Tag: Star Wars: Episode V – The Empire Strikes Back

  • Retro Bits: Summer of 1980

    Retro Bits: Summer of 1980

    The US summer box office season of 2020 has taken some decidedly odd turns, with a global pandemic pushing films off the traditional summer schedule, into digital platforms or off the calendar entirely.

    So, in their absence, I thought I’d take a look back at what punters were doing when the outside world wasn’t just on our screens.

    The first stop on my wayback machine is 1980, a year that opened with Sidney Lumet’s Just Tell Me What You Want and closed with Buck Henry’s First Family. While future stars Olivia Munn, Eva Green, Kristen Bell, Macaulay Culkin and Chris Pine were busy being born, the likes of Airplane! (or Flying High!) and something called The Empire Strikes Back were shutting up and taking our money.

    May

    The summer season began with the unexpected success of FRIDAY THE 13TH (Dir: Sean S. Cunningham) on May 9, a $550,000 slasher film that took a whopping US$59.8 million.

    Cinema marquee for Friday the 13th in 1980. Source: Horror News Network
    Cinema marquee for Friday the 13th in 1980. Source: Horror News Network

    Now a staple of the horror franchise, the little indie-that-could – one that got a rare international release – stole shamelessly from other slashers, carved out its own niche and gave the world of a glimpse of all six degrees of Kevin Bacon in his Speedo. Its only rival on release was the Get Smart spin-off NUDE BOMB (Dir: Clive Donner), a film that lived up to its name with critics and audiences.

    Alan Parker’s FAME followed fast on May 16, teaching us how to fly and changing the way we thought about inner city teens learning music forever. My favourite detail is the one kid who went to the High School of Performing Arts for three years and plays the cymbals once in the final concert. He will live forever, because he already made it to heaven.

    Yet no film would dominate the American summer more than THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK (Dir: Irvin Kerschner). It’s hard to imagine it now – with two new trilogies, spin-offs and so many TV shows later – but this was the first Star Wars sequel. Pre-Internet buzz, it was an atomic smash to the box office that year: people lined up around the block to the tune of $181.4 million on initial release, a figure that went even higher when it was re-released the following year. It crushed the closest competitor – the Jane Fonda, Lily Tomlin, and Dolly Parton vehicle 9 to 5 – by almost $100 million in 1980 money. In 2020 money, that would be…probably more?

    Fans wait outside the Alabama Theater to see the film The Empire Strikes Back in this 21 May 1980 photo. (Source: Ben DeSoto / Houston Post)

    May was bookended by another horror film, the now iconic THE SHINING (Dir: Stanley Kubrick). It wasn’t always revered, of course, with author Stephen King famously furious about the treatment of his novel. Since then it’s been endlessly parodied, reworked in both Ready Player One and the official sequel Doctor Sleep, and (as my friend Alex once put it) somehow remade scene-for-scene in 8-minute The Simpsons‘ ‘Treehouse of Horror’ episode.

    Other notable releases included Walter Hill’s western revival The Long Riders and The Gong Show Movie, which caused George Burns to react: “For the first time in 65 years, I wanted to get out of show business.” You can’t buy that kind of press.

    June

    As 1980 moved into summer proper, the inauspicious start of June quickly segued out of The Happy Hooker Goes to Hollywood and Galaxina (starring 1980 Playboy Playmate of the Year Dorothy Stratten) into James Bridges’ URBAN COWBOY starring John Travolta. This was even before his career needed reviving: it was already (wait for it) staying alive by itself.

    The middle of June was decidedly weird. First of all, there’s The Children (a.k.a. The Children of Ravensback), a low-budget horror flick from Max Kalmanowicz that (according to the Wiki) is about a “yellow toxic cloud” that “transformed [a group of five children] into bloodless zombies with black fingernails who microwave every living thing they put their hands on.” My favourite review comes from The Los Angeles Times who said it “reeks of a nasty, ill-defined dislike of humankind.” The problem being? Of course, its main competition was The Island, a slasher with Michael Caine and David Warner, and musical comedy Roadie starring no less a talent than Meatloaf. What could possibly go wrong?

