Surprised you didn’t mention how Endor was originally the ‘sanctuary moon’ around Coruscant. Meaning the final climactic battle was supposed to be over Coruscant to properly overthrow the Empire…
The same way Max and Amazon are creating a LOTR series, maybe someone should make a SW skywalker series. Reinvent the entire story as a 9 season episodic with these old ideas fleshed out
The Ewoks work on a thematic level. Luke underestimated Yoda due to his size when he first met the Jedi Master. Yoda stated, "Judge me by my size... size matters not." Luke trusted the Ewoks and demonstrated he had learned a critical lesson.
Yeah and when you watch the scene the Ewoks get absolutely whooped after some initial creative (and conveniently already prepared) traps. It's pretty harrowing stuff hearing them get shot, scream and shake lifeless bodies. People talk like he made this unrealistic super effective army of cuddly toys.
@@rumblehat4357No, revenge aligns more with the Sith, and the Jedi did return in the 6th movie through Luke (and Vader returning to the light, as well). Actually makes more sense how it is
No, that would’ve been a horrible idea. Jedi don’t take revenge because it is associated with the dark side, and the Sith were already established and recognized as having returned since Episode 1.
My friend worked at the theater when "Revenge of the Jedi" posters and cardboard cutouts were staged in early 1983. He still has some of them, serious collector's items.
Always felt like Yoda’s line about Leia could have been about Vader, because he too could still sense the good in him and believed he could be turned back to the good, with Luke having come to terms with the identity of his father
You are actually completely correct. I've read all of the available drafts online of Return of the Jedi and one of the earlier drafts explicitly explains what Yoda meant in Empire as referring to Anakin.
CGI is partly to blame for the prequels looking stupid and for the Hobbit looking bad..its a cop out and takes away from realism in scenes..i personally like Return of the Jedi and its choices.
Holy shit, I was 6 at the time watching either Star Wars or Empire Strikes back in 1982/early 1983 and do remember those posters saying Revenge of the Jedi. Thanks for bringing up a good memory from a long long time ago!
Oh no…Empire Strikes Back went over budget! Oh no we managed to make the greatest fantasy film of all time until The Fellowship of the Ring!!! Oh no the film made 10x its budget back in its initial run!!!!!!* I see only one solution…fire that hack Gary Kurtz!!!!!!!!!!! /s It will always baffle me. I could see firing Kurtz if The Empire Strikes Back bombed, but firing him would be like firing Kevin Feige after The Avengers. I believe George Lucas always disliked anyone that pushed back, and Kurtz was the artist voice that kept the negative economic voice of Lucas at bay. As much as I love Return of the Jedi as an action adventure film, it is not the grand finale that a Return of the King or even War for the Planet of the Apes is for their respective franchises, and I believe it’s because they cheaped out with the filmmaking and characters and emotions and originality. Why not make the film a three hour epic? The film could cost $100 million, and it would still be profitable (that budget would be excessive, but you get my point). Pay the fines to get Steven Spielberg or Ridley Scott. Go for broke with the third Star Wars. There was never a more sure fire hit in the history of cinema to that point. On the plus side, at least Kurtz made The Dark Crystal and Return to Oz before hitting financial ruin with Slipstream. It’s unfortunate that an artist like Kurtz never bounced back, but hey, money isn’t everything. Kurtz is still the man in my book! *The budget was $30.5 million. The data is a little fuzzy for the initial box office, the domestic box office was around $200 million, so I am being conservative and saying the international was around $100 million.
@@korakys50 years after the death of the creator. No reason why Paul McCartney should lose copyright over his Beatles and Wings songs just because 50 years have passed.
For those interested in this sort of behind-the-scenes stuff, I highly recommend reading Tom Simon’s online essay, “Creative Discomfort and Star Wars”. In essence, his thesis is that the first two movies were great because Lucas and his team took the time and effort to make sure the story was right, drafting and redrafting scripts and waiting for the best ideas to come along. ROTJ is when the series began to sour because of lazy, snap decision-making, and a desire to rush products onto the market as fast as possible without worrying about whether or not the story made any darned sense; it only went downhill from there.
Sorry, I got part way through that and realised it was the typical greasy bullshit, much like this video. And then it just deteriorated into sneery opinion. I feel bad for you if you found it convincing.
There are sequences of Jedi that just blow my mind even today. The speeder bike chase, the cruiser dogfights and the death star surface and tunnels are just incredible!
I got to see ROTJ in the theater when I was 10. Even back then I could tell that there was a slight dip in overall quality, Han Solo had nothing to do, and the Ewoks were a stupid. Carrie Fisher also looked almost 10 years older.
Every official publication and source from 1976 (yes 76) till 1983, had Luke Skywalker described as 20 years old, and Princess Leia as 16 years of age. You can imagine my surprise when in 1983 at The Esquire Theater, I learned that Leia was Luke's twin sister. 🧐
This video is missing a VERY important part of the film. Only a line connected Luke's sister to the force? Leia was shown to be Force sensitive in Empire that's how Luke was able to reach out to here using only his mind.
@@thinkhector Fair point. Though at the time ESB was released, most folks I knew would have guessed that it was just because Luke was getting so strong with the force at this point.
@@thinkhector The idea that Leia herself has some connection to the force (is she the other one Yoda mentions?) . Completely abandoned as far as driving any development in Leia's character. When you stop and think about the Leia who was rescued from the Death Star, the Princess Leia who was three steps ahead of everyone else, who could look Vader and Tarkin in the eye and tell them where they could get off, resist the mind probe, and dismiss her own rescuers as a bunch of amateurs, it is tragic what she became by the time of ROTJ, reduced to prancing around in her slave outfit, sharing an Oreo with an Ewok, playing the straight man to Solo's clown, put in a series of ridiculous situations that had nothing to do with her as - supposedly - a princess (not elected) of a people who had lost their homeland and leader of a rebellion on the ropes. So many interesting story lines that could have been developed for her in ROTJ! Starting with her relationship with the Force.
In my youth I worked in a toy shop and was invited to a trade show where details , and toys, of the next Star Wars film were released. Told all my mates about the what I had seen. Was horrified when it came out as Return and not Revenge. Also horrified that I had not stolen one of the posters that were all over the place. Would be worth a pretty penny today!!
I've heard a lot of these tidbits, if not the reasons behind them, like the difficulty of finding 7 foot actors. Never heard about a mystery sister or the death star battle originally being the ending for Return of the Jedi. I'm very curious about what that trilogy would look like. There is a lot of revisionist history coming from Lucas' camp over the years. I feel like so much of Star Wars was Lucas flying by the seat of his pants, and a lot of the things people point to as being part of his master plan all along were almost accidental. One of my favorite stories is how Lucas gave a green light to kill Vader to an author writing an early Star Wars novel.
George Lucas' greatest work is his own mythology, but anybody who's really followed what he does knows you're right about him flying by the seat of his pants and pretending to have ultimate control (then when he DID have ultimate control, he made tepid movies and then sold the franchise). He has crafted the narrative of himself being a mastermind with the implication that 'without me there wouldn't have been any advances in special effects or fun sci-fi movies'. He distracts from his real inspirations to avoid copyright infringement and to pretend he's got higher-art motives for everything. The whole 'Joseph Campbell' thing, he didn't know anything about that until AFTER he started making movies. It wasn't an inspiration to him, it was an observation about his work by somebody else.
That's always been Star Wars in a nutshell. Especially when you go back to interviews and materials from of the time that the original trilogy was being made or even before that time. Lucas has always given conflicting information and the crew members and actors on the films even give different information than what Lucas would say. It seems like he wrote a shit ton of lore, but was constantly always trying to figure out how to make sense of it while telling a story. It's always wild to me when people these days talk about George like he had this all masterfully planned out when in reality the original Star Wars was a huge gamble that just so happened to pay off for him big time. He had to keep the ball rolling when the success came.
@@jamescarter3196 Looks like it is that, pretty much. I was a teenager when the first movie came out, and while I live in Europe we could get at least some of the American and UK magazines specializing in things like science fiction and movies here, and I remember reading a few interviews before the last movie which rather gushed about the role of Marcia Lucas when it came to the creation of those movies, but then after the divorce it looked like her part had been completely memory holed for years. And how Lucas made Star Wars because he could not get the rights to make Flash Gordon, which is what he had originally wanted to make. No mention of Campbell, as far as I remember, until years later. And a lot of conflicting information, like the fact that after the success of the first movie Lucas seemed determined to make a 9 movie series but then it was just 6, and then he decided for a while that 3 was enough. I never kept any of those magazines I used to buy, something I have later regretted, might be fun to now compare what was in those articles to what got told later. I haven't been able to find much online, but then I don't really even remember what I read where, or what the names of the more obscure or shorter lived magazines were. Lucas's impression of himself probably wasn't much helped by the more adoring part of Star Wars fandom, there still seem to be a lot who are about ready to attack anything that might implicate that he actually had help from others (maybe especially that ex-wife - whose potential importance I do find quite plausible simply based on the fact that he made pretty damn good movies while they were together, but the quality of what he has made after that, especially when he was fully in charge, with the prequels, is nowhere close to those) creating those movies. No, to those fans he is the genius, the ultimate genius, maybe even better than somebody like Shakespeare...
There was a lawsuit by two Canadians who said they sent Lucas their ideas for Ewoks, not expecting he'd take the name and idea and add them to _Return of the Jedi_ without compensating them. They lost, but it could have been true.
George wasn't in the best ways going into this one with his divorce looming ahead, money management being foremost on his mind, and trying to keep this massive Star Wars empire moving forward. He was put through the wringer since the start of production on the 1977 film, so, I could see him being not as enthusiastic and passionate about wrapping up the trilogy with the strongest story possible. Getting it done on budget and on schedule was all that mattered, regardless of how good it really was. DP Alan Hume was a solid and reliable cinematographer, but ROTJ doesn't have that cinematic panache of The Empire Strikes Back. Also, with Marquand passing away a few years after the film's release, we never really got to hear of his experiences first hand.
You can hear from Anthony Daniels, Howard Kazanjian and Marcia Lucas criticising Marquand in the Icons Unearthed documentary. Buying into the Kurtz myth that Lucas compromised the story for toy sales is lazy and naive, but people who the saga to be something different as quite keen to believe anything that validates their opinion. It's what makes people so gullible. Easy for Kurtz and Kasdan to criticise what already exists, but much harder to actually conceive of something as influential or with as much scope as Lucas did, which neither man ever did in their careers.
@@Ruylopez778 All that being said, ROTJ still has the feeling of having been hijacked by a different story, not to mention a different sensibility, than what characterized the first two films. For better or worse, it singularly changed the flavor of Star Wars from what it was before, and set the path for everything to follow. In my opinion, it was not for the better.
Well said Barefoot. And I agree with most of what you said, however, I am of the viewpoint that ROTS was a excellent film and followed in the traditional of New Hope and Empire. Although, the thing that kind of threw me on ROTS was how young Anakin turned out to be because I was under the impression from Ep 4, 5, & 6, that Anakin was a bit older. Especially after casting a 78 year old actor to portray him unmasked in ROTJ.
@@BarefootPeasant It really doesn't no matter how often people exaggerate about it. Subjectively disliking elements of ROTJ or the prequels doesn't mean that the story was 'compromised' as claimed by Kurtz. Kurtz was quite happy to be cavalier with the budget of ESB, knowing that, 'the movie would turn a profit anyway'. Of course, it wasn't his reputation, home, business or employees that would suffer if the shoot collapsed before it even got finished. Now, he claims that giving the director time was necessary to make the movie, but that certainly isn't the way other people on set tell it. And if his 'no rush' approach was so great, why did Kershner turn down the chance to make another movie? Because it was too much for him, much like Lucas felt on ANH. Had they both had a better producer, that got shit done and kept the crew and creatives on good terms, would they have both had better experiences as directors? Probably. But each Star Wars movie made under Lucas (as producer or director and uncredited editor/writer) was hugely ambitious both on a technical level and in terms of scale and depth on screen. To claim otherwise is ignorant - but most likely based on a narrative that that person wants to buy into to - 'I don't want it to be like this, so it should **should have been** what I wanted'. And this has nothing to do with making art or movies, and is purely about entitlement and expectation. And of course, Kurtz wanted to save face by claiming that his ideas and his vision were somehow more sophisticated and character/story focused, which is 'why' he got fired - although does he ever admit he got fired? Kazanjian and Marcia are pretty clear that he did. Although it happened in a very awkward way, because Lucas didn't want to tell him outright, but certainly didn't want him ruining his trilogy or company. The accusation in this video and its previous iteration is that Lucas was a 'businessman' and more concerned with profits than story. 1. this can't be proved, it can only be speculation, based on Kurtz's narrative, and by making further unsubstantiated claims that "prove" this narrative. 2. given that THX flopped commercially and put American Zoetrope in trouble, it's not particularly surprising that Lucas wanted to avoid this. The video, tries to imply that Kurtz is claiming that Lucas tried to be cheap on ESB. However, AFTER Kurtz was fired, and Lucas and Kazanjian did their best to save the production and the movie overall, and after it was released in theaters, Lucas made some small changes to ending, to make it clearer for audiences. So the idea that Lucas has a 'that'll do' approach to Star Wars is simply a reductive claim. Lucas doesn't want to waste time and money on things that don't matter. There is a difference, unless trying to construct a bullshit narrative by misrepresenting the past. Each of Lucas' 6 movies is intentionally different. The accusation that ROTJ 'changed' what came before it, is both an exaggeration and entirely subjective. It was Lucas' decision to make the second movie more character focused and murky - since he wrote both the treatment for Brackett, and rewrote her first draft (that he didn't like) and a further two or three drafts after that. Kasdan was brought in to polish what already existed, and Lucas, Kershner, Kurtz and Kasdan were all part of the story consultation group. You can see photos of how Carrie Fisher rewrote her dialogue, and we know Han improvised his 'I know' out of frustration. And by all accounts it was not a particularly happy set under Kershner and Kurtz. Reportedly Kurtz was scared to say anything to Kershner. But that doesn't stop fans from claiming 'Empire is so much better because Lucas wasn't involved' and 'It was written by Brackett and Kasdan' being the reason for the 'jump in quality'. Lucas was also an uncredited editor as on ANH - confirmed by Paul Hirsch, who was there. Now, ANH and ESB are very different, despite having Lucas as writer/co-writer, co-editor, producer, Hirsch returning as co-editor, Marcia as co-editor, not to mention Kurtz and all the crew and actors that were carried over. So it's fairly easy to conclude that continuity isn't the defining factor in 'what characterized' ANH or ESB. All people are doing is jumping to the conclusion they want to believe, based on which perspective they want to believe, exaggerating, and ignoring anything that contradicts their narrative. People like JJ Abrams feel that 1980 was the pinnacle of Star Wars and the first two should be revered and frozen in time, and Star Wars shouldn't be anything other than those two movies. And when he rehashed it, with all his talk of 'practical effects and sets', and killed off Han, the fans who hate ewoks still weren't happy. And when Rian made Luke disillusioned and gave him his 'bittersweet end', the fans still weren't happy. And neither Marcia Lucas, Howard Kazanjian or Paul Hirsch liked what happened to Han and Luke in the sequels. So I guess we could safely presume that none of them would have been in favour of killing them off in ROTJ, or ending with TLJ's downbeat deconstructionism. The video, like Kurtz, tries to downplay the plot and climax of ROTJ as being derivative or lazy (while apparently failing to understand the psychology or symbolism of it). And what of the mastermind Kurtz and his great ideas...? Dark Crystal? What did he ever make without the 'focus on toys' from Lucas holding him back..?
Great video. I would only like to point out that the reason why Empire went over budget and over schedule wasn't mismanagement on Kurtz's side. It was because he gave Kershnerr free rein during production to take his time and make the best movie possible-which ultimately happened. Kershnerr was a very, very, very slow and meticulous director. He liked to work with the actors and take his time bringing the best performances out of them. And it shows. Lucas was understandably mad about it, but I think Kurtz rationalization behind his decisions was more on point: Empire was going to make a ton of money either way. The risk was minimum and they could afford to make the best movie possible. As it turns out, Empire is still the best Star Wars film around. History ended up proving him right. And it's not that he was a bad producer in any way. Star Wars (the first one) was finished in time thanks to his management of the ILM chaos that was happening back in L.A. while they were shooting the movie in England. George was famously not a people's person, so Kurtz stepped in and course-corrected ILM's efforts in order to finish the special effects mostly on schedule. He did have some disagreements with Lucas from the very beginning, because he was the man who used to tell him "no." Those disagreements got worse during production on Empire, and by the time they were starting to make Jedi, Lucas simply wanted to go in a different direction. A direction more influenced by the money and the toys, and less by the creative side of filmmaking. Was he wrong? I think so. He was also under a lot of stress with his marriage falling apart and becoming a multi-millionaire overnight. He also learned the wrong lesson from making Raiders of the Lost Ark. He thought audiences didn't care about production value, or complex characters, or a complex story. They just wanted entertainment. So that's what Jedi became in the end: entertainment. Is it a bad film? I don't think so. Not the third act, anyway. It's not a strong movie. It's repetitive, sometimes boring, the first act leads nowhere, the stakes were dropped when introducing the Teddy bears, Leia's twist looked like a watered down version of Vader's twist in Empire... and so on. Take away Luke's confrontation of Vader and the Emperor, and the impressive final Rebel attack, and what you get is an uninspired film that shies away from true, compelling storytelling. It could've been so much better. It could've been even great. It could've been the perfect ending for a beloved film trilogy. But it could've been so much worse, too. I mean... have you seen the Special Editions?
