|  | Posted by Fred Goodwin, CMA on 05/28/06 03:51 
How Star Wars Surprised the World
 http://www.americanheritage.com/entertainment/articles/web/20060525-star-wars-george-lucas-movies-hollywood-luke-skywalker-darth-vader-american-graffiti-science-fiction-special-effects.shtml
 http://tinyurl.com/fvs66
 
 In the late 1970s most movie theater owners simply weren't interested
 in a movie set in space. The last truly successful science-fiction film
 had been 1968's 2001: A Space Odyssey; more recent fare, such as the
 ecological fable Silent Running (1972), had bombed. So on May 25,
 1977-29 years ago today-Star Wars opened on just 32 screens
 nationwide.
 
 It didn't look like a logical career move for its creator, the
 director George Lucas, either. After the unexpected smash success of
 his American Graffiti (1973), which earned him two Oscar nominations
 and millions of dollars, the then-29-year old director was a hot
 commodity in Hollywood. For a follow-up he decided to develop an idea
 he'd been tinkering with for years: a space fantasy, complete with
 elaborate sets and dazzling special effects. He struck a deal with 20th
 Century Fox for $150,000 to write and direct the movie that would
 become Star Wars.
 
 He already had some experience with the sci-fi genre, having filmed the
 grim, low-budget Orwellian tale THX 1138 (1971). He now aimed to tell a
 more optimistic and straightforward story of good versus evil, right
 versus wrong-a story that he felt would particularly appeal to
 children. But he struggled with the Star Wars script for more than two
 years, seeking inspiration from sources such as 1950s sci-fi movies,
 1930s Flash Gordon serials, and quasi-mystical contemporary sci-fi
 novels such as Frank Herbert's Dune. He also studied the work of the
 writer Joseph Campbell, whose research into various cultures'
 archetypical hero mythologies, detailed in his 1949 book The Hero With
 a Thousand Faces, helped provide a template for the Star Wars plot.
 "There's a whole generation growing up without any kind of fairy
 tales," Lucas said later. "And kids need fairy tales."
 
 After constant writing and revising, he eventually had enough material
 for three movies. But the first one, he knew, had to be a success, and
 his perfectionism drove him to oversee every aspect of its production.
 He spent months auditioning relatively unknown actors. Some who were
 rejected would later become major stars, including Christopher Walken,
 Nick Nolte, Jodie Foster, and Amy Irving. The role of Luke Skywalker
 (who was originally going to be named Luke Starkiller) went to the
 unknown Mark Hamill. Harrison Ford, who had had a bit part in American
 Graffiti, was cast as Han Solo, and Carrie Fisher, the daughter of the
 actress Debbie Reynolds and the singer Eddie Fisher, won the part of
 Leia.
 
 With an initial budget of only $8.5 million, production began in March
 1976 in the deserts of Tunisia, in Africa, and one disaster followed
 another. On the second day of shooting it rained-the first winter
 rain the area had seen in 50 years. The controls for the robot R2-D2
 constantly malfunctioned, and a whole day was spent on a shot of the
 robot moving only a few feet. Sand damaged camera equipment beyond
 repair, and windstorms destroyed expensive sets that had been shipped
 in from England.
 
 The production later moved to the sprawling Elstree Studios outside
 London, and none of the British crew took the project seriously. This
 was, after all, a movie with robots and a furry "Wookiee."
 Technicians inadvertently damaged sets with explosions, one of which
 caused a stuntman to be hospitalized. The actors, meanwhile, tried to
 make sense of Lucas's standoffish directorial style. After one take
 he admonished them by saying, "Uh. . . let's do it again, only this
 time . . . do it better."
 
 Returning to California after the overseas production wrapped, Lucas
 discovered that his special-effects team, the newly founded Industrial
 Light & Magic, had completed only 3 of 365 special-effects shots yet
 had spent more than $1 million of the $2 million special-effects
 budget. The next day he was hospitalized overnight with chest pains.
 Suffering from hypertension and exhaustion, he vowed that once he
 completed Star Wars, he would never direct another film.
 
 He and his crew worked around the clock to finish the movie, enduring
 numerous additional setbacks. The special effects went 35 percent over
 budget, and the entire film's budget ballooned to more than $10
 million; Mark Hamill suffered a car accident that severely injured his
 face, making reshoots with him impossible. Many Fox executives were
 certain the movie would be an unmitigated flop.
 
 On May 25, 1977, Star Wars' release date, Lucas spent the day mixing
 foreign-language versions in a sound studio in Los Angeles. He called
 his wife and asked her to meet him at a local hamburger joint for
 dinner. As they approached the restaurant, the noticed that the streets
 were clogged with traffic, and crowds of people were filling the
 sidewalks. He had forgotten that Star Wars was playing at the famous
 Mann's Chinese Theatre, across the street from the restaurant. The
 crowds were there to see his film.
 
 Word of mouth quickly spread that the movie was a one-of-a-kind
 experience, and moviegoers, particularly children, attended it in
 droves all over the country. Some $3 million in tickets were sold in
 the first week of release-in only those 32 theaters. By the end of
 1977, more than 1 in 20 moviegoers had seen Star Wars several times. By
 April 1978 it had grossed a staggering $215 million in the United
 States alone, smashing box-office records. It would go on to rake in
 six Academy Awards, as well as millions of dollars from product
 merchandising, including Star Wars calendars, soundtrack albums, and
 action figures. Five sequels would follow, and the seemingly tireless
 Lucas would direct three of them.
 
 Star Wars not only rejuvenated the moribund science-fiction genre; it
 also ushered in the era of the summer blockbuster movie-which, for
 better or worse, transformed the way the movie industry does business.
 Film companies would increasingly channel millions into big-budget
 escapist fare and forgo smaller, low-budget films. Lucas's Industrial
 Light & Magic would go on to revolutionize visual effects in film. Such
 spectacle is an integral part of American movies to this day, driving
 budgets-and box-office grosses-ever higher. For the movie industry,
 Star Wars was a fairy tale with a very happy ending.
 
 -David Rapp has written about history for American Heritage,
 Technology Review, and Out. He has a degree in film from New York
 University.
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