    Speaking of musicals, can you imagine John Landis’ THE BLUES BROTHERS coming out now? After all, it’s been decades since there was a truly successful leap from Saturday Night Light concept to cinema. The premise of a soul/blues musical road trip across Illinois wouldn’t even get past the pitch stage in 2020, but a $115 million box office taking and the biggest car pile-up to date ensured its cult status forever. (Total sidebar: what other film could get me excited for a trip to the Cook County Assessor’s Office during my first visit to Chicago?)

    It opened across from another musical, CAN’T STOP THE MUSIC (Dir: Nancy Walker). The bizarre fictionalised origin story of the Village People stars the band as themselves, opposite megastars Steve Guttenberg and Bruce Jenner! Its legacy is winning two of the first ever Razzie Awards for Worst Picture and Worst Screenplay, as well as being the first film Australians watch every year: it comes on immediately after the telecast of the New Year’s Eve fireworks on Channel 9. It’s a magic night.

    The month ended with the now familiar sight of Disney domination as Herbie Goes Bananas went up against The Last Flight of Noah’s Ark. Herbie would live to ride again.

    July

    Have you ever seen a grown man naked? Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, and Jerry Zucker’s AIRPLANE! (or as it’s known here, FLYING HIGH!) is a comedy classic that somehow gets funnier every time you see it. As inappropriate today as it was in the early 80s, this parody of the Airport films was a box office titan that came in at #4 overall in 1980. Seems like it was a good time to give up sniffing glue.

    It wouldn’t be summer without a monster movie, and Lewis Teague’s ALLIGATOR terrified us all of going to the bathroom. Then, long before #isolife, THE BLUE LAGOON (Dir: Randal Kleiser) was the ultimate isolation coming-of-age fantasy, except this one had Brooke Shields instead of your disapproving cat staring back at you.

    An odd string of films – from casting Chevy Chase as Benji in Oh! Heavenly Dog to Cheech and Chong’s Next Movie – led their way up to summer’s other slasher film: PROM NIGHT. Jamie Lee Curtis solidified her reputation of a scream queen as another final girl in one of several films riding high on the whiff of slasher success.

    In the final week of July, the tail-end of the traditional box office peak, the American-Australian drama film THE EARTHLING (Dir: Peter Collinson) dropped, a film that was partially shot in Sydney’s Blue Mountains region. It was dwarfed by Harold Ramis’ legendary comedy CADDYSHACK – starring the amazingly talented comedians Chevy Chase, Rodney Dangerfield, and Bill Murray – and Brian De Palma’s DRESSED TO KILL, a film that earned Nancy Allen both Golden Globe and Golden Raspberry nominations.

    Beyond summer

    Of course, a film calendar isn’t defined by its blockbuster summer. The rest of the year gave us bona fide classics with the likes of Martin Scorsese’s Raging Bull, David Lynch’s Elephant Man and Robert Redford’s directoral debut, Ordinary People. Akira Kurosawa’s Kagemusha and Bob Fosse’s autobiographical All that Jazz split the Palme d’Or at Cannes. Less successful was Michael Cimino’s Heaven’s Gate, a massive western flop that is said to have brought the wave of New Hollywood films conclusively to an end.

    At the other end of the scale, there was Xanadu, Flash Gordon and Robert Altman’s misguided Popeye. There’s was whatever Menahem Golan was trying to do with his sci-fi musical The Apple. Scholars are still puzzling that one. The year would start to come to a close with Any Which Way You Can, a sequel that continued to see Clint Eastwood out-starred by an orangutan. Decades later, he would recreate the experience with an empty chair.

    40 years later

    The legacy of the summer of 1980 continues 40 years on. Copycat slasher horror films still populate our screens, and Star Wars sequels maintain their multi-billion dollar Disney dominance. (Not that there’s anything wrong with that). What is arguably missing from the box office today are those films with an anarchic sense of fun, the kind of thing Canon Films were known for in their heyday. Yet as we’ll see when the wayback machine drops in 1990, the Franchise Movie would play a bigger role in summer over the next 10 years.

