Lucas is a good director and producer, a BAD writer, a fabulous businessman, and a complete asshole (oddly enough something that is basically required to survive in the film/entertainment industry).
His major contribution to film can really be boiled down to his refusal to except "That is the best we can do."
ILM and everything else sprung from the fact that he would not accept the established wisdom that what he wanted to appear on screen could not be done, he simple demanded that the people he had gathered figure out how to do it, and the people he gathered were VERY good.
He deserves his place in cinema history, but it is not at the top.
His major contribution to film can really be boiled down to his refusal to except "That is the best we can do."
ILM and everything else sprung from the fact that he would not accept the established wisdom that what he wanted to appear on screen could not be done, he simple demanded that the people he had gathered figure out how to do it, and the people he gathered were VERY good.
He deserves his place in cinema history, but it is not at the top.
This message last edited by HyogaRott on 15/10/2012 at 06:20:28 PM
When the career of George Lucas is reviewed, will he be the most influential film-maker of all time?
10/10/2012 12:27:59 AM
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Shrug. He might be the most influential special-effects artist *NM*
10/10/2012 08:43:05 AM
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It is going to be the same way with Steve Jobs
10/10/2012 02:38:25 PM
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Steve Jobs shouldn't be remembered for the Apple II, it was Woz's creation.
18/10/2012 04:37:38 AM
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He deserves all the credit he gets, he's a superior artist to his pals Spielberg & Coppola
10/10/2012 04:15:29 PM
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My point is that his greatest contribution is horrifically overlooked.
11/10/2012 06:14:53 AM
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Hell has frozen over
11/10/2012 04:31:56 PM
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I'm going to start making a list of people who say stuff like this to me.
12/10/2012 03:48:36 AM
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That's giving a single man way too much credit and influence, and under the wrong title
12/10/2012 01:13:07 AM
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I'm not sure the OP was saying he was the most influential director
12/10/2012 08:34:02 PM
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Pretty sure I said film-maker. (Checks the Subject line.) Yep, I did. *NM*
15/10/2012 05:28:50 AM
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That's precisely the problem. You said filmmaker, not effects studio owner. *NM*
18/10/2012 10:31:26 PM
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Re: That's precisely the problem. You said filmmaker, not effects studio owner.
19/10/2012 03:46:33 PM
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Short answer, no.
15/10/2012 06:19:52 PM
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So who beats him out?
16/10/2012 02:23:19 AM
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Thats the point, he didn't actually change anything; he demanded that others change things.
16/10/2012 02:35:03 PM
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You have a strange definition of influence.
16/10/2012 09:55:59 PM
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Not really, influence is somthing actively done, his role was too passive.
17/10/2012 03:23:40 PM
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Spielburg, Howard, Coppola, Tarrentino... There is a long list, even only among the modern filmakers *NM*
16/10/2012 02:39:28 PM
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Maybe, no, no, and no. Lucas had a much bigger impact that any of the film-makers .....
18/10/2012 04:40:41 AM
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