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“George knew at the onset that there was going to be a snow battle and he knew we were going to have armored speeders,” stated Joe Johnston who made a name for himself as an art director before becoming a Hollywood blockbuster filmmaker. “But he hadn’t really decided what kind of vehicles the Empire would have or how they were going to film it. At first they considered using existing military tanks, dressing them to look alien. I did a bunch of sketches using these tanks as a basis.” Johnson made a fortuitous discovery. “I ran across a Xerox that a friend of mine had. It was a promotional brochure put out by US Steel in the early 1960s and contained a whole slew of full-colour paintings indicating, ‘What steel will be used for in the future.’ The paintings were done by Syd Mead. Interestingly enough, one of the paintings showed a four-legged walking truck! That’s where the initial walker idea came from. It wasn’t a military vehicle, it was just a transportation thing, but I thought it would make a great fighting vehicle if you took off the truck bed and put an armored body and head on it.”
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“We needed a full-scale [Millennium] Falcon,” remarked Gary Kurtz of the signature smuggler’s spaceship piloted by Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and his furry towering companion Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew). “We never had one in the first film. That one was a half-size prop built into a wall and supported by hidden wires and things, but we needed more activity around the Falcon this time. So Norman Reynolds designed a way to build a full-sized Falcon, which was about sixty-five feet in diameter and eighty feet long when you count the mandible.” Kurtz added, “They fabricated the steel into sixteen sections, very much like a pie, which would be bolted together so that when the picture was over, we could take it apart and store it. The five feet that touch the ground had built-in compressed-air hoverpad units so that we could move it even though it weighed twenty-three tons. We would move it around by pumping enough compressed air into it and pulling it with a forklift.” Complications for the picture occurred when Stanley Kubrick’s production of The Shining limited the number of available stages at Elstree Studios; as well a crippling fire erupted at the facility as principle photography was about to commence. “We knew the day it happened that it was going to screw up our schedule,” recalled George Lucas who ran into further conflict with the legendary director. “We also knew that Stanley would use that as a way of further delaying things so he could think about his film.”
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George Lucas decided not to step behind the camera again and so Gary Kurtz had to search for a suitable replacement. “The problem you encounter when you’re doing a follow-up to a very successful picture is that there are directors who shy away from the project for fear of being overshadowed by the reputation of the first film,” stated Kurtz. “The perceived wisdom is that if a sequel works, the original director gets the credit; if it doesn’t work, you get the blame.” Lucas and Kurtz focused their attention on a filmmaker who taught at their alma matter USC, Irvin Kershner. Recalling his time spent shooting the ice planet Hoth scenes in Norway, Kershner said, “The eyepiece would cloud over. The cameraman would look through it and then, about a third through the take, it just became white. He couldn’t see anything, couldn’t tell whether it was in focus, whether he was following the action. And if you touched the camera without gloves on, your skin immediately glued to the metal; it freezes. You had to take a razor blade and slice away the skin to get it off.” Despite the frigid conditions, the director immersed himself in the task at hand. “The intensity of the work takes away self-concern and to get a shot, you work at it and you realize that you’ve stood in one place for about two hours.” However, life in the controlled environment of a studio soundstage was not easy for the filmmaker and his crew. “We were living for days in these man-made caverns that were covered with salt for a glistening effect. There was so much salt that it got into our lungs, our pores. We could taste the salt all day and all night. And for scenes with fog or mist, we had to keep shooting heated mineral oil into the air because the effects folks claimed it was healthier than the vegetable oil used in America. After a while, we couldn’t’ breathe, let alone smell anything.”
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“I had basically put everything I had into Empire,” stated George Lucas. “I took the money, everything I had from the first movie, and rolled it over into the second movie. The first one was budgeted for $13 million and then Fox said, ‘Make it for 7,’ but it came out at 11. The second one was budgeted at $20 million, but, about halfway through, it became very apparent that it wasn’t going to be 20. It was way over schedule, and it had not been thought through carefully on the economic side. So we had to go back to the bank and get more money.” It was calculated that after including the costs of marketing and distribution The Empire Strikes Back would have to make at least a profit of $50 million – a feat achieved by only 10 out of nearly of 100 films released in 1979. The financial gamble paid off when the movie grossed over $538 million worldwide and at the Academy Awards was presented with the Oscar for Best Sound and a Special Achievement Award. Reflecting upon his affinity for myths and fairy tales, George Lucas stated, “If I wasn’t a filmmaker, I think I might be a toymaker. I love making kids happy. Giving them something, especially a fantasy life, is an important thing. If we don’t take care of our kids, if we just ignore them and let them suffer through, we’re not going to be much of a civilization.”
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If you want to learn more, read The Making of Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back by J.W. Rinzler for it is a treasure trove of previously unpublished interviews, photos, art work, and production mementos.
Images courtesy of Lucasfilm Ltd.
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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