[via whenanangelfalls]
george lucas
The key that unlocked Luke for me though, came from a commenter on TheForce.net named Jedi Princess. “Luke is gentle, in a way that so few action/adventure movie heroes are.” I read that and immediately flashed back to an anecdote from the making of A New Hope. When Luke and C-3PO track down R2-D2, Hamill initially played the scene angrily — only to hear George Lucas say “cut” and tell him, “it’s not a big deal.” Hamill then delivered a deliberately understated take, expecting the director to concede more emotion was needed. Lucas thought it was perfect. It was the moment Hamill understood the character, and years later it helped me do the same thing.
This isn’t to say Luke is passive in the classic trilogy. But he destroys the Death Star by taking Obi-Wan Kenobi’s advice to “let go,” and he defeats the Emperor not through his lightsaber skills, but by awakening his father’s love. It’s in Empire that Luke is most active, and his decisions prove disastrous for himself and his friends. It’s the opposite of what you’d expect in big action movies. Once I realized all that, I had the foundation for the story I wanted to tell.
in 2010 George Lucas said “I am dedicating the majority of my wealth to improving education. It is the key to the survival of the human race.” Two years later, Lucas sold Lucasfilm Ltd. to Disney for 4.05 billion dollars and donated the proceeds to a charity that focuses on education.
It’s hard to hate on a man who donates $4 billion to educational charities…
Nothing but love, respect and gratitude for this man.
Source can be found here, folks
Whilst researching that post about George Lucas’s politics (it made it to Tumblr Radar, huh) I did run across a pretty interesting story that I don’t think many people know –
– namely, that Boondocks creator Aaron McGruder (like most people) thought Jar Jar Binks was an upsetting racial stereotype and was very vocal in criticizing Lucas for the character. So Lucas personally called him up – and hired him to work on Red Tails.
(Which, you know, that shouldn’t be highly praiseworthy, that’s what billionaire white filmmakers ought to be doing. But I’m really glad he at least recognized there was a problem and took steps to correct it.)
The story being told in ‘Star Wars’ is a classic one. Every few hundred years, the story is retold because we have a tendency to do the same things over and over again. Power corrupts, and when you’re in charge, you start doing things that you think are right, but they’re actually not.
(via awesome-daily-quotes)
george lucas literally set up return of the jedi to be an allegory of/protest against the Vietnam War
revenge of the sith
was so anti-Bush (Anakin even paraphrases a Bush line at one point) that people boycotted it
emperor palpatine was very deliberately based on Nixon
lucas later went on to compare Bush to Darth Vader and Dick Cheney to Palpatine, plus he’ll talk at any given opportunity about how political he wanted the prequels to be
but please, keep talking about how ‘the sjws’ have ‘destroyed star wars’ by bringing politics into it
#nute gunray is named after newt gingrich and ronald reagan#the war-profiteering kaminoan senator in clone wars is named halle burtoni#after halliburton#lucas wasn’t even a little bit subtle












