Michael Moran
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When George Lucas premiered ‘Star Wars’ (as it was then known) on the 25th of May 1977 he could scarcely have dreamed that his low-budget space opera would spawn a vast multimedia empire. The film was born out of George’s desire to recreate the feeling of serials like ‘Flash Gordon’ that had thrilled him as a young moviegoer.
Because the ‘Flash Gordon’ rights had proven elusive (after Star Wars’ success they were parlayed into one of the ultimate ‘guilty pleasure’ movies of the 1980s) Lucas forged his own myth. In interviews of the period he breezily alluded to a planned nine-part series but it’s more likely was bluffing, believing that the film would seem more appealing if he could give it the air of being connected to a wider mythos.
The film opened on about 2,100 screens in the US, grossing a shade over $36 million in its opening weekend. Respectable business for an $11,000,000 movie. Respectable enough, indeed, to finance ‘The Empire Strikes Back’ which is where the Star Wars franchise really began, with its generation-spanning story arc.
But Star Wars (or, as it was later dubbed, Episode IV: A New Hope) was by no means a certain success. The Tunisian desert shoot was fraught with technical problems and Lucas’ actors were less than impressed with the material they had to work with. Harrison Ford is famously quoted as having said "You can type this shit, George, but you sure can't say it."
Thirty years and two major revisions later Lucas’ clunky dialogue endures, and the film’s influence continues to grow. Terminator and Titanic director James Cameron is reputed to have got into the movie business solely as a result of having seen Star Wars and even if that legend is too good to be true it’s undeniable that the success of the Star Wars movie and toy tie-in franchise has given rise to thirty years of sci-fi blockbusters, from Alien to James Cameron’s forthcoming Avatar, few of which would have seen a green light were it not for the unstoppable force of Star Wars
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I think the actual premier was on December 27th 1977 in the West End, with a general release a week later. But most of us Brits got to watch it in 1978. I remember it well as it was the first film I had ever seen at the cinema aged 5. My Dad who took me and my mate on that day has been a hero ever since ;-)
Paul Briggs, London UK,
Well I remember watching this on the premier day in England. Guess what it was the May day Bank holiday in 1978. So its more like 29 years old for us Brits.
Mo, Bolton, UK
The scrole-down prologue at the start of the film always read "Episode IV A New Hope"
Colin Worthington, Nottingham, England