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October 2000
Would Anakin Skywalker turn to the dark side? Was Boba
Fett going to make an appearance? And most crucially
of all, would Jar Jar Binks die horribly? After months
of skimming through the wild speculation on the Internet
sites - Episode II was still more than a year and a
half away - the invitation had arrived. I could now
read the script of Star Wars Episode II. Only
I wasn't going to get a copy in the post, oh no. I had
to actually, physically travel to Lucasfilm in northern
California to read it. Security, you understand.
So I flew to San Francisco and drove up into the hills
to the remote valley where Skywalker Ranch, George Lucas'
HQ, is hidden away from the eyes of the world. At the
entrance lodge, security guards confirm your identity
and hand you a map. It's quite useful having a map as
the Ranch is several miles long. There's criss-crossing
roads that dip through redwoods and past a lake (that's
Lake Ewok), a fire station (gleaming fire engines with
"Skywalker Ranch" on the side), a baseball diamond,
kitchen garden, vineyards, horses, and random deer.
Oh, and bicycles, used by Lucasfilm folk to get around.
We are met by Iain Morris, Art Editor at Lucasfilm,
and taken to an oak-panelled room in the Main House
(where George Lucas has his office) for coffee and muffins.
Then we are escorted to a luxurious stag theatre, lit
by art nouveau lamps and with gigantic armchairs for
seats. Apparently, this is where George watches films;
I looked around for signs of thrown popcorn and spilt
coke, but it was immaculate. Howard Roffman, Lucasfilm's
head of Licensing, sat us down and told us a story,
in which we find out exactly what Anakin Skywalker does,
who Boba Fett really is, and, thankfully, not very much
at all about Jar Jar Binks. We are treated to three
partially finished sequences from the film. In one,
the speeder chase through Coruscant, Obi-Wan and Anakin
are played by stand-ins, and their hilarious over-acting
gives me a rough idea of how Star Wars might
look if John Waters had directed it instead.
Then the big moment arrives. We are led to an office,
where a pile of bound manuscripts are waiting for us.
The script! At this current moment in time, this is
the Holy Grail of Star Wars fandom. We are each
asked to sign for them, and are escorted to separate
offices to read it. I've got just two hours with it.
I sit down with my notepad and pen and turn to the first
page. I read: Star Wars Episode II "Jar Jar's
Big Adventure".
November 2000
Having read the script, I have been able to plan out
which spaceships and vehicles we'll feature in the Cross-Sections
book. I have also had my choice of author approved by
DK and Lucasfilm. Dr Curtis Saxton is an Australian
who holds a PhD in theoretical astrophysics and knows
more about Star Wars than I would ever have thought
humanly possible. He writes an enormous website called
the Technical Commentaries, whose mission is to "synthesise
and explore a self-consistent reality for the Star
Wars universe." (Sample topic: Hyperspace - phenomenological
study and physical rationalisation of superluminal travel"!)
Apart from this, Curtis has no actual publishing experience,
and I realise that I'll be held responsible if anything
goes wrong!
January 2001
I arrange for Hans Jenssen, Richard Chasemore and Curtis
to fly to Lucasfilm to research the vehicles and spacecraft
to be featured in the Cross-Sections book. Between them,
the two artists have 13 major cross-section artworks
to research, plan, draw, get approved, ink, colour and
finish. To begin drawing, they will need good reference
and at this stage in the film's production schedule,
that's going to be hard to come by. Iain Morris says
that he can get us access to concept artwork and reference
pictures - but no scale models, since they are all stored
at special effects supremos Industrial Light and Magic
(ILM) and ILM is totally out of bounds to pesky licensees
like us. However, we might possibly be able to have
a meeting with Doug Chiang, one of the concept design
supervisors for the film and therefore a Very Important
Person.
Sunday 4th March 2001
It's a warm spring morning in northern California. The
illustrators and I are getting over jetlag. We're awaiting
the arrival of Curtis Saxton, flying in from Australia.
Eventually, from out of the sunshine, a dark figure
appears - with an Australian accent. Curtis, dressed
in a double-breasted suit, struggles with a gigantic
and very ancient alligator skin suitcase ("my grandfather
used it when he went exploring in Africa…"). As I get
to know Curtis, I realise that despite being just 27
years of age, he makes no concessions to youth in his
manner or dress. As a self-declared "young fogey", he
wears a formal suit at all times. After making introductions,
Curtis produces a ball of green string from his pocket.
I nod as if in understanding, explaining to the bemused
illustrators later "it's ok, he's just a bit eccentric."
Monday 5th
Lucasfilm people are even more bemused with Dr Saxton.
Used to people dressed casually in jeans and T-shirts,
they didn't know what to make of Curtis in his dark
suit and black, shiny shoes.