I accept what you are saying, but one of the primary responsibilities of a producer is to keep the move on schedule and budget (as much as possible). Lucas delegated a great deal to Kurtz on 'TESB' and supervised the ILM work & editing. You have to remember that Lucas entirely financed the budget (US$ 20 million). The production over-run forced Lucas to take out an additional US$ 10 million approx in bank loans, which potentially jeopardised Lucasfilm's viability/longer term goals. So there was a great deal at stake in case the first SW film had just been a fluke/a happy coincidence of timing when released. I regret many of the key decisions on 'ROTJ', but from Lucas' own p.o.v. it was far more understandable to both keep a tight reign on production and to wrap up a film series that had cost him a lot personally.
I never had a problem with the Jabba sequence. After all, his name was plugged into the first two movies - I really wanted to see this infamous Jabba. Could 10 -15 minutes have been trimmed off the first act??? Probably so... this lends to my biggest complaint with Jedi is pacing issues. The main culprit is the middle act. For the swan song of the trilogy and everything needs closure, this movie drags in parts. The whole beginning of the Endor sequence till the intro of the Ewoks is soooo slow. Even as a 11 yr old seeing this in the theatre multiple times at this point; this area of the movie was the time for a bathroom break or grabbing more food at the lobby.
It wasn't just that the guy believed in what Kirshner was doing, he didn't reveal the financial overruns to Lucas, until they nearly ran out of money and Lucas had to go to bank(s) for funding.
For anyone who has fought in a war, you quickly learn not to underestimate your enemy regardless of how much you overpower them. I believe the Ewoks aren’t laughable. When I was in war, our unit truly underestimated the enemy because they were just a bunch civilians with nothing but the will to fight. That will to fight is a strong force. In the end they did do some damage. But all that matters is the final outcome. You don’t win a war by tallying all of the points and how many battles you won. That’s called a video game. You win when the other side concedes defeat. And many times in history that’s just the stronger military unable to continue the fight financially and so they concede defeat.
@@cvz8849 well the movies are just that…movies. I could write a thesis pointing out all of the flaws in the tactics used on the army side. No idea about naval doctrine, but I’m sure they screwed that up too. I mean look at the Jedi when fighting, who would let the enemy have a clear shot of their back? It’s all just art and not reality. *But* the point that George was making in this film, you can find an interview of him explaining this, was just his interpretation of the US in Vietnam. And it truly is a lesson that needs to be reiterated a lot.
Yes you can find Lucas explaining Vietnam in the documentary "From Star Wars to Jedi". To your point about Jedi's not covering their backs is true. Maybe they were just poorly trained or over-stressed thus a lack of concentration on the battlefield. Could you have won against those peski EwoKs, my guess...no. You're in "their" environment. @@pqsk
My problem wasnt that rhe Ewoks were small, cute and primitive, it's that they were played mostly for jokes, even during battle scenes. The one who twirls the bolo and wraps it around his head. The two trying to pilot the AT-ST while Chewie (who had just done a Tarzan yell while swinging from a vine) barks orders at them. The one who steals a speeder bike and cant get his feet on the pedals. If they had taken them seriously during the battle it would have really enphasized how the Empire had underestimated them. Instead I was just left, as an 11-yr old, with my suspension of disbelief stretched past the breaking point. The only scene that tried to drive the seriousness home was when one Ewok is killed and the other tries to wake it up, realizes his friend is dead, and sits down beside him, saddened.
I always thought the Jabba sequence was too detached from the rest of the movie, a story arc that needed to be resolved and then quickly forgotten about… I’d have liked Boba Fett to have survived the battle at the Pit of Carkoon and followed our heroes to Endor, relatives of Jabba having now increased the bounty on their heads… Fett in Endor would feel like a Star Wars take on Predator
Odd, I thought Leia was already planned to be Luke's sister (the other) in ESB because at the end when her sensitivity to the Force leads her to find Luke when he's hanging on for life in Cloud City after losing to Vader?
The Death Star situation reminds me of the 'Superman turns back time' scene that was supposed to be in Superman II, and then was shifted to Superman I when they needed a good climax.
We still don't know what we would have gotten if the Salkinds just stepped back and let Richard Donner make two movies back-to-back saving production costs and maybe making two epic movies instead of one. The Donner cut is cute, but doesn't do the villains justice, though the Marlon Brando scenes were epic. And would the ending of the first have been weak or a cliffhanger? That would have sucked for the extended TV cut lasting 3 hours with ads.
I remember being 10 years old and being blown away by how good Empire was…Instead Of walking out of the theater, I think I must have floated….Then I remember being 13 years old and seeing ROTJ and liking it all right but also feeling let down….
I was 19 when RotJ came out and my friends and I straight up hated it. It failed to honor the offers raised in Empire, which we were very invested in and had talked about and anticipated for 3 years. So many things were just ignored or thrown out, and Yoda just dies from complications of movie disease. "Help them you can, but you will destroy all for which they have fought and suffered", he said, but there literally were no consequences for Luke's actions. Han's brain turned into mush, rendering him a complete idiot, and we got to see the terrible Ewoks and their equally disastrous costumes. Luke stands around for over a half an hour in scenes with Palpatine in which NOTHING HAPPENS. RotJ just plain sucks and it set the table for the even worse prequel trilogy.
@@BrBill Totally agree buddy, Jedi felt like a prototype for the disastrous prequels ...for me it felt (and looked) like a sickeningly safe, corny Disney film - what a monumental disappointment after the epic, classy, beautifully-shot, mature Empire Strikes Back.
@@Ruylopez778 It's really weird how you've got this giant chip on your shoulder about this subject, like you're afraid poor little George Lucas isn't getting enough credit for things already. You're not sharing any facts, just a bunch of 'me no like Gary Kurtz' bs and it's pretty whiny. It's clear you don't have a damn clue what producers do since you're trying so hard to pretend like he had no meaningful involvement with ESB.
Unfortunately it makes ESB+RotJ a repeat of the first movie: Luke gets trained by a Jedi, someone gets captured by Darth Vader, there's a rescue/escape, the Jedi dies leaving Luke on his own, then the Rebels blow up the Death Star.
@@richarddecredico6098 All that was just talk: "[Lucas] says a lot of things." He didn't write things out. Spielberg can attest to it for Indiana Jones when he asked what was next and Lucas didn't have anything like he said he did, so they had to write the next chapter, using a lot of stunts cut from the first movie like the cart chase and jumping out a plane with an inflatable raft.
You could tell adolescent me that and I'd throw a tantrum. But I go back to ESB as an adult, understand the themes, the repercussions, etc. As a kid, it was my least-favorite because there's slower, melancholy beats like the Millennium Falcon hiding from Imperial forces, or Luke's training. Other parts made me sad. It's arguably the darkest movie out of the 1 through 6 movies, and as me who just wanted swing swing lightsaber and vroom vrooom Xwing, I just didn't watch it as much. So FF to adult me, a maturer, critical and dynamic thinker. Yup, ESB is hands-down the best SW.
Return of the Jedi was our favorite as kids. Ewoks were cute and we loved that Ewok Movie with the green giant and light sprite. As a teen it became Empire Strikes Back because of the romance and romantic music.
I like Empire but I think it's just the critics favorite. Star Wars and Return had better elements but the surprise of Vader's identity and Han's capture just turns people into critics too. The prequel trilogy also were incredible and finally getting the love they deserve. Star Wars ends with the Lucas films. Nothing else matters to me although Rogue One and Mandalorian seasons 1&2 gets some love.
“Well there were several possible story threads that we were looking to follow, one of them was Luke’s quest, his own process, he goes back to Yoda to finish his training and it deals with the whole spiritual side of being a Jedi Knight more. And therefore at the end of the story, he would go off on his own. It was really Luke kind of riding off into the sunset, very much like (the) Clint Eastwood character in many of his westerns, and so it was a very bittersweet kind of story, but the spiritual dimension was there with Luke going back to Yoda and discussing a lot more training a lot more with Yoda. “ - Gary Kurtz (ign) It seems like Kurtz wanted to make Jedi more deeper and character driven like Empire and Lucas wanted a blockbuster rollercoaster similar to Raiders of the lost ark. It’s a shame Luke arc was sacrificed for the Ewoks. I’m sure Yoda was going to teach him about the history of the Jedi and reveal Vader true past to Luke during his training. Maybe realizing he was once a good man would inspire him to save Vader. Seeing Luke over come his dark legacy spiritually, and mentally and become a fully trained Jedi knight would’ve been beautiful.
@@adanalyst6925 it’s a shame Luke character development was sacrificed for this rollercoaster discovery. I remember thinking did I skip a movie when I first saw ROTJ. Having all his development happen off screen was a disappointment. and don’t even get me started on Han and Leia. I remember Mark Hamill complained that they didn’t have much to do in the film.
@@jeremyfields9009 yeah they totally skipped the cool stuff with Luke’s growth. How did he become a cool dude in a black cloak? I always thought it would have made more sense to show him training with Yoda at the start then go to rescue Han. Instead it’s like, wow he left his training, and then showed up for Yoda to die. He is not a real Jedi lol
@@adanalyst6925 it’s crazy I loved ROTJ as a kid and then when you get older you’re like “wait a minute, this shit doesn’t make any sense. Lol folks like to crap on the Ewoks but that’s the least of ROTJ problems. seeing Luke complete the training with yoda, succeeding in the cave, and probably seeing Sebastian Shaw Anakin in the cave to let Luke know there’s still good in him would’ve been great.
@@adanalyst6925 Ya know, I hadn't really thought about it and have always just accepted that in the time following Bespin, Luke somehow managed while training himself to exponentially increase his powers and abilities in the Force; my head canon was probably under Kenobi's guidance. But what you suggest makes way more sense; Luke goes back to Yoda to continue his training (Yoda's passing fits better here too), then puts into action the rescue on Tatooine.
Yeah, even as a kid I felt Leia being Luke’s sister was a bit of an ass-pull. In fact, I seem to remember early Star Wars imagery suggesting that Luke and Leia would eventually hook up instead of Leia and Han.
Same was with me - something didn't seem to fit well in that somehow artificial plot twist. I remember wondering then how is it possible for a couple of twins to be born on two different planets. And just recently I came across the first draft of the script for The Empire Strikes Back by Leigh Brackett and found out that indeed it wasn't originally meant to be this way.
@@emilkolarov5561 "Born on two different planets" is not the same as 'raised on two different planets.' Obi-Wan made this plain and clear when he said "to protect you both from the Emperor you were hidden from your father when you were born." This is, in both cases, 'being hidden in plain sight' - Tatooine, Anakin's birthplace, a place he had no personal reason or desire to return to; and Alderaan, from whom hailed Senator Organa, which Star Wars Rebels established was an early covert backer of the Rebellion against Imperial rule, and apparently also took the opportunity to make Leia his protegé.
@@RockBrentwood I am told by a Star Wars fan franchise historian, that one of its critical points of failure was having no "canon bible"; a master plot, character, and technical reference from which to say "no you can't have that character do that because 'X' ", so there was endemic chaos amongst the books. Maybe if Lucas didn't have so many interpersonal issues he could have hired someone to do that long-term...
Let’s not forget some of the directors that Lucas wanted for this one were: Paul Verhoeven, David Cronenberg, and David Lynch. Any choice would have been very interesting.
You say that, but in the end, Lucas backseat directed the two episodes formally directed by other people anyway. He didn't need a creative voice, he needed a reliable employee who could be trusted to bring his vision to life while he's busy elsewhere.
@@thecandlemaker1329 You give too much credit to lucas. Star Wars was just a side project to him, he was very surprised it became so big. He never had a Star Wars vision. And the last thing lucas needed is an other yes men.
@@Zodroo_Tint Where did you read this disingenuous slander? Lucas has been trying and failing to make the movie for eight years. He was writing for eight hours, five days a week. The movie is assembled from every element he liked in world cinema, it's his ultimate auteur project. And all of that for a bunch of dumb nerds to slander him forty years later. Disgraceful.
@@karlwithak. I think American Graffiti is pretty good. Had Lucas made more those kind of films he might have been known for more than just "the Star Wars tycoon". Then again he sort of tried making "other films" and we got crud like "Howard the Duck" (which Lucas produced and pinned his hopes on).
Love these vids, you should look into the history of WB doing a Batman Beyond movie. They were working on one 20 years ago before they went with Nolan instead, and then ofc there was apparently a Michael Keaton one in development that was cancelled when Gunn took over for DC
@@Ruylopez778 - I don't think it's out of order to say that the success of Star Wars, from the very beginning, was due to a most fortuitous line up of contributors, including Gary Kurtz, John Dykstra, Stewart Freeborn, Ben Burtt, Ralph McQuarrie, John Williams and many, many more. Lucas assembled quite a team of talent. Just as you have added many comments under this video recommending against criticising Lucas without considering the full story, that latitude should be granted to all the contributors.
@@RictusHolloweye "I don't think it's out of order to say that the success of Star Wars, from the very beginning, was due to a most fortuitous line up of contributors" And Lucas has never denied that he had a great team of people to help achieve his vision. John Barry (set designer) is one who is often forgotten, but regularly credited by Lucas. However, there exists a contingent of fans that not only exaggerate in order to complain, but also (through ignorance or intent) either downplay Lucas' contribution or make up accusations and narratives about how/why decisions were made that they can't prove. I can only presume they do this to make their subjective opinion have more validity. A classic example being the people claiming the uptick in quality in ESB is down to 'Lucas not being involved' and it being 'written by Brackett and Kasdan'. In their own ignorance, they apparently think they have 'proved' something. It shows how easily people chose to believe whatever they want. "that latitude should be granted to all the contributors" So when Anthony Daniels, Howard Kazanjian and Marcia Lucas don't say anything positive about Kurtz, in a documentary that is intentionally implying that Lucas was overwhelmed and needed more push back, what should we conclude? Kurtz spend a lot of effort making accusations about Lucas, which I can only presume was to try and save face for being fired. Perhaps if he hadn't been so blasé about burning through Lucas' *own money* while making ESB, and it hadn't nearly been a complete disaster (again) we might have seen episode VII, VIII and IX made in the 80s/90s? Perhaps Lucas' marriage might not have fallen apart. Certainly recent history has shown us that making Star Wars without Lucas (as many disgruntled fans wanted) is just as divisive, and killing off Han, and deconstructing Luke with 'bittersweet' ending is equally divisive. As you're probably read me say elsewhere, retrospectively ESB gets to have its cake and eat it, because fans know how the story ends, but get a cliff hanger at the same time. The implication by people determined to exaggerate or insult Lucas for not doing exactly what they wanted, is that Kurtz's own opinion on what it 'should have been' was automatically going to be better. Han got killed off in TFA, sacrificing himself for the rebels, just as so many apparently wanted. Was the actual reality as good as the idea of doing it? I'd say opinion is very split on that. When someone like Bowie says, 'don't play to the crowd' i.e. make your own art your way, he is lauded as someone with high integrity. When Lucas makes his movies the way he wants them, he is accused of being a greedy egotist, who compromises story for profit. Can't see the double standard there? People are free to criticise Lucas for what they don't want or don't like. Creating accusations about his motives in order to downplay his involvement or contribution is both disingenuous and pathetic. But it will continue, as long as sneery fans believe they understand 'writing' because they can nitpick or watch others exaggerate and nitpick things that don't matter, or otherwise misrepresent Lucas.
@@Ruylopez778 George's ex wife didn't like him, and nor did Anthony 'This is my sole acting gig' Daniels. That's not evidence, from these two, that is their opinion.
There is One moment from the annotated screenplay that I can't forget. A sequence which was scripted but never filmed: Han Solo attaches a cable between the Shield Bunker Door and the commandeered At-St Walker in an effort to rip the entryway open. This proves to be humorously futile when the AT-ST walker tears itself in two because the Bunker Doors really are that impenetrable.
I saw an interview (possibly with Lucas if memory serves me correctly) that the reason they did Ewoks was because the Wookie suits are hand stitched with every hair being inserted by hand - they only made about 16 Wookie suits for Episode 3 and CGI's the rest based off those real 16 suits - that was simply not possible in the early 80's and would not have been cost effective in time or materials to make about 100 of them. They could have found that many tall men but the suits would have been the problem. However, yes the Ewoks would be more appealing to young kids and as I recall the Ewok figurines were the same price as the full size figurines so that's pretty cost effective as well. I don't recall any of my peers where were about 12 wanting Ewok figurines - we all wanted Jabba, the Rancor, the sand skiff and Jabba's henchmen, as well as Han in carbonite.
I completely agree. I was also 12 and the excitement was all about the forest speeders, the Falcon as always, Jabba, the Rancor, the Emperor etc. I even remember wanting a 2-legged AT and Admiral Ackbar figure. The Ewoks were a disappointment even at that age; it was obvious they didn't spend much effort on the costumes.
I don't think I was instantly against the Ewoks. I watched one of the Ewok TV movies that finally ended it for me. I don't think I watched RotJ more than twice in the theater, and my parents wouldn't buy me the novel-adaptation.
It was probably harder to find dozens of 7+ foot tall Wookee actors than dozens of little people for Ewoks.. for one. But I also always thought Ewoks worked narratively because the Empire underestimates them as a threat. The Emperor's hubris leads to his demise, where even the smallest, most innocent looking creature can turn the tide if they work together, like the Rebellion themselves.
@@Steve56179 This week I heard there's criticism of _Wicked_ because they didn't use little people to play Munchkins. But I'm sure there's enough basketball players (or former basketball players) like Kevin Peter Hall _(Predator)_ who was 7'4"
My first memory of feeling critical about a film was over Return Of The Jedi in 1983, aged 11. The first 2 films were such a big deal to me that even though I enjoyed Jedi and still do, I was disappointed the plot was just destroying another Death Star and even more disappointed that my childhood hero Han Solo had so little to do and looked bored. God knows what I would have made of The Last Jedi. ;)
@@ArcanumAscent - Seriously..... You don't think the whole rescue effort wouldn't have healed old 'wounds' (they both saved each other's lives in the process); nor that they had a reconciliatory chat on their way back to rebel HQ in the Falcon? (Having some big on-screen dialogue would have been entirely un-necessary). It's not that deep; fella.
