Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Star Wars. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 14, 2025

Darth Vader Day!


George Lucas was born on this date in 1944. It is difficult to measure the impact that Star Wars has had on films and society. It made science fiction cool, at least for a time. Lucas has other films such American Graffiti and THX-1138 but he'll always be remembered as the guy who gave us Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker, and the gang from a time long, long ago. 

I'm not aware of anyone who doesn't admire the work of Russ Manning. Manning created a sleek handsome future world for Magnus the Robot Fighter, a world which was visually sometimes at odds with the dangerous threats it faced from too much reliance on technology. He'd broken in on Brothers of the Spear and made himself an international star with his definitive work on Tarzan of the Apes. So when the Star Wars folks wanted to take their stripling concept and expand it onto the funny pages, they found the ideal translator in Manning.


Manning was in complete command in the beginning, partly because that's the way he preferred to work and partly because the behemoth that was to become the Star Wars machine was still forming. Eventually they decided they needed to pre-approve things and at that point Manning gave up writing the strip though he continued to draw it. 



There were three stories during the Manning-only period, the most famous of these is likely "Gambler's World" which ran in the daily strip and introduced a new villain named "Blackhole".  Given the understandable mandate that none of the real status quo of the series could be affected, the story has a frivolous quality to it which was not to my mind in keeping with the Star Wars feel, but there's no denying Manning's skill at capturing the characters likenesses. 


In the Sunday pages two other Manning-only efforts ran and they were both more like the movie. They introduced a new character named Gyla Petro who was at once a minor romantic interest for Han Solo and someone for him to talk to since he couldn't have both Luke and Leia at the same time in the series, one of the early restrictions on Manning. Han and later Luke shows to help save a culture from Empire and later we get a glimpse of Wookie culture. 


At that point Steve Gerber of Howard the Duck fame steps aboard for an adventure which takes Luke back to Tatooine. It's probably my favorite of the stories as it really evokes the classic feel of the movie. A writer named Russ Helm comes aboard with a few stories and later Don Christensen writes a few. By the time it's over we've met some really interesting new characters such as Lady Tarkin (loved Peter Cushing in the movie and liked seeing him remembered here). Even Boba Fett turns up to make things hot for the trio as that embargo seems to have been lifted at some point. 


When Manning fell ill his assistants Dave Stevens and Rick Hoberg take the helm for a short transitional period and then the duo of Helm and new artist Alfredo Alacala take over. Now I'm a huge Alacala fan, but he was not well used here and the last strip in this collection is several notches in quality below the rest. The sleek futuristic lines of Manning have been replaced with Alfredo's heavier touches and not to good effect and I have to wonder how much reference Alcala had since the characters look very different and only vaguely like the movie stars they represent. It's a tragedy indeed that Russ Manning died so young. 


It's almost unimaginable to me that the work of Russ Manning, an artist who I regard as among the most amazing in comics could be topped on a project. On Tarzan when Joe Kubert came along, he made the character his own and his version didn't seem to compete with Manning's more modernized sleeker Ape Man. But on Star Wars one has only to glance at the work Al Williamson using the characters and settings of the George Lucas classic movie and you know instantly that it's the ideal pairing of an artist and a project.


Apparently Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson tried out for the strip in the very beginning and seeing the samples reproduced in this collection it's hard to imagine how they were immediately hogtied and forced to take it on. But it didn't happen and Russ Manning ain't no one to sneeze at. But Williamson's adulation of Alex Raymond and the way he took that and other influences to make his own idealized artwork made him the perfect match for the Lucas film, because he and Lucas were coming from the same source though by two different tributaries. Williamson used the original Flash Gordon comic as inspiration for much of his work and Lucas tapped into the zeitgeist of the serials that used Flash as its subject matter. Two craftsmen who looked to the past to make the future.


And Archie Goodwin ain't no slouch. The respect he garnered universally across the comic book field in his capacities as writer and editor is nigh near unique. No one seems not to have liked Archie Goodwin, and having been in jobs where he was forced to tell folks things they didn't like to hear that's incredible to imagines and points to a sincerity and competence that was evident to his peers instantly. I will worship him until I pass for his creation of Manhunter with Walt Simonson, and I fell in love with him in the first story I read by him in the pages of Iron Man. The skill was just evident, even to my boy's eyes and he has always been a talent I followed from that time forward in comics. I never really knew of his simultaneous career in comic strips all that much, to my regret.


