 Who Lives
In The Star Wars Galaxy? by
Stephen Schochet
| | It's hard to say where old Hollywood ended
and new Hollywood began. People in the industry don't think of
themselves as making history, they are just going to work. But the day
in 1967 that Jack Warner cleaned out his desk at Warner Bros. studio,
George Lucas and Francis Ford Coppola arrived on the lot.
The two
young filmmakers were very different in demeanor. Coppola a legend at
UCLA film school was 27, a loud boisterous mixture of mogul and Marxist,
who prided himself in dressing like Fidel Castro. He impressed film
executives at first with his bravado, but later would upset them with
his reckless overspending. Five years younger, Lucas, who went to USC,
was quiet and introspective. The only guys at Warners who were below 30
and wore beards, they hit it off instantly with Coppola taking the
mentor role. Lucas had made a thirteen minute science fiction film
project called THX 1138, a dark look at a computer controlled future,
which contained some elements that would later be used in Star Wars.
Coppola convinced his protege to extend it into a full-length film and
talked the new executives at Warner Bros. into financing it.
Over the next few months
the wily Coppola played both sides. "I'm telling you this kid Lucas
is making a great film." Coppola told the Warner brass. "Don't
put pressure on yourself, they don't expect anything," He reassured
Lucas. When they saw the completed THX 1138 the Suits were furious.
"Francis what is this?" "I don't know, I've never seen
it." replied the bewildered producer. To Lucas's dismay the studio
cut out parts from THX 1138 before they released it. "They're
cutting the fingers off my baby."
THX failed at the box
office and Coppola was held financially liable for $300,000, but the two
filmmakers were given another chance to make a low budget movie at
Universal. Impressed by the success of Easy Rider (1969) the old guard
at the studio was reaching out to new talent, once again Coppola would
produce and Lucas would direct. Lucas was encouraged by his wife Marsha
to make the second project more positive. At USC he had studied
anthropology learning that the American male has a unique mating ritual,
he drives around in cars trying to pick up girls. Lucas combined this
observation, with his own love of classic cars, his small town
upbringing in Modesto, California and his appreciation for top 40 songs
played on the radio by disc jockeys like Wolfman Jack. These elements
were blended together with a talented young cast to form American
Graffiti (1973).
The now beloved film got off to a rocky start.
It was previewed in San Francisco to a young crowd who adored it. After
the show Lucas and Coppola waited for the Universal executives to come
and congratulate them. Instead they were shocked by angry accusations
that they had planted their friends in the crowd and American Graffiti
was not releasable. True to their personas Coppola argued and Lucas
stood quiet. Once again George saw his film taken away and cut up by
what was in his view an interfering, know nothing studio. But unlike THX Graffiti was a hit, a
highly profitable film that made Lucas a millionaire.
Now Lucas
decided to return to science fiction, this time wanting to do a more
positive story than THX. After failing to acquire the rights to Flash
Gordon, he sat down to write his own screenplay. Influenced by the
writings of Carlos Castaneda and the mythology of King Arthur, he based
the characters on familiar figures. Luke Skywalker's personality came
from George Lucas himself, young, adventurous, and quiet from a small
town, with a love of racing cars, or in this case space pods. Han Solo
was based on . . . Francis Ford Coppola. He was loud, cocky, reckless,
always in debt, going through a love-hate relationship with the younger
Skywalker. And the empire was actually the Hollywood studios. George
Lucas striving for his creative freedom as a filmmaker would parallel
Luke Skywalker's journey to win liberty from the empire, and both would
achieve it thanks to Star Wars.
| | Stephen Schochet is the author of Hollywood Stories: Short, Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and Legends of the Movies! (isbn 9780963897275)
Available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon or wherever books are sold.
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| | Stephen Schochet is the author of the upcoming book
Hollywood Stories: Short Entertaining Anecdotes About the Stars and
Legends of the Movies. He is also the author of two acclaimed
audiobooks
Tales of Hollywood: Hear the Origins of Hollywood!
and
Fascinating Walt Disney: Hear How Walt Disney's Dreams Came
True!
These entertaining gift items are available at Amazon,
Barnes and Noble, 1-800-431-1579 or wherever books are sold.
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