#james earl jones movies
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James Earl Jones, voice of Darth Vader, dies aged 93
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#james earl jones#james earl jones death#james earl jones filmography#darth vader#earl jones#mufasa#james earl jones cause of death#james earl jones net worth#james earl jones movies#flynn earl jones#field of dreams#lion king#coming to america#darth vader actor#james earl#the sandlot#mark hamill#star wars#empire state building#james earl.jones#empire state building james earl jones#how did james earl jones die#james.earl.jones#cecilia hart#james earl jones darth vader#james earl jones sandlot#the lion king#james earl jones wife#did james earl jones die#julienne marie
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Outfit of the day (James Earl Jones as Thulsa Doom, Conan the Barbarian, 1982)
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#james earl jones#rest in peace#black tumblr#black literature#black excellence#black history#black community#civil rights#blackexcellence365#black actors#american actor#movie stars#the lion king#movie actor
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Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977)
#Star Wars#filmedit#Mark Hamill#Harrison Ford#Carrie Fisher#Alec Guinness#James Earl Jones#George Lucas#my gifs#movie gifs
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Conan The Barbarian (1982) dir. John Milius.
#80s movies#conan the barbarian#scifi#cult classic#mood#vibes#pop culture#arnold schwarzenegger#james earl jones#conan#thulsa doom#max von sydow#sandahi bergman#cassandra gava#valerie quennessen#nadiuska#art
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Long live the king.
#batman#vintage#superman#smallville#dc#star trek#star wars#darth vader#james earl jones#the lion king#disney#rest in peace#movie#childhood#idol#deadpool 3#deadpool and wolverine#ryan reynolds#hugh jackman#robert downey junior#the big bang theory#thank you#long live the king#mufasa#revenge of the sith#return of the jedi#a new hope#1990s#the empire strikes back#2000s
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James Earl Jones, January 17, 1931 – September 9, 2024.
With his son, Flynn, and his father, Robert. 1987 photo by Michael Tighe.
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Biggest regret this month of October :
Rest in Peace Ken Page, you will always be remembered by your awesome villain voice act. 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
@subukunojess
#TAG THOSE WHO ARE FAN OF OOGIE BOOGIE#I almost forgotten the TNBC movie#luckily my friend and I are watching right now#oogie boogie is one of the iconic villain this spooky season and it gets vibin when it comes to his voice#first we lost james earl jones as mufasa#second was emi shinohara who is the Sailor Moon voice actress Makoto Kino aka Sailor Jupiter#then ken page#this is my saddest year for the moment#rest in peace#the nightmare before christmas#tnbc#oogie boogie#disney#disney villains#ken page
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I'm tired of being disappointed. By far the best part of the movie was the what-could-have-been in the soundtrack. Mufasa had seeds of being good but it suffered from a lack of focus and terrible visual language, so it was ultimately unsatisfying.
I think it's actually worse when you can see the threads and interesting seeds of a good story just wasted and abandoned under a pile of Bad Storytelling.
Lack of Focus:
The movie was trying to say something about Bravery, and Bloodlines, and Vengeance, and Going Against the Status Quo, and Self-Reflection, and Loyalty, and Family, and Relying on One Another Instead of Just Yourself, and Belief in Yourself, and even Vague Spirituality, all at once. So it wound up giving the movie-equivalent of two or three disjointed sentences about each topic, and never actually made a clear point about any of them.
For example, Mufasa is afraid of water. Rafiki says that this is because Mufasa is afraid of his own reflection, even though the audience would have been assuming that it was because Mufasa almost drowned as a cub. Then in the climax, Mufasa and Kiros are battling underwater and Mufasa remembers his foster-mother telling him to close his eyes and use his other senses to hunt. So he does, and he realizes I guess through the currents, that a big rock is falling toward them, and pushes Kiros into it.
What does that tell us? That Mufasa was taught to hunt like a lioness, so he can use those skills when he needs to. Which he's already been doing with no hesitation for the whole movie. Just because he's in water during the final battle, doesn't mean that's a satisfying conclusion to what they were doing with water, as a symbol for his character.
