
I really give this book 3 and a half stars only for the artwork. Primarily, this book is rather disappointing. The pictures, and artwork are great, and I must say it is quite amazing to see the matte paintings that were used in the film. The book contains numerous paintings, sketches, and pictures, but they are very poorly organized. I often found that if I saw a picture I liked and wanted to look at it again, I would have to literally flip through almost every page to find it again. The pictures aren’t organized into “sections” as were the ones in THE ART OF THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK. But that is because the script for the movie is included in this book.The script takes up a lot of space, but is often spaced apart by maybe 2-3 pages of artwork. So for example, once you’re done reading the portion of script on page 9, you’d have to skip up to page 12 to continue reading it. It ruins the continuity of the script, but that is not that much of a deal. The script is nice to have, but then
Any Star War fans out there?
Is there any Star War conventions Star Wars Pics coming up ?Can you share pics. if you have been to one?Whos your favorite Person in Star Wars
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I used these for my 5 year old’s star wars party. They were a hit with the kids and adults. I swirled frosting on the cupcakes, sprinkled some sugar crystals on and inserted the rings in the center. They looked great and I was asked if they were professional. The kids took the rings home as a party favor. Love them!
I initially bought this book because the insane amount of detail that went into the artwork and I thought I might be able to use the visuals for ideas in a Star Wars RPG campaign. While It might have been useful, our group scrapped playing SWRPG and went back to playing D&D. I don’t know where the book is now, but I don’t really care. I looked at it once. Now I realize that was all I needed.
With the gorgeous illustrations, these pages are better off being posters, because I can’t imagine anyone seriously using these as reference material for anything else. They just look cool. It’s worth about 10 minutes of looking at the intricate designs, and then you set it down and question why the heck anyone would care which way the wampa went.
It’s basically a coffee table book if you want to show off how geeky you are.
This is the third book in the “Inside the World’s of Star Wars” series. All of them are absolutely incredible! They take you on an in depth tour of the locations in the “Star Wars” galaxy. If you have ever looked into the background while watching the “Star Wars” movies, and wondered about the complex environments depicted by George Lucas, this book is for you. It gives complex detail about every aspect, of every location, of every scene from the movies. It show’s you all of the location’s on Tatooine, the Yavin base, the Death Stars, Eco Base, Yoda’s hut, the Ewok village, and much, much more. Anyone curious about the colorfull worlds of the “Star Wars Trilogy” should purchse this book. For much more information on the variety of characters from “Star Wars,” the “Visual Dictionary” series is also a must have, and to go in depth with the ships and technology, “Star Wars, the Incredible Cross-Sections” is another great series from DK.
I have enjoyed reading the DK series of books on Star Wars worlds and vehicles and once again they do not disappoint with an amazing level of detail. One really does appreciate the time and patience the artists and writers put into each illustration. Each illustration often contains additional material explaining events that happened off camera (i.e. as characters travel from place A to place C, something occured at place B). Some events I recognised from the original screenplay and deleted sequences(such as the Tosche station / Biggs sequence). Not being a hard core Star Wars fan, I have no idea where the others can from, beyond their being ideas that were tossed around during pre-production.
The copy I have was let down by some unprofessional publication flaws, notably incomplete sentences that trailed off into nothing (this occured about three times).
I am not an expert on Star Wars but there were one or two things that caused me to wonder, particularly the reference to C-3PO and Anakin’s lightsaber on Tatooine which I thought may have contradicted something I read on the Star Wars site about droid memory erasure.
The book also vaguely fleshes out a few interesting “links” in the twenty or so year gap between the events of the current triology and the original triology of films, notably with reference to Yoda.
Recommended for fans of the Star Wars films (five stars if DK fix the typos).
I mistakenly thought that this book was also going to describe some of the actual outdoor movie set locations of where various exterior scenes were filmed, but it is actually a well-presented and detailed description of all of the various ficticious locations in Star Wars episodes IV,V,& VI from the fantasy point of view.
The exterior views and also the cut-a-way illustrations, maps of planets,and their detailed descriptions of Star Wars space technology are amazing in detail and descriptive content.
It is a pleasurable study of the Stars Wars Planets,Cities,and buildings and other space-related ships and other story-related structures for those who love the technical points of things like I do. Someone went to alot of trouble to produce this very definitive work, and I appreciate that kind of technical diligence as seen in this most enjoyable book.
This was an awesome book if you have any arguments shove it up your @$
If you enjoy seeing how the classic stories developed, this is definately going to be a book you wont regret getting, and is a MUST for your collection, allong with the other two art books.
In brief, this is NOT an “Art of” book. It’s a script with a lot of pretty pictures. I can buy the script in several other different formats, but this is the only chance for me to find anything out about the artwork, and this book simply does not do it. Lucasfilm seems to alternate between so-called “Art of” books with the script shoved in (New Hope, Jedi), and actual, quality ART books (Phantom Menace, Empire) that recognize that the script can be found elsewhere. Hopefully the remaining books in the series will leave the script OUT.