Subject: The Films of George Lucas
Electronic Labyrinth: THX-1138: 4EB A virtually silent film (save two words) with a complicated sound overlay, "EE:THX" is a security tape summary of one man's attempt to escape an anti-septic, electronically-monitored society of the future. Perform
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THX-1138 - Lucas' expansion of his student film was the first production of Coppola's American Zoetrope Studios - and nearly sank it. Lucas lucked out being able to use the still-under-construction BART system and tunnels. Good cast headed (baldly) by Robert Duvall and Donald Pleasance. The reverent score by Lalo Schifrin and sound-design/screenplay by Walter Murch all help the look and feel of the production. Lucas' depressive eye for angles and ideas on societal strictures are all an improvement, and if one is bored by the extended sociological tack of the film, they are paid off with an adrenaline-pumping chase, with a suitably triumphant finale. Lucas' "Director's Cut" restores "Buck Rogers" serial footage which over-states the theme of the movie, and adds CGI-enhanced scenes for bigger scale and "coolness" factor, but ultimately they're unnecessary.
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Star Wars - Making a movie he "wanted to see," Lucas cribbed f
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Episode I: The Phantom Menace
Episode II: Attack of the Clones
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Episode III: Revenge of the Sith - After Lucas' traumatic experiences making "Star Wars" - only to see it become the most successful film ever made - Lucas took a desk-job and only emerged after investing the millions of dollars in "Star Wars" earnings to perfect the techniques of CGI-centered, high-definition video (which would prove to be the wave of the future for film-makers) to make his epic "Star Wars" prequel trilogy. But despite the technological advances from frame 00:00;01 to the last, all the tech services a story that constantly skirts the sophisticated and plays to the cheap seats.
Somewhere along the way, Lucas lost sight of his audience; instead of aiming for the 25-year old geeks like himself, as he originally did, he chose to aim for the kids (his kids, no doubt) to tell the story of Anakin Skywalker's corruption to become the technoid villain Darth Vader (along with the destru
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There is a lot to like about the prequels - its sumptuous art design, the abandonment of some of the more black-and-white concepts (the Republic is subverted from within to become the Evil Empire rather than, say, invasion), Lucas' brief flirtation with the "Messiah as Asshole" storyline, the full-scale commitment to the "good-girl/bad-boy" story - but ultimately one has to ask: "With all the time and money invested in the movies, shouldn't they have been better?" Lucas had the unique ability to do everything he wanted, and a tough, dark storyline that could have said so much more and been worth much more. But then, would it have been the B-movie-based "Star Wars?" Would that have been even less a crowd-pleaser? As they were, they were grudgingly
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Lucas, in interviews around the time of "Sith," was well-aware of the ironies: He started as a "rebel" film-maker battling the big bad Studio System and, in so doing, managed to create his own Lucasfilm Empire with more power and autonomy than any Studio in Hollywood. He became more of a Studio than they were. And I think he is equally aware that fate is its own tragedy. His fortunes are tied forever with "Star Wars"...and he never managed to completely leave his home-town of Modesto.
The young Lucas would hold the older in complete disdain. But that's what happens when one's goals are for power above all else. In completing his "Star Wars" prequels, he told a story that paralleled his own.
*...with any luck.
**Ouvre: 1.the works of a writer, painter, or the like, taken as a whole.
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