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Star Wars: A New Hope premiered in the spring of 1977, followed by its
two sequels: The Empire Strikes Back in 1981 and Return of the Jedi in 1983. It
quickly became apparent that this was a science fiction trilogy unlike any
previous movies of this genre, a fact emphasized by the way the movie shattered
previous box-office records and won awards, including seven of the ten Academy
Awards for which it was nominated.
The movies tell the story of Luke Skywalker (actor Mark Hamill) who—together
with his Jedi mentors Ben "Obi-Wan" Kenobi (Alec Guinness) and Yoda, his friends
Princess Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher) and Han Solo (Harrison Ford), and his two
trusty androids C-3P0 (Anthony Daniels) and R2-D2 (Kenny Baker)—battles Darth
Vader (David Prowse; voice, James Earl Jones) and the evil Empire to restore
peace to the Galaxy.
The most obvious difference between Star Wars and its predecessors was the
special effects. Computer graphics were still in their infancy in 1977, and much
of the technology needed to realize director George Lucas's vision had to be
developed as the production of Star Wars progressed. The advancement of
computerized special effects can be seen by comparing the initial trilogy with
the "special edition" versions released in 1997—Lucas had to wait for technology
to catch up with his initial vision for scenes such as the Mos Eisley spaceport
in Star Wars and Cloud City in The Empire Strikes Back.
The special effects in the original trilogy stunned moviegoers. For the first
time, spaceships were depicted as vehicles that looked as if they had been
through many battles instead of appearing as shiny flying saucers. Battle scenes
looked real, and moviegoers felt as if they were in the middle of the action.
Aliens displayed a wide variety of appearances rather than simply looking like
bulbous-headed humans with three fingers.
The Star Wars trilogy represented the variety of worlds that humans might
encounter throughout a galaxy. Planets ranged from the desert planet of Tatooine
orbiting a double star to Yoda's swamp world of Dagobah, from the ice-covered
world of Hoth to the Bespin with Lando Calrissian's Cloud City. Star Wars
presented an array of new weapons such as the light saber and a new power, the
Force, which could be used for either good or evil. Some of the concepts, such
as creatures living on airless asteroids and spaceships traveling at speeds
greater than the speed of light, are definitely in the realm of science fiction.
Nevertheless, there were enough scientifically reasonable concepts in the
movies to make everything seem possible at some other time or place in the
universe.
As a proponent of space exploration, Lucas hoped that Star Wars would excite
the younger generation about space and its exploration. Lucas has said, "I would
feel very good if someday they colonize Mars . . and the leader of the first
colony says 'I did it because I was hoping there would be a Wookiee up there.'" |