    Next stop: the Summer of 1990 which included Back to the Future Part III, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, Another 48 Hours, Robocop 2, Die Hard 2, Young Guns II – and even some non-sequels too!

  • Legendary Artist Jean ‘Moebius’ Giraud Dies at 73

    Legendary Artist Jean ‘Moebius’ Giraud Dies at 73

    Only a week after the passing of concept artist Ralph McQuarrie comes the news that the legendary comic book and film concept artist Jean Giraud, better known by the name Moebius, has died at the age of 73, following a long battle with cancer.

    The French artist, who also worked under the name Gir, is perhaps most famous for his epic Western comic book series Blueberry, which he created with Belgian scriptwriter Jean-Michel Charlier. It ran from 1963 until the present day, and was made into a film in 2004, directed by Jan Kounen and starring Vincent Cassel in the lead role.

    His pseudonym Moebius came with his science-fiction and fantasy work, particularly for his work in the seminal magazine Métal Hurlant, better known to the English-speaking world as Heavy Metal.His other comic book work included Alejandro Jodorowsky’s The Incal, and various work for other companies such as Stan Lee’s The Silver Surfer: Parable for Marvel, which won an Eisner Award in 1989.

    The film world will know his direct influence on the designs of Ridley Scott’s Alien world, Disney’s Tron and Luc Besson’s The Fifth Element. His concept art was used in The Abyss, Willow and Masters of the Universe, and it is easy to see George Lucas’ inspiration for the Imperial Probe Droid in Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back, and the later design of Coruscant.

    In the best way we know how, here is a small tribute to Giraud via his art, which has directly influenced the likes of Hayao Miyazaki (see: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind), Geof Darrow and the late Seth Fisher.

    Click images to enlarge

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud - Iron Man

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud - Crowded Streets

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud - Blueberry

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud - Silver Surfer

    Jean 'Moebius' Giraud - Transmetropolitan

  • Star Wars Concept Artist Ralph McQuarrie Dies at 82

    Star Wars Concept Artist Ralph McQuarrie Dies at 82

    A sad bit of news has come in over the wires today, as legendary Star Wars concept artist Ralph McQuarrie dies at the age of 82.

    It is arguable that no single man, outside of George Lucas, has had more of an impact on the look and feel of the Star Wars universe than Ralph McQuarrie. He served as the original concept artist on the first film, and returned for The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi. He also had the uncredited role of General McQuarrie in The Empire Strikes Back.

    In addition to his Star Wars work, McQuarrie designed the alien ships for Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind and E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial, and was the conceptual artist on the 1985 film Cocoon, for which he won the Academy Award for Visual Effects.

    We couldn’t think of a better way to pay tribute than to pull out some of our favourite examples of his work from the Star Wars trilogy. His legacy will live as long as we have the original Star Wars films available.

    You can find a full list of his work over on RalphMcQuarrie.com.

    Click images to enlarge

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Star Wars - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Empire Strikes Back - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Concept Art - Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back

    Ralph McQuarrie - Empire Strikes Back - Concept Art

    Ralph McQuarrie - Return of the Jedi - Concept Art

  • Blu-ray Review: Star Wars – The Complete Saga

    Blu-ray Review: Star Wars – The Complete Saga

    [stextbox id=”grey” caption=”Disc Specifications” float=”true” align=”right” width=”220″]

    Star Wars: The Complete Saga (Blu-ray, Australia)

    Director: George Lucas, Irwin KershnerRichard Marquand

    Runtime: 802 minutes

    Starring: Mark HamillHayden ChristensenHarrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Ewan McGregor, Natalie PortmanAnthony Daniels, Kenny Baker, James Earl Jones, Liam Neeson

    Video: 1080p HD/2:40:1 (16:9)

    Audio:

    Subtitles: English for the hard of hearing, Brazilian Portuguese, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, French, Latin Spanish, Norwegian, Swedish

