Re: Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015)
Posted: June 15th, 2015, 3:46 pm
hahahahahaDragon_316ca wrote:First look of Princess Leia(?):
Discussion forums for the premiere fan community for and by fans of film director Christopher Nolan.
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hahahahahaDragon_316ca wrote:First look of Princess Leia(?):
Leia is great, costume is great (and legit)... but those two are unfortunate. Like bad outtakes somebody decided NOT to delete, for some odd reason.Dragon_316ca wrote:First look of Princess Leia(?):
http://www.theforce.net/story/front/Cov ... 164602.asp (fan site)TheForce.net - Covergirl Launching Star Wars Themed Make Up Line
We received these photos showing off a new upcoming make up collection coming soon from Covergirl. The packaging uses The Force Awakens, and one package shot has a coupon for a discounted movie ticket. Expect to see these hit in late fall.
Someone call the Boba Fett of screenwriting.
Can't wait to find out what happens in Star Wars: The Force Awakens?
It could be worse: Gawker Media is so impatient to find out what happens to Luke Skywalker, Han Solo and the rest of the crew from a galaxy far, far away that it's posted bounty for a copy of a script to the movie.
In a post, staff writer Ashley Feinberg writes that the company is "willing to pay cold, hard cash" for a screenplay to this winter's revival of the space opera franchise. "Yes, only the select few who have sacrificed their firstborn and answered George Lucas’s riddles three to get jobs working on the new movie will have official copies of the script," Feinberg admitted. "But we’re willing to bet it’s already found its way into any number of other hands — including hands that may have recently navigated to this particular post."
The post clarifies that Gawker is "not endorsing acquiring the script by any illegal means," adding, "illegal things are bad!"
Gawker Media might be feeling a little gun shy about the legality of the issue, considering that it's preparing for a court appearance next month concerning its publication of a sex tape featuring wrestler Hulk Hogan, with Gawker CEO Nick Denton estimating a 1-in-10 chance that the company faces financial "disaster" should it lose the case.
Quite what Gawker is willing to pay for a copy of the script — the Gawker.com post asks for a script "from any draft stage" or even a portion thereof — and how it intends to prove the validity of what people are offering remains to be seen, as does what the company would do with a script should it manage to buy one.
Only one thing is for sure: Fans who have worked on convincing fake scripts for the movie for fun have just realized that their hobby could turn out to be far more lucrative than they could've expected.
Star Wars: The Force Awakens hits theaters Dec. 18.
Yes.SilverHeart wrote:So Gawker is publicly advertising that they intend to commit a crime?
The Saga Continues @StarWarsTSC
We're halfway there guys! We're now officially just 6 months away from #TheForceAwakens!