Neane (post: 1595449) wrote:I will give Lucas credit for a few things...
1. Lucas had some artistic vision, stories to tell, did what he wanted to do against all odds and it paid off for him.
I will give Lucas credit for just a little bit more.
More than any other single person on this planet, Lucas is responsible for the current thriving 'Geek' culture.
Sure, it had always been there, geeks passionately pursuing the objects of their obsession, whether it had been anime, or Tolkien, or Star Trek, or comics, or whatnot.
But the communities were small and local. There wasn't much interaction or intersection.
Star Wars was a catalyst on a number of fronts. First and foremost, no one in the entertainment industry had seen a single movie with quite as much staying power since
Gone With the Wind. It opened in May, 1977. People waited in long lines to see it. Many fans, myself included, went back to see it several times. In August, it was still filling smaller theaters. (How many films today can say that? To be fair, it was in the days before you could say, "I'll wait for the DVD", so the dynamic was different. Still...)
Studio executives noticed. When Spielberg's
Close Encounters of the Third Kind was released a few months later, the verdict was in: science fiction films resonated with audiences. Projects that would have had no chance to be greenlit were now hot properties (with the usual representative share of failures, of course). Suddenly, almost overnight, Special Effects became the new guest star.
Industrial Light and Magic would become the most sought-after entertainment specialty company.
But that's not where it stopped.
Star Wars served as the template for geeks to both self-identify, and by extension, identify each other. I was amazed at how many of my friends were fans. We talked about the movie, the pre-history of the Star Wars universe, the technologies. When
The Empire Strikes Back came out three years later, we speculated as to Yoda's cryptic comments, Han Solo's fate, the father-son relationship. And, yes, three years later still, we hated the Ewoks.
Star Wars became a gateway drug. It opened people up to new ways of thinking, not just about entertainment, but about their passions, and other passions they hadn't been introduced to but now had a chance to explore.
It didn't hurt that, at this same time, the role-playing game Dungeons and Dragons emerged on the scene]Star Wars[/i], at least for a small segment of the society that, collectively, had felt isolated.
And, when this stew had simmered, and the ARPANET evolved into the Internet, the whole thing grew exponentially to where it is today. I'm not saying it couldn't have happened without it. But take it away, and I think you have a much different culture that might have developed.
All this from one man who had some dreams about a movie, and how it could be conceived and carried out. I agree he's not a great director, maybe not even a 'good' director. His screenwriting is lackadaisical. He
is a marketing genius. But all of that's irrelevant. He had a dream, carried it out, and changed history.