ForgottenTcklr
4th Level Red Feather
- Joined
- May 11, 2001
- Messages
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Long Ago in a Galaxy Somewhere...In Dublin?
Tue Nov 12, 9:04 AM ET
DUBLIN (Reuters) - "Star Wars" director George Lucas, please phone home...or at least get in touch with the library at Trinity College, Dublin.
Library administrator Robin Adams would like to discuss an uncanny resemblance between the 18th-century Long Room Library at Trinity, and the "Jedi Archives" in the latest episode of the "Star Wars" epic.
A picture of the Jedi Archives from the film "Star Wars Episode II--Attack of the Clones" sits side by side with a photograph of The Long Room on the Web Site of the Architectural Association of Ireland (www.irish-architecture.com).
The resemblance is, well, almost clone-like.
Not only is the vaulted ceiling exactly the same, but even the statues are in almost identical places. Some wags say if you look hard enough, you might see Trinity enfant terrible Oscar Wilde peeking out from the Jedi stacks.
The striking similarity was noted some time ago in a student newspaper when the latest "Star Wars" film was released last May.
But it was only this past weekend that Adams wrote a letter to Lucasfilms suggesting the company might want to acknowledge a debt to architect Thomas Burgh, who died in 1730 but whose work apparently lives on, in a parallel universe.
"It would be nice if there were some kind of response," Adams told Reuters.
"The library would have been used by historic figures of the past, Oscar Wilde and so forth...it's quite nice if..."
If it was used by Jedi Knights?
"Yes, exactly," Adams said.
Some Irish news reports have suggested Trinity was thinking of suing but Adams said this was not so. Apparently Trinity has not succumbed to the power of the dark side -- yet.
Tue Nov 12, 9:04 AM ET
DUBLIN (Reuters) - "Star Wars" director George Lucas, please phone home...or at least get in touch with the library at Trinity College, Dublin.
Library administrator Robin Adams would like to discuss an uncanny resemblance between the 18th-century Long Room Library at Trinity, and the "Jedi Archives" in the latest episode of the "Star Wars" epic.
A picture of the Jedi Archives from the film "Star Wars Episode II--Attack of the Clones" sits side by side with a photograph of The Long Room on the Web Site of the Architectural Association of Ireland (www.irish-architecture.com).
The resemblance is, well, almost clone-like.
Not only is the vaulted ceiling exactly the same, but even the statues are in almost identical places. Some wags say if you look hard enough, you might see Trinity enfant terrible Oscar Wilde peeking out from the Jedi stacks.
The striking similarity was noted some time ago in a student newspaper when the latest "Star Wars" film was released last May.
But it was only this past weekend that Adams wrote a letter to Lucasfilms suggesting the company might want to acknowledge a debt to architect Thomas Burgh, who died in 1730 but whose work apparently lives on, in a parallel universe.
"It would be nice if there were some kind of response," Adams told Reuters.
"The library would have been used by historic figures of the past, Oscar Wilde and so forth...it's quite nice if..."
If it was used by Jedi Knights?
"Yes, exactly," Adams said.
Some Irish news reports have suggested Trinity was thinking of suing but Adams said this was not so. Apparently Trinity has not succumbed to the power of the dark side -- yet.