7 Things Disney Wants You To Forget About Star Wars

3. Darth Plagueis

In Revenge Of The Sith, George Lucas uncovered a noteworthy bit of Sith mythology. He had Palpatine tell Anakin “The Tragedy of Darth Plagueis the Wise”. He was a Sith Lord with the ability to create life and forestall death. His backstory was further extended in a book, which affirmed he was to be Palpatine’s master and that the Emperor had a hand in Anakin’s creation.
Plageuis has shot to fame on account of the exceptionally well known fan hypothesis that he is the Supreme Leader Snoke. There are a lot of signs for this. As it is, Snoke’s theme is like that played amid the Plageuis scene, he’s depicted by Kylo Ren as “wise” and it would allow the Sequel Trilogy to be more than simply a constrained sequel.It’s this hypothesis that implies Disney will need to downplay of the presence of the Sith Lord. If he is, then Lucas film wants to stop audience guessing it, and if he isn’t, they’ll have to keep from fans being frustrated.




 

2. Don’t Own Any Of The Original Movies

The best thing to ask at a Star Wars junket is “Who shot first?” Firstly, Harrison Ford’s absolutely contemptuous “I don’t care,” is the best interview minute from the previous year. However, it serves as a captivating investigation into the ethos behind Star Wars from those included. As it is, everybody says Han.
It’s from cast members, beyond any doubt. However, that appears to mirror the reasoning of Disney that all of George Lucas’ fiddling for the Special Editions isn’t the “real” version of Star Wars. So, where are our un-tampered forms of the original movies? Why doesn’t this section about them wanting us to overlook the Special Edition changes?
All things considered, this is where it gets somewhat confusing. As it is, George Lucas’ deal with Fox in the 70s gave him the sequels and merchandise rights. However, the studio had the rights to distribution. This implied that while the sale of Lucasfilm in 2012 incorporated every one of the assets and trademarks identifying with the film, Disney can’t sell the film itself. The fact is; Fox still possesses the distribution rights to every one of the six of the original motion pictures. Furthermore, their choices on Episodes I-III and V and VI don’t run out until May 2020. The story is surprisingly more terrible for the original film: they have that foreternity. It’s hard to believe, but it’s true; Disney paid $4.05 billion for Star Wars, yet will never own the film called Star Wars.




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