(c/o Dave's IP list)

< snip >

[Note:  Do yourself a favor and go to the 'Panic Struck Productions' site
and download the trailer for this film.  After taking a look, you'll most
likely be queued up to get the full film on Monday.  This effort shows that
Hollywood no longer has the monopoly on doing first class special effects
films.  The available technology has no created a level playing field for
all.  Now its just a matter of talent and the desire to make it happen.  May
the Force be with you!  DLH]

Posted on Wed, Apr. 13, 2005

'Star Wars Revelations' a sophisticated fan film By Tish Wells Knight Ridder
Newspapers <http://www.realcities.com/mld/krwashington/11384018.htm>

WASHINGTON - In the original "Star Wars," the Imperial military leader Grand
Moff Tarkin tells head baddie Darth Vader, "The Jedi are extinct; their fire
has gone out of the universe."

Not for the makers of "Star Wars Revelations," an amateur fan film to be
released Monday over the Internet. It's part of a growing video genre
produced by devoted viewers and made possible by affordable cameras,
computer graphics and editing technologies. All are labors of love, and
viewable free since they're based on intellectual property that belongs to
the copyright owners, in this case "Star Wars" creator George Lucas and
Lucasfilm.

"Star Wars Revelations," a 40-minute feature that's sophisticated by
fan-film standards, is based on the "Star Wars" universe. Thanks to a solid
plot, interesting characters, superb special effects and an unexpected
ending, it's accessible even to viewers who can't tell a lightsaber from a
flashlight.

"Revelations" is a provocative prelude to the May 19 release of the sixth
Lucasfilm in the "Star Wars" series, "Episode III: Revenge of the Sith." The
fan film picks up on the expectation that the Jedi, the good guys, will fall
to their enemies, the Sith, epitomized by black-helmeted Darth Vader.

In "Revelations," Vader's Imperial Forces are hunting down escaping Jedi. A
former Jedi turned Imperial agent, Zhanna, is pursing an artifact that will
help her find and destroy her former comrades.

Opposing her is a fugitive Jedi heroine, Taryn Anwar, working through an old
friend and smuggler, Declan, and another ex-Jedi, Cade, who has control of
the artifact. Taryn and Zhanna vie for the artifact in a series of starship
chases and lightsaber battles.

"Revelations" lacks the mega-bucks polish of a Lucasfilm production, but it
catches the otherworldly excitement of a summer science-fiction blockbuster.

Director-actor Shane Felux as Cade, Frank Hernandez as Declan and Gina
Hernandez as Taryn deliver smooth performances. The complicated plot moves
along briskly despite uneven dialogue and an occasional clunky line.

The computer-graphics special effects are retina-blasters. They include a
chase through space-based starship construction yards and a night on the
town in Corellia city, whose Central Park, minus the orange tint, looks much
like New York's.

Felux, who maxed out his credit cards and took a home equity loan to make
"Revelations," acknowledges that the film "got bigger than even I thought it
would. We just never really tried to limit ourselves."

It shows.

"Star Wars Revelations" is due to be released Monday over the Internet by
Panic Struck Productions, at <http://www.panicstruckpro.com>




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