That's so true. You would think Han would have knocked Lando down and out on his butt for what he did to him, "a deep sleep of nothing" in carbonite. But i'm dreaming,... Georgie Lucas would never do that in a kids movie, thus a very bored Harrison hoping he would die in SW#6 then comes out of retirement in SW#7 35+ years later still bored not doing much on screen and get his wish fulfilled.@@ArcanumAscent
I stood in line for three hours when I was 7 to see this movie when it was released, and I loved it and that was one incredibly memorable day for a 7 year old kid.
When Star Wars came out in 1977 , on its first Saturday night, me and my brother arrived at theater at 7;00 PM for the 8;00 PM show and had to wait on the line for the 10:00 PM show, We were on line for the better part of three hours
7:56 That's a myth. Several films prior had no opening credits, such as Citizen Kane and West Side Story, and were fine. The rule is that if any recognizable part of a name is credited, the director must be too. And "Lucasfilm" contains part of a recognizable name, and is seen before the opening crawl. It was passable on Star Wars because Lucas was the director, but not in The Empire Strikes Back because he wasn't. And because Kershner hadn't officially waived his rights to a credit, he was fined.
From everything I have ever seen and heard about the films creation, The overriding impression I get of Lucas is that he is a horrible control freak. Employing someone to do a job for you and then breathing down their neck the whole time is a nasty trait at any level. Imagine being hired to plumb someone's house, who used to be a plumber and them telling you that you've done it all wrong constantly!
I'm so glad I found this video because often times in these types of videos, you see a lot of comments about how great ROTJ was and people's joy over the Ewoks. (To each his own.) However, when this video explained how Lucas hired "cheap and fast" Richard Marquand, that really nailed it, IMO. Because I always thought ROTJ looked "cheap and fast." Especially, in comparison to the exquisite looking ESB.
@@trentmonaghan179Of course they were right. Yoda didn't want Luke to face Vader because he didn't have enough training, but it's ok, we have another hope, Leia, who has ZERO training and is ALREADY captured by Vader. That makes no sense.
@@JadePR33 Yeah, myself along with one of my friends were disappointed with the Leia answer, and personally, it seemed like it was shoehorned into the story. But this video helps make sense of what I perceived back then. Also, I hate to say this, but *the best part of the movie, which redeemed the movie and which is what the movie was all about* was spoiled for me by apparently, a magazine writer who didn't like the movie and blabbed out that Vader returned back to the light side in a magazine article that I was browsing through before the movie came out, just to get a taste of some photographs of this upcoming movie. 😕 And that kind of ruined the movie for me. Plus, once something is spoiled for you, it is always spoiled. 😕
@@BrandonLovesTheMovies Well, yeah... I agree that it had the best model work of the original trilogy because from a hardware standpoint, one could see where the technology had advanced with the spaceships and the internal segments of the Death Star, etc. However, what I was talking about was the writing and the poor way that the movie was put together and edited (with the exception of hardware scenes of the spaceships twirling around in space, etc.). Along with the cheap looking teddy bears which didn't even looked like real creatures, but looked like short people in bear suits. 🙄 But the only good part of the movie, which I think redeemed the movie, which unfortunately was spoiled for me was Vader coming back to the light side. 😕 Also, even though this movie was a big hit, it fell short of the domestic box office take of TESB.
Maybe LeiA had those unexplainable powers that ReY has & eventually kick his father's butt into the sand.😄, all in the span of a very short time.🤔@@JadePR33
@00:42 What they don't mention here is that his wife cleaned him out in the divorce between Empire and Jedi. One of the main reasons Jedi was so focused on being a toy movie was because Lucas retained 100% of the merchandising from Star Wars, meaning he made all the money from the toys. This is the reason Gary Kurtz left and did that work with him on Jedi.
Yeah, saying "that boy's our last hope" made me think that he didn't know about the sister. Haven't seen _Obi-Wan_ series where they changed that and had them meet, or RotS where she's born.
@@Bulletsandblockbusters You worded things differently and added more details, but the bias is mostly still there, it's just slightly more implied than before.
I remember hearing they were it from "Revenge" to "Return" on Entertainment Tonight. I remember it. It didn't make any difference to me, I just wanted that movie. There weren't many outlets for STAR WARS news in the 1980's
Ahh man, this overall story would actually have been better. I love that idea of luke going off to find his long lost sister and them teaming up eventually to take down the emperor. Over 9 movies it would have been tons better.
Its no wonder why Return of the Jedi felt so merchandise-driven. Like its still a good movie, but its also admittedly a step down from the first two movies. This is also the beginning of George having more control on the Star Wars brand that lead to more "mixed reception" among the fans, since he had no one to challenge him on his ideas.
Gary might have spent more, but my word, it was the best of the bunch. Probably should have looked back and said "You know, for Revenge of the Jedi, let's give Gary another shot." Bad idea is bad idea. The mention of Luke and his sister was a discussion I literally JUST finished having with my son not ten minutes ago, and then I clicked this video. I see you listening, Google! LOL
Lucas blamed Gary Kurtz for not reigning in Irvin Kerschner. Kerschner was the reason why Empire was running late and over budget. He kept wanting to refilm things that Lucas deemed “good enough.” He wanted to keep refilming Luke’s ex-wing rising out of the swamp over and over for reasons such as “the water didn’t trickle off the ship the way he wanted.” Really Irvin was the problem, but Lucas didn’t want to confront him, apparently. It wound up being the best made Star Wars film. In hindsight Lucas should have just let the same team work on Jedi...
@@rumblehat4357 The real problem was that he didn't tell Lucas the truth about running out of money until the last minute, making Lucas have to scramble to the bank(s) and perhaps studio to get the money to finish the movie. Had he been honest with him, he could have gotten more funding sooner, or shown up to see what was happening on-set if something needed changing.
Wow! This explains a lot. I’ve always said the best Star Wars film is the one Lucas had the least hand in: The Empire Strikes Back. This clip explains why. Lucas didn’t really care about quality-only marketing his toys. Imagine how good Retirn might have been had Kurtz, Kirshner and his cinematographer returned-and if someone had deep sixed the Ewoks.
Hmm. After the woman died who wrote the draft script, it was up to Lucas to write the next draft of Empire and that's when he realized it was necessary to make Vader Luke's father. So nearly all that was filmed was from the script(s) that he worked on. Every change had to meet with his approval, like "I love you." "I know." It was supposed to be "I love you too" and he didn't like them changing it.
I hate how people (George Lucas included, and in particular) will say things like, "Oh this was part of what was originally written" or, "This was always planned." No, no it wasn't. Leia was never the sister, Vader wasn't supposed to be Luke's father, and Vader's children weren't supposed to be born without him seeing them, or even knowing of their existence, for twenty years! These might have been thoughts in George's head, or part of the broadest of broad strokes, but there is no way that he had all these bad ideas planned out, beat for beat 5, 10, 20 years in advance! I'm sorry, but the Lucas defenders just kill me sometimes. The man had a few good ideas, but A New Hope was saved in the editing room, Empire was amazing because of Kershner, and then the next 4 films were very week because it was all Lucas with everyone too timid to tell him no, and Lucas too arrogant to be open to brainstorming and input from others. All that being said, I absolutely LOVE Star Wars, especially the original EU (Legacy now, I suppose) especially the novels that REALLY showcased what that Universe could be!
I hate that, too. It's perfectly okay to admit that the story developed/evolved. It happens with characters in books as they are being written. Ask JK Rowling - she envisioned different endings for her characters, but they went other directions.
The final irony is that the sequels are so bad in part because of too much brainstorming and all input considered equal and rolled together by committee. It's a lesson in how to create greatness; there has to be one creative visionary who encourages dissent, incorporates the input, but ultimately makes the final creative decisions with all input carefully considered. Skew in either direction from that balance and you get mediocrity, or worse.
@@jefferysterner This talk about making a movie by committee being bad is an exaggeration. Movies are a collaborative endeavor: writer, producer, director, editor, etc. I think there are examples against the assumption that one person should have total creative control. They've given free control to people who were part of a collaboration in a previous movie, that without it in the sequel just screw it up, like _Wonder Woman 1984_ and now _Joker 2._
@@sandal_thong8631 well I wasn't referring to writer/producer/director/editor kind of collaboration being a problem. It's when the creative process is governed by focus-group minded groupthink. Brainstorming is always good to start, but the creative process has to get focused as it progresses, which is generally better done with one person's vision in mind and a collective who gets behind them. That said, a creative dictator is also not good, which is why I said the visionary must encourage dissent and use what comes from that. The OT was so good because Lucas had his wife in particular, but also Carrie Fisher and others in the cast pushing back on him when it made sense. They worked as a team, with everyone having George's overall vision in their sights. The prequels were not as good because none of those players were there to push on George as much. Those movies would have been so much better had Marcia remained involved. Today, Disney's creative committees are not team-oriented; rather they are focus-group oriented, comprised of a bunch of people who each have their own vision for what is important and put their own agendas above the creative goal. All that creative spaghetti gets spliced together, add that to multiple writer/directors for a trilogy, and you get creative garbage.
Get the making of book by rinzler (rip), youll get the original Story and parts of screenplay, Discussions, reasons for changes, artwork, little people stories. Just get it.
I always thought an easy way to help explain the Ewok/Endor victory would be to incorporate some of the stuff from the Ewok movies because there was some freaky stuff going on on Endor
I got so sick of Death Star ripoffs in the EU. The Sun Crusher, The Galaxy Gun, The Darksaber, the lost Death Star under Admiral Daala's command at the Maw Installation...it was just ridiculous. Then you see what the sequel trilogy did and I just wanted to scream. Starkiller Base was literally "LIke a Death Star, but BIGGER-ER-ER!!!" and the fleet of Death Star Star Destroyers was the most hacky thing I've ever seen.
It's interesting to consider that IV-VI were such a mess behind the scenes but they still seem to stand up better than the latest films, despite obvious missteps. Not sure whether that's the effect of expectation, nostalgia, dumb luck or what.
Episodes IV-VI have something neither the prequel nor the sequel trilogy has: *Characters you can relate to* Luke is the down on his luck, good-hearted guy who is stuck in a life where he is going nowhere, but then suddenly ends up in the adventure of his life. Han is a wise-cracking, disillusioned space-pirate who knows his only skill is being a great smuggler and a pilot. He's in the adventure for money and since he owes Jabba a debt. Leia is spunky, young woman who occasionally let's her aristocratic, high life personality come through to the annoyance of others. Obi-Wan is the old sage who introduces Luke (and the audience) to an ancient art and knows he must sacrifice himself to let the others escape and live. The prequels have: Padme: Who in the first movie is just dull and devoid of both headstrong character or wisdom beyond her years which should be expected if she's a queen of a planet. She later falls for Anakin for seemingly arbitrary reasons and accepts him in little time despite his obvious inner struggles and flaws. Anakin: Who is too perfect as a kid, being too kind, too friendly and can fix or build anything. As an adult he wants more power but doesn't himself know why. In Revenge of the Sith he sounds like a brainwashed cult-member who doesn't understand how foolish and silly he sounds. Real power-hungry people are cunning and can sway a lot of people to follow them. Obi-Wan: A hothead who loses his composure and temper and rushes into fights by exposing himself. How is that character the same, level-headed sage we saw in the original films? Qui-Gon: He wants to defy the Jedi council because...?? Who knows. Jar-Jar: Supposedly the comical character but just comes across as hopelessly clumsy and annoying. The sequels have: Slightly better and more relatable characters than the prequels. However they all run out of steam in the second film already. At least Poe Dameron shows both bouts of humor and genuine disappointment and anger when he learns the rebel commander has no plan (or so he believed). Rey already knows the ways of the force and can defeat Kylo Ren at the end of the first film. If you don't relate to the characters or at least understand their motivations then you don't care about them. Characters whose choices and actions seem arbitrary and exist without any believable traits just feel artificial and alien.
Four reasons the OG trilogy worked: 1) amazing practical effects 2) great characters including Harrison Ford 3) clear fight between good and evil. Obi-Wan Kenobi acting almost like Jesus. 4) John Williams ground breaking soundtrack based on Holst's planets. Future generations may even think John Williams' work eclipses the films.
@@McLarenMercedes Did you seriously say the prequels have unrelatable characters? Did you also claim that the characters in the sequels are more RELATABLE!? How ignorant are you? When the heck was Obi-Wan EVER a hothead!? If anything, he has always been incredibly cautious in every movie. His fighting still is DEFENSIVE, hotheads don't rush to people to attack defensively. Obi-Wan has never shown a moment of anger nor did he ever lose his temper. He tries to stay composed and even at the death if his master, he didn't show any rage. Did you even watch the movies? Do you even know who Obi-Wan was? Anakin Skywalker was a SLAVE who tried to be optimistic as a child and dreamt of being a jedi. Once he became a Jedi, he wanted to become stronger to protect the ones he loved. His mother dying traumatized him and he started developing feelings for Padme but was told that he coulnd't pursue it because it goes against the jedi order. Anakin also NEVER wanted to rule the galaxy, he only wanted enough power to save the ones he loved. He's not power hungry for the sake of it. Qui Gon wants to defy the jedi council because he saw the corruption of the jedi. Their zealousy and arrogance brought them down a path that he was strictly opposed to, just like his master Tyranus. The sequels have dumb hotheads like Poe Damareon who makes "yo mama" jokes and some stormtrooper whose entire personality is screaming "REEEY" and the granddaughter of darth sidious who is automatically good at everything from piloting a spce ship she never touched in her life to being a jedi. How on earth did you seriously think the prequels have no "relatable" characters while believing that the clowns from the sequels are "relatable"? It's clear that you have NEVER seen the prequels and are nothing more that a proud sequel consoomer
@@tron23058 I truly believe Star Wars wouldn't be the phenomenon it is without Williams. I'm not saying it wouldn't still be amazing, but it definitely wouldn't be what it is without him.
When Return of the Jedi was announced I was stunned the director was someone I'd never heard of. The film is very good but I do wonder what could have been if Spielberg had directed it.
I'm glad it's called Return of the Jedi. Revenge is a very callous word that holds a lot of anger and hatred towards something. Return especially in this context feels like honour is about to be restored.
I remember when I was 7 or 8 being at the movie theatre and seeing the revenge of the jedi poster and telling all the kids at school about it. I was so excited and couldn't wait for this movie. Then when the ads for return of the jedi came out I was so confused because I was positive it was called revenge of the jedi. All my friends told me I was just dumb and read it wrong or I imagined it or something. It bothered me so much at the time, but thankfully decades later I would learn that I was indeed correct.
The line from Yoda about their “being another” still works even if Leia is not Luke’s sister. I’ve always thought it actually referred to Anakin Skywalker and the chosen one prophecy
George didn’t invent the chosen one concept until he did the phantom menace. Jedi was more about Anakin’s redemption, the son saving the father and the father saving the son. He wanted a Christian mythical ending. Evil destroys itself. Nothing against the prophecy idea. I kinda liked it. But so many fans upset about palpatine coming back is a waste of hot air. Lucas was gonna change it with the Disney treatments anyway.
That's what prequel hate is all about, though; the problem isn't whether it 'works', it's whether it's satisfying, which SW isn't for many with alternative universes in their heads. However much you love them.
@@crispy_338 I go back and forth between the Battle of endor and the Battle of scarif in Rogue one.... The one thing I thought was missing in Return of the Jedi is I got height to see the b-wing actually do something.... I don't remember any scenes of it actually in combat lol
@@ianbrewster8934 I do like the RO fight but there’s something so nostalgic about real models composited onto a space background that just does it for me
I found "Return of the Jedi" a disappointing follow up to "Empire Strikes Back". How important was merchandising to George Lucas? When he gave permission to Mel Brooks to make "Spaceballs", one condition was that the parody couldn't be merchandised.
Lucas probably would have sold more Star Wars stuff if he'd let Brooks make Spaceballs toys, but as we know from so much other evidence, George wants control more than money or good movies. He does like money but 'control' stopped him from benefiting from Spaceballs.
The Ewok stuff isn't as bad as people tend to remember it. Yes, they're cute little merchandise critters, but if you really watch that last battle, they're not that effective. Their log traps work fairly effectively, but where their strength lies is in creating distractions. This enables the Rebel soldiers to be more effective. For those interested in early drafts and discarded ideas, I recommend Star Wars: The Annotated Screenplays. It's really interesting to see how the original trilogy evolved as it progressed.
It was obvious back in the 70's that Leia and Luke weren't siblings. Just read the canon novel "Splinter of the Mind's Eye". Then of course, it got un-canoned pretty quick lol.
This is just one of many things that changed as they wrote more. Its kinda like comic books where there are a billion alternate universes. I don’t mind the Leia storyline being a Skywalker… I just wish they did more with it. Leia in my opinion was the best character in the series, though I understood it was mainly Luke’s story. Luke, however, isn’t a very interesting character, and is one we’ve seen over and over. Leia, however, was really revolutionary. She’s a teenager, but incredibly smart and powerful, and is politically minded unlike Luke who was naive and Han who was selfish and jaded. A Jedi Leia would have been so cool, or at least if we could have gotten more of her in a leadership role. They tried to touch on it in the new sequels, but there was a new generation of characters who were supposed to be the lead characters. The original cast were just nostalgic supporting characters who had little to do. Leia remains as a character with so much promise, but with no follow through. As Carrie once said, once she put on the metal bikini, she basically lost any of her relevance or seriousness.
Empire strikes back director Kershner should have directed RotJ and continue writing directing ESB style story telling into a fluent ending with Vader’s redemption and death of Palpy
I read some sci-fi book set in the future where the main character before his own story starts was watching Star Wars: Episode 60 or something, assuming there'd be a new one every 3 years for 180 years. But I don't remember the book or short story!
