Thank you
I've been checking my college campus bookstore everyday since you arrived here with your information. Is all the Lucas-related stuff going to be available online?
As soon as the article came up online, I posted it at TFn and one of the moderators there suggested that I move it into some anonymous, scarcely read thread.
Rock on, MF!
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Anyway, I really enjoyed the article. It touched upon a side of George Lucas that I wasn't really aware of for a good deal of time in my youth and younger teenage years when I should have been.
His status as an independent filmmaker is unfortunately obscured due to the nature of the SW Saga but his past/projected future should certainly be given more emphasis in wherever he is written about. This "side" of GL makes him more easily relatable to a rogue or rebellious persona that America main-stream seems to be lacking nowadays but which he constantly portrays in his films. Also, I love the angle the article took of portraying an independent artist trying to get away from the trappings of what he has constructed himself. Rejecting his built-up time and effort to "reinvent" himself. It's great to know someone that old and experienced is still, as Obi-Wan recently put it, "always on the move."
It's very inspiring.
Another unique facet of this article was the description of the "art scene" that found its way to the West. Is it a detriment or a benefit to know of these influences? I ask the author, do you ever feel as though an artist's originality is diluded when there is such a detailing of inspirations? I'm constantly concerned about these things, being a filmmaker myself. Either way, GL has certainly taken all his experiences and morphed them into something new and unseen in this generation. I kinda think that sort of initial emulation is necessary, especially when surrounded by a society that really isn't very open-minded and doesn't always easily allow for such divergent expression. It serves as a guide, firm and validating, until you're able to find your own voice and more freedom.
Here's a memorable quote:
"Art is about communicating with people emotionally without the intellectual artifacts of the current situation, and dealing with very emotional issues." -GL
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An excellent complement to this article would be GL's interview with Charlie Rose which aired about half-a-year-ago.
Thanks again,
force2187, because your writing is solid and your content is deep. I slid through this thing with speed and interest.
The_Somnambulist