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'Star Wars' Action Figure Review: Luke Skywalker (Hoth Attack) - 'Star Wars' Saga Collection

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(C) 2004 Hasbro, Inc. and Lucasfilm Ltd. (LFL)  Luke Skywalker (Hoth Attack) Action Figure While patrolling on Hoth, Luke was savagely attacked by a Wampa and dragged by the ice creature to its cave, where he was suspended from the ceiling in anticipation of becoming the Wampa's next meal. Luke used the Force to retrieve his lightsaber from the floor of the cave and freed himself from the ice entrapping his leg. The Wampa attacked again, and Luke fought the vicious creature, escaping only after severing one of the Wampa's arms. – Product blurb: Luke Skywalker (Hoth Attack) Action Figure Luke Skywalker has had a very bad day on Hoth. While on a routine mounted patrol on the surface of the ice world Hoth, the young Rebel Commander had spotted what looked like a meteor falling from the sky. Before he could investigate, the huge clawed paw of a hungry Wampa Ice Creature slammed him off his tauntaun and knocked him out. When Luke regained consciousness some time

Book Review: 'The Battle of the Generals: The Untold Story of the Falaise Pocket-The Campaign That Should Have Won World War II'

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(C) 1993 William Morrow & Co.  Martin Blumenson's The Battle of the Generals: The Untold Story of the Falaise Gap – The Campaign That Should Have Won World War II is an interesting, though never quite captivating study of the controversial Battle of the Falaise Gap, the climax of Operation Overlord in August of 1944. Blumenson, author of Breakout and Pursuit (1963) and an eminent military historian, focuses on the "big picture" as he focuses on what he frankly believes was the Allies' biggest blunder in the campaign in Northwest Europe: the failure of the Allied armies to close the Falaise Gap and trap the shattered remnants of two German armies west of the Seine River. Blumenson states point-blank that had Eisenhower, Bradley, and Montgomery paid more attention to the immediate goal of destroying the German army in Normandy instead of being diverted by visions of a triumphal march into Germany, many German troops and their equipment would have been se

Movie Review: 'Darkest Hour'

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Darkest Hour (2017) Directed by: Joe Wright Written by: Anthony McCarten Starring: Gary Oldman, Kristin Scott-Thomas, Ben Mendelsohn, Lily James, Ronald Pickup, Stephen Dillane On December 22, 2017, Universal Pictures released Darkest Hour, a historical dramatization that depicts the ascension of Winston Churchill (Gary Oldman) from First Lord of the Admiralty to Prime Minister and the immense challenges he faced in the spring of 1940 - Great Britain's "darkest hour" during World War II. Written by Anthony McCarten ( The Theory of Everything ) and directed by Joe Wright ( Atonement ), Darkest Hour earned six Academy Award nominations at the 2017 Oscars ceremony and took home two trophies (Best Actor - Gary Oldman and Best Makeup and Hairstyling - Kazuhiro Tsuji, David Malinowski, and Lucy Sibbick), plus another armful of award and accolades at the Golden Globes, British Film Awards, Austin Film Critics Awards, and other film fetes.  Darkest

Talkin' About... 'Star Wars': What Stories Do You Prefer? Canon or Legends?

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I prefer canon. Star Wars,  after all, did not originate from a book or series of books a la  Harry Potter ,  Hunger Games,  or the Jack Ryan films. It was, first and foremost, a film that grew into a movie franchise, with tie-in novelizations, comic book adaptations, and even radio dramatizations. With the exception of  Splinter of the Mind’s Eye,  none of the first “Expanded Universe” novels published by Del Rey between 1978 and 1985 took place within the same time span of the Original Trilogy.  Splinter  stands out because it was an adaptation of George Lucas’s “Plan B” for a quick and inexpensive sequel to  Star Wars  in case the 1977 film was not a big success at the box office. But the Han Solo and Lando Calrissian trilogies that were published during the Original Trilogy era all describe events that occur before the Galactic Civil War. The Expanded Universe that emerged after Bantam Spectra published Timothy Zahn’s  Star Wars: Heir to the Empire  started out, as

Classic PC Game Review: 'Star Wars: X-Wing Collector's Edition - CD ROM'

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If you're a reader of Bantam Spectra's long-running Star Wars: X-Wing novels by Michael A. Stackpole and Aaron Alliston, you know the books were not only inspired by George Lucas' original Star Wars Trilogy and the subsequent Expanded Universe novels by Timothy Zahn and other authors, but also by Star Wars: X-Wing , a best-selling series of PC games from Lucasarts Games. Designed by Lawrence Holland ( Strike Fleet ) and Edward Kilham, Star Wars: X-Wing first appeared in 3.5-inch floppy disk format for DOS-based IBM PCs and compatible machines which used the Intel 386 processor. I couldn't afford it back then -- a brand new 5-disc set with manual and a copy of The Farlander Papers cost about $50 back in 1993 -- but my then-neighbor Geno Betancourt had a brand-new copy. Geno, knowing I love Star Wars and PC games, loaned me his Star Wars: X-Wing software and the manual -- he was both working and studying long hours back then, and he wasn't playing the g

Book Review: 'Star Wars: Thrawn'

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Cover art by Two Dots. (C) 2017 Del Rey Books and Lucasfilm Ltd. (LFL) On April 11, 2017, Del Rey Books, an imprint of Random House, published Timothy Zahn's canonical novel, Star Wars: Thrawn, the long-awaited origin story of one of the greatest villains ever created for the space-fantasy franchise set "a long time ago in a galaxy far, far away." Grand Admiral Thrawn was originally conceived by Zahn in the early Nineties when Lucasfilm and Bantam Spectra hired the Hugo Award-winning author to reboot the moribund Star Wars Expanded Universe. Star Wars - Episode VI: Return of the Jedi. the final chapter of George Lucas's storied trilogy, was only followed by a handful of Lando Calrissian novels set before Star Wars - Episode IV: A New Hope and a lackluster Marvel Comics line that ended publication in 1986. And with the long-rumored Prequel Trilogy apparently on permanent hold, it looked as though the franchise itself was in danger of dying. The publication

Book Review: 'Star Wars: I, Jedi'

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Cover art by Drew Struzan. (C) 1998 Bantam Spectra and Lucasfilm Ltd. (LFL) One of the side effects of creating a literary "expanded universe" of a popular movie or television series is the studio's licensing division coming in and saying to a diverse group of authors something like  Okay, go ahead and write novels based on our characters and situations and carry the story forward, even though what counts as the Official Story is what we show on movie screens or TV shows. We will vet almost anything so long as it doesn't seriously contradict or affect any past or future project we may have later on. Lovely idea, this, since it keeps the fans happy with new stories set in their favorite universes and gives them new insights into the offscreen lives and "further adventures" of such characters as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the captains and crews of the various starships named  Enterprise , and, of course, the heroes and villains that populate George Luc