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(1) The UFO crash at Roswell
(2) The elder head of the Bush family – his patents for everything, including Sky Net and the internet
(3) The Terminator movies – these are based on a prophecy that once Sky Net becomes active, it will become sentient and destory/take over the world
Rent the Star Wars dvds in the trilogy and watch the additional featurettes and commentaries (esp. Empire of Dreams). You can cite shows and media like that… just get an MLA book and look up the proper format
The official web site run by LucasArts (George Lucas’ company) is here:
The majority of the entries for each character, vehicle, location, etc. has a “Behind the Scenes” tab that provides various information on original concept art, note on the actor (for characters), and production methods for creating miniture models and CGI elements. There’s a special section called “Hyperspace” (marked with an icon of a yellow “H” in from of the frames of the Millenium Falcon’s cockpit, which looks a lot more like a “H” on a movie reel at first glance) and in this sectrion subscription members can access additional articles.
There are alot of sites and books dedicated to the Star Wars universe depicted in the films, comics, novels, and video games. I’m assuming your actually looking for the more “behind the scenes” info rather than the finished story, locations, and characters.
The easiest place to start is to find someone with the DVD boxed set for the original Star Wars trilogy, it has 4 DVDs, 3 are the movies and the 4th is marked “Bonus Material”. This 4th DVD has the featurette “Empire of Dreams” (it was shown on A&E a while back). In it they mention alot of the behind the scenes history of how the story was made, marketing franchise, the casting for the various key characters, location shoots, model making, use of matte paintings, CGI effects for the Special Ediction, sound effects, filming techniques and special effects along with the various changes in technology that were developed and used between the original trilogy and the prequel trilogy… basically it touches on a lot of the stuff you listed in your question, but you may have to look through it a few times to catch all the various details they mention (they tend to kinda fly by in a lot of cases) since it crams about 30 years worth of Star Wars movie making into about 3 hours or so.
Of course a single DVD isn’t going to be enough to I’ve tried to find as many possible “behind the scenes” books that could go into futher detail. I haven’t read any of them, but their summaries give the impression that they may provide the “real world” behind the scenes stuff like the Empire of Dreams DVD above.
Empire Building (looks like an alternate book of whats on the DVD)
SWEP1: The Making of the Phantom Menace (Looks like it goes into the behind the scenes stuff not really covered in the DVD.)
Dressing The Galaxy (About the costumes and designers used)
Sculpting the Galaxy (About model making vehicles and locations)
SW: Where Science Meets Imagination (Looks like it shows comparisons between real technology and the type of technology in Star Wars)
Inside the Worlds of Star Wars (Goes into the making of scenes and worlds using various real locations and special effects)
I think these go into the various real world myths encorperated into the Star Wars movies.
These “scrapbooks” also go into behind the scenes stuff.
And this one goes into the behind the scenes stuff on the writing and screenplay of the Star Wars films.
I doubt you’re gonna want to shell out money just to get these books, but I’m sure there’s got to be some student Star Wars fans living scattered around campus and the nearby towns. You might be able to assemble all the books on here by borrowing one or two of them from several different student Star Wars fans. If your really lucky, there will be 1-3 super ******** Star Wars fans that have most of these books, instead of having to borrow books from over half a dozen people.
This should give you a decent start into your project with multiple sources. The only trick is getting a hold of the books, the DVD box set with “Empire of Dreams” should be easy to borrow. Hope this helps… was gonna say “good luck”, but I think it would be more fitting to close with a classic line…
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Alamo Fast Draw is dedicated to the sports of Fast Draw, Single Action Shooting, Old West History, Western Movies, Western Movie Stars and Gunfighters Past, Present, Future.
I can tell you what to look for…
(1) The UFO crash at Roswell
(2) The elder head of the Bush family – his patents for everything, including Sky Net and the internet
(3) The Terminator movies – these are based on a prophecy that once Sky Net becomes active, it will become sentient and destory/take over the world
Sky Net became named Star Wars.
Rent the Star Wars dvds in the trilogy and watch the additional featurettes and commentaries (esp. Empire of Dreams). You can cite shows and media like that… just get an MLA book and look up the proper format
don’t know
The official web site run by LucasArts (George Lucas’ company) is here:
The majority of the entries for each character, vehicle, location, etc. has a “Behind the Scenes” tab that provides various information on original concept art, note on the actor (for characters), and production methods for creating miniture models and CGI elements. There’s a special section called “Hyperspace” (marked with an icon of a yellow “H” in from of the frames of the Millenium Falcon’s cockpit, which looks a lot more like a “H” on a movie reel at first glance) and in this sectrion subscription members can access additional articles.
There are alot of sites and books dedicated to the Star Wars universe depicted in the films, comics, novels, and video games. I’m assuming your actually looking for the more “behind the scenes” info rather than the finished story, locations, and characters.
The easiest place to start is to find someone with the DVD boxed set for the original Star Wars trilogy, it has 4 DVDs, 3 are the movies and the 4th is marked “Bonus Material”. This 4th DVD has the featurette “Empire of Dreams” (it was shown on A&E a while back). In it they mention alot of the behind the scenes history of how the story was made, marketing franchise, the casting for the various key characters, location shoots, model making, use of matte paintings, CGI effects for the Special Ediction, sound effects, filming techniques and special effects along with the various changes in technology that were developed and used between the original trilogy and the prequel trilogy… basically it touches on a lot of the stuff you listed in your question, but you may have to look through it a few times to catch all the various details they mention (they tend to kinda fly by in a lot of cases) since it crams about 30 years worth of Star Wars movie making into about 3 hours or so.
Of course a single DVD isn’t going to be enough to I’ve tried to find as many possible “behind the scenes” books that could go into futher detail. I haven’t read any of them, but their summaries give the impression that they may provide the “real world” behind the scenes stuff like the Empire of Dreams DVD above.
Empire Building (looks like an alternate book of whats on the DVD)
SWEP1: The Making of the Phantom Menace (Looks like it goes into the behind the scenes stuff not really covered in the DVD.)
Dressing The Galaxy (About the costumes and designers used)
Sculpting the Galaxy (About model making vehicles and locations)
SW: Where Science Meets Imagination (Looks like it shows comparisons between real technology and the type of technology in Star Wars)
Inside the Worlds of Star Wars (Goes into the making of scenes and worlds using various real locations and special effects)
I think these go into the various real world myths encorperated into the Star Wars movies.
These “scrapbooks” also go into behind the scenes stuff.
And this one goes into the behind the scenes stuff on the writing and screenplay of the Star Wars films.
I doubt you’re gonna want to shell out money just to get these books, but I’m sure there’s got to be some student Star Wars fans living scattered around campus and the nearby towns. You might be able to assemble all the books on here by borrowing one or two of them from several different student Star Wars fans. If your really lucky, there will be 1-3 super ******** Star Wars fans that have most of these books, instead of having to borrow books from over half a dozen people.
This should give you a decent start into your project with multiple sources. The only trick is getting a hold of the books, the DVD box set with “Empire of Dreams” should be easy to borrow. Hope this helps… was gonna say “good luck”, but I think it would be more fitting to close with a classic line…
“May the Force be with you.” =P