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Happy 30th Empire Strikes Back

Started by Geekyfanboy, May 18, 2010, 03:27:19 PM

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Geekyfanboy

This is my favorite of the first trilogy and I can't believe on May 21 it will be it's 30th anniversary. Watching this movie for the first time is one of my most vivid memories of my childhood.. along with Darth Vader walking through those blast doors in Star Wars.

Got this from - http://www.starwars.com/fans/media_news/maxim_esb/index.html

"Maxim magazine's May issue recently published several rare photos celebrating Empire's 30th anniversary, all of which we're making available to StarWars.com readers below! Some great shots here of Harrison Ford, Mark Hamill, Carrie Fisher, and director Irvin Kershner on set, as well as an early reference shot of Boba Fett "in the field" -- literally. Make sure to pick up this issue for your collection while it's still on stands!"

Geekyfanboy

Two more pixs..

Bryancd

GREAT pics. I can't wait for the Rinzler book to come out! Man, memories of Empire. I need to put together some audio for Rico this week.

Rico

Great pics!  And don't forget to send me some audio comments for this weekend's look back at Empire.  Love to especially hear people comment on when they first saw this great movie and what there first impressions were.

Blackride

Very nice photos. Don't think I ever saw all of those...
Ripley: Ash. Any suggestions from you or Mother?
Ash: No, we're still collating.
Ripley: [Laughing in disbelief] You're what? You're still collating? I find that hard to believe.

moyer777


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Listen to our podcast each week http://www.takehimwithyou.com

Bryancd


Vartok

Maxim's?  Any other good reason to pick up a copy?!
V

Geekyfanboy

Quote from: Vartok on May 20, 2010, 05:21:28 PM
Maxim's?  Any other good reason to pick up a copy?!
V


that's not reason enough :)

Meds

I hear they are showing it on a 44ft screen in times square. Anyone going to see it?

Geekyfanboy

Happy Anniversary Star Wars The Empire Strikes Back...

Today marks the 30th anniversary of the release of Star Wars: Episode V -- The Empire Strikes Back. To this day, many fans consider the sequel the best Star Wars movie ever made. To celebrate, here are 30 facts you might not know about the film.

Creator George Lucas insisted on moving the credits to the end of the film. The Writers Guild and Directors Guild didn't approve and tried, but failed, to pull The Empire Strikes Back from release. They fined Lucas and tried to fine Kershner, but Lucas paid all the fines, Lucas paid nearly $250,000 in fines and dropped his membership in the Writers Guild, Directors Guild and the Motion Picture Association of America.

Yoda's full name was Minch Yoda. In the first draft, he was known only as Minch. Changed for the better, that was.

Kershner initially turned down the chance to direct Empire, but his agent convinced him to give it a go.

Producer Gary Kurtz came up with the title for the film.

Meet Cliff Clavin, Rebel fighter. Before his role as the annoying mailman on Cheers, John Ratzenberger played Major Derlin, a good guy on the ice planet Hoth.

Boba Fett, the memorable bounty hunter, actually debuted in an animated short on The Star Wars Holiday Special in 1978.

Another preemptive hit from 1978: The first depicted lightsaber duel between Darth Vader and Luke Skywalker didn't happen in Empire, but instead in the 1978 Star Wars novel Splinter of the Mind's Eye. Vader lost his arm in that battle.

Empire won an Oscar for Best Sound, plus a special award for visual effects. It was nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Direction and Best Original Score.

Lucas spent thousands on an advertising campaign to get Frank Oz an Oscar nomination for best supporting actor for his performance/puppet work with Yoda, the gnomelike Jedi Master. The campaign failed.

The set for the swamp planet Dagobah was elevated to give Oz and other puppeteers room to control the Yoda puppet from below.

Han Solo was frozen in carbonite partly because it was uncertain whether Harrison Ford would be back for a third film. Unlike Mark Hamill (Luke Skywalker) and Carrie Fisher (Princess Leia), Ford refused to be signed for a three-picture deal. He even asked Lucas to kill off Han.

In the original Star Wars trilogy, the only time Darth Vader and C-3PO share the screen is during the carbon freezing scene. The 1999 prequel, The Phantom Menace revealed a young Anakin Skywalker, who would become Vader, actually built C-3PO.

An early version of Lando Calrissian, the role made famous by Billy Dee Williams, had Lando not as head of Cloud City but instead the clone leader of a clan left over from the Clone Wars, which takes place well before Empire.

To maintain the austere interiors of Cloud City, crew constantly mopped and polished the set between takes, and everyone wore cushioned shoes.

Lobot, Lando's silent aide on Cloud City, gets his name from "lobotomy." Lobot was supposed to have dialogue but the filmmakers decided he was lobotomized to accommodate the cyborg implant around the back of his head.

The evil Emperor who his film debut in Empire was actually played by a woman with prosthetic makeup and chimpanzee eyes superimposed in post-production. Clive Revill did the voice in the original release. Ian McDiarmid played the Emperor in Return of the Jedi and subsequent films.

Director Irvin Kershner provided the voice of Darth Vader in the temporary mix of the film before James Earl Jones recorded the final version.

Boba Fett and the rest of the bounty hunters are never referred to by their proper names. Boba Fett is only referenced as "bounty hunter."

After an extra got sick, Boba Fett actor Jeremy Bulloch was called in to replace the Imperial Guard who escorts Leia and pulls her into the Cloud City elevator when she screams at Luke that he's entering a trap.

Actor Michael Sheard played Admiral Ozzel, one of two Imperial officers Darth Vader kills by telekinetic strangulation in Empire. Sheard later played Hitler in a small scene in Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade.

Mark Hamill sustained facial scars in a car accident before Empire started shooting. It's long been rumored the scars were explained in the Star Wars universe courtesy Luke's nasty encounter with a wampa ice creature early in the film. Actually, that scene was already in early Empire drafts before Hamill's accident.

That's no moon ... or asteroid. In the dizzying asteroid scene, one of the asteroids is a potato and another is a shoe.

Han Solo's Millennium Falcon was life-size. The 23-ton ship was 65 feet in diameter and 16 feet high with a mandible giving it an overall length of 80 feet.

The film used eight R2-D2s. Actor Kenny Baker used two, three were remote controlled and three were dummy versions that could be damaged.

Hamill had to bang his head on the ceiling of Yoda's hut 16 times before the director was satisfied.

Empire was the first film to have a 5.1 surround sound mix.

Luke's home planet Tatooine appears in five of the six Star Wars films, but not this one.

The most famous line is often misquoted. Darth Vader did not say, "Luke, I am your father." Instead he said, "No, I am your father."

Lucas was so intent on keeping that ending a secret he had David Prowse, who portrayed Darth Vader, say "Obi-Wan killed your father." He later dubbed the bombshell that Darth Vader was Luke's father. Only six people knew the true ending: Lucas, Kershner, writers Leigh Brackett and Lawrence Kasdan, Hamill and James Earl Jones.

Hamill's wife gave birth to their first son, Nathan, during the Empire shoot. Hamill went straight from the hospital to shooting. That day's shots had Luke hanging by a weather vane below Cloud City.

Feathers

I hadn't heard that they'd spoofed the crew on the ending. I know a lot of that goes on these days but didn't realise it was in play that far back in history

*winces at realisation of age*

I know it's unnusual here but I don't have a podcast of my own.