But this collection begins with an adaptation of a novel by Brian Daley titled Han Solo at Star's End. It's scripted by Goodwin but drawn by Alfredo Alcala. Now let me be clear here, the work of Alcala is astounding and his pages and pages of barbarians and damsels and such are wonders in details and construction. He's a master, but his work on Star Wars is right terrible. He doesn't get the costuming right, his version of robots is all wrong, and really it's quite disappointing.


It was always a delicate matter about these films and the secrecy that surrounded plot points. So, it's no surprise that even after the arrival of The Empire Strikes Back that Goodwin and Williamson told tales set between the two tent pole movies. It's safer all around and adds to the luster of the Star Wars universe. In the modern-day internet mini-episodes and comic books act as preludes and enriching events in conjunction with a show in real time, such they did with The Walking Dead and Star Trek in recent years. But in the early 80's such organized storytelling was not common at all, but then licenses were just becoming a booming business, the whole far more lucrative than the sum of the parts.


The third volume collects up all the remaining Star Wars comic strips produced before the strip ended in 1984. Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson are on hand throughout the process and generate stories of a singular mature character that fill-in the several years between the end of the debut Star Wars movie and the first sequel The Empire Strikes Back. The strip never deals with the tumultuous revelation by Darth Vader that he is Luke Skywalker's father. The romance between Leia and Han Solo is left on a low simmer. Many of the stories are cannily written with the knowledge of the movie The Empire Strikes Back and toward the end the final film Return of the Jedi, but at no point are the storytellers allowed to drift into the core themes of the epic. 


As with any saga in which the ending is known to some degree, a suspense and tension is difficult to manage. I'm thinking the long years of Conan the Barbarian comics written by Roy Thomas filling in gaps in the published Robert E. Howard adventures. The trail can be a winding one, filled with danger and doubt, but always we know that eventually we will end up in a recognizable spot. Star Wars the comic strip is never allowed to reach that recognizable spot, though they do a pretty good job of it in the end with the use of the planet Hoth as a setting. 



Williamson didn't work on the artwork alone on this strip this time, getting help from his friend and studio mate Carlos Garzon. In later storylines artists such Tom Yeates and Brent Anderson, both working over Williamson layouts. The artwork in the series is the thing that makes it sing, it's absolutely divine, an ideal matching of talent and subject. The strip ended in early 1984 having told the story it was allowed to tell, and telling that story in a beautiful way. 

Rip Off

Sunday, September 27, 2020

The Sunday Funnies - Star Wars Volume Three!


The third volume collects up all the remaining Star Wars comic strips produced before the strip ended in 1984. Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson are on hand throughout the process and generate stories of a singular mature character that fill-in the several years between the end of the debut Star Wars movie and the first sequel The Empire Strikes Back. The strip  never deals with the tumultuous revelation by Darth Vader that he is Luke Skywalker's father. The romance between Leia and Han Solo is left on a low simmer. Many of the stories are cannily written with the knowledge of the movie The Empire Strikes Back and toward the end the final film Return of the Jedi, but at no point are the storytellers allowed to drift into the core themes of the epic. 


As with any saga in which the ending is known to some degree, a suspense and tension is difficult to manage. I'm thinking the long years of Conan the Barbarian comics written by Roy Thomas filling in gaps in the published Robert E. Howard adventures. The trail can be a winding one, filled with danger and doubt, but always we know that eventually we will end up in a recognizable spot. Star Wars the comic strip is never allowed to reach that recognizable spot, though they do a pretty good job of it in the end with the use of the planet Hoth as a setting. 



Williamson didn't work on the artwork alone on this strip this time, getting help from his friend and studio mate Carlos Garzon. In later storylines artists such Tom Yeates and Brent Anderson, both working over Williamson layouts. The artwork in the series is the thing that makes it sing, it's absolutely divine, an ideal matching of talent and subject. The strip ended in early 1984 having told the story it was allowed to tell, and telling that story in a beautiful way.  

Rip Off

Saturday, September 26, 2020

The Saturday Serials - Return Of The Jedi!


