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George Lucas' Galactic Empire article - from Time, in 1978 (re plans for 12 episodes)

Author
Time
 (Edited)

From Time Magazine:

George Lucas’ Galactic Empire

Get ready for Star Wars II, III, IV, V …

Posted Monday, Mar. 6, 1978

Last time we saw him, you may remember, Darth Vader was tumbling away to a safe star, and the evil Galactic Empire, momentarily stunned by the mysterious Force, was licking its wounds in preparation for… Star Wars II, of course, and the further adventures of Luke Skywalker. Already scouts are scouring the globe for exotic, unworldly-looking locations, from the jungles of central Africa to the arctic wastes of Lapland, and shooting is expected to begin next February. If all goes well, the Star Wars sequel will be out by Christmas of 1979.

Along with Luke, Darth Vader will be back, as menacing as ever, as will Princess Leia, Han Solo, the Wookie Chewbacca and computerdom’s cutest robots, Artoo Detoo and Threepio. There will also be several new characters, “of various genres,” as Creator George Lucas phrases it, together with “aliens, robots and others, including humans.” What about Obi-wan-Kenobi, the role that last week brought Alec Guinness an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor? Lucas is suddenly circumspect. “Obi-wan’s aura will be there,” he says cautiously, “his essence, if you like.”

Whatever it does to the Galactic Empire, the Force has all but taken over little earth, and Lucas has formed something like a galactic empire of his own. Star Wars I seems likely to ring up anywhere between $300 million and $400 million around the world, making it the biggest grosser in film history. An additional $200 million or so will come from toys, records and the myriad of other Star Wars gadgets and gimmicks.

Anticipating his share, an estimated $80 million, Lucas has set up four corporations: Star Wars Corp. will make Star Wars II and the ten, count ‘em, ten other planned sequels; Medway Productions will make other kinds of films, including a sequel to Lucas’ 1973 hit, American Graffiti. Sprocket Systems Inc. will provide special effects for the Star Wars progeny and any other films that need its services, and Black Falcon Ltd. will market books, records, toys and other spin-offs from Lucas’ films.

The whole purpose of his cosmic conglomerate, Lucas says, is to make money so that he and his friends can escape the tyranny of the studios and make good movies–or at least the kind of movies they like. He was traumatized by his experience with American Graffiti, where Universal arbitrarily cut five minutes from his finished version of the film. He vows that it will never happen again. “It wasn’t a film by Lucas,” he says bitterly. “It was a film made by me with changes by the studio. That isn’t fair.” One of the first jobs of Medway Productions will be to put American Graffiti back into distribution. It will be shown, with the five minutes restored, this May.

“I’m simply trying to become a free man. I’m trying to set up an alternative film making that allows me more freedom to do what I want, within certain parameters. We’re trying to make a company that will respect the personality and individuality of film makers. Part of my good fortune is to be making progress in that direction. I feel it’s a destiny of sorts.” He is already helping, free of charge, his friend Francis Coppola cut his epic Apocalypse Now and trim it to something like four hours."

 

Most of Lucas’ new riches have indeed gone into his various projects rather than into his pocket, and his life has hardly changed since May 25, when Star Wars rocketed onto the screens. He still drives a 1967 Camaro, still wears the same Levi’s and cords, and still walks around in the same battered shoes and sneakers. When he leaves his home in San Francisco for the Los Angeles movie labs, he stays with friends in the unfashionable San Fernando Valley, avoiding the Beverly Hills-Malibu axis as if it were enemy territory, which for him it is. The only real change is that he has finally finished furnishing his house in San Francisco, and he and his wife Marcia, one of the best-known film editors in the business, have allowed themselves to relax on weekends.

Lucas said when he was making Star Wars that he was giving up directing, and, true to his word, SWII will be directed by Irvin Kershner (The Flim Flam Man and Raid on Entebbe). “But I’ve always thought,” he says, “that sooner or later, somewhere down the road, I will go back and do another one. But it will be toward the end of the cycle, about 20 years from now.” Would you believe 2001?

Would you believe it! 20 years down the road from 1978 makes for 1998, at which point Lucas was again seated in the director’s chair for Episode 1. Now, this is as much a coincidence as it was a conscious decision on his part of course, but imagine what a Star Wars legacy we would have been left with if he had stayed as true to real talents and original vision as he did to this vision for directing!

 

Mod Edit: a link to the above article can be found here:-

https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,915986-1,00.html

Author
Time
Lucas doesn't like directing, but he's good at it. The one thing he's not good at is disciplining himself to limit CGI, and he benefits if he hires a good writer - which he doesn't do very much. The fact that he directed the prequels shows that he was willing to go the extra mile - he didn't have to. I hope to see some new talent from Lucas in the future ... and not just Indiana Jones 4 - in fact I wish they'd just drop the idea for a new Indy movie entirely, they've waited too long (Harrison Ford is older then Lucas for crying out loud).
Some were not blessed with brains.
<blockquote>Originally posted by: BadAssKeith

You are passing up on a great opportunity to makes lots of money,
make Lucas lose a lot of his money
and make him look bad to the entire world
and you could be well known and liked

None of us here like Lucas or Lucasfilm.
I have death wishes on Lucas and Macullum.
we could all probably get 10s of thousands of dollars!