At lunch, we are sat at a table right beside none
other than George Lucas. Halfway through the meal, George
is shown a large board on which are pinned a selection
of types of video case. George examines each in turn
before making his choice. Since, at this point the video
release for The Phantom Menace hadn't even been announced,
we realised we were officially witnessing a Highly Confidential
Moment.
The illustrators have got access to work in the Art
Room, which is the creative nerve centre for whole look
of the Star Wars prequels. We still didn't have
clearance to visit the vehicle models at ILM. This was
a blow, since we had come above all else to look at
the models. It's the best way of getting a sense of
the bulk of a ship; by studying the exterior marking,
you can get an idea of how the interior might be laid
out - which is obviously crucial for the cross-section
artworks Hans and Richard had to produce.
Tuesday 6th
The artists begin their initial sketches, deciding which
angle shows off the craft to best advantage, allowing
us to see as much as possible of the interior and allowing
for annotations and captions on the spread. They have
been looking through folders of pre-production sketches,
which are helpful only to a degree since most of the
vehicles change dramatically from Doug Chiang's initial
idea to the finished thing. It's a strange feeling when
you walk into the Art Room and all around you there's
top-secret Episode II stuff pasted over the walls, and
every surface is littered with models of every description.
At DK, I have to clear my desk each evening and keep
all Episode II materials locked up. It's particularly
amazing seeing people actually working on the film;
for example, producing animatics - computer animated
storyboards that are used to pre-plan every shot of
the film.
Wednesday 7th
It's the day of our lunch with Doug Chiang. In bright
sunshine, we drive up to his white stucco apartment
overlooking San Rafael, palm trees everywhere. Doug
greets us at the door dressed entirely in white. Doug
is laid back and charming. His wife and young children
pad softly around. A piano tuner tunes Doug's new piano,
all white, of course. Doug takes us into his beautiful,
light-filled studio, and shows us his latest paintings.
Then we assemble on his sun porch with big glasses of
fresh orange juice, and quiz Doug about the spaceships
and vehicles he designed for the movie. What weapons
does Obi-Wan's fighter have? How many clone troopers
do the Gunships carry? How will the loading hatches
on the Republic Assault Ship open? Doug tells us everything
he and George Lucas decided for the ships, and then
we drive off to San Rafael to his favourite Thai restaurant
for lunch. As it's his birthday, Hans gets to ride with
Doug in his silver Porsche Boxter. Doug is open and
talkative about his work on the Star Wars prequels.
He asks the illustrators all sorts of questions about
their work.
Thursday 8th
Curtis, Hans, Richard and I spend all day working out
how the spaceships and vehicles should work. Some, such
as Zam Wesell's speeder, have no obvious outlets for
important things like exhaust, and Curtis works out
complex but scientifically water-tight ways to resolve
these apparent problems. He proposes that Geonosian
fighter pilots are permanently sealed in their ships,
literally hatched in the cockpit. We love it! He's great
at taking Hans' and Richard's ideas and pushing them
further. Curtis is really firing on all cylinders, the
illustrators are looking impressed, and I feel justified
in my confidence in him, though later we have to modify
many of his ideas.
Friday 16th
Against all odds, Iain has managed to arrange clearance
for us to visit ILM. We jump in the car and drive to
ILM, whose anonymous, low-rise buildings give away no
clues as to its importance as the world's most successful
special effects company. At the reception, we receive
passes and are whisked along corridors lined with movie
posters, through busy work areas, crowded with computers,
models, drawings, props, and miscellaneous other stuff.
And right out the other side. Eventually, in another
nondescript building (I'm sure they were deliberately
disorientating us so we could never find our way around
again), we reach the payoff - the room where the Episode
II vehicle models have been laid out for us like priceless
jewels. They are only a few inches tall, but are intricately
made, showing all sorts of details like hatches and
viewscreens which we couldn't get from anything else.
The illustrators and author proceed to debate every
last pen-drawn line and measure every length. For me,
the important thing was that at last I found out what
Curtis' green string was for: taking impromtu measurements.
Ahh, of course.
Our final afternoon. We have had the guided tour of
the Ranch, seen the beautiful library which has a stained
glass dome for a ceiling. We have eaten in all of its
four restaurants and eyed up all the Star Wars
merchandise in the shop. We've seen the cabinets of
actual props from Lucasfilm movies - C3PO's metal hand;
Luke's lightsaber; Indiana Jones' hat and whip! We've
fantasized about staying in the guest lodge, where visiting
VIPs stay, Coppola and Spielberg among them. Preparing
to leave for England, we've got reference that we could
never have got anywhere else; but we've still got almost
nothing on certain spaceships, and now the serious work
really begins.
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