I'm not going to lie -- I'm not a big fan of this movie. Star Wars burned out my old-fashioned eyes when it debuted and rewired my boyhood brain with fresh understandings of both movies and science fiction. Loved it fiercely and still do! The Empire Strikes Back added to the saga effectively, picking up the hints and suggestions from the first and fleshing them out and setting the stage for a stunning finale. Tragically Return of the Jedi had the least mustard of any other original trilogy and while they are not the only problem by any means, I mostly blame those damned Ewoks.

Amazon.com: Wicket the Ewok Vintage 1983 Star Wars Return of the Jedi Board  Game: Toys & Games

Now I don't hate the Ewoks. Wait..let me correct that statement...I do hate the Ewoks. They are the antithesis of what I'd come to expect from the Star Wars universe, a romanticized good guy-bad guy situation, but one with a sometimes grimy appearance and sometimes a gleaming appearance. Aliens were weird, really weird, but one thing they never ever were was...cute. The Ewoks brought "cute" to the franchise much to its detriment and the ersatz teddy bears proceeded to demolish not just those Imperial walkers but my trust in George Lucas.

Star Wars- Return of the Jedi (1983) Episode VI - gold slave bikini- Carrie Fisher- H 2016

Now that doesn't mean that the movie doesn't have its charms. And for that I'll point to every Star Wars fanboy's wet dream, the ravishing Princess Leia in her slave bikini. Now in the previous flicks Leia had been more tomboy than vixen, a damsel well capable of getting herself out of distress in the first one, and a no-nonsense warrior in the second. She does give in to her love for Han in the first sequel, thus cracking her tough skin just a wee bit, but it's not until she's chained at the...uh...ahem..."feet" of Jabba the Hut that classic sci-fi sexuality is allowed to sizzle forth from Carrie Fisher's portrayal. She soon strangles the nasty Jabba with is own chain showing her mettle (no pun intended) has not slackened. But make no doubt about it,s slavegirl Leia she's occupying new territory in the fanboy imagination.


Another thing I didn't care for in Return of the Jedi was the quick dispatch of Boba-Fett, a character I thought was worthy of a better send-off. We get his origin decades later and that helped soothe my woes, but it was a prickly point at the time. On the plus side, I did very much enjoy seeing a confident Luke Skywalker taking it to the Emperor as well as arguably the most delinquent father in film history. He's gone from white to gray to black and with each shift in color his skills have developed. Now the swiftness of the training is a bit of a nag, but that's not uncommon in these stories and give Lucas a pass on that one. The relationship between Leia and Han Solo is really nicely done as they can now get on with the lovemaking since we now broken off the Luke angle on the triangle. (That was a tad icky by the way.)


The ending is a little too overgrown for my tastes, a fan of westerns in which the hero just saunters away into the sun when the work is done, but I can handle celebration in moderation. (I generally hate applause by characters inside the narrative of a movie -- it almost always seems contrived to elicit a similar reaction from the audience.) The misty trio from the source -- Obi Wan, Anakin and Yoda -- was a bit over the top, but I'll suck it up for the kiddies. It sounds like I hate Return of the Jedi and I don't. If it had been the only one of the three, it would've been a triumph for science fiction fantasy on film. But given the expectations and the opportunity it presented, it falls short of what was anticipated for several years. And that can leave a mark. 

Rip Off

Sunday, September 20, 2020

The Sunday Funnies - Star Wars Volume Two!


It's almost unimaginable to me that the work of Russ Manning, an artist who I regard as among the most amazing in comics could be topped on a project. On Tarzan when Joe Kubert came along he made the character his own and his version didn't seem to compete with Manning's more modernized sleeker Ape Man. But on Star Wars one has only to glance at the work Al Williamson using the characters and settings of the George Lucas classic movie and you know instantly that it's the ideal pairing of an artist and a project.


Apparently Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson tried out for the strip in the very beginning and seeing the samples reproduced in this collection it's hard to imagine how they were immediately hogtied and forced to take it on. But it didn't happen and Russ Manning ain't no one to sneeze at. But Williamson's adulation of Alex Raymond and the way he took that and other influences to make his own idealized artwork made him the perfect match for the Lucas film, because he and Lucas were coming from the same source though by two different tributaries. Williamson used the original Flash Gordon comic as inspiration for much of his work and Lucas tapped into the zeitgeist of the serials that used Flash as its subject matter. Two craftsmen who looked to the past to make the future.


