mandingo wrote:
If and when we do find the quote, that doesn't necessarily make Lucas or Kurtz liars, either. People forget stuff, they change their minds and get confused.
I think the larger issue here is that many people who have followed Lucas's comments over the years are aware that he's become a revisionist historian, and not a very skilled one at that. It doesn't seem to matter whether it's some dopey weird twisting of a minor and meaningless fact (like saying that ROTJ was only called "Revenge of the Jedi" at first, not because that was meant as the real title, but in order to throw the media off track -- huh?) or whether it's something that actually alters the story -- the spin is that Lucas has never been wrong or mistaken, and if it appears that he was, it's someone else's fault.
Take this for example: in Entertainment Weekly #785, the September 24 2004 issue, Lucas is being interviewed in connection with the OT DVD release, and Greedo comes up (all bracketed words are as they appear in the interview):
Quote:
GL: If you really look at it, there's hardly any changes at all. The thing that really caused the trouble on Star Wars is the whole question of whether Han Solo or Greedo shoots first. The way it got cobbled together at the time, it came off that [Han] fired first. He didn't fire first.
EW: So you consider this a correction?
GL: It's a correction. [When I made Star Wars] I said, "Well, I don't have that shot, so I'll just, you know, fudge it editorially." In my mind [Greedo] shot first or at the same time. We like to think of [Han Solo] as a murderer because that's hip -- I don't think that's a good thing for people. I mean, I don't see how you could redeem somebody who kills people in cold blood.
OK, leaving aside the question of how you redeem someone who kills people -- or a bunch of padawan kids -- in cold blood, think about what he just said. He's saying he ALWAYS meant to have Greedo shoot first, but when it came time to edit, he didn't have the coverage. Now this is the age of "The Annotated Screenplays," the age of the internet; can ANYONE out there locate ANY version of the screenplay that says that Greedo shoots first?
So what are we supposed to believe? That out of all of the shots that were changed for the SEs, the only one that completely changes the tone of the scene is the one that is in no existing version of the screenplay of the 1977 release -- but according to Lucas in 2004, was
always really meant to be there?
Or can we just believe that this control freak is pathologically incapable of admitting that he changed his mind?