I

Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R30JL7A59FWFBR Putting this book down is difficult after you flip through a few pages. There are hundreds of pieces of conceptual art and beautiful paintings. It is apparent right from the start that George Lucas only hire the best artists for his movie.The art genre is science fiction. You’ll see a lot of concept art on cityscape, robots, planets, costumes, creatures, architecture, props and characters relating to the Star Wars movie. This book is all about art, you won’t see any movie stills.There are two versions of the book. The one with the movie script has 272 pages. The one I’m holding has only 224 pages.Design concepts are explained for the characters and set. There’s not much text but enough. The level of detail, effort and creativity displayed by the artists is simply marveling. This genre is really a playground for artists to explore with their imagination.For Star Wars fans, there’s no reason not to get this book. For artbook


XBox 360 Fracture soundtrack sounds like Star Wars?
Perhaps I'm going crazy, but while playing Fracture by Lucas star wars Art Arts, I noticed that a great deal of the soundtrack sounds like many of the Star Wars games. If anyone has any comments or additional info about this phenomenon please post. Good additional info will earn a best answer.
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lcd-plasma-tv-yoda-birthday-cake-star-wars-art-warhol
r2-d2-star-wars-art-3d-pop-artwork-poster-print-jedi-droid-robot-r2d2-movie-
star-wars-art-poster-giclee -painting- canvas-16-x20--with-mat-frame-star-track
boba-fett-star-wars-fan--pop-art-painting-18x24-by-chris-cargill-gift-wall-decor
star-wars-art-poster-super-giclee -painting-on-canvas-16-x20--with-mat-frame
star-wars-art-poster-giclee -painting- -canvas-16-x20--with-mat-frame-space-ship
tyler-stout-star-wars-art-print-poster-set-signed-mint
darth-vader-drawing-12-x-18-star-wars-art-jedi sith
c-3po-original-oil-painting-star-wars-art
star wars Art


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14 Responses to “I”

  • Forker [ 25May10]

    lots of sketches on environment, and outfits for the queen, its really cool art book to collect

     
  • Jameson [ 25May10]

    The first time I really started Really liking Star Wars was with The Phantom Menace. Personally, I don’t go in for the dissecting crtisicm kind of thing. So Yea, there may be a some flaws, but to me there was more right than wrongs.
    So about this book; I am crazily into art, and my copy of this one
    is starting to look worn out. It is an amazing collection of conceptual art (drawings, paintings, digital designs, ect.) arranged chronologicaly paralleling the script. I believe that when
    I started studying the works of Iian McCaig, Dermot Power, and others; my ideas and artwork really took off, and seeing the quality and height of what I wanted to reach laid out inspired me
    greatly. Well, in all, this book is brilliantly executed and would be awesome to look at for any Star Wars fan or art fanactic.

     
  • Jameel [ 26May10]

    Sometimes is easy to forget the amout of design works that takes to make a star wars movie, with lots of designers hired trying to get the ship, landscape or character design that fits into the visuals and story of the movie.
    This book gathers lots of artwork, focused on the Star Wars Attack of the Clones movie and will satisfy both old and new star wars fans for sure.

     
  • Nyman [ 26May10]

    Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R9KNH7QB5301Z This art book is noticeably better that the already good The Art of Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace.

    This time round, even more details are added to the concept art. Most of the sketches are now coloured. As usual, the pages are filled to the brim with character designs, environment paintings, storyboards, sculptures and ships. All drawings are captioned by the individual artists on the idea they are trying to bring across.

    In some ways, the character designs and sketches look better on book than in the movie. The environment paintings are just epic.

    Included also, at the back of the book, is the full script for the movie.

    This book is highly recommended to sci-fi artists, concept artists and of course Star Wars fans.

    (More pictures are available on my blog. Just visit my Amazon profile for the link.)

     
  • Arthur [ 27May10]

    This is a really fun game. It is cool. You can do fun things on it like fly in a ship and fight. And this came does not have villains. This is only for children.

     
  • Marston [ 27May10]

    Nine year old boy claims “It’s the coolest thing ever”. He would never stop playing if I didn’t make him stop. Mom’s only complaint is that the game can only be saved at the end of a level, so I get complaints that his progress is lost when his time to play is up. To allow him to play to the end of the level can take a while. Any violence is cartoonish and not offensive for an older child.

     
  • Irish [ 28May10]

    If you like the Lego series of games, this is a must get. A classic of the genre.

     
  • Davenport [ 28May10]

    The game got here a FULL TEN DAYS before expected … and my daughter is THRILLED!!! Great transaction and we will gradly shop with you again!

     
  • Macey [ 29May10]

    Forward by Doug Chiang. This volume (48 pages) contains an excerpt from the book written by Jonathan Bresman. It also contains concept sketches, storyboards and full color illustrations by various artists, among them Doug Chiang, depicting scenes and characters from the movie Episode I: The Phantom Menace.

    From the preface: ” This book offers a behind-the-scenes look at the lengths the art department went in its construction of George Lukas’ universe. The evolutionary stages for each major character, vehicle, and planet are displayed so that the reader can get a sense of how the film was painstakingly sculpted, and finally, how a new style of filmmaking was founded.”

    This excerpt focuses on how sketches combine and evolve in the development of ideas into the final concepts for characters and other elements in the film.

    Staple bound. A Del Ray Book; Ballantine Publishing Group.

     
  • Adolphs [ 29May10]

    Probably the best one in the Star Wars Art series, it shows a great amount of the concept art of what became the look of an entirely “new” Star Wars galaxy.