Firstly it was never stated to be 19 years when the originals were made, secondly the death star was barely built and had millennium falcon sized holes in it, thirdly they'd done it before so knew what they were doing
Good upload. Seems incredible to me that the new movies have managed to kill off the entire Skywalker lineage. Supposedly the last hope of restoring the balance of the force. Palpatine was never as powerful as Annakin Skywalker, regardless of what's insinuated by that horrible final movie..
The SW film group was the first set of films to disappoint filmgoers who expected a deep universe of characters and stories, and instead got a couple of good-looking entries, followed by others that confused the narrative, had repetitive plot elements, and left the audience feeling like they didn't get much for their emotional and financial investment. GoT was a recent example, but there are many others. Good analysis here - I enjoyed it a lot!
"who expected a deep universe of characters and stories, and instead got a couple of good-looking entries" That would explain why it was one of the biggest franchises ever for decades I guess? Nope. "confused the narrative" Well, which was it, harmless fluff, or confusing? "repetitive plot elements" For example? Surely you have a really bad example to go with your sweeping dismissive claims. "and left the audience feeling like they didn't get much" I guess that explains why they weren't the biggest or second biggest movies of the year they were released... "Good analysis here - I enjoyed it a lot!" So, just regurgitate hollow claims of the guy that got fired for being incompetent and a liar? Answer me this about this 'good analysis'. Kurtz having ONE example of Lucas not fussed about ONE shot from ESB, when the movie is about to collapse and cost him his company and reputation shows that Lucas didn't care about quality? Except that by the end of the production, Kurtz had already been replaced by Kazanjian. 1. Lucas did change a shot after they'd already released the movie (before wide release). 2. He was so disappointed with the sound reproduction of Jedi in a regular theater, that he pushed for the THX system to be a standard. But sure, he just didn't care about anything but toys, right? How can people be so gullible and cynical, and at the same time so condescending? It really is baffling.
Interesting video. This is perhaps what the sequels were trying to do. Adam driver now taking the place of Luke not defeating the emperor but turning to the dark side-ish and also searching for his long lost sister aka Rey and not actually Leia. And then teaming up against the emperor in the final 9th movie.
Leia did not have to be Luke's sister - that was the moment that Star Wars became a little too soap opera. In my mind the obvious answer to Yoda saying "No, there is another." is pretty obvious because that's exactly how it turned out: Anakin Skywalker was the other hope.
To OP. "No, there is another." is pretty obvious because that's exactly how it turned out: Anakin Skywalker was the other hope." Really? That's a really hard sell when both Obi-Wan and Yoda believe Anakin/Darth Vader is beyond saving and both tell Luke that Anakin is long gone and that he's more machine than man now. Luke is the only one who actually believes there is still good in Vader, and Vader himself dismisses this several times during their talks and their final fight. The emperor himself beliefs Anakin is forever doomed to serve him. Yoda even gives Luke a warning not to underestimate the powers of the emperor or he will suffer his father's fate. Fate is final. There is no going back. This too clearly says Anakin/Vader is doomed and was turned into the dark side by the emperor. Leia being Luke's sister is clunky and obviously shoehorned in but it works. Leia is a force for good and has been ardent supporter of the rebellion since before the original film. Betting your hopes on the most evil man in the galaxy, the man who hunted down and killed all the remaining jedi and is the emperor's obedient servant/slave? Great idea...
@@McLarenMercedes I was mainly speaking from the perspective of The Empire Strikes Back, before Jedi was even written. Lucas had toyed with the idea of a sibling relationship in early drafts of a new hope but I think it's pretty obvious that he had sidelined the idea until the last second (maybe at the recommendation of someone else?). In fact I believe there are interviews where "the other" was discussed and multiple options were explored. Don't get me wrong, I love Leia, but by the time of the prequels good Lord everybody in the galaxy is related to this one family. ALABAMA... IN... SPACE!!!!
I do wonder at what point Harrison Ford learned that this would be the final movie in a trilogy, and not merely part 3 in an even larger story. Because if he was thinking that he might have to stick around for another 4 films, that might affect why he wanted Han Solo dead.
Return of the Jedi is my fav of the original trilogy but I've never liked that Leia was made Luke's sister or the second death star. Felt like a cheap repeat of the other movie's highlights.
Be interesting with all these multiverse movies if people would see alternate versions of the Star Wars movies. I think they talk about alternate casting in some lesser movies in _The Flash._
I feel the opening of Return of the Jedi was successful, but I would make some changes to the rest of the film. I would change the plot from there to have Han and Leia follow a lead from Jabba’s Palace to Coruscant (kind of a WW2 French spy thriller vibe), and Han, Chewbacca, and Leia discover a method to use Spice routes to smuggle rebel troops past the Imperial fleet to storm the Imperial Palace. Blade Runner was released in 1982 so the effects were possible for Coruscant. Luke is now a symbol of hope for the galaxy, meaning he will bring the return of the jedi order and peace to the galaxy. The rebel troops inspire the Coruscantians to rise up (maybe there are Wookies that were inspired by Chewbacca, which helps turn the tide). Lando and a new character (maybe someone that infiltrated Jabba’s Palace with him so they have a rapport) would follow a similar path to the actual movie leading the space attack against the Imperial fleet, but the attack on the fleet is a smoke screen to distract the actual goal of sneaking in the ground troops to the surface; Lando could have subplot about convincing the rebel fleet on a suicide mission that functions as a distraction. Luke would similarly follow a similar path to the actual movie, but I would have had Luke be training Leia in the Force between movies (it’s clear in Empire Strikes Back that she can use The Force so why not have that training occur off screen or in an early scene…maybe Leia uses the Force during the Jabba mission). I would also not make Leia and Luke related; the scene where Luke snaps when Vader says “If you will not turn, maybe she will…” still works, especially if Leia is on the planet at the time. Luke would still confront the Emperor, but it would occur at the Imperial Palace. There would be additional tension because Luke falling to the Emperor’s side would snuff out the new hope that he has provided to the people of the galaxy. The rebels are successful with taking the palace and there is a celebration to the end of the civil war. Maybe Han dies so Harrison Ford can have his dream fulfilled. The end. Regarding Gary Kurtz… Oh no…Empire Strikes Back went over budget! Oh no we managed to make the greatest fantasy film of all time until The Fellowship of the Ring!!! Oh no the film made 10x its budget back in its initial run!!!!!!* I see only one solution…fire that hack Gary Kurtz!!!!!!!!!!! /s It will always baffle me. I could see firing Kurtz if The Empire Strikes Back bombed, but firing him would be like firing Kevin Feige after The Avengers. I believe George Lucas always disliked anyone that pushed back, and Kurtz was the artist voice that kept the negative economic voice of Lucas at bay. As much as I love Return of the Jedi as an action adventure film, it is not the grand finale that a Return of the King or even War for the Planet of the Apes is for their respective franchises, and I believe it’s because they cheaped out with the filmmaking and characters and emotions and originality. Why not make the film a three hour epic? The film could cost $100 million, and it would still be profitable (that budget would be excessive, but you get my point). Pay the fines to get Steven Spielberg or Ridley Scott. Go for broke with the third Star Wars. There was never a more sure fire hit in the history of cinema to that point. On the plus side, at least Kurtz made The Dark Crystal and Return to Oz before hitting financial ruin with Slipstream. It’s unfortunate that an artist like Kurtz never bounced back, but hey, money isn’t everything. Kurtz is still the man in my book! *The budget was $30.5 million. The data is a little fuzzy for the initial box office, the domestic box office was around $200 million, so I am being conservative and saying the international was around $100 million.
And ewoks gave little people jobs 👍 plus having a second death star is okay to do again if the empire had improved the design to make it less vulnerable...
The original went over budget too, and they were editing up to three days before release. I wasn't there for the stuff but I really don't believe Gary Kurtz's firing was solely because 'the budget' when that would mean Gary was also the guy who facilitated George to go over-budget on the original film.
@@jamescarter3196 I think it was not telling him until they needed Lucas to go to the bank (or studio) to get money to keep production going that infuriated him. If he'd kept him up to date, then it would have been Lucas's decision whether to step in on set or get more money earlier.
that was the major cop out of jedi..was doing another death star battle..they should have attacked coruscant...gary kurtz if he was still around would have pushed for that
How so? it makes perfect sense. The empire had gambled on the death star being around to smack around any rebelling systems; with the first one gone, there was something of a power vacuum. So they construct a new one. The emperor then uses the death star to draw the rebels in..
I always felt that from seeing the first one back when i was a kid in the early 1980's in a small village in Finland on a crap vhs copy on a dark Luxor tv set, from a state Tv broadcasted version from Sweden. It was the most fantastic adventure ive'd ever seen. Back then you could not even get the original sequels here. And i was dying to see them. Just by accident back then in a paper called "The yellow pages" which is like Ebay today or any online selling site... Someone was selling the sequel to Alien. Aka James Camerons Aliens. I bought it,... But on that VHS cassette, was commercials for widescreen releases for The Empire Strikes Back and Return Of The Jedi. I was like..... OMG!!! Now i can finally see them!!!! And this was waaay before the internet! I believe it was 1988 or 1989 i get them, and i was like on a 7th cloud when the notice came in the mailbox that they had arrived at the post office ready to be picked up. I had my mom drive there, i rushed in and got them and came up and ran upstairs and popped Empire in!!!.... I was like hmm.... This is not what i came to expect.. But okay. Then i popped Return of The Jedi in right after. Okay.... I was like kind of let down... Because i could tell, that this was not George Lucas's original idea. It was okay, but it just felt wrong or "altered" from Star Wars A New Hope. The beginning of Empire made sense, but to make that wise Jedi master as something from the muppet show was like.... Okay. Whatever. Jedi was no better,.... I guess the drama with Luke and Vader was what saved it. Another Death Star?... Really?... And muppet bears running around?... I did not see The Holiday Special but i did see the unofficial tv sequels to ROTJ: Caravan Of Courage & The Battle For Endor. Even as hyped as SW was then with the prequels i refused to watch them. I remember ppl waiting in line and camping outside the theaters etc... I was not one of them. I have seen snippets from here and there out of morbid curiosity, but from what i have taken throughout the years, the prequels were nothing but a filler for George Lucas's wallet. I was to the theater for "The Force Awakens" but that was only a remake of Episode IV, only done more childish. Well, that is my take. The original trilogy is phenomenal, There is so much lore and things that did not come to fruition behind it. And in my opinion, would have been tons better than the Star Wars we got thought the years. May the Schwartz be with you.
This would NEVER, um, ‘fly’ today, but after I learned that the Ewoks were supposed to be Wookiees, I always thought a great solution would be to still have Wicket discover Leia, and eventually take her TO the Wookiees, the race that really ruled the forest. The Battle of Endor (or Kashyyyk) would have BOTH species involved, the Ewoks still being cute and marketable little shits, but some serious asskicking also taking place. Of course, this tandem would MANDATE that at some point, Wookiees TOSSED Ewoks at hapless Stormtroopers and other Imperials, hence the ‘problematic’ implications in today’s Outragonia. So, I’m not sure I’m even allowed to daydream about such cinematic fun. P.S. George attempted to redeem this in Episode III, but the Kashyyyk sequence there just felt like a weightless, high quality videogame cutscene, which really could be said about a third of the Prequels’ total footage.
They weren't supposed to be Wookies. Or at least not in Return of the Jedi. This video misled you. Lucas wanted a bunch of Wookies flying ships at the end of A New Hope (in part cause he really like the word 'Wookie', in fact it shows up in his earlier sci fi film THX). That was the plan. But it was too pricey so he settled for one: Chewy. Then he wanted another hairy alien species but one that was more primitive, so he designed one for that role.
@@SamSaxtonArt I honestly can’t keep track of the urban legends versus the half-truths versus the historically accurate anecdotes anymore. I know his early drafts had the Wookiees helping with the assault on the Death Star. But since they didn’t, introducing them en masse in the third film would’ve been cool, and I stand by my dream of seeing Chewie heaving Wicket into a group of unsuspecting Stormtroopers standing below them in the woods.
Post the source for that claim then. Cause you're putting words in his mouth if that's your interpretation just from the clip you posted. He never even implies that that was an intention. He's gone on record as saying that he wanted to do lots of wookies and he's explaining here why he didn't just do them for the natives in ROTJ. @@Bulletsandblockbusters
Surprised you didn’t mention how Endor was originally the ‘sanctuary moon’ around Coruscant. Meaning the final climactic battle was supposed to be over Coruscant to properly overthrow the Empire…
The same way Max and Amazon are creating a LOTR series, maybe someone should make a SW skywalker series. Reinvent the entire story as a 9 season episodic with these old ideas fleshed out
That's good. They could have changed the ewoks to wookiee slaves.
@@Danny_Delano hope for better than the "same way" since the LOTR series sucks.
@@Danny_Delano I don't know that I'd use Rings of Power as an example of what to do.
Yeah, take Leia and make her as unlikable as they made Galadriel!
The Ewoks work on a thematic level. Luke underestimated Yoda due to his size when he first met the Jedi Master. Yoda stated, "Judge me by my size... size matters not." Luke trusted the Ewoks and demonstrated he had learned a critical lesson.
Yeah and when you watch the scene the Ewoks get absolutely whooped after some initial creative (and conveniently already prepared) traps. It's pretty harrowing stuff hearing them get shot, scream and shake lifeless bodies. People talk like he made this unrealistic super effective army of cuddly toys.
Loo😂😂😂 shut up 😂😂😂
or it's just how Lucas wrote the characters
Ewoks were some type of VC, Viet Cong point Lucas wanted to make. Star Wars at its core was GL's feelings about Viet Nam, US politics.
Same reason Lucas wanted the prequels to "rhyme" with those similar themes by making "Darth Jar-Jar".
Imagine if Episode VI was Revenge of the Jedi, then Episode III would've been Return of the Sith.
I always said that would have made more sense.
@@rumblehat4357No, revenge aligns more with the Sith, and the Jedi did return in the 6th movie through Luke (and Vader returning to the light, as well). Actually makes more sense how it is
@@Invidious-GamerVader killed the emperor.
@@kevonarenas4367 return of the sith sounds way better then return of the jedi.
No, that would’ve been a horrible idea. Jedi don’t take revenge because it is associated with the dark side, and the Sith were already established and recognized as having returned since Episode 1.
My friend worked at the theater when "Revenge of the Jedi" posters and cardboard cutouts were staged in early 1983. He still has some of them, serious collector's items.
Yes, I remember that only west coast fan club got the poster
My mom was dating a guy that worked on the movie and us kids were given revenge of the jedi shirts that we still have
Always felt like Yoda’s line about Leia could have been about Vader, because he too could still sense the good in him and believed he could be turned back to the good, with Luke having come to terms with the identity of his father
You are actually completely correct. I've read all of the available drafts online of Return of the Jedi and one of the earlier drafts explicitly explains what Yoda meant in Empire as referring to Anakin.
The crazy part is that if Return of the Jedi were made today, Lucas would have simply inserted CGI wookies in post production.
Disney can have robotic beings constructed that look real.
Surprised he didnt already tbh 😂
CGI is partly to blame for the prequels looking stupid and for the Hobbit looking bad..its a cop out and takes away from realism in scenes..i personally like Return of the Jedi and its choices.
@@michaeledwards1644Ikr. They should’ve just hired half a million actors to play the clone army 🙃
@@T.N.C_HATNAN Wasn't an issue with the Empire and their stormtroopers in the OT....
In 82 I saw a back to back matinee of "Star wars" and Empire Strikes Back. When we left the theatre they had posters for Revenge of the Jedi.
Holy shit, I was 6 at the time watching either Star Wars or Empire Strikes back in 1982/early 1983 and do remember those posters saying Revenge of the Jedi. Thanks for bringing up a good memory from a long long time ago!
I'd like to skip into another universe to see this version and a second trilogy with Kurtz still at Lucas' side
Same here
I would add Marcia Lucas as well for her expert film editing skills.
Oh no…Empire Strikes Back went over budget! Oh no we managed to make the greatest fantasy film of all time until The Fellowship of the Ring!!! Oh no the film made 10x its budget back in its initial run!!!!!!* I see only one solution…fire that hack Gary Kurtz!!!!!!!!!!!
/s
It will always baffle me. I could see firing Kurtz if The Empire Strikes Back bombed, but firing him would be like firing Kevin Feige after The Avengers. I believe George Lucas always disliked anyone that pushed back, and Kurtz was the artist voice that kept the negative economic voice of Lucas at bay. As much as I love Return of the Jedi as an action adventure film, it is not the grand finale that a Return of the King or even War for the Planet of the Apes is for their respective franchises, and I believe it’s because they cheaped out with the filmmaking and characters and emotions and originality. Why not make the film a three hour epic? The film could cost $100 million, and it would still be profitable (that budget would be excessive, but you get my point). Pay the fines to get Steven Spielberg or Ridley Scott. Go for broke with the third Star Wars. There was never a more sure fire hit in the history of cinema to that point.
On the plus side, at least Kurtz made The Dark Crystal and Return to Oz before hitting financial ruin with Slipstream. It’s unfortunate that an artist like Kurtz never bounced back, but hey, money isn’t everything. Kurtz is still the man in my book!
*The budget was $30.5 million. The data is a little fuzzy for the initial box office, the domestic box office was around $200 million, so I am being conservative and saying the international was around $100 million.
I would like to skip into another universe where copyright only lasts 50 years so we could get an even better take on the original concepts.
@@korakys50 years after the death of the creator. No reason why Paul McCartney should lose copyright over his Beatles and Wings songs just because 50 years have passed.