IF Mufasa had been embarrassed about his lioness-observational-skills, thinking it made him less of a lion, or weird, and therefore rarely used those skills because he was always trying to be more like Taka or the other males—conserving energy, not being mindful of what's around him—THEN finally embraced his weird skills at the end, while in water fighting—that would be something thematic.
You would be able to say, "he's learned not to be afraid of where his skill-set is, as a leader, ergo: he's learned 'not to be afraid of his reflection/the water.'"
But that's not what happened. Because they didn't devote time to developing what, exactly, Mufasa is afraid of seeing in himself, or WHY he's afraid. Because everything he does succeeds. He wins his first race, wins his first fight, wins the favor of his adoptive father, survives diving into water even though he's afraid of it, wins at saving sarabi and then wins her affections even when he's actively trying not to—there's no reason for him to be trying not to. Not any that tie back into "Mufasa is afraid of himself." There's no reason ever shown for this weird halfhearted insecurity he sometimes has, and has to overcome.
So then it's not compelling. And that sort of thing is sprinkled all over the movie.
They keep mentioning "Milele," which means "forever" in Swahili, but that whole concept is alternately described as a "dream," or "a place you feel inside of you," but basically it's also a physical location that becomes the Pridelands. And nobody ever clarifies what exactly Milele is. It's treated like a fantasy concept or a spiritual vision or a physical utopia whenever the film needs it to be those things. But if it's never clearly defined, it's not compelling, which sucks when Milele is what the characters are "searching for." Another example of starting a concept and then never following it through to a satisfying conclusion.
They have seeds of Mufasa being the only lion to ask for help and be willing to cooperate with other animals besides lions—but they are few and far-between. He doesn't ask Rafiki for help; Rafiki sort of convinces him not to eat him. And asking animals for help like he does with the elephants or the Pridelands animals isn't unique to him; the first to do it is Sarabi, who willingly accepts and relies on Zazu despite others' scorn—and MUFASA is one of the ones who is scornful, initially! So they plant seeds for the big climax where he's the only voice that can unite animals across species by the climax, but they're don't water or tend to or help those seeds to grow. So the climax feels a little out of nowhere and less compelling.
If they had just focused on one of these things, it would've been tighter and more emotionally impactful.
Except NO, it wouldn't have been. Because you will have a hard time connecting, emotionally, to photorealistic-CGI lions even if the story's focus was tight.
Bad Animation and Filming
Lions in real life move with too much weightiness and heavy-animal-breathing for you to commit to that weight 100% of the time AND have good character acting. You can only really commit wholeheartedly to one or the other.
So you can tell in this movie the eyes are bigger and more expressive than in the first CGI Lion King. But that doesn't save it. It doesn't cut it.
When Taka is giving Sarabi his last longing look, he just looks like a vaguely displeased large animal. There's no human heartbreak in his expression.
When Mufasa is singing a fast line about not knowing how to respond to Sarabi, he should be swinging his head back and forth, like he's looking around for something in desperation—because that's what the song sounds like—and his walking, if he's walking, should be fast. A cross between running from something and searching for something. Because that's what's happening in the emotion of the song.
But lions don't move that fast, because they're heavy. And when they're looking around for something, they do it with their noses and long head-turns in sweeping motions. No fast eyes-darting-around. Certainly no human conflict of desire in their faces. So photorealistic Mufasa can't do any of those things. Which sucks, because the actions of the characters and the action in the scene should match the emotions they're feeling, and the emotion the audience is supposed to be feeling. But it can't, so everything is flat and boring.
And even if you could connect to photorealistically emotional lions—you might, we connect with our pets emotionally all the time—you wouldn't get the chance because the film avoids their faces every time something emotionally interesting is happening.
For example: my favorite part of the song "I Always Wanted a Brother" is when the beat appears to hard-drive, and it feels like a "stop everything" moment, to match Taka's outrage that someone is dissing his brother. And he goes, "what did you say 'bout my brother? That's not a stray, that's my brother! You stay away from my brother 'cuz I say so."
