rinue: (Cathedral)
[personal profile] rinue
Well, the Star Wars blu-rays are out, and George Lucas has once again fucked with them and made the originals yet more unavailable. You can guess my opinions on the matter pretty easily, given the number of times I've talked about film being a collaborative process that does not and cannot belong solely to the director (or in Lucas's case copyright holder; he didn't write or direct Empire or Jedi), or how often I've echoed Duchamp's sentiments about art being created in the eye of the viewer and not necessarily understood by the person who makes the physical object.

You can look at the way I've built my entire life around the conviction that stories matter and that the narrative choices we make have effects beyond entertainment to impact the wider culture, telling us how to treat other people and what to value. Religions are built around stories. Therapy is built around stories. Wars and elections are built around stories.

I don't really need to talk about my opinion of George Lucas and what he is doing, or whether they're "his" movies.

I do want to point out that the public backlash against people who complain about it is very good evidence that our society does not take science fiction seriously, despite the last decade of "geeks ascendant!" editorials.

The two main "shut up about this" reactions I see are:

1. Star Wars is for kids; you liked it when you were a kid, grow out of it
2. Who cares; it's not important and there are tons of other movies

I compare "who cares" to what happened when a version of Huck Finn was edited to remove a single word - a single word that has become so offensive and injurious as a taunt that it prevented many children from reading the book. A single word changed, in one edition, with the original text still available in many printings. People went ballistic about censorship of a cultural icon. Nobody said we should "get over" Mark Twain and read the other, better young adult books that have come out since. I compare our complete disdain for the people who would bowdlerize Shakespeare (note the existence of the word bowdlerize) or put fig leaves on classical statues (note the phrase "to fig leaf").

Was Star Wars as important as Mark Twain or Shakespeare? I think it was. It broke box office records. It redefined the summer blockbuster. It made huge technical leaps in how we created special effects. It changed what we thought was possible in a science fiction film. It invented a lot of film grammar and a lot of technology. It was critically lauded and nominated for 11 Academy Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, and a category specially invented for Ben Burtt, who reinvented sound editing.

Now when professors want to teach it or trade groups want to honor it, they can't show clips. They have to work from memory or hearsay. When the hundreds of people who worked on the film want to show off what they did, they can't. It would be sad enough if that was lost through carelessness or misfortune, the way Erich von Stroheim's Greed has disappeared, the way we lost countless early films before we understood how to store celluloid or make archival prints. It's worse when a film has been vandalized.

If someone was burning books, we'd know how to react. But since it's a science fiction movie, we think it's not serious destruction; we think the only people who would be upset by it are childish geeks who should get a life.

Would people react the same way if we were talking about the Godfather movies? I don't think they would, although Godfather is smaller in scope and ambition, and less important to film history. I like Godfather. I think it's a masterpiece. Can I use Godfather to draw a line between what came before it and what came after? I cannot. Are the emotions in Godfather less elevated and operatic? No. But it's exclusively about men and about domination. That means it's adult.

In contrast, Star Wars is science fiction which includes women, friendships, and "cute" characters*, so it must be a kid's series, and silly, and not ultimately very good. I know that if I wanted to make movies for children, I would model the first one on Kurosawa and spend the first hour of it wandering alone in desert landscapes. I would split most of the run time of the second between an adult romance and a discussion of philosophy. I would keep my color palette muted and my surfaces grimy and worn. I would convey complex emotion through fleeting glances. I would offscreen important plot points and count on my child viewers to catch them based on a line of dialog.

I liked the Marx Brothers and the Rolling Stones when I was a kid, too, so I guess they must have been made for children. I'm probably fooling myself that they're any good.

Although I am being sarcastic, I have heard this argument made about The Beatles. Of course, with the Beatles, I can counter-argue by playing some of their music. With Star Wars it's a lot harder.

It would be easier to say Star Wars was silly and never mattered. It's always easier to be apathetic. But I grew up with some powerful myths that told me I was supposed to care about the things that connect me to other people.

I am so grateful for the restoration of Touch of Evil.

* Apparently old, green, and wrinkled is cute; beeping and made out of metal is cute; and furry and holding a spear is cute. The throughline: short. We should not take shorter or physically weaker people seriously, i.e. women, children, the elderly, and Al Pacino. Except --

(no subject)

Date: 2011-09-23 03:40 pm (UTC)
pengolodh_sc: (Default)
From: [personal profile] pengolodh_sc
There are Region 2 PAL DVDs with the originals - I have them. They were released as two-disc sets, with one disc containing the original theatrical release (no restoration, cleanup, or anything done to them) and the other containing the special edition from the trilogy box set. Not sure if this was ever released in Region 1, and The Empire Strikes back is now listed as out of stock in the (Norwegian) webshop where I bought them.

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