And Archie Goodwin ain't no slouch. The respect he garnered universally across the comic book field in his capacities as writer and editor is nigh near unique. No one seems not to have liked Archie Goodwin, and having been in jobs where he was forced to tell folks things they didn't like to hear that's incredible to imagines and points to a sincerity and competence that was evident to his peers instantly. I will worship him until I pass for his creation of Manhunter with Walt Simonson, and I fell in love with him in the first story I read by him in the pages of Iron Man. The skill was just evident, even to my boy's eyes and he has always been a talent I followed from that time forward in comics. I never really knew of his simultaneous career in comic strips all that much, to my regret.


But this collection begins with an adaptation of a novel by Brian Daley titled Han Solo at Star's End. It's scripted by Goodwin but drawn by Alfredo Alcala. Now let me be clear here, the work of Alacala is astounding and his pages and pages of barbarians and damsels and such are wonders in details and construction. He's a master, but his work on Star Wars is right terrible. He doesn 't get the costuming right, his version of robots is all wrong, and really it's quite disappointing.


It was always a delicate matter about these films and the secrecy that surrounded plot points. So it's no surprise that even after the arrival of The Empire Strikes Back that Goodwin and Williamson told tales set between the two tent pole movies. It's safer all around and adds to the luster of the Star Wars universe. In the modern day internet mini-episodes and comic books act as preludes and enriching events in conjunction with a show in real time, such they did with The Walking Dead and Star Trek in recent years. But in the early 80's such organized storytelling was not common at all, but then licenses were just becoming a booming business, the whole far more lucrative than the sum of the parts.

Rip Off

Saturday, September 19, 2020

The Saturday Serials - The Empire Strikes Back!


There are many folks who consider The Empire Strikes Back the best of the Star Wars movies. I am not one of those people. The movie is a dandy for certain with a barely discernible harder edge than its predecessor, though for all of the vaunted differences in tone it's supposed to have from Star Wars (now call "A New Hope"), I detect very little change save that they don't win  at the end. (Sorry if that's a spoiler.)


All the stars return to reprise the roles that came to define their careers and in many instances their lives. The story is set several years after its predecessor and gives us a good inside look at the Rebel Alliance which is supposed to stand up the overpowering Empire that dominates space. Its' also a war movie, at least at first. The tale beginning with a huge battle as it does evokes more of a doughty WWII feel in the way soldiers take on devastating machines in the form of the "Walkers", one of my favorite Star Wars inventions. There is outstanding stop-motion filming done in this flick and in these days of digital overload a delightfully simple solution. After the fighting the movie settles down into a light drama with extensive comedy thrown to lighten the blend.


The love triangle sorts itself out as Princess Leia shows her feeling for Han Solo and poor little Luke is left to hang and train with the offbeat Yoda.  Whereas the first story was set pretty much on Tatooine and in space, this one wants to play up different worlds and takes the watcher to the ice world of Hoth, the swamp world of Dagobah, and the cloud world of Bespin, as well as a little time on an asteroid which is home to an enormous worm. We also get a ginormous space battle cruiser, all black and sleek controlled by Darth Vader himself. The canvas is much larger, and that's no doubt because the producers of the film were pretty much guaranteed a success given the hunger for a sequel created by the enormous success of Star Wars.


As for the big reveal of Darth Vader as Luke's father, it all seems a little quaint these days. But I can remember wondering about it and the impact it would have on the outcome of the story. Darth Vader was an amazing composite character, physically performed by David Prowse and vocally by James Earl Jones. His mystery and menace lurks all over this movie, more than the others even because he's the center of attention as much as anyone is. The first movie was about the droids and told from their perspective and while we don't get that access to Vader, we do get a much greater sense of his power and limitations such as the time he kneels to his Emperor and speaks so confidently of his plans.


The Empire Strikes Back was a remarkable thing, a sequel nearly as compelling as the film that inspired it. To my mind not as strong or complete an experience, but that was all intentional and I cannot fault the creators for the necessary problems. The story would be resolved in the next movie, but for that I'd have to wait several more years. And when the time finally came, I got to meet Ewoks. More on that encounter next week.

Rip Off

Sunday, September 13, 2020

The Sunday Funnies - Star Wars Volume One!