For those interested in this sort of behind-the-scenes stuff, I highly recommend reading Tom Simon’s online essay, “Creative Discomfort and Star Wars”. In essence, his thesis is that the first two movies were great because Lucas and his team took the time and effort to make sure the story was right, drafting and redrafting scripts and waiting for the best ideas to come along. ROTJ is when the series began to sour because of lazy, snap decision-making, and a desire to rush products onto the market as fast as possible without worrying about whether or not the story made any darned sense; it only went downhill from there.
Sorry, I got part way through that and realised it was the typical greasy bullshit, much like this video. And then it just deteriorated into sneery opinion. I feel bad for you if you found it convincing.
And to think that I couldn’t get any worse.. then we had the prequels. But can’t get any worse form there.. Disney: hold my beer
I also recommend SFDebris’ Hero’s Journey/Shadow’s Journey/Hermit’s Journey essays. Very thorough and constructed with great insight.
The laziest decision that Lucas made was making Luke and Leia siblings.
Many THOUSANDS of FANS TOTALLY disagree!!!@@johnnyd3158
There are sequences of Jedi that just blow my mind even today. The speeder bike chase, the cruiser dogfights and the death star surface and tunnels are just incredible!
I got to see ROTJ in the theater when I was 10. Even back then I could tell that there was a slight dip in overall quality, Han Solo had nothing to do, and the Ewoks were a stupid. Carrie Fisher also looked almost 10 years older.
Every official publication and source from 1976 (yes 76) till 1983, had Luke Skywalker described as 20 years old, and Princess Leia as 16 years of age.
You can imagine my surprise when in 1983 at The Esquire Theater, I learned that Leia was Luke's twin sister.
🧐
This video is missing a VERY important part of the film. Only a line connected Luke's sister to the force? Leia was shown to be Force sensitive in Empire that's how Luke was able to reach out to here using only his mind.
@@thinkhector Fair point. Though at the time ESB was released, most folks I knew would have guessed that it was just because Luke was getting so strong with the force at this point.
@@thinkhector A development completely left behind in ROTJ.
@@mikesmovingimages Not sure what you mean. They used the same mind connection thing between Vader/Luke in Return. The idea wasn't abandoned.
@@thinkhector The idea that Leia herself has some connection to the force (is she the other one Yoda mentions?) . Completely abandoned as far as driving any development in Leia's character. When you stop and think about the Leia who was rescued from the Death Star, the Princess Leia who was three steps ahead of everyone else, who could look Vader and Tarkin in the eye and tell them where they could get off, resist the mind probe, and dismiss her own rescuers as a bunch of amateurs, it is tragic what she became by the time of ROTJ, reduced to prancing around in her slave outfit, sharing an Oreo with an Ewok, playing the straight man to Solo's clown, put in a series of ridiculous situations that had nothing to do with her as - supposedly - a princess (not elected) of a people who had lost their homeland and leader of a rebellion on the ropes. So many interesting story lines that could have been developed for her in ROTJ! Starting with her relationship with the Force.
In my youth I worked in a toy shop and was invited to a trade show where details , and toys, of the next Star Wars film were released. Told all my mates about the what I had seen. Was horrified when it came out as Return and not Revenge. Also horrified that I had not stolen one of the posters that were all over the place. Would be worth a pretty penny today!!
I've heard a lot of these tidbits, if not the reasons behind them, like the difficulty of finding 7 foot actors. Never heard about a mystery sister or the death star battle originally being the ending for Return of the Jedi. I'm very curious about what that trilogy would look like. There is a lot of revisionist history coming from Lucas' camp over the years. I feel like so much of Star Wars was Lucas flying by the seat of his pants, and a lot of the things people point to as being part of his master plan all along were almost accidental. One of my favorite stories is how Lucas gave a green light to kill Vader to an author writing an early Star Wars novel.
George Lucas' greatest work is his own mythology, but anybody who's really followed what he does knows you're right about him flying by the seat of his pants and pretending to have ultimate control (then when he DID have ultimate control, he made tepid movies and then sold the franchise). He has crafted the narrative of himself being a mastermind with the implication that 'without me there wouldn't have been any advances in special effects or fun sci-fi movies'. He distracts from his real inspirations to avoid copyright infringement and to pretend he's got higher-art motives for everything. The whole 'Joseph Campbell' thing, he didn't know anything about that until AFTER he started making movies. It wasn't an inspiration to him, it was an observation about his work by somebody else.
That's always been Star Wars in a nutshell. Especially when you go back to interviews and materials from of the time that the original trilogy was being made or even before that time. Lucas has always given conflicting information and the crew members and actors on the films even give different information than what Lucas would say. It seems like he wrote a shit ton of lore, but was constantly always trying to figure out how to make sense of it while telling a story. It's always wild to me when people these days talk about George like he had this all masterfully planned out when in reality the original Star Wars was a huge gamble that just so happened to pay off for him big time. He had to keep the ball rolling when the success came.
They were able to find enough for the crhistmas special.
@@jamescarter3196 Looks like it is that, pretty much. I was a teenager when the first movie came out, and while I live in Europe we could get at least some of the American and UK magazines specializing in things like science fiction and movies here, and I remember reading a few interviews before the last movie which rather gushed about the role of Marcia Lucas when it came to the creation of those movies, but then after the divorce it looked like her part had been completely memory holed for years. And how Lucas made Star Wars because he could not get the rights to make Flash Gordon, which is what he had originally wanted to make. No mention of Campbell, as far as I remember, until years later. And a lot of conflicting information, like the fact that after the success of the first movie Lucas seemed determined to make a 9 movie series but then it was just 6, and then he decided for a while that 3 was enough.
I never kept any of those magazines I used to buy, something I have later regretted, might be fun to now compare what was in those articles to what got told later. I haven't been able to find much online, but then I don't really even remember what I read where, or what the names of the more obscure or shorter lived magazines were.
Lucas's impression of himself probably wasn't much helped by the more adoring part of Star Wars fandom, there still seem to be a lot who are about ready to attack anything that might implicate that he actually had help from others (maybe especially that ex-wife - whose potential importance I do find quite plausible simply based on the fact that he made pretty damn good movies while they were together, but the quality of what he has made after that, especially when he was fully in charge, with the prequels, is nowhere close to those) creating those movies. No, to those fans he is the genius, the ultimate genius, maybe even better than somebody like Shakespeare...
There was a lawsuit by two Canadians who said they sent Lucas their ideas for Ewoks, not expecting he'd take the name and idea and add them to _Return of the Jedi_ without compensating them. They lost, but it could have been true.
George wasn't in the best ways going into this one with his divorce looming ahead, money management being foremost on his mind, and trying to keep this massive Star Wars empire moving forward. He was put through the wringer since the start of production on the 1977 film, so, I could see him being not as enthusiastic and passionate about wrapping up the trilogy with the strongest story possible. Getting it done on budget and on schedule was all that mattered, regardless of how good it really was. DP Alan Hume was a solid and reliable cinematographer, but ROTJ doesn't have that cinematic panache of The Empire Strikes Back. Also, with Marquand passing away a few years after the film's release, we never really got to hear of his experiences first hand.
You can hear from Anthony Daniels, Howard Kazanjian and Marcia Lucas criticising Marquand in the Icons Unearthed documentary. Buying into the Kurtz myth that Lucas compromised the story for toy sales is lazy and naive, but people who the saga to be something different as quite keen to believe anything that validates their opinion. It's what makes people so gullible. Easy for Kurtz and Kasdan to criticise what already exists, but much harder to actually conceive of something as influential or with as much scope as Lucas did, which neither man ever did in their careers.
@@Ruylopez778 All that being said, ROTJ still has the feeling of having been hijacked by a different story, not to mention a different sensibility, than what characterized the first two films. For better or worse, it singularly changed the flavor of Star Wars from what it was before, and set the path for everything to follow. In my opinion, it was not for the better.
Well said Barefoot. And I agree with most of what you said, however, I am of the viewpoint that ROTS was a excellent film and followed in the traditional of New Hope and Empire. Although, the thing that kind of threw me on ROTS was how young Anakin turned out to be because I was under the impression from Ep 4, 5, & 6, that Anakin was a bit older. Especially after casting a 78 year old actor to portray him unmasked in ROTJ.
ROTJ not having the cinematic panache of ETB is an understatement because ROTJ had always looked fast and cheap to me.
@@BarefootPeasant It really doesn't no matter how often people exaggerate about it. Subjectively disliking elements of ROTJ or the prequels doesn't mean that the story was 'compromised' as claimed by Kurtz.
Kurtz was quite happy to be cavalier with the budget of ESB, knowing that, 'the movie would turn a profit anyway'. Of course, it wasn't his reputation, home, business or employees that would suffer if the shoot collapsed before it even got finished. Now, he claims that giving the director time was necessary to make the movie, but that certainly isn't the way other people on set tell it. And if his 'no rush' approach was so great, why did Kershner turn down the chance to make another movie? Because it was too much for him, much like Lucas felt on ANH. Had they both had a better producer, that got shit done and kept the crew and creatives on good terms, would they have both had better experiences as directors? Probably. But each Star Wars movie made under Lucas (as producer or director and uncredited editor/writer) was hugely ambitious both on a technical level and in terms of scale and depth on screen. To claim otherwise is ignorant - but most likely based on a narrative that that person wants to buy into to - 'I don't want it to be like this, so it should **should have been** what I wanted'. And this has nothing to do with making art or movies, and is purely about entitlement and expectation.
And of course, Kurtz wanted to save face by claiming that his ideas and his vision were somehow more sophisticated and character/story focused, which is 'why' he got fired - although does he ever admit he got fired? Kazanjian and Marcia are pretty clear that he did. Although it happened in a very awkward way, because Lucas didn't want to tell him outright, but certainly didn't want him ruining his trilogy or company.
The accusation in this video and its previous iteration is that Lucas was a 'businessman' and more concerned with profits than story. 1. this can't be proved, it can only be speculation, based on Kurtz's narrative, and by making further unsubstantiated claims that "prove" this narrative. 2. given that THX flopped commercially and put American Zoetrope in trouble, it's not particularly surprising that Lucas wanted to avoid this.
The video, tries to imply that Kurtz is claiming that Lucas tried to be cheap on ESB. However, AFTER Kurtz was fired, and Lucas and Kazanjian did their best to save the production and the movie overall, and after it was released in theaters, Lucas made some small changes to ending, to make it clearer for audiences. So the idea that Lucas has a 'that'll do' approach to Star Wars is simply a reductive claim. Lucas doesn't want to waste time and money on things that don't matter. There is a difference, unless trying to construct a bullshit narrative by misrepresenting the past.
Each of Lucas' 6 movies is intentionally different. The accusation that ROTJ 'changed' what came before it, is both an exaggeration and entirely subjective. It was Lucas' decision to make the second movie more character focused and murky - since he wrote both the treatment for Brackett, and rewrote her first draft (that he didn't like) and a further two or three drafts after that. Kasdan was brought in to polish what already existed, and Lucas, Kershner, Kurtz and Kasdan were all part of the story consultation group. You can see photos of how Carrie Fisher rewrote her dialogue, and we know Han improvised his 'I know' out of frustration. And by all accounts it was not a particularly happy set under Kershner and Kurtz. Reportedly Kurtz was scared to say anything to Kershner.
But that doesn't stop fans from claiming 'Empire is so much better because Lucas wasn't involved' and 'It was written by Brackett and Kasdan' being the reason for the 'jump in quality'. Lucas was also an uncredited editor as on ANH - confirmed by Paul Hirsch, who was there.
Now, ANH and ESB are very different, despite having Lucas as writer/co-writer, co-editor, producer, Hirsch returning as co-editor, Marcia as co-editor, not to mention Kurtz and all the crew and actors that were carried over. So it's fairly easy to conclude that continuity isn't the defining factor in 'what characterized' ANH or ESB. All people are doing is jumping to the conclusion they want to believe, based on which perspective they want to believe, exaggerating, and ignoring anything that contradicts their narrative.
People like JJ Abrams feel that 1980 was the pinnacle of Star Wars and the first two should be revered and frozen in time, and Star Wars shouldn't be anything other than those two movies. And when he rehashed it, with all his talk of 'practical effects and sets', and killed off Han, the fans who hate ewoks still weren't happy. And when Rian made Luke disillusioned and gave him his 'bittersweet end', the fans still weren't happy.
And neither Marcia Lucas, Howard Kazanjian or Paul Hirsch liked what happened to Han and Luke in the sequels. So I guess we could safely presume that none of them would have been in favour of killing them off in ROTJ, or ending with TLJ's downbeat deconstructionism.
The video, like Kurtz, tries to downplay the plot and climax of ROTJ as being derivative or lazy (while apparently failing to understand the psychology or symbolism of it). And what of the mastermind Kurtz and his great ideas...? Dark Crystal? What did he ever make without the 'focus on toys' from Lucas holding him back..?
Great video. I would only like to point out that the reason why Empire went over budget and over schedule wasn't mismanagement on Kurtz's side. It was because he gave Kershnerr free rein during production to take his time and make the best movie possible-which ultimately happened. Kershnerr was a very, very, very slow and meticulous director. He liked to work with the actors and take his time bringing the best performances out of them. And it shows.
Lucas was understandably mad about it, but I think Kurtz rationalization behind his decisions was more on point: Empire was going to make a ton of money either way. The risk was minimum and they could afford to make the best movie possible. As it turns out, Empire is still the best Star Wars film around. History ended up proving him right.
And it's not that he was a bad producer in any way. Star Wars (the first one) was finished in time thanks to his management of the ILM chaos that was happening back in L.A. while they were shooting the movie in England. George was famously not a people's person, so Kurtz stepped in and course-corrected ILM's efforts in order to finish the special effects mostly on schedule.
He did have some disagreements with Lucas from the very beginning, because he was the man who used to tell him "no." Those disagreements got worse during production on Empire, and by the time they were starting to make Jedi, Lucas simply wanted to go in a different direction. A direction more influenced by the money and the toys, and less by the creative side of filmmaking. Was he wrong? I think so. He was also under a lot of stress with his marriage falling apart and becoming a multi-millionaire overnight. He also learned the wrong lesson from making Raiders of the Lost Ark. He thought audiences didn't care about production value, or complex characters, or a complex story. They just wanted entertainment.
So that's what Jedi became in the end: entertainment. Is it a bad film? I don't think so. Not the third act, anyway. It's not a strong movie. It's repetitive, sometimes boring, the first act leads nowhere, the stakes were dropped when introducing the Teddy bears, Leia's twist looked like a watered down version of Vader's twist in Empire... and so on. Take away Luke's confrontation of Vader and the Emperor, and the impressive final Rebel attack, and what you get is an uninspired film that shies away from true, compelling storytelling.
It could've been so much better. It could've been even great. It could've been the perfect ending for a beloved film trilogy.
But it could've been so much worse, too. I mean... have you seen the Special Editions?
I accept what you are saying, but one of the primary responsibilities of a producer is to keep the move on schedule and budget (as much as possible). Lucas delegated a great deal to Kurtz on 'TESB' and supervised the ILM work & editing. You have to remember that Lucas entirely financed the budget (US$ 20 million). The production over-run forced Lucas to take out an additional US$ 10 million approx in bank loans, which potentially jeopardised Lucasfilm's viability/longer term goals. So there was a great deal at stake in case the first SW film had just been a fluke/a happy coincidence of timing when released. I regret many of the key decisions on 'ROTJ', but from Lucas' own p.o.v. it was far more understandable to both keep a tight reign on production and to wrap up a film series that had cost him a lot personally.
I never had a problem with the Jabba sequence. After all, his name was plugged into the first two movies - I really wanted to see this infamous Jabba. Could 10 -15 minutes have been trimmed off the first act??? Probably so... this lends to my biggest complaint with Jedi is pacing issues. The main culprit is the middle act. For the swan song of the trilogy and everything needs closure, this movie drags in parts. The whole beginning of the Endor sequence till the intro of the Ewoks is soooo slow. Even as a 11 yr old seeing this in the theatre multiple times at this point; this area of the movie was the time for a bathroom break or grabbing more food at the lobby.
It wasn't just that the guy believed in what Kirshner was doing, he didn't reveal the financial overruns to Lucas, until they nearly ran out of money and Lucas had to go to bank(s) for funding.
The man is more of a business man than a film maker- at least what he became after his big score.
@@karlwithak. Pretty sad.
RIP Richard Marquand
Cool video. Love the explanations about the decisions made behind-the-scenes.
Glad you liked it!
For anyone who has fought in a war, you quickly learn not to underestimate your enemy regardless of how much you overpower them. I believe the Ewoks aren’t laughable. When I was in war, our unit truly underestimated the enemy because they were just a bunch civilians with nothing but the will to fight. That will to fight is a strong force. In the end they did do some damage. But all that matters is the final outcome. You don’t win a war by tallying all of the points and how many battles you won. That’s called a video game. You win when the other side concedes defeat. And many times in history that’s just the stronger military unable to continue the fight financially and so they concede defeat.
Do you think your unit would have lost a battle to the Ewoks?
@@cvz8849 well the movies are just that…movies. I could write a thesis pointing out all of the flaws in the tactics used on the army side. No idea about naval doctrine, but I’m sure they screwed that up too. I mean look at the Jedi when fighting, who would let the enemy have a clear shot of their back? It’s all just art and not reality. *But* the point that George was making in this film, you can find an interview of him explaining this, was just his interpretation of the US in Vietnam. And it truly is a lesson that needs to be reiterated a lot.
Yes you can find Lucas explaining Vietnam in the documentary "From Star Wars to Jedi".
To your point about Jedi's not covering their backs is true. Maybe they were just poorly trained or over-stressed thus a lack of concentration on the battlefield.
Could you have won against those peski EwoKs, my guess...no. You're in "their" environment. @@pqsk
Comparing Star Wars to War. Americans sure do love violence.
My problem wasnt that rhe Ewoks were small, cute and primitive, it's that they were played mostly for jokes, even during battle scenes.