That whole moment, I'm envisioning Taka getting all up in another animal's face, maybe taking a swipe at it, throwing his little weight around and puffing his chest, fearsome-face. The song FEELS like that's what's happening; like he's going on and on, exploding with insistence and protectiveness.
Something similar to the "stop everything-angry" vibe of this:
But in the movie, is it a close-up shot of Taka invading another animal's space? Does the camera follow him from behind in a slow zoom, and then when he says, "what did you say bout my brother?" He spins and looks directly into the camera (in the direction of the animal he's talking to) and the camera stops while Taka charges closer? Do we get to see his angry face at all?
No.
The camera does this stupid boring thing where we, the audience, are in the branches of a tree (where the animal Taka is addressing is safely out of reach) and it pans slowly along, unfocused, like we're casually passing this interaction by. Taka's face is far away on the distant ground and you can't really see it's expression, his body language isn't doing anything interesting (he's just standing there for the whole part of the song) and at one point because of the panning, the tree the camera is in has a branch that actually hides Taka completely from view during the song.
We don't even get to see the animal he's talking to react. All we see is the back of its head.
They do this over and over in the movie. When Rafiki is finally running to meet his long lost brother, we get the back of his body, one quick snapshot of the underside of his face, and then it's flyover drone-style shots. When Sarabi and Mufasa decide to love each other, it's a close-up on the backs of their chins; no eyes, no mouths, no head-body-language. When Sarabi and Mufasa are singing a very back-and-forth interactive duet to one another, the camera is, again, far-off and distant for most of the song, rotating slowly around a landscape that they're lion-lumbering through. Boring. Distant. Wasteful.
Sometimes the movie tries to match the emotional pace in the way it's shot. When Kiros is readying a killing blow and Taka has moments to decide if he's going to save his brother, that scene cuts well between the raised paw and Taka and Mufasa's faces—for example. But those are the most basic ways to shoot those scenes, and scenes like them are few and far-between.
What it needed was one overarching idea to connect the character threads, and give them time to unspool. And then it really, desperately needed to be animated traditionally so that the lions could emote like humans.
So! I'll probably be writing a series of posts exploring what could've been to correct the fumble. Because I did enjoy the concepts in Mufasa.
#Mufasa#the lion king#kiros#obasi#afia#eshe#Taka#scar#tlk#meta#character analysis#storytelling#filmmaking#film#cgi#animation#visual storytelling#lions#disney#critique#live action remake#live action lion king#review#2024 movies#Mufasa 2024#James earl jones
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James Earl Jones
1931-2024
RIP
#james earl jones#80s#1980s#80s movies#star wars#empire strikes back#return of the jedi#field of dreams#coming to america#the lion king
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The Lion King: Animated (1994) v Live Action (2019)
You do not have to see both to vote, but it might have been helpful.
Feel free to share opinions or explanations with comments/tags/rbs
#original or remake#yen sids poll#the lion king#disney#disney live action#disney on broadway#disney animated movie#simba#mufasa#nala#timon#pumbaa#james earl jones#donald glover#beyonce#matthew broderick
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RIP Mr Jones thank you 😭🕊️🫡💖
#james earl jones#anakin skywalker#star wars#disney#lion king#mufasa#rip#cartoon#animation#movies#tv series
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Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
#dr strangelove#dr strangelove or how i learned to stop worrying and love the bomb#dr strangelove 1964#stanley kubrick#peter sellers#george c scott#sterling hayden#keenan wynn#slim pickens#peter bull#james earl jones#1960s#1964#filmedit#film#cinema#movies
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#movies#polls#the hunt for red october#hunt for red october#90s movies#john mctiernan#sean connery#alec baldwin#scott glenn#sam neill#james earl jones#requested#have you seen this movie poll
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R.I.P. James Earl Jones (1931-2024)
#mufasa#simba#lion king#lion king 1994#tlk#disney#disney movie#1990s animated movies#animated movie#animation#james earl jones#the lion king gifs#my gifs#disney gifs#cartoon gifs#thelionkingedits#the lion king edit#my edit#source: giphy#giphy#lions
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