I'm not aware of anyone who doesn't admire the work of Russ Manning. Manning created a sleek handsome future world for Magnus the Robot Fighter, a world which was visually sometimes at odds with the dangerous threats it faced from too much reliance on technology. He'd broken in on Brothers of the Spear and made himself an international star with his definitive work on Tarzan of the Apes. So when the Star Wars folks wanted to take their stripling concept and expand it onto the funny pages, they found the ideal translator in Manning.


Manning was in complete command in the beginning, partly because that's the way he preferred to work and partly because the behemoth that was to become the Star Wars machine was still forming. Eventually they decided they needed to pre-approved things and at that point Manning gave up writing the strip though he continued to draw it. 



There were three stories during the Manning-only period, the most famous of these is likely "Gambler's World" which ran in the daily strip and introduced a new villain named "Blackhole".  Given the understandable mandate that none of the real status quo of the series could be affected, the story has a frivolous quality to it which was not to my mind in keeping with the Star Wars feel, but there's no denying Manning's skill at capturing the characters likenesses. 


In the Sunday pages two other Manning-only efforts ran and they were both more like the movie. They introduced a new character named Gyla Petro who was at once a minor romantic interest for Han Solo and someone for him to talk to since he couldn't have both Luke and Leia at the same time in the series, one of the early restrictions on Manning. Han and later Luke shows to help save a culture from Empire and later we get a glimpse of Wookie culture. 


At that point Steve Gerber of Howard the Duck fame steps aboard for an adventure which takes Luke back to Tatooine. It's probably my favorite of the stories as it really evokes the classic feel of the movie. A writer named Russ Helm comes aboard with a few stories and later Don Christensen writes a few. By the time it's over we've met some really interesting new characters such as Lady Tarkin (loved Peter Cushing in the movie and liked seeing him remembered here). Even Boba Fett turns up to make things hot for the trio as that embargo seems to have been lifted at some point. 


When Manning fell ill his assistants Dave Stevens and Rick Hoberg take the helm for a short transitional period and then the duo of Helm and new artist Alfredo Alacala take over. Now I'm a huge Alacala fan, but he was not well used here and the last strip in this collection is several notches in quality below the rest. The sleek futuristic lines of Manning have been replaced with Alfredo's heavier touches and not to good effect and I have to wonder how much reference Alcala had since the characters look very different and only vaguely like the the movie stars they represent. It's a tragedy indeed that Russ Manning died so young. 

But this is just the beginning for the strip as in the next volume Archie Goodwin and Al Williamson step aboard. 

Rip Off

Saturday, September 12, 2020

The Saturday Serials - A New Hope!


There's little chance of overstating the impact of Star Wars on films, science fiction, and the popular culture in general. We were all living our lives quite quietly, discontented with a decade which was not delivering on the promises of the previous two. America was, if not crumbling, then at the very least showing its age with its big cities becoming wildly dangerous places (at least in the imagination) and the world increasingly not listening to our demands, especially in the Middle East where it turned out "our oil" was not actually ours.

1977 Star Wars soundtrack poster I found. Enjoy! : StarWars

In the wake of America's two hundredth birthday it seemed that life was turning a bit gloomy all around. Then Star Wars hit. It saved Hollywood from itself , rescuing an industry which had gotten old but not mature, and it saved comic books when the license bailed out the company which would become the behemoth Marvel. For a fantasy and sci-fi fan it was manna from heaven giving us all something new and shiny to discuss and obsess over. It was indeed as it would come to called, a new hope.

Pic of the Day: Star Wars (1977) | deep fried movies

For me personally it was eye-opening to the extreme. I grew up a comics fan, a science fiction fan, and was just coming away from several years entranced by the works of J.R.R. Tolkien and his imitators. I'd read lots of Asimov, some Ellison, but not enough Heinlein. Dune was perhaps my favorite sci-fi novel, maybe still is. I went to see most all the fantasy and science fiction movie releases that hit my area including the Harryhausen and Heston epics.

Star Wars 1977 Japanese B2 Poster | Posteritati Movie Poster Gallery | New  York

But when I went to see Star Wars, already having read a somewhat lackluster comic appearance, I came out changed for all time. While it seems a bit old and worn these days, back then those spaceships were visions of an imagination larger than mine and the characters were at once stunningly weird and comfortably familiar. Movies like Logan's Run suddenly seemed like out-sized episodes of Lost in Space and a new game was afoot.

