The Millennium Falcon was not a focal point of the movie. It was just there, it was a space ship. It was a hurdle the studio had to overcome to help create the atmosphere for the story.
Kind of like the shots in the clip you posted. Most of the greenscreen is being used to extend streets and sets; "atmosphere for the story."
Look at the difference between The Empire Strikes Back and the newer Phantom Menace. The special effects of The Empire Strikes Back look primitive compared to the Phantom. Yet, why is Empire a CLASSIC, and Phantom considered by most to suck? Story.
Yep. Lucas intended for all 6 episodes to be as silly as the recent ones. He is quoted as saying that he could only complete 40% of his vision for STAR WARS (THE NEW HOPE). When he released the Special Editions, he added a bunch of stupid CGI shots - Greedo firing first, Jabba talking to Han, Jawas falling off of gigantic beasts in the streets of Mos Eisley, etc, etc. Thank goodness, he didn't digitize Chewbacca like he did to Yoda and Jar Jar!
Lucas was limited to mostly practical effects, proving your following point:
Just because you can do certain things, doesn't mean you should.
C grade horror movies from the 40s and 50s are better then most movies coming out today. That's pathetic. But, even in those awful acted flicks lies a semi decent story.
Back then, there was very little budget for anything but the story. The other difference is that today's output of content (good or bad) is 1000 fold or more. Back then, you had movies, radio or theater. Today, you have hundreds of channels and people able to make Youtube videos with their readily available Iphones. You have to sift through a lot of muck to find true talent. The talent is still there, but there's more muck.
You mentioned Hitchcock - he's one of my favorites.
BUT, back then it was done to enhance the story. The story wasn't written around the bg or the effect. Nowadays that's all there is.
Not entirely. The technology is simply a tool. The video you posted to reminds me of the mattes they used to pull off, such as inserting a palace into the existing shot (R2 and 3PO approaching Jabba's or Indiana Jones approaching the palace in TEMPLE OF DOOM). How about those Albert Whitlock glass matte paintings for EARTHQUAKE or THE THING (saucer shot), or Obi Wan Kenobi standing on the ledge in the Death Star core? It's the same thing - matting. Whether done with computer or physical matte, it is still the same process that has been around for decades.
I used mattes to hide the fact that we shot EXILE in my backyard:
There was no way BLM was letting me build that 24' hallway on location! Does using a matte make me a bad person? No, it's just a tool. I put my effort into the movie's plot. Though that didn't seem to be what distributors cared about, so you may be right about the attitude of the industry. They preferred snazzy effects, instead. Have you watched it, yet? I traded you US SINNERS for it.
Above everything else, I'm a movie lover.
I'm guessing you didn't like INCEPTION or AVATAR?