The one who twirls the bolo and wraps it around his head. The two trying to pilot the AT-ST while Chewie (who had just done a Tarzan yell while swinging from a vine) barks orders at them. The one who steals a speeder bike and cant get his feet on the pedals.
If they had taken them seriously during the battle it would have really enphasized how the Empire had underestimated them. Instead I was just left, as an 11-yr old, with my suspension of disbelief stretched past the breaking point.
The only scene that tried to drive the seriousness home was when one Ewok is killed and the other tries to wake it up, realizes his friend is dead, and sits down beside him, saddened.
I always thought the Jabba sequence was too detached from the rest of the movie, a story arc that needed to be resolved and then quickly forgotten about… I’d have liked Boba Fett to have survived the battle at the Pit of Carkoon and followed our heroes to Endor, relatives of Jabba having now increased the bounty on their heads… Fett in Endor would feel like a Star Wars take on Predator
Agreed
Except that Predator didn't come out until 3-4 years after RotJ. So it would be Predator copying Star Wars.
Endor was a mistake, Endor with Fett could be just as a bad mistake.
Yep, when Jabba’s sail barge blew up and they flew off into space, I was like “good, now we can start the real movie.”
Funny... because I think the Jabba sequences are my favorite...
Odd, I thought Leia was already planned to be Luke's sister (the other) in ESB because at the end when her sensitivity to the Force leads her to find Luke when he's hanging on for life in Cloud City after losing to Vader?
Nope, although many people think that.
This guy made a few errors
that implies that she has the force, everyone could born like this, that is not necessary related to the (stupid and unnecessary) luke's sister thing
@@Bulletsandblockbusters
Happy coincidences filling up plot holes
Luke just reaches out to her with the force.
The Death Star situation reminds me of the 'Superman turns back time' scene that was supposed to be in Superman II, and then was shifted to Superman I when they needed a good climax.
💯
TY for making referencial comparisons.
We still don't know what we would have gotten if the Salkinds just stepped back and let Richard Donner make two movies back-to-back saving production costs and maybe making two epic movies instead of one. The Donner cut is cute, but doesn't do the villains justice, though the Marlon Brando scenes were epic. And would the ending of the first have been weak or a cliffhanger? That would have sucked for the extended TV cut lasting 3 hours with ads.
I remember being 10 years old and being blown away by how good Empire was…Instead Of walking out of the theater, I think I must have floated….Then I remember being 13 years old and seeing ROTJ and liking it all right but also feeling let down….
I was 19 when RotJ came out and my friends and I straight up hated it. It failed to honor the offers raised in Empire, which we were very invested in and had talked about and anticipated for 3 years. So many things were just ignored or thrown out, and Yoda just dies from complications of movie disease. "Help them you can, but you will destroy all for which they have fought and suffered", he said, but there literally were no consequences for Luke's actions. Han's brain turned into mush, rendering him a complete idiot, and we got to see the terrible Ewoks and their equally disastrous costumes. Luke stands around for over a half an hour in scenes with Palpatine in which NOTHING HAPPENS. RotJ just plain sucks and it set the table for the even worse prequel trilogy.
@@BrBill Totally agree buddy, Jedi felt like a prototype for the disastrous prequels ...for me it felt (and looked) like a sickeningly safe, corny Disney film - what a monumental disappointment after the epic, classy, beautifully-shot, mature Empire Strikes Back.
@@Optimus18 You're speaking my language now!
@@BrBill I'm still mad that all Han and Leia did was stand in front of a bunker the last act
@@pierreo33 Hey now, they made a weak joke callback to ESB too
RIP Gary Kurtz. I wish he had gotten his way.
Well at the very least George should have kept him.
Thank God he didnt.
@@Rschr101Why not?
@@Ruylopez778Did you ever think people were inclined to believe him since a lot of people think ESB was the best movie in the series?
@@Ruylopez778 It's really weird how you've got this giant chip on your shoulder about this subject, like you're afraid poor little George Lucas isn't getting enough credit for things already. You're not sharing any facts, just a bunch of 'me no like Gary Kurtz' bs and it's pretty whiny. It's clear you don't have a damn clue what producers do since you're trying so hard to pretend like he had no meaningful involvement with ESB.
Building a second Death Star is a very military - industrial Complex way of solving a problem.
Unfortunately it makes ESB+RotJ a repeat of the first movie: Luke gets trained by a Jedi, someone gets captured by Darth Vader, there's a rescue/escape, the Jedi dies leaving Luke on his own, then the Rebels blow up the Death Star.
4:49 - Rinzler dispute this claim convincingly in his book on the making of Star Wars. Lucas did not think seriously on more than one film.
nonsense
it was even announced to the public when the first film came out that that it was the first of three trilogies and that 8 more would follow
@@richarddecredico6098 All that was just talk: "[Lucas] says a lot of things." He didn't write things out. Spielberg can attest to it for Indiana Jones when he asked what was next and Lucas didn't have anything like he said he did, so they had to write the next chapter, using a lot of stunts cut from the first movie like the cart chase and jumping out a plane with an inflatable raft.
And that, folks, is why 'the Empire Strikes Back' is the GREATEST Star Wars movie EVER!!!! 🙂
Yes! Best direction- best dialogue. Easily the best.
Idk, a new hope and empire strikes back were great. Yeah empire strikes back was probably better but a new hope was great for its time.
You could tell adolescent me that and I'd throw a tantrum. But I go back to ESB as an adult, understand the themes, the repercussions, etc. As a kid, it was my least-favorite because there's slower, melancholy beats like the Millennium Falcon hiding from Imperial forces, or Luke's training. Other parts made me sad. It's arguably the darkest movie out of the 1 through 6 movies, and as me who just wanted swing swing lightsaber and vroom vrooom Xwing, I just didn't watch it as much.
So FF to adult me, a maturer, critical and dynamic thinker. Yup, ESB is hands-down the best SW.
Return of the Jedi was our favorite as kids. Ewoks were cute and we loved that Ewok Movie with the green giant and light sprite. As a teen it became Empire Strikes Back because of the romance and romantic music.
I like Empire but I think it's just the critics favorite. Star Wars and Return had better elements but the surprise of Vader's identity and Han's capture just turns people into critics too. The prequel trilogy also were incredible and finally getting the love they deserve. Star Wars ends with the Lucas films. Nothing else matters to me although Rogue One and Mandalorian seasons 1&2 gets some love.
“Well there were several possible story threads that we were looking to follow, one of them was Luke’s quest, his own process, he goes back to Yoda to finish his training and it deals with the whole spiritual side of being a Jedi Knight more. And therefore at the end of the story, he would go off on his own.
It was really Luke kind of riding off into the sunset, very much like (the) Clint Eastwood character in many of his westerns, and so it was a very bittersweet kind of story, but the spiritual dimension was there with Luke going back to Yoda and discussing a lot more training a lot more with Yoda. “ - Gary Kurtz (ign)
It seems like Kurtz wanted to make Jedi more deeper and character driven like Empire and Lucas wanted a blockbuster rollercoaster similar to Raiders of the lost ark. It’s a shame Luke arc was sacrificed for the Ewoks. I’m sure Yoda was going to teach him about the history of the Jedi and reveal Vader true past to Luke during his training. Maybe realizing he was once a good man would inspire him to save Vader. Seeing Luke over come his dark legacy spiritually, and mentally and become a fully trained Jedi knight would’ve been beautiful.
Interesting cuz as good as Raiders is, it’s the film that convinced Lucas that filmgoers don’t care about story as much as spectacle.
@@adanalyst6925 it’s a shame Luke character development was sacrificed for this rollercoaster discovery. I remember thinking did I skip a movie when I first saw ROTJ. Having all his development happen off screen was a disappointment. and don’t even get me started on Han and Leia. I remember Mark Hamill complained that they didn’t have much to do in the film.
@@jeremyfields9009 yeah they totally skipped the cool stuff with Luke’s growth. How did he become a cool dude in a black cloak? I always thought it would have made more sense to show him training with Yoda at the start then go to rescue Han.
Instead it’s like, wow he left his training, and then showed up for Yoda to die. He is not a real Jedi lol
@@adanalyst6925 it’s crazy I loved ROTJ as a kid and then when you get older you’re like “wait a minute, this shit doesn’t make any sense. Lol folks like to crap on the Ewoks but that’s the least of ROTJ problems. seeing Luke complete the training with yoda, succeeding in the cave, and probably seeing Sebastian Shaw Anakin in the cave to let Luke know there’s still good in him would’ve been great.
@@adanalyst6925 Ya know, I hadn't really thought about it and have always just accepted that in the time following Bespin, Luke somehow managed while training himself to exponentially increase his powers and abilities in the Force; my head canon was probably under Kenobi's guidance. But what you suggest makes way more sense; Luke goes back to Yoda to continue his training (Yoda's passing fits better here too), then puts into action the rescue on Tatooine.
Yeah, even as a kid I felt Leia being Luke’s sister was a bit of an ass-pull. In fact, I seem to remember early Star Wars imagery suggesting that Luke and Leia would eventually hook up instead of Leia and Han.
It was not as bas as the "Somehow, I've always known" line after that.
Same was with me - something didn't seem to fit well in that somehow artificial plot twist. I remember wondering then how is it possible for a couple of twins to be born on two different planets. And just recently I came across the first draft of the script for The Empire Strikes Back by Leigh Brackett and found out that indeed it wasn't originally meant to be this way.
@@emilkolarov5561
"Born on two different planets" is not the same as 'raised on two different planets.' Obi-Wan made this plain and clear when he said "to protect you both from the Emperor you were hidden from your father when you were born."
This is, in both cases, 'being hidden in plain sight' - Tatooine, Anakin's birthplace, a place he had no personal reason or desire to return to; and Alderaan, from whom hailed Senator Organa, which Star Wars Rebels established was an early covert backer of the Rebellion against Imperial rule, and apparently also took the opportunity to make Leia his protegé.
@@RockBrentwood
I am told by a Star Wars fan franchise historian, that one of its critical points of failure was having no "canon bible"; a master plot, character, and technical reference from which to say "no you can't have that character do that because 'X' ", so there was endemic chaos amongst the books.
Maybe if Lucas didn't have so many interpersonal issues he could have hired someone to do that long-term...
A little film called The Wrath of Khan kind of had something to do with the title change.
No, it was the other way around. It was to be _The Vengeance of Khan,_ until they heard _Revenge of the Jedi_ and changed it in 1982.
Life long Star Wars fan here. I learned several things I didn't know. Nice work!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Let’s not forget some of the directors that Lucas wanted for this one were: Paul Verhoeven, David Cronenberg, and David Lynch. Any choice would have been very interesting.
You say that, but in the end, Lucas backseat directed the two episodes formally directed by other people anyway. He didn't need a creative voice, he needed a reliable employee who could be trusted to bring his vision to life while he's busy elsewhere.
@@thecandlemaker1329 You give too much credit to lucas. Star Wars was just a side project to him, he was very surprised it became so big. He never had a Star Wars vision.
And the last thing lucas needed is an other yes men.
@@Zodroo_Tint Where did you read this disingenuous slander? Lucas has been trying and failing to make the movie for eight years. He was writing for eight hours, five days a week. The movie is assembled from every element he liked in world cinema, it's his ultimate auteur project. And all of that for a bunch of dumb nerds to slander him forty years later. Disgraceful.
@@karlwithak. Spielberg directed Duel
@@karlwithak. I think American Graffiti is pretty good. Had Lucas made more those kind of films he might have been known for more than just "the Star Wars tycoon". Then again he sort of tried making "other films" and we got crud like "Howard the Duck" (which Lucas produced and pinned his hopes on).
Very nice mini-documentary 👏
Many thanks!
Disney's Light & Magic series touched on a few of these points.
8:11 That's what I was thinking why it's "Return" not "Revenge" because the Jedi isn't supposed to be consumed by anger
yes new episode came running even for a re-edit big guy
Love these vids, you should look into the history of WB doing a Batman Beyond movie. They were working on one 20 years ago before they went with Nolan instead, and then ofc there was apparently a Michael Keaton one in development that was cancelled when Gunn took over for DC
It’s on the to do list and thanks!!!
Would love to see a Batman Beyond movie. Would be cool to have Christian Bale in it
Without Gary Kurtz, there's no Star Wars phenomenon.
@@Ruylopez778 - I don't think it's out of order to say that the success of Star Wars, from the very beginning, was due to a most fortuitous line up of contributors, including Gary Kurtz, John Dykstra, Stewart Freeborn, Ben Burtt, Ralph McQuarrie, John Williams and many, many more. Lucas assembled quite a team of talent.
Just as you have added many comments under this video recommending against criticising Lucas without considering the full story, that latitude should be granted to all the contributors.
@@RictusHolloweye "I don't think it's out of order to say that the success of Star Wars, from the very beginning, was due to a most fortuitous line up of contributors"
And Lucas has never denied that he had a great team of people to help achieve his vision. John Barry (set designer) is one who is often forgotten, but regularly credited by Lucas.
However, there exists a contingent of fans that not only exaggerate in order to complain, but also (through ignorance or intent) either downplay Lucas' contribution or make up accusations and narratives about how/why decisions were made that they can't prove. I can only presume they do this to make their subjective opinion have more validity. A classic example being the people claiming the uptick in quality in ESB is down to 'Lucas not being involved' and it being 'written by Brackett and Kasdan'. In their own ignorance, they apparently think they have 'proved' something. It shows how easily people chose to believe whatever they want.
"that latitude should be granted to all the contributors"
So when Anthony Daniels, Howard Kazanjian and Marcia Lucas don't say anything positive about Kurtz, in a documentary that is intentionally implying that Lucas was overwhelmed and needed more push back, what should we conclude? Kurtz spend a lot of effort making accusations about Lucas, which I can only presume was to try and save face for being fired. Perhaps if he hadn't been so blasé about burning through Lucas' *own money* while making ESB, and it hadn't nearly been a complete disaster (again) we might have seen episode VII, VIII and IX made in the 80s/90s? Perhaps Lucas' marriage might not have fallen apart.
Certainly recent history has shown us that making Star Wars without Lucas (as many disgruntled fans wanted) is just as divisive, and killing off Han, and deconstructing Luke with 'bittersweet' ending is equally divisive. As you're probably read me say elsewhere, retrospectively ESB gets to have its cake and eat it, because fans know how the story ends, but get a cliff hanger at the same time.
The implication by people determined to exaggerate or insult Lucas for not doing exactly what they wanted, is that Kurtz's own opinion on what it 'should have been' was automatically going to be better. Han got killed off in TFA, sacrificing himself for the rebels, just as so many apparently wanted. Was the actual reality as good as the idea of doing it? I'd say opinion is very split on that.
When someone like Bowie says, 'don't play to the crowd' i.e. make your own art your way, he is lauded as someone with high integrity. When Lucas makes his movies the way he wants them, he is accused of being a greedy egotist, who compromises story for profit. Can't see the double standard there?
People are free to criticise Lucas for what they don't want or don't like. Creating accusations about his motives in order to downplay his involvement or contribution is both disingenuous and pathetic. But it will continue, as long as sneery fans believe they understand 'writing' because they can nitpick or watch others exaggerate and nitpick things that don't matter, or otherwise misrepresent Lucas.
@@karlwithak. Whatever your opinion of the Star Wars films, denying they were a phenomenon just makes you seem a bit silly.
@@Ruylopez778 George's ex wife didn't like him, and nor did Anthony 'This is my sole acting gig' Daniels. That's not evidence, from these two, that is their opinion.
Without George Lucas, the GUY MUCH in love with SPACE ADVENTURES (and the CREATOR), there wouldn't be any Star Wars at all!!
There is One moment from the annotated screenplay that I can't forget. A sequence which was scripted but never filmed: Han Solo attaches a cable between the Shield Bunker Door and the commandeered At-St Walker in an effort to rip the entryway open. This proves to be humorously futile when the AT-ST walker tears itself in two because the Bunker Doors really are that impenetrable.
I saw an interview (possibly with Lucas if memory serves me correctly) that the reason they did Ewoks was because the Wookie suits are hand stitched with every hair being inserted by hand - they only made about 16 Wookie suits for Episode 3 and CGI's the rest based off those real 16 suits - that was simply not possible in the early 80's and would not have been cost effective in time or materials to make about 100 of them. They could have found that many tall men but the suits would have been the problem. However, yes the Ewoks would be more appealing to young kids and as I recall the Ewok figurines were the same price as the full size figurines so that's pretty cost effective as well. I don't recall any of my peers where were about 12 wanting Ewok figurines - we all wanted Jabba, the Rancor, the sand skiff and Jabba's henchmen, as well as Han in carbonite.
I completely agree. I was also 12 and the excitement was all about the forest speeders, the Falcon as always, Jabba, the Rancor, the Emperor etc. I even remember wanting a 2-legged AT and Admiral Ackbar figure.
The Ewoks were a disappointment even at that age; it was obvious they didn't spend much effort on the costumes.
I don't think I was instantly against the Ewoks. I watched one of the Ewok TV movies that finally ended it for me. I don't think I watched RotJ more than twice in the theater, and my parents wouldn't buy me the novel-adaptation.
It was probably harder to find dozens of 7+ foot tall Wookee actors than dozens of little people for Ewoks.. for one. But I also always thought Ewoks worked narratively because the Empire underestimates them as a threat. The Emperor's hubris leads to his demise, where even the smallest, most innocent looking creature can turn the tide if they work together, like the Rebellion themselves.
@@Steve56179 This week I heard there's criticism of _Wicked_ because they didn't use little people to play Munchkins. But I'm sure there's enough basketball players (or former basketball players) like Kevin Peter Hall _(Predator)_ who was 7'4"
I thought Steven Spielberg and David Cronenberg was going to direct this movie, have you heard of the tragedy of Darth Plagueis the wise?
I have heard it but not from a Jedi.