    Forget the technological look of the original trilogy. The lavish look of the planets shown in the new movies started at this point. It was a more spectacular age for the galaxy and the paintings show it.

    While it is certainly not McQuarrie, Chiang and the other artists do justice to his legacy.

    Only the art of the original Star Wars can be compared to the scope and breadth of the art displayed in this book. After all, the other four episodes built upon what was already created for the Phantom Menace and a New Hope.

    A must have for any Star Wars and fantasy art enthusiast.

     
  • Davey [ 30May10]

    I would never have thought that I would stoop so low in nerd-dom and buy a book like this, but there is more to being a nerd than simply obsessing over your favorite fantasies.

    I love Star Wars, hate the Phantom Menace. And yet way back when the VHS release was going on, I too crowded into a Media Play at 12 in the morning with my buddy and his wife to get my advanced Widescreen Collector’s copy. DVD has since come and taken away any significance to that item, but what did come along with it was a little booklet featuring excerpts from “The Art of Star Wars; Episode I.” For a long time this little booklet and I rarely parted, and I thought I was so priviledged to have this particular booklet and that it would one day be a rarity.

    Imagine my surprise when I discovered THIS book, the actual Art of Star Wars. Not only does it have everything in my booklet, but it presents conceptual art from all corners of the movie. There’s so much to look at, and so much that is fascinating to look at, you can’t help spend hours just looking.

    The book is hard-bound, with pages made from such high-quality paper, it will make you turn them with tweezers, they feel so expensive. The art is presented in chronological order with the film, so that reading it cover-to-cover is almost like watching the film. For most of the artwork, a little background information is provided in the corner next to a numerical key denoting which works belong to which artists.

    As for the quality of reproduction; I am rarely satisfied when something I’ve drawn is scanned onto a color-copier, which often is the best option for reproducing them. I still lose something in the translation from pad to paper, a little bit of hue here, some shading here, depth of line there. However, in this book there is nothing lost. (Nothing is lost, or the originals must be stunning to look at!) The artwork shows you just why the movie relies so much on visuals (and not on strength of character or plot). Artists Doug Chiang, Ian McCaig, and Terry Whitlatch to name a few, are so skilled at vividness, their works immediately juice your imagination into action. Looking at concepts for space-ships, you can almost hear them fly.

    The emphasis is on Doug Chiang and Ian McCaig, one a brilliant architectural and mechanical artist, the other a genius at characters and costumes. Whitlatch seems to handle most of the aliens, while gorgeous matte-paintings by Doug Chiang depict, in color, some of the more finalised concepts.

    If you are a fan of Star Wars, this book is a must for any in-depth knowledge of how things developed behing the scenes. For film scholars, I would also recommend this book, for the glimpse it provides into the realm of pre-production, especially for you film scholars who have never set foot onto a film studio, or a design office.

    For fellow artists, I can only say that these works inspire to improve my technique and work even harder at my art. It’s always the test of an artist when he runs into someone who is superior; does the work make you want to quit art, or make you want to improve? This stuff will make you choose the latter.

     
  • Loew [ 30May10]

    Sellers are using this page to sell a book that is actually titled: THE ART OF STAR WARS EPISODE I: an excerpt of the book written by Jonathan Bresman. The ISBN matches this work, which is only 44 pages in length and was given away with the purchase of a VHS version of the Phantom Menace. The way Amazon lists this book can be misleading because they refer to it as the paperback edition in the review which claims it is a massive volume with over 600 illustrations. They are actually referring to another edition of the book… the TRADE PAPERBACK EDITION. This error has caused me a lot of fuss with two of the used book traders here at Amazon. Know that you are not buying the 200+ page oversize work with this webpage.

     
  • Ellman [ 31May10]

    This book is the best in the Art Of Star Wars series, but has a few downfalls.

    This book is filled with color photos, but the text that goes with the pictures hasn’t improved much. A good thing about this book, is the artwork is divided up into sections: HOTH, STAR DESTROYER, ASTEROID FIELD, DAGOBAH, BESPIN, REBEL CRUISER, and at the beginning of each section is about one and a half pages of text that describes how the “section” was done for the movie.

    The “features” of the book such as the technique for the Imperial Walkers and Tauntauns to make them move, was included in the paragraphs at the beginning of each section, but really was poorly written. And the evolution of Yoda wasn’t even written in text at all. All it consisted of was pages of drawings that looked different.

    The pictures are, as always, magnificent, and included photographs, drawings, sketches, paintings, matte paintings, and blueprints, although the blueprints are on two pages, and a portion of them disappear where the two pages meet. But the rest is great, and it is so amazing to see how real the matte paintings look!

    All four and a half stars are for the great pictures, organization, and text, but the missing half star is due to the lack of text. The lack of text is the real downfall, but since the pictures are great, I don’t regret getting it. Especially since this is the only ART OF THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK book there is.

     
  • Lumby [ 31May10]

    This book is FAR superior to the other two “Art of” books in the original trilogy because it is actually an “Art of” book and NOT an illustrated screenplay. By publishing the script elsewhere (in numerous publications – the best being “The Empire Strikes Back Notebook” which had the script, commentary from Kasdan and Kershner, and tons of storyboard panels – try to get a copy), Lucasfilm wisely left room for the artwork and its accompanying explanatory text. The other two books, while providing plenty of fantastic eye candy, unfortunately tell you nothing about the artwork. It is a good sign that for Episode I, Lucasfilm has chosen to go with and improve upon the editorial model set by the “Art of Empire” book.

     
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