The Empire Strikes Back!

The Empire Strikes Back!

And so does George Lucas in the second
of his Star Wars epics Well, it took them long enough, but here they come. All the old friends
and some favorite enimies have returned to brighten up this unhappy
spring. There's Luke Skywalker, that gee whiz kid from Tatooine, and
there's Princess Leia, that cosmic mankiller. There are Han Solo and
his furry 8-ft. friend Chewbacca trying to get their beat-up old tub,
the Millennium Falcon, to make the jump into hyperspace. And back, of
course, are the Laurel and Hardy of the robot set, Artoo Detoo and See Threepio, in fine beep and polish. But wait. What is that ominous sound in the background, that heavy
breathing that strikes terror in the hearts of all those who love peace
and freedom? It could only be the scourge of the universe, the nastiest
man from here to infinity, Archvillain Darth Vader, the Dark Lord of
Sith and leader of the Imperial Forces. It is time, in other words, to
hurry up, buy the popcorn, M&M's, or whatever else you like to munch in
front of the silver screen, and grab a seat for The Empire Strikes
Back. This sequel to Star Wars, which easily toppled Jaws as the most
successful movie in Hollywood history, opens in Britain and in 125
theaters around the U.S. on May 21, and that is not a millisecond too
soon for those children, everybody under the age of 90, who have been
waiting since 1977 to find out what happens next. Three expensive
science fiction films—Star Trek, The Black Hole and Alien—have opened
in the past year, but none has claimed the public's affection like the
adventure fantasy of Producer-Creator George Lucas. The question now
is: Can he do it again? Whether Lucas, 36, will break his own world record is uncertain, of
course, but he and Director Irvin Kershner have certainly tried. With
the money Lucas made from Star Wars, he built for The Empire the
world's largest sound stage and what may be its most sophisticated
special effects studio. Tricks that were hard first time around were
easy the second time, and new harder ones were thought up. Actors who
were not sure what they were doing spouting Lucas' Classics comics
dialogue were enthusiastic about the sequel. “Star Wars was basically a
'Let's Get Darth Vader' story line, all action and little dialogue,”
says Carrie Fisher, who plays haughty Princess Leia. “The Empire has
romance, minor tragedies and characters working more off each other.
Sure, it's a fairy tale, just like the first, but it has an additional
dimension.” When Star Wars ended, the rebels—the good guys—had just destroyed the
Empire's Death Star and were giving their two new heroes, Luke and Han
Solo

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