    Extras:

    Distributor: Fox

    More info

    [/stextbox]

    For the last three and a half decades, even scruffy looking Nerf herders can’t throw a rock without bulls-eying one of the monolitic wampas of the blockbuster landscape. The very words “Star Wars” have made their way into the cultural milieu across six films, several animated spin-offs, comic books, scores of novels, a handful of television movies and an ill-fated holiday special. The US Reagan Presidency even named their Strategic Defense Initiative after the films. Originally created as a “space opera” in 1977 by George Lucas, a director then best known for the retro coming of age film American Graffiti, what was once known simply as Star Wars changed the face of science-fiction, special effects and Hollywood filmmaking forever.

    For those of you just emerging from a cave, our saga takes place a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away. While purists may disagree, the saga in its complete form tells the story of the rise and fall of one young Anakin Skywalker. When we first meet him (chronologically speaking of course), he is just a mop-headed boy (Jake Lloyd) on the planet Tatooine, caught in the midst of some kind of intergalactic tax blockade or something. Taken in and trained by Qui-Gon Jinn (Liam Neeson) and later Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor), Anakin grows into an arrogant young Jedi Knight, one of the sworn guardians of the Republic who are able to wield the mystical power of the Force. Or perhaps simply have a high Midichlorian count.

    Eventually, he is corrupted by Sith Lord (and ultimately Emperor) Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) and becomes Darth Vader, a minion of the Empire. Yet there is a new hope in young Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill), who may or may not be related to Anakin Skywalker, and who joins the aged Obi-Wan (Alec Guinness), a pair of droids named C-3PO and R2-D2 and the scoundrel Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and his hairy sidekick Chewbacca to rescue Princess Leia (Carrie Fisher), custodian of the stolen plans that can save her people and restore freedom to the galaxy…

    For many, the series is ‘review proof’, for nothing we say here will impact on the sales one iota. Taken as a whole, the saga certainly morphs into a whole new dynamic, and not simply because of the added tinkering that George Lucas can’t stop doing every few years (but more on that below). For a generation of people over the age of 25, the original trilogy of A New Hope (or Star Wars as we once knew it), Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi will be the definitive and unquestioningly perfect set of Star Wars films that should never be touched. For all of their flaws, including the introduction of the evil Jar Jar Binks and a weak and often misguided narrative, the prequel trilogy of The Phantom Menace, The Attack of the Clones and Revenge of the Sith will be the films that forever introduced a younger generation to the dysfunctional Skywalker clan. These are very special kinds of film, and neither the ravages of time nor George Lucas’s endless fiddling are going to change that. From the stunning opening to the explosive conclusion, this is a rollicking adventure that you are sure to come back to time and again.

    Help Me Obi-wan Kenobi - Star Wars

    Video and Audio:

    When we reviewed the release of the Original Trilogy DVDs back in 2004, the staff of DVD Bits were suitably impressed with the quality of the transfers, bandying around words like “amazing”, “brilliant restoration” and “exemplary”. All that can now be dismissed as hyperbole in the face of these stunning HD transfers. It is no shock that the largely digital Prequel Trilogy looks stunning on these discs. What is really surprising is how good the older films look. We’ve seen some marvellous restorations this year, but the sheer amount of detail in some of the shots is almost like watching a new film. Well, given this is a LucasFilm production it is a new film. C-3PO’s metallic surface shows every bit of tarnish, Leia’s makeup looks caked and Obi-Wan’s beard bristles. The colour correction is marvellous. The sound is perhaps the best yet, with the primary DTS HD Master Audio 6.1 packing a powerful punch. Our windows rattled as the first ships came rattling overhead.

