote: I actually think Maul is so good because we get so little of him. Anymore and he would have started to get more dialogue and who knows what else....
You may recall that Darth Maul had more dialogue originally, roughly about twice the amount he ended up with in the final cut. We would have prefered to have seen him have a little more to say, but the silent, mysterious Sith Lord seemed to work.
Speaking of which, C3-P0 originally had about half the amount of dialogue, but Lucas obviously realised that audiences would want more of him, so he tried to crowbar as much extra dialgue for Anthony Daniels as he could - this probably formed the basis for Episode II's horrible every-shot-a-quip-for-Threepio thing.
Sometimes, less is more.
The Wilson Bros
You may recall that Darth Maul had more dialogue originally, roughly about twice the amount he ended up with in the final cut. We would have prefered to have seen him have a little more to say, but the silent, mysterious Sith Lord seemed to work.
Speaking of which, C3-P0 originally had about half the amount of dialogue, but Lucas obviously realised that audiences would want more of him, so he tried to crowbar as much extra dialgue for Anthony Daniels as he could - this probably formed the basis for Episode II's horrible every-shot-a-quip-for-Threepio thing.
Sometimes, less is more.
The Wilson Bros
The droid factory scene with 3po in Clones is probably my least favorite Star Wars moment ever.
The sequence is b****red up by Lucas seemingly wanting Threepio to have a c**ppy quip every time he appears on-screen - this idiocy continues into the area sequence - need we mention the "this is such a drag" line...?
Attack of the Clones is probably the weakest movie in the series, as pretty much sod all of significence happens during the thing. OK, so Jar-Jar is the fall-guy who effectively hands over power to Papatine; Anakin's mother croaks, sliding him further to the Dark Side & the Clone War begins, but apart from that, it just feels like it's marking time until the third part (which contained FAR too much story to squeeze into one film.)
The Wilson Bros
Attack of the Clones is probably the weakest movie in the series, as pretty much sod all of significence happens during the thing. OK, so Jar-Jar is the fall-guy who effectively hands over power to Papatine; Anakin's mother croaks, sliding him further to the Dark Side & the Clone War begins, but apart from that, it just feels like it's marking time until the third part (which contained FAR too much story to squeeze into one film.)
The Wilson Bros
It has tons of issues, to be sure, but it does have a lot going for it as well. And for my money, I still think the duel between Maul, Qui-Gonn and Obi-Wan is the best of the series.
It's certainly the best in the Prequel Trilogy.
Marcus1138 wrote: It's certainly the best in the Prequel Trilogy.
I thought that Episode III was the best in the prequel trilogy but the prequel trilogy was pointless.
I thought that Episode III was the best in the prequel trilogy but the prequel trilogy was pointless.
Stunning article, Marcus. I've always liked Episode 1, it's Attack Of The Clones that I hate. Such a plodding load of old twaddle. Old Binksy has also never bothered me, I found him to be a funny chap in places. It's the shoehorning in of,(and terrible gags involving),those two bloody droids that irked me in the prequels.