@@Bulletsandblockbusters well I think J.J was going to him be Snoke the whole time until you know who screwed it up
@@srstriker6420 and who was it that screwed it up?
Fun fact was that Richard Marquand had a cameo in the movie as one of the scout walker pilots.
My first memory of feeling critical about a film was over Return Of The Jedi in 1983, aged 11. The first 2 films were such a big deal to me that even though I enjoyed Jedi and still do, I was disappointed the plot was just destroying another Death Star and even more disappointed that my childhood hero Han Solo had so little to do and looked bored. God knows what I would have made of The Last Jedi. ;)
I thought the same, it's a replay attack on the DEATStar 2 but with amazing looking effects.
@@ArcanumAscent .........You mean apart from the entire rescue from Jabba which makes up the first third of the film?
@@ArcanumAscent - Seriously..... You don't think the whole rescue effort wouldn't have healed old 'wounds' (they both saved each other's lives in the process); nor that they had a reconciliatory chat on their way back to rebel HQ in the Falcon? (Having some big on-screen dialogue would have been entirely un-necessary).
It's not that deep; fella.
@@airfixx_8952the first third is so stupid, such a ridiculous nonsense plot
That's so true. You would think Han would have knocked Lando down and out on his butt for what he did to him, "a deep sleep of nothing" in carbonite. But i'm dreaming,... Georgie Lucas would never do that in a kids movie, thus a very bored Harrison hoping he would die in SW#6 then comes out of retirement in SW#7 35+ years later still bored not doing much on screen and get his wish fulfilled.@@ArcanumAscent
I stood in line for three hours when I was 7 to see this movie when it was released, and I loved it and that was one incredibly memorable day for a 7 year old kid.
Yes, I'm sure it was perfect for a 7 year old, in fact, I think that was the target demographic.
When Star Wars came out in 1977 , on its first Saturday night, me and my brother arrived at theater at 7;00 PM for the 8;00 PM show and had to wait on the line for the 10:00 PM show, We were on line for the better part of three hours
7:56 That's a myth. Several films prior had no opening credits, such as Citizen Kane and West Side Story, and were fine. The rule is that if any recognizable part of a name is credited, the director must be too. And "Lucasfilm" contains part of a recognizable name, and is seen before the opening crawl. It was passable on Star Wars because Lucas was the director, but not in The Empire Strikes Back because he wasn't. And because Kershner hadn't officially waived his rights to a credit, he was fined.
From everything I have ever seen and heard about the films creation, The overriding impression I get of Lucas is that he is a horrible control freak. Employing someone to do a job for you and then breathing down their neck the whole time is a nasty trait at any level. Imagine being hired to plumb someone's house, who used to be a plumber and them telling you that you've done it all wrong constantly!
imagine it the Disney way though where it's all done by committee and everyone has different inputs and it's all a big mess.
Imagine a world where yoda saying “there is another” set up a new trilogy, that would be epic foreshadowing
I'm so glad I found this video because often times in these types of videos, you see a lot of comments about how great ROTJ was and people's joy over the Ewoks. (To each his own.) However, when this video explained how Lucas hired "cheap and fast" Richard Marquand, that really nailed it, IMO. Because I always thought ROTJ looked "cheap and fast." Especially, in comparison to the exquisite looking ESB.
Also, according to this video, the side who always said that originally, Luke and Leia weren't supposed to be siblings were right.
@@trentmonaghan179Of course they were right. Yoda didn't want Luke to face Vader because he didn't have enough training, but it's ok, we have another hope, Leia, who has ZERO training and is ALREADY captured by Vader. That makes no sense.
@@JadePR33 Yeah, myself along with one of my friends were disappointed with the Leia answer, and personally, it seemed like it was shoehorned into the story. But this video helps make sense of what I perceived back then.
Also, I hate to say this, but *the best part of the movie, which redeemed the movie and which is what the movie was all about* was spoiled for me by apparently, a magazine writer who didn't like the movie and blabbed out that Vader returned back to the light side in a magazine article that I was browsing through before the movie came out, just to get a taste of some photographs of this upcoming movie. 😕 And that kind of ruined the movie for me. Plus, once something is spoiled for you, it is always spoiled. 😕
@@BrandonLovesTheMovies Well, yeah... I agree that it had the best model work of the original trilogy because from a hardware standpoint, one could see where the technology had advanced with the spaceships and the internal segments of the Death Star, etc. However, what I was talking about was the writing and the poor way that the movie was put together and edited (with the exception of hardware scenes of the spaceships twirling around in space, etc.). Along with the cheap looking teddy bears which didn't even looked like real creatures, but looked like short people in bear suits. 🙄
But the only good part of the movie, which I think redeemed the movie, which unfortunately was spoiled for me was Vader coming back to the light side. 😕 Also, even though this movie was a big hit, it fell short of the domestic box office take of TESB.
Maybe LeiA had those unexplainable powers that ReY has & eventually kick his father's butt into the sand.😄, all in the span of a very short time.🤔@@JadePR33
@00:42 What they don't mention here is that his wife cleaned him out in the divorce between Empire and Jedi. One of the main reasons Jedi was so focused on being a toy movie was because Lucas retained 100% of the merchandising from Star Wars, meaning he made all the money from the toys.
This is the reason Gary Kurtz left and did that work with him on Jedi.
That always stuck with me “ no, there is another “ and Kenobi reacted surprised… Leía Was never meant to be the sister
Yeah, saying "that boy's our last hope" made me think that he didn't know about the sister. Haven't seen _Obi-Wan_ series where they changed that and had them meet, or RotS where she's born.
Me, with my pencil and paper, about to play "Spot the Difference."
Haha it's mostly the same, just added some additional context and removed a lot of my own bias.
@@Bulletsandblockbusters Nice! Its good to see that you care about the quality of your content! 👏
@@Bulletsandblockbusters You worded things differently and added more details, but the bias is mostly still there, it's just slightly more implied than before.
I remember hearing they were it from "Revenge" to "Return" on Entertainment Tonight. I remember it. It didn't make any difference to me, I just wanted that movie. There weren't many outlets for STAR WARS news in the 1980's
Ahh man, this overall story would actually have been better. I love that idea of luke going off to find his long lost sister and them teaming up eventually to take down the emperor. Over 9 movies it would have been tons better.
This is true, but what we got with Anakin's return to the Light side and 'at the time' destroying the Emperor, was pretty amazing.
Its no wonder why Return of the Jedi felt so merchandise-driven. Like its still a good movie, but its also admittedly a step down from the first two movies.
This is also the beginning of George having more control on the Star Wars brand that lead to more "mixed reception" among the fans, since he had no one to challenge him on his ideas.
Gary might have spent more, but my word, it was the best of the bunch. Probably should have looked back and said "You know, for Revenge of the Jedi, let's give Gary another shot." Bad idea is bad idea.
The mention of Luke and his sister was a discussion I literally JUST finished having with my son not ten minutes ago, and then I clicked this video. I see you listening, Google! LOL
😂
Lucas blamed Gary Kurtz for not reigning in Irvin Kerschner. Kerschner was the reason why Empire was running late and over budget. He kept wanting to refilm things that Lucas deemed “good enough.” He wanted to keep refilming Luke’s ex-wing rising out of the swamp over and over for reasons such as “the water didn’t trickle off the ship the way he wanted.” Really Irvin was the problem, but Lucas didn’t want to confront him, apparently. It wound up being the best made Star Wars film. In hindsight Lucas should have just let the same team work on Jedi...
@@rumblehat4357 The real problem was that he didn't tell Lucas the truth about running out of money until the last minute, making Lucas have to scramble to the bank(s) and perhaps studio to get the money to finish the movie. Had he been honest with him, he could have gotten more funding sooner, or shown up to see what was happening on-set if something needed changing.
Wow! This explains a lot. I’ve always said the best Star Wars film is the one Lucas had the least hand in: The Empire Strikes Back. This clip explains why. Lucas didn’t really care about quality-only marketing his toys. Imagine how good Retirn might have been had Kurtz, Kirshner and his cinematographer returned-and if someone had deep sixed the Ewoks.
Wow what a hot take
Hmm. After the woman died who wrote the draft script, it was up to Lucas to write the next draft of Empire and that's when he realized it was necessary to make Vader Luke's father. So nearly all that was filmed was from the script(s) that he worked on. Every change had to meet with his approval, like
"I love you."
"I know."
It was supposed to be "I love you too" and he didn't like them changing it.
I hate how people (George Lucas included, and in particular) will say things like, "Oh this was part of what was originally written" or, "This was always planned." No, no it wasn't. Leia was never the sister, Vader wasn't supposed to be Luke's father, and Vader's children weren't supposed to be born without him seeing them, or even knowing of their existence, for twenty years!
These might have been thoughts in George's head, or part of the broadest of broad strokes, but there is no way that he had all these bad ideas planned out, beat for beat 5, 10, 20 years in advance!
I'm sorry, but the Lucas defenders just kill me sometimes. The man had a few good ideas, but A New Hope was saved in the editing room, Empire was amazing because of Kershner, and then the next 4 films were very week because it was all Lucas with everyone too timid to tell him no, and Lucas too arrogant to be open to brainstorming and input from others.
All that being said, I absolutely LOVE Star Wars, especially the original EU (Legacy now, I suppose) especially the novels that REALLY showcased what that Universe could be!
all films are made in the editing room
all
I hate that, too. It's perfectly okay to admit that the story developed/evolved. It happens with characters in books as they are being written. Ask JK Rowling - she envisioned different endings for her characters, but they went other directions.
The final irony is that the sequels are so bad in part because of too much brainstorming and all input considered equal and rolled together by committee. It's a lesson in how to create greatness; there has to be one creative visionary who encourages dissent, incorporates the input, but ultimately makes the final creative decisions with all input carefully considered. Skew in either direction from that balance and you get mediocrity, or worse.
@@jefferysterner This talk about making a movie by committee being bad is an exaggeration. Movies are a collaborative endeavor: writer, producer, director, editor, etc. I think there are examples against the assumption that one person should have total creative control. They've given free control to people who were part of a collaboration in a previous movie, that without it in the sequel just screw it up, like _Wonder Woman 1984_ and now _Joker 2._
@@sandal_thong8631 well I wasn't referring to writer/producer/director/editor kind of collaboration being a problem. It's when the creative process is governed by focus-group minded groupthink. Brainstorming is always good to start, but the creative process has to get focused as it progresses, which is generally better done with one person's vision in mind and a collective who gets behind them. That said, a creative dictator is also not good, which is why I said the visionary must encourage dissent and use what comes from that. The OT was so good because Lucas had his wife in particular, but also Carrie Fisher and others in the cast pushing back on him when it made sense. They worked as a team, with everyone having George's overall vision in their sights. The prequels were not as good because none of those players were there to push on George as much. Those movies would have been so much better had Marcia remained involved.
Today, Disney's creative committees are not team-oriented; rather they are focus-group oriented, comprised of a bunch of people who each have their own vision for what is important and put their own agendas above the creative goal. All that creative spaghetti gets spliced together, add that to multiple writer/directors for a trilogy, and you get creative garbage.
Get the making of book by rinzler (rip), youll get the original Story and parts of screenplay, Discussions, reasons for changes, artwork, little people stories. Just get it.
You should make a what could’ve been focused on if Steven Spielberg had directed Return of the Jedi and how that could’ve possibly turned out
Well the Ewoks had a home field advantage. Plus the detachment the Empire deployed to Endor’s moon was pretty small
@@knowsomething9384 Flowery purple prose
I always thought an easy way to help explain the Ewok/Endor victory would be to incorporate some of the stuff from the Ewok movies because there was some freaky stuff going on on Endor
Magic ewoks
I got so sick of Death Star ripoffs in the EU.
The Sun Crusher, The Galaxy Gun, The Darksaber, the lost Death Star under Admiral Daala's command at the Maw Installation...it was just ridiculous.
Then you see what the sequel trilogy did and I just wanted to scream. Starkiller Base was literally "LIke a Death Star, but BIGGER-ER-ER!!!" and the fleet of Death Star Star Destroyers was the most hacky thing I've ever seen.
It's interesting to consider that IV-VI were such a mess behind the scenes but they still seem to stand up better than the latest films, despite obvious missteps. Not sure whether that's the effect of expectation, nostalgia, dumb luck or what.
Episodes IV-VI have something neither the prequel nor the sequel trilogy has: *Characters you can relate to*
Luke is the down on his luck, good-hearted guy who is stuck in a life where he is going nowhere, but then suddenly ends up in the adventure of his life.
Han is a wise-cracking, disillusioned space-pirate who knows his only skill is being a great smuggler and a pilot. He's in the adventure for money and since he owes Jabba a debt.
Leia is spunky, young woman who occasionally let's her aristocratic, high life personality come through to the annoyance of others.
Obi-Wan is the old sage who introduces Luke (and the audience) to an ancient art and knows he must sacrifice himself to let the others escape and live.
The prequels have:
Padme: Who in the first movie is just dull and devoid of both headstrong character or wisdom beyond her years which should be expected if she's a queen of a planet. She later falls for Anakin for seemingly arbitrary reasons and accepts him in little time despite his obvious inner struggles and flaws.
Anakin: Who is too perfect as a kid, being too kind, too friendly and can fix or build anything. As an adult he wants more power but doesn't himself know why. In Revenge of the Sith he sounds like a brainwashed cult-member who doesn't understand how foolish and silly he sounds. Real power-hungry people are cunning and can sway a lot of people to follow them.
Obi-Wan: A hothead who loses his composure and temper and rushes into fights by exposing himself. How is that character the same, level-headed sage we saw in the original films?
Qui-Gon: He wants to defy the Jedi council because...?? Who knows.
Jar-Jar: Supposedly the comical character but just comes across as hopelessly clumsy and annoying.
The sequels have:
Slightly better and more relatable characters than the prequels. However they all run out of steam in the second film already. At least Poe Dameron shows both bouts of humor and genuine disappointment and anger when he learns the rebel commander has no plan (or so he believed). Rey already knows the ways of the force and can defeat Kylo Ren at the end of the first film.
If you don't relate to the characters or at least understand their motivations then you don't care about them.
Characters whose choices and actions seem arbitrary and exist without any believable traits just feel artificial and alien.
Four reasons the OG trilogy worked: 1) amazing practical effects 2) great characters including Harrison Ford 3) clear fight between good and evil. Obi-Wan Kenobi acting almost like Jesus. 4) John Williams ground breaking soundtrack based on Holst's planets. Future generations may even think John Williams' work eclipses the films.
@@McLarenMercedes Did you seriously say the prequels have unrelatable characters? Did you also claim that the characters in the sequels are more RELATABLE!? How ignorant are you?
When the heck was Obi-Wan EVER a hothead!? If anything, he has always been incredibly cautious in every movie. His fighting still is DEFENSIVE, hotheads don't rush to people to attack defensively. Obi-Wan has never shown a moment of anger nor did he ever lose his temper. He tries to stay composed and even at the death if his master, he didn't show any rage. Did you even watch the movies? Do you even know who Obi-Wan was?
Anakin Skywalker was a SLAVE who tried to be optimistic as a child and dreamt of being a jedi. Once he became a Jedi, he wanted to become stronger to protect the ones he loved. His mother dying traumatized him and he started developing feelings for Padme but was told that he coulnd't pursue it because it goes against the jedi order. Anakin also NEVER wanted to rule the galaxy, he only wanted enough power to save the ones he loved. He's not power hungry for the sake of it.
Qui Gon wants to defy the jedi council because he saw the corruption of the jedi. Their zealousy and arrogance brought them down a path that he was strictly opposed to, just like his master Tyranus.
The sequels have dumb hotheads like Poe Damareon who makes "yo mama" jokes and some stormtrooper whose entire personality is screaming "REEEY" and the granddaughter of darth sidious who is automatically good at everything from piloting a spce ship she never touched in her life to being a jedi.
How on earth did you seriously think the prequels have no "relatable" characters while believing that the clowns from the sequels are "relatable"?
It's clear that you have NEVER seen the prequels and are nothing more that a proud sequel consoomer
@@tron23058 I truly believe Star Wars wouldn't be the phenomenon it is without Williams. I'm not saying it wouldn't still be amazing, but it definitely wouldn't be what it is without him.
When Return of the Jedi was announced I was stunned the director was someone I'd never heard of. The film is very good but I do wonder what could have been if Spielberg had directed it.
it was kind of weird how little the Ewoks were shown before the movie came out. even on the Kenner figure back they were scratched out with markers
I'm glad it's called Return of the Jedi. Revenge is a very callous word that holds a lot of anger and hatred towards something. Return especially in this context feels like honour is about to be restored.
Keep up the good work bro!
Have any clues about what next vid will be?
Thanks! Yup! George Miller’s Justice League, then I think Edgar Wright’s Ant-Man
@@Bulletsandblockbusters Cool!
wow this is the most informative Star Wars video i have seen on UA-cam....good job
As a kid I loved jedi but even as a 9 year old I thought the second death star was stupid.
I remember when I was 7 or 8 being at the movie theatre and seeing the revenge of the jedi poster and telling all the kids at school about it. I was so excited and couldn't wait for this movie. Then when the ads for return of the jedi came out I was so confused because I was positive it was called revenge of the jedi. All my friends told me I was just dumb and read it wrong or I imagined it or something. It bothered me so much at the time, but thankfully decades later I would learn that I was indeed correct.
The line from Yoda about their “being another” still works even if Leia is not Luke’s sister. I’ve always thought it actually referred to Anakin Skywalker and the chosen one prophecy
George didn’t invent the chosen one concept until he did the phantom menace. Jedi was more about Anakin’s redemption, the son saving the father and the father saving the son. He wanted a Christian mythical ending. Evil destroys itself. Nothing against the prophecy idea. I kinda liked it. But so many fans upset about palpatine coming back is a waste of hot air. Lucas was gonna change it with the Disney treatments anyway.
