I remember there being a comic where Han, Chewie, and the Falcon got sucked into some space anomaly that transported them across the universe to planet Earth in the Milky Way Galaxy. They then crashed in the Pacific Northwest area of North America. Han did not survive but Chewie did live for a while and became the inspiration for the native people's stories about "Big Foot." Years later, an archeologist named Henry "Indiana" Jones found the ancient wreckage.
In a galaxy far far away ... Even that they have in Star Wars some sort of random bullshit drive that ignores physics and logic, traveling between galaxies is a bit far fetched.
"A long TIME ago in a GALAXY far, far away..." Do you honestly think that things from Earth could cross such vast distances of time and space? Especially given that Planet of the Apes is set in an imagined future? Yes, you are clueless enough that you could...
If you take that literally yes, if taken from telling the audience as if they are in another galaxy it can mean something else, eg as if telling the story to a ficticious audience in a ficticious timeframe a story, and the actual audience is just listening in. Kind of like the very end of ME3, where it's told as if the story is being told to a small child, rather than the player.
I remember there being a comic where Han, Chewie, and the Falcon got sucked into some space anomaly that transported them across the universe to planet Earth in the Milky Way Galaxy. They then crashed in the Pacific Northwest area of North America. Han did not survive but Chewie did live for a while and became the inspiration for the native people's stories about "Big Foot." Years later, an archeologist named Henry "Indiana" Jones found the ancient wreckage.
What part of "A long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away" did you not understand?
Earth isn't in the Galaxy Far, Far Away, but E.T.'s species (E.T. The Extraterrestrial) can be spotted in the Republic Senate...
"...a galaxy far far away."
Nice click bait, though. :)
In a galaxy far far away ... Even that they have in Star Wars some sort of random bullshit drive that ignores physics and logic, traveling between galaxies is a bit far fetched.
EA Battlefront 2 had a easter egg
on Geonosis & people think it was Earth at some point.
Effects guys like to toss things in for fun.
"A long TIME ago in a GALAXY far, far away..."
Do you honestly think that things from Earth could cross such vast distances of time and space?
Especially given that Planet of the Apes is set in an imagined future?
Yes, you are clueless enough that you could...
Long ago, in a galaxy far, far away, two knobheads forgot the opening line of every Star Wars movie that's ever been made.
If you take that literally yes, if taken from telling the audience as if they are in another galaxy it can mean something else, eg as if telling the story to a ficticious audience in a ficticious timeframe a story, and the actual audience is just listening in.
Kind of like the very end of ME3, where it's told as if the story is being told to a small child, rather than the player.
in a galaxy far far away... does not mean one sector over. It means IN A GALAXY FAR FAR AWAY, my god the collective intelligence here is disappointing