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Star Wars Fan Films, now Star Wars Audio Drama

darth fluffy writes "Star Wars Fanfilms have become as popular as anime music videos in the geek world over the past year (if not more), but here's a new spin: a full length Star Wars Fan Audio Drama. Recorded with over 40 actors from 5 different countries. Hurray for the power of home PC's!"

5 of 102 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Not my thing, but... by AlfaGiik · · Score: 2, Informative

    They're not sharing ideas, they're rehashing someone else's. Amazing what passes for creativity these days...

  2. Re:I just hope Lucas by TerryAtWork · · Score: 3, Informative

    No its a TRADEMARK he has to defend.

    And that brings up another of my pet peves. This 'defend your trademark or lose it' thing is a scam by the lawyers.

    In Japan where they do not have this law the IP grafix/comix business is a lot bigger than in the west. Not a coincidence.

    By putting 'SW and all characters TM George Lucas 2002' they can cover their asses on this.

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  3. Written Examples by mugnyte · · Score: 3, Informative


    In the SW storyline, this may give you an idea of the creativity being cultured online for fan fiction.

  4. Re:I just hope Lucas by TerryAtWork · · Score: 3, Informative

    No they aren't.

    If I cut a scene of Luke Skywalker from a SW movie and put it in my own I'd be violating CR and TM.

    If I dress up as Luke Skywalker and wave a cardboard light sabre around shouting "I, Luke Skywalker, Jedi Knight, will save you Princess!' on camera, I'd be violating TM and the Laws of Good Taste :-)

    You can't copyright a character, only a particular representation of it. TRADEMARK is for the character and it's name and likeness.

    --
    It's Christmas everyday with BitTorrent.
  5. Let's See What We Can Do Here... by NPB-2S · · Score: 3, Informative

    Nice to see Slashdot taking an interest in the project. Of coure, now we're on a frantic hunt for more mirrors so 2S doesn't kill the entire StarWarz/JediNet server, but that's okay.

    To answer some of the comments (particularly the ones that show that the poster has no clue what they're talking about):

    Don't expect GL or LFL to kill the site. For those who haven't been keeping up, fan productions such as fan films have been around for years, and are an ever-expanding community. Lucasfilm takes a fan-friendly approach to the genre, only curtailiing those that somehow tarnish the SW name through extensive sexual content (Tripping the Rift, StarBallz, etc.) or use film footage direct from their films (the original version of The Dark Redemption, for example). While fan productions cannot receive official approval from Lucasfilm, many projects (including Second Strike) have received positive comments from people who work with or work for Lucasfilm or LucasBooks. (Daniel Wallace, for instance, has a regular segment on Second Strike's sister project, ChronoRadio, while Kevin Rubio, Ann Crispin, and others, have interviews scheduled for CR as well). In other words, there's no need to worry about LFL "shutting us down." They're about the most benevolent company in terms of fan productions that there is.

    FearUncertaintyDoubt: That's why you'll never hear a space explosion in Second Strike, only ones in the mid-atmosphere, at the highest.

    Fan Fiction Naysayers: There's a difference between fan fiction that directly comes out of a film and an original story set in the context of a fictional universe. Second Strike does the latter. It has very few tie-ins directly to previously released materials. It simply uses the backdrop of the time frame created by one comic book series and one novel series as its setup. After that, it could be an audio presentation of any other story or an entirely separate story. The Star Wars tie-in, though, represents the community we wanted to present it for, as a thanks for the support given to the projects that many of our 40+ cast have worked on in the past. In many of our cases, this is the last hurrah before leaving the fan production community.

    StewyGriffin: Perhaps it didn't make the page, so you didn't know. The entire production has cost *maybe* $40, mostly for food and such that our Mixer has been using as fuel for late-night mixing. Pretty much everything has been done with programs that we all had to begin with, and, after that, all that was required was time. A fan *film* on the other hand, require a decent sized budget. Part of why Second Strike is audio is to cut down costs to almost nothing.

    a1englishman: Listen to the opening of 2S. That's what we're paying homage to. You can tell the most in the model used for the opening narrator.

    I'll try to check back again tonight or once I get back to Atlanta this weekend. Just have to remember to ignore the trolls and keep an eye out for people who *have* bothered to check it out who can therefore make *informed* comments.
    --NPB
    http://www.starwarz.com/timeline /2s/