That's what prequel hate is all about, though; the problem isn't whether it 'works', it's whether it's satisfying, which SW isn't for many with alternative universes in their heads. However much you love them.
BLEH
ABSOLUTELY. The other hope is that there is still some Anakin left in Vader.
Lucas has also said that worked to make the audience think that he could kill Luke off in the end of ESB.
Honestly Revenge of the Jedi sounds way better than what we got.
That's fascinating stuff. I knew most of this but it is still fascinating. Despite Jedi being the weakest in the trilogy it still is a good film.
It has the best space battle of any SW movie though. The one in TPM and Jango and Obi Wans dogfight rival it though
@@crispy_338 I go back and forth between the Battle of endor and the Battle of scarif in Rogue one.... The one thing I thought was missing in Return of the Jedi is I got height to see the b-wing actually do something.... I don't remember any scenes of it actually in combat lol
@@ianbrewster8934 I do like the RO fight but there’s something so nostalgic about real models composited onto a space background that just does it for me
@@crispy_338 true dat my friend.
I found "Return of the Jedi" a disappointing follow up to "Empire Strikes Back". How important was merchandising to George Lucas? When he gave permission to Mel Brooks to make "Spaceballs", one condition was that the parody couldn't be merchandised.
Lucas probably would have sold more Star Wars stuff if he'd let Brooks make Spaceballs toys, but as we know from so much other evidence, George wants control more than money or good movies. He does like money but 'control' stopped him from benefiting from Spaceballs.
Han Solo dies and Chewie gets a whole planet of Wookies to topple the Empire... No Jedis needed. Would have been the perfect movie.
I wonder if Lucas was always going to have Han fall in love with Luke's sister.
The Ewok stuff isn't as bad as people tend to remember it. Yes, they're cute little merchandise critters, but if you really watch that last battle, they're not that effective. Their log traps work fairly effectively, but where their strength lies is in creating distractions. This enables the Rebel soldiers to be more effective.
For those interested in early drafts and discarded ideas, I recommend Star Wars: The Annotated Screenplays. It's really interesting to see how the original trilogy evolved as it progressed.
It was obvious back in the 70's that Leia and Luke weren't siblings. Just read the canon novel "Splinter of the Mind's Eye". Then of course, it got un-canoned pretty quick lol.
This is just one of many things that changed as they wrote more. Its kinda like comic books where there are a billion alternate universes. I don’t mind the Leia storyline being a Skywalker… I just wish they did more with it. Leia in my opinion was the best character in the series, though I understood it was mainly Luke’s story. Luke, however, isn’t a very interesting character, and is one we’ve seen over and over. Leia, however, was really revolutionary. She’s a teenager, but incredibly smart and powerful, and is politically minded unlike Luke who was naive and Han who was selfish and jaded. A Jedi Leia would have been so cool, or at least if we could have gotten more of her in a leadership role. They tried to touch on it in the new sequels, but there was a new generation of characters who were supposed to be the lead characters. The original cast were just nostalgic supporting characters who had little to do. Leia remains as a character with so much promise, but with no follow through. As Carrie once said, once she put on the metal bikini, she basically lost any of her relevance or seriousness.
Empire strikes back director Kershner should have directed RotJ and continue writing directing ESB style story telling into a fluent ending with Vader’s redemption and death of Palpy
There is plenty to love about Return of the Jedi, but I do wish there weren't quite so many storytelling shortcuts taken.
I read some sci-fi book set in the future where the main character before his own story starts was watching Star Wars: Episode 60 or something, assuming there'd be a new one every 3 years for 180 years. But I don't remember the book or short story!
Took 19 years to build the first death star and then after its destruction they conveniently built a new one in 3 years.
And don't forget the second one was WAY bigger.
Well they had cellphones by then so it was a lot easier to order parts
@@jamescarter3196😂
Firstly it was never stated to be 19 years when the originals were made, secondly the death star was barely built and had millennium falcon sized holes in it, thirdly they'd done it before so knew what they were doing
@@zaczac744 Seethe and Copium.
Good upload. Seems incredible to me that the new movies have managed to kill off the entire Skywalker lineage. Supposedly the last hope of restoring the balance of the force. Palpatine was never as powerful as Annakin Skywalker, regardless of what's insinuated by that horrible final movie..
The SW film group was the first set of films to disappoint filmgoers who expected a deep universe of characters and stories, and instead got a couple of good-looking entries, followed by others that confused the narrative, had repetitive plot elements, and left the audience feeling like they didn't get much for their emotional and financial investment. GoT was a recent example, but there are many others. Good analysis here - I enjoyed it a lot!
Thanks!
"who expected a deep universe of characters and stories, and instead got a couple of good-looking entries"
That would explain why it was one of the biggest franchises ever for decades I guess? Nope.
"confused the narrative"
Well, which was it, harmless fluff, or confusing?
"repetitive plot elements"
For example? Surely you have a really bad example to go with your sweeping dismissive claims.
"and left the audience feeling like they didn't get much"
I guess that explains why they weren't the biggest or second biggest movies of the year they were released...
"Good analysis here - I enjoyed it a lot!"
So, just regurgitate hollow claims of the guy that got fired for being incompetent and a liar?
Answer me this about this 'good analysis'. Kurtz having ONE example of Lucas not fussed about ONE shot from ESB, when the movie is about to collapse and cost him his company and reputation shows that Lucas didn't care about quality?
Except that by the end of the production, Kurtz had already been replaced by Kazanjian.
1. Lucas did change a shot after they'd already released the movie (before wide release).
2. He was so disappointed with the sound reproduction of Jedi in a regular theater, that he pushed for the THX system to be a standard.
But sure, he just didn't care about anything but toys, right?
How can people be so gullible and cynical, and at the same time so condescending? It really is baffling.
Bro you’ve been commenting on this video for over a month go touch grass.
Interesting video. This is perhaps what the sequels were trying to do.
Adam driver now taking the place of Luke not defeating the emperor but turning to the dark side-ish and also searching for his long lost sister aka Rey and not actually Leia. And then teaming up against the emperor in the final 9th movie.
Leia did not have to be Luke's sister - that was the moment that Star Wars became a little too soap opera. In my mind the obvious answer to Yoda saying "No, there is another." is pretty obvious because that's exactly how it turned out: Anakin Skywalker was the other hope.
Agreed!
To OP.
"No, there is another." is pretty obvious because that's exactly how it turned out: Anakin Skywalker was the other hope." Really? That's a really hard sell when both Obi-Wan and Yoda believe Anakin/Darth Vader is beyond saving and both tell Luke that Anakin is long gone and that he's more machine than man now. Luke is the only one who actually believes there is still good in Vader, and Vader himself dismisses this several times during their talks and their final fight. The emperor himself beliefs Anakin is forever doomed to serve him. Yoda even gives Luke a warning not to underestimate the powers of the emperor or he will suffer his father's fate. Fate is final. There is no going back. This too clearly says Anakin/Vader is doomed and was turned into the dark side by the emperor.
Leia being Luke's sister is clunky and obviously shoehorned in but it works. Leia is a force for good and has been ardent supporter of the rebellion since before the original film. Betting your hopes on the most evil man in the galaxy, the man who hunted down and killed all the remaining jedi and is the emperor's obedient servant/slave? Great idea...
@@McLarenMercedes i think Yodas really just saying we can still hope for plan B ~ Luke's idea, if all else fails
@@McLarenMercedes I was mainly speaking from the perspective of The Empire Strikes Back, before Jedi was even written. Lucas had toyed with the idea of a sibling relationship in early drafts of a new hope but I think it's pretty obvious that he had sidelined the idea until the last second (maybe at the recommendation of someone else?). In fact I believe there are interviews where "the other" was discussed and multiple options were explored.
Don't get me wrong, I love Leia, but by the time of the prequels good Lord everybody in the galaxy is related to this one family.
ALABAMA... IN... SPACE!!!!
Ha! Dueling banjos instead of lightsabers between Luke and Pa Vader.
When you mentioned lynch you should have included a clip of him talking about a wookie
😂
If the ideas carried on though. Luke go out unto the sunset in search for his sister. That would have been a damn good take on the series.
LOL, the video where George accidentaly stumbles into someones video is used greatly here :)
Haha thanks
I actually have a Gammorean Guard costume from '83; misprinted: "Revenge of the Jedi"; (RETIREMENT FUND)
I do wonder at what point Harrison Ford learned that this would be the final movie in a trilogy, and not merely part 3 in an even larger story.
Because if he was thinking that he might have to stick around for another 4 films, that might affect why he wanted Han Solo dead.
It's so unfortunate... there are only 2 things I don't like about Jedi...
Bringing back Han, and introducing the Ewoks
Return of the Jedi is my fav of the original trilogy but I've never liked that Leia was made Luke's sister or the second death star. Felt like a cheap repeat of the other movie's highlights.
Be interesting with all these multiverse movies if people would see alternate versions of the Star Wars movies. I think they talk about alternate casting in some lesser movies in _The Flash._
Too many Wookies would have had people questioning the existence of Sasquatch. Lucas was forced to change it.
I feel the opening of Return of the Jedi was successful, but I would make some changes to the rest of the film.
I would change the plot from there to have Han and Leia follow a lead from Jabba’s Palace to Coruscant (kind of a WW2 French spy thriller vibe), and Han, Chewbacca, and Leia discover a method to use Spice routes to smuggle rebel troops past the Imperial fleet to storm the Imperial Palace. Blade Runner was released in 1982 so the effects were possible for Coruscant. Luke is now a symbol of hope for the galaxy, meaning he will bring the return of the jedi order and peace to the galaxy. The rebel troops inspire the Coruscantians to rise up (maybe there are Wookies that were inspired by Chewbacca, which helps turn the tide).
Lando and a new character (maybe someone that infiltrated Jabba’s Palace with him so they have a rapport) would follow a similar path to the actual movie leading the space attack against the Imperial fleet, but the attack on the fleet is a smoke screen to distract the actual goal of sneaking in the ground troops to the surface; Lando could have subplot about convincing the rebel fleet on a suicide mission that functions as a distraction.
Luke would similarly follow a similar path to the actual movie, but I would have had Luke be training Leia in the Force between movies (it’s clear in Empire Strikes Back that she can use The Force so why not have that training occur off screen or in an early scene…maybe Leia uses the Force during the Jabba mission). I would also not make Leia and Luke related; the scene where Luke snaps when Vader says “If you will not turn, maybe she will…” still works, especially if Leia is on the planet at the time. Luke would still confront the Emperor, but it would occur at the Imperial Palace. There would be additional tension because Luke falling to the Emperor’s side would snuff out the new hope that he has provided to the people of the galaxy.
The rebels are successful with taking the palace and there is a celebration to the end of the civil war. Maybe Han dies so Harrison Ford can have his dream fulfilled. The end.
Regarding Gary Kurtz…
Oh no…Empire Strikes Back went over budget! Oh no we managed to make the greatest fantasy film of all time until The Fellowship of the Ring!!! Oh no the film made 10x its budget back in its initial run!!!!!!* I see only one solution…fire that hack Gary Kurtz!!!!!!!!!!!
/s
It will always baffle me. I could see firing Kurtz if The Empire Strikes Back bombed, but firing him would be like firing Kevin Feige after The Avengers. I believe George Lucas always disliked anyone that pushed back, and Kurtz was the artist voice that kept the negative economic voice of Lucas at bay. As much as I love Return of the Jedi as an action adventure film, it is not the grand finale that a Return of the King or even War for the Planet of the Apes is for their respective franchises, and I believe it’s because they cheaped out with the filmmaking and characters and emotions and originality. Why not make the film a three hour epic? The film could cost $100 million, and it would still be profitable (that budget would be excessive, but you get my point). Pay the fines to get Steven Spielberg or Ridley Scott. Go for broke with the third Star Wars. There was never a more sure fire hit in the history of cinema to that point.
On the plus side, at least Kurtz made The Dark Crystal and Return to Oz before hitting financial ruin with Slipstream. It’s unfortunate that an artist like Kurtz never bounced back, but hey, money isn’t everything. Kurtz is still the man in my book!
*The budget was $30.5 million. The data is a little fuzzy for the initial box office, the domestic box office was around $200 million, so I am being conservative and saying the international was around $100 million.
And ewoks gave little people jobs 👍 plus having a second death star is okay to do again if the empire had improved the design to make it less vulnerable...
You can tell Empire went over budget and over Production time. It literally is the best of the Original 3 movies!
The original went over budget too, and they were editing up to three days before release. I wasn't there for the stuff but I really don't believe Gary Kurtz's firing was solely because 'the budget' when that would mean Gary was also the guy who facilitated George to go over-budget on the original film.
@@jamescarter3196 I think it was not telling him until they needed Lucas to go to the bank (or studio) to get money to keep production going that infuriated him. If he'd kept him up to date, then it would have been Lucas's decision whether to step in on set or get more money earlier.
I had a Revenge movie poster! Mom threw it out one day….. one day i snuck into her room and threw out some of her gold rings.
LMAO
Liar
@@I_Shit_on_your_shit_point you are the liar AND a January 6th traitor!
We all see it.
Repent.
Yes, yes, gooooood!
that was the major cop out of jedi..was doing another death star battle..they should have attacked coruscant...gary kurtz if he was still around would have pushed for that
How so? it makes perfect sense. The empire had gambled on the death star being around to smack around any rebelling systems; with the first one gone, there was something of a power vacuum. So they construct a new one. The emperor then uses the death star to draw the rebels in..
@@timewarpdrive77 this is a movie man! Audiences want to see something different! Laziness from George lucas
@@donsharma6136 It's also a story and it works perfectly in the story
The Super-Star Destroyer met it's end pretty easily. That could have been the focus of a major attack.
I always felt that from seeing the first one back when i was a kid in the early 1980's in a small village in Finland on a crap vhs copy on a dark Luxor tv set, from a state Tv broadcasted version from Sweden. It was the most fantastic adventure ive'd ever seen.
Back then you could not even get the original sequels here. And i was dying to see them. Just by accident back then in a paper called "The yellow pages" which is like Ebay today or any online selling site... Someone was selling the sequel to Alien. Aka James Camerons Aliens. I bought it,... But on that VHS cassette, was commercials for widescreen releases for The Empire Strikes Back and Return Of The Jedi. I was like..... OMG!!! Now i can finally see them!!!! And this was waaay before the internet!
I believe it was 1988 or 1989 i get them, and i was like on a 7th cloud when the notice came in the mailbox that they had arrived at the post office ready to be picked up.
I had my mom drive there, i rushed in and got them and came up and ran upstairs and popped Empire in!!!.... I was like hmm.... This is not what i came to expect.. But okay. Then i popped Return of The Jedi in right after. Okay....
I was like kind of let down... Because i could tell, that this was not George Lucas's original idea. It was okay, but it just felt wrong or "altered" from Star Wars A New Hope.
The beginning of Empire made sense, but to make that wise Jedi master as something from the muppet show was like.... Okay. Whatever.
Jedi was no better,.... I guess the drama with Luke and Vader was what saved it. Another Death Star?... Really?... And muppet bears running around?...
I did not see The Holiday Special but i did see the unofficial tv sequels to ROTJ: Caravan Of Courage & The Battle For Endor.
Even as hyped as SW was then with the prequels i refused to watch them. I remember ppl waiting in line and camping outside the theaters etc... I was not one of them. I have seen snippets from here and there out of morbid curiosity, but from what i have taken throughout the years, the prequels were nothing but a filler for George Lucas's wallet.
I was to the theater for "The Force Awakens" but that was only a remake of Episode IV, only done more childish.
Well, that is my take. The original trilogy is phenomenal, There is so much lore and things that did not come to fruition behind it. And in my opinion, would have been tons better than the Star Wars we got thought the years.
May the Schwartz be with you.
This would NEVER, um, ‘fly’ today, but after I learned that the Ewoks were supposed to be Wookiees, I always thought a great solution would be to still have Wicket discover Leia, and eventually take her TO the Wookiees, the race that really ruled the forest.
The Battle of Endor (or Kashyyyk) would have BOTH species involved, the Ewoks still being cute and marketable little shits, but some serious asskicking also taking place. Of course, this tandem would MANDATE that at some point, Wookiees TOSSED Ewoks at hapless Stormtroopers and other Imperials, hence the ‘problematic’ implications in today’s Outragonia. So, I’m not sure I’m even allowed to daydream about such cinematic fun.
P.S. George attempted to redeem this in Episode III, but the Kashyyyk sequence there just felt like a weightless, high quality videogame cutscene, which really could be said about a third of the Prequels’ total footage.
That's a pretty fire idea. If only...
They weren't supposed to be Wookies. Or at least not in Return of the Jedi. This video misled you.
Lucas wanted a bunch of Wookies flying ships at the end of A New Hope (in part cause he really like the word 'Wookie', in fact it shows up in his earlier sci fi film THX). That was the plan. But it was too pricey so he settled for one: Chewy. Then he wanted another hairy alien species but one that was more primitive, so he designed one for that role.
@@SamSaxtonArt I honestly can’t keep track of the urban legends versus the half-truths versus the historically accurate anecdotes anymore. I know his early drafts had the Wookiees helping with the assault on the Death Star. But since they didn’t, introducing them en masse in the third film would’ve been cool, and I stand by my dream of seeing Chewie heaving Wicket into a group of unsuspecting Stormtroopers standing below them in the woods.
@samsaxtonart That’s incorrect. From George’s mouth he says it was originally a Wookie planet and he changed it.
Post the source for that claim then. Cause you're putting words in his mouth if that's your interpretation just from the clip you posted. He never even implies that that was an intention. He's gone on record as saying that he wanted to do lots of wookies and he's explaining here why he didn't just do them for the natives in ROTJ. @@Bulletsandblockbusters