    Now for the changes. Yes, everything you have read is true. From The Phantom Menace through to Return of the Jedi, there have been changes made. The first thing you’ll notice is that Yoda is now fully digital in The Phantom Menace, a welcome change from the creepy uncanny-valley puppet used back in 1999. Many of the other changes are the kind of senseless tinkering that George has been doing since back in 1981, with the evolution of Star Wars continuing. The much talked-about sound changes, including Star Wars‘ new Krayt Dragon call and the addition of a few “Nooooos!” to the end of Return of the Jedi are all noticeable to fans. The latter really is unforgiveable as it is not simply tinkering, but changing the silent dramatic tension of another director’s scene. With each of these changes, Lucas is forever erasing the hard work of hundreds of people who worked on the original films, many of whom broke new ground with their special effects techniques. Hell, some of the Blu-ray bonus features celebrate that. Of course, none of this would be a problem if the original films were simply released unaltered alongside these new cuts, as every other filmmaker from Ridley Scott’s Blade Runner to Steven Spielberg’s Close Encounters of the Third Kind/E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial has managed to do. Unfortunately, for generations to come, this will be the only version we get to see.

    Star Wars Complete Blu-ray - Yoda

    Extras:

    The collection of bonus features is bizarre to say the least, with far too much emphasis on the ephemera of the Star Wars universe, and not enough on the making of. Sure, the audio commentaries are great: each of the films has two commentaries a piece. The first was presented on the original DVD releases, while the second has been constructed from archival interviews and are new to this release. But where are the PiP tracks? Video commentaries? Seamless branching? If Lucas is on the bleeding edge of technology, then why are these Blu-rays not taking advantage of any of the features available to the HD age?

    Discs 7 and 8 of the set are where the majority of the film-related bonus features for Episodes I – III (Disc 7) and Episodes IV-VI (Disc 8) are found. These include deleted, extended and alternate scenes; prop, maquette and costume turnarounds; matte paintings and concept art; supplementary interviews with cast and crew and a flythrough of the Lucasfilm Archives to name but a few. There is a wealth of material here, but not everything. Once again, while there are some great new inclusions, including the much talked about deleted scenes from Return of the Jedi, Lucas has missed a great opportunity to archive all that material we have seen floating around over the years, with few of the DVD documentaries making it over. Unlike the Alien Quadrilogy Blu-ray set, which literally put everything that has ever been committed to disc (including all versions of the films), this misses the mark even with three bonus features discs!

    The majority of the new bonus features are to be found on Disc 9 of the set, but the inclusion of some of these is incredibly questionable. Really? An 84-minute documentary called Star Warriors on the 501st Legion, the people who like to dress up like Storm Troopers? This is evidence that either the well has been well and truly milked dry on these films, or that this was another misguided reading of the fans from the House of Lucas. Similarly, the 91 minutes (!) dedicated to the Star Wars Spoofs – covering everything from Family Guy, The Simpsons, How I Met Your Mother and Weird Al – could have just as easily been a small featurette rather than a feature-length documentary. The 25 minute Conversations with the Masters: The Empire Strikes Back 30 Years On, with chats from George Lucas, Irvin Kershner, Lawrence Kasdan and John Williams, is possibly the only strong new addition. The originalmaking ofs‘ from 1977, 1980, 1983 and 1997 respectively are all nice to have, but the 46 minute Star Wars Tech is another misguided documentary (albeit one from 2007) taking up space where proper content could have gone.

    Yet it isn’t so much what is on the discs as what is not. Over 9 discs of material, and no space for the original trailers? While it is almost certain there will be double-dip on Blu-ray, especially given the theatrical 3D re-release planned to start next year, we did get a second round of DVDs, and they included the theatrical cuts of the original trilogy as well. We can only live in a (new) hope.

    Star Wars Complete Blu-ray - The Empire Strikes Back

    [stextbox id=”custom” caption=”The Reel Bits”]Star Wars has arrived on Blu-ray, and true to form, it is unlike any version we have seen before. Some will be disappointed by the lack of the original versions of the film, others will crave more bonus features than what we have been offered here. For most, having these films in stunning high-definition will be enough. Regardless, this is undoubtedly the Blu-ray event of the year: let the Force guide you. [/stextbox]

    Star Wars: The Complete Saga is released on Blu-ray around the world in the UK on September 12, in Australia on September 14 and in the US on September 16 from Fox Home Entertainment.