12 Awesome Behind the Scenes Photos from THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK!


Here are 12 pretty awesome behind the scenes photos from the George Lucas and Irvin Kershner classic film Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back. These come from the new book The Making of Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back. Kershner was at the main talent behind Empire Strikes Back and it's crazy to think that Lucas didn't like what he did with it. This film was made by a crew of talented people that actually told George Lucas "No." Which is why the movie ended up being the best of them all!

I can't wait to get my copy of this book! Check out the photos and feel free to share your thoughts with us!

Mark Hamill at EMI Elstree Studios, where by September 1979 two Star Wars films had been shot.

The opening crawl was filmed at Industrial Light & Magic, circa March 1980.

Des Webb, in his enormous snow-creature costume with gigantic boots on stilts, could walk no more than a few feet without taking what looked like a painful fall. Here he drags a Luke Skywalker mannequin.

Phil Tippett and Jon Berg stop-motion animate a shot with all three walkers (the background walkers are cutouts). Originally the plan had been to photograph the walkers against four-by-five Ektachrome transparencies shot in Norway; when these didn’t work as planned, matte artist Mike Pangrazio copied select Ektachromes onto large scenic backings.

Harrison Ford sitting behind an X-wing.

A monkey is outfitted with a cane and a mask and measured. The simian was also briefly considered for walking shots of Minch-Yoda that would have been impossible to execute with a puppet.

On September 5, 1979, renowned actor Sir Alec Guinness arrived at Elstree Studios, in Hertfordshire, England, where Mark Hamill greeted him. Though not on camera, Hamill would feed his character Luke Skywalkers lines to Guinness, who played Ben Kenobi.

At the dining-room door, unit publicist Alan Arnold, director Irvin Kershner, Ford, Carrie Fisher, and Billy Dee Williams.

The Boba Fett costume was built by several crew members and painted by Joe Johnston. “I painted Boba Fett’s outfit and tried to make it look like it was made of different pieces of armor,” says Johnston. “It was a symmetrical design, but I painted it in such a way that it looked like he had scavenged parts and done some personalizing of his costume; he had little trophies hanging from his belt, little braids of hair, almost like a collection of scalps.”

Peter Mayhew, as Chewbacca, with Fisher.

When Darth Vader (David Prowse) revealed his secret to Luke, Hamill was hanging onto a pinnacle above mattresses placed on cardboard boxes about 30 feet off the ground.

What has become an iconic photograph of Hamill, George Lucas, Fisher, and Ford (in the background are chief hairdresser Barbara Ritchie; Michael J. Duthie, an editor who happened to be visiting the set that day; and assistant to director Debbie Shaw, daughter of actor Robert Shaw).

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