1977 Posters - Star Wars Archives

Like most folks I saw it multiple times, four I think. In those days when video was just blooming there was no such thing as waiting at home for it to drop in a few months. These will-of-the-wisps had to be chased and wrestled to the ground. My tired bones like the new age of countless films at my fingertips, but I confess the old days were fun for muscles eager to run about.

Star Wars Poster//Star Wars Movie Poster//Spanish New Hope Poster//Mov –  The Vintage Printing Co

I'm not going to spend any time reviewing the plot of Star Wars because if you don't know it, you ain't reading this blog. But here are few things that have stuck me in recent viewings. Luke is set up elegantly as our hero from the magical repetition of his name when we first meet him to the twin moons of Tatooine, one shining and one dusky, which symbolize the twin natures of his heritage and his soul. We know who is father is, who is sister is, but he doesn't and he's a young man set adrift when his Uncle Owen and Aunt Beru are murdered. They seem too quickly forgotten it now seems as I watch the movie, but I didn't think that then as he clings to a new mentor named Kenobi, who opens a box and draws forth a magic sword that will lead the youngster toward his destiny.

Star Wars Poster by Michelangelo Papuzza, 1977 for sale at Pamono

I prefer to watch the original version of the movie as opposed to the refined and retooled one that Lucas dropped on us to make them more compatible to his prequels. Seeing some unidentifiable beast lumber across Mos Eisley doesn't really add value to my experience though I confess the sweetened explosions don't hurt.

Amazon.com: Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977) Movie Poster 24"x36":  Posters & Prints

When Lucas made Star Wars that was it, the only one for all the chatter about chapters and such. Because it was an enormous success he could make the sequels (neither of which surpasses the original --spoiler alert) and years later when cash-strapped he'd finally launch his own personal "Silmarillion" on the world. (I confess I like them fine, but you're only a virgin once.) Of the new movies only Rogue One has captured the exciting essence of this very first New Hope and that's because like its predecessor it was only supposed to ever stand alone really. One shiny object from a time and a galaxy far away to behold and enjoy forever and ever.

More next week when...you guessed it...the empire will strike back.

Rip Off

Friday, September 11, 2020

Where Were You In 1962!

Details about American Graffiti FRIDGE MAGNET 6x8 Movie Poster George Lucas  Magnetic Print | American graffiti, Movie posters vintage, Classic movie  posters

American Graffiti is a movie that takes us ultimately into the future, but by way of revisiting the nostalgic past as seen through the eyes of writer and director George Lucas. This movie of a teens on the verge of passing into adulthood and at once eager and fearful of that transition picks up some of the themes evident in the earlier Lucas film THX 1138 in the sense that it's lead character is confronted with the dilemma of staying fixed in his reasonably comfortable but constricting life or trekking out to find something different, perhaps even something better.

American Graffiti at 45: George Lucas' Pre-Star Wars Masterpiece – /Film

Of course Lucas takes the naive position that if one has the courage to move into the new sphere they will necessarily find success and that doing otherwise is utter foolishness. A more nuanced understanding of life might have given this film a deeper meaning, but as it is it does direct our feelings to want to root for the life beyond the winding streets filled with endlessly meandering cars. Success might be beyond the horizon or it might not be and happiness can be found in the local, but for all symbolically at least the transition into the sometimes cold world of adulthood is unavoidable.

American Graffiti | Lucasfilm.com

As a comic book and movie fan, nostalgia is an enormous part of what makes my life enjoyable, but being stranded on the rocks of the past is different than wanting to preserve and nurture warm memories of that time. But it's rather ironic to listen to George Lucas talks much about the necessity of moving on with life in the commentary to this film, to leave behind the things of the past. But a quick look reveals that pretty much his whole movie career after THX 1138 is memorializing a romanticized view of the past in movies such as the swashbuckling Star Wars and Raiders of the Lost Ark which hearkens back to the serials of Buster Crabbe and adventures of Errol Flynn, and this movie which is a milestone marker for a time when "innocence" was possible in a dark dim world.

vintage magazine covers | Vintage Magazine Cover Art (car  related)....Christmas too.... | Automotive art, Car art, Cover art

It seems that  Lucas is also a collector of Norman Rockwell paintings, works that themselves point backwards to a shining idealized past. While Lucas as been enormously successful as a director and even more so as a producer, his advice to go forth and conquer new realms tends to thud on the sharp stones of reality a bit.

Rip Off