During the pre-production of Episode II, George Lucas visited the art department every Friday to review new designs, concept art and sketches. The case is well known: the filmmaker brought his stamp which allowed him to highlight the works he liked. The more OKs he stamped on concept art, the more he loved that design. A single OK meant that the design was not discarded, but changes needed to be made. 8/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/421/545/397/014/original/c4ee0c48d8da98df.png
Chiang: "George has the designs in his mind and as the master editor of all of this, he decides what is within the realm of the Star Wars universe and what is behind it." Lucas: "For every design that I use in the movie, there's at least 10 or 15 designs that get rejected." Obi-Wan's starfighter actually evolved out of dozens sketches. 9/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/425/284/937/499/original/cdf0efc9c1f4c9f8.png
Doug Chiang: "When [George] saw the designs, he started to incorporate his new storyline to it, and so the whole idea of taking that shape and turning into a Jedi fighter evolved with the design process." George Lucas: "Ultimately the overriding factor on Obi Wan's ship, and all of the Jedi ships, is that I wanted them to be reminiscent of the design of the Star Destroyers because ultimately that's where those ships grew out of." 10/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/428/511/798/255/original/b746acbfffae2f3b.png
Doug Chiang: "George will typically pick up a pencil or pen and add his modifications to the designs or say, ' let's take the cockpit of the drawing here and put it here.'" Doug Chiang: "And one of the fun things is that, I remember George saying, "Let's just take a Star Destroyer and turn it into a fighter ship". That was such a bold statement. At first, I didn't think it would work, until I actually saw it on paper." 11/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/431/783/826/412/original/ea7f07edeba1ac7a.png
At this time, George wanted to blend and blur the lines. Doug Chiang: "So you can see here, even though these are Jedi ships, we actually kept them very triangular to sort of evoke a little bit of the transition towards the Empire Star Destroyers." "It's my job with the rest of the artists to come up with the background for that design and make it make sense so that no one questions the design when they see the film." 12/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/435/118/937/440/original/5c6a183823989518.png https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/435/850/922/412/original/3604db681bcde5a7.png
Doug Chiang: "We were so familiar with this triangular shape being the symbol or the icon for the Empire that to take that and actually give it a new personality, a new identity which is the shape for the Jedi Starfleet, was actually a really brilliant move and actually made the whole symbolism very powerful. Because you can see how everything slowly starts turning towards the Dark side." 13/13 https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/440/597/032/219/original/a325727f90c062ec.png https://cdn.masto.host/socelnet/media_attachments/files/111/071/442/177/205/519/original/ef5e70ffe06e5b25.png
For those who want to dig deeper into the subject, my piece on the creation of the Jedi Starfighter, of which this thread is in part an extract, is available on my Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/posts/66488808
Of course, if you liked this thread, please repost the first post! 🙏 https://socel.net/@TheSpaceshipper/111071392463983757