StarWars.com made a great selection of quotes from Abrams from previous interviews about the impact Star Wars has had on his life and career....
THAT FAMOUS BANTHA TRACK T-SHIRT (2006):
“When Damon Lindelof walked into my office for the first time and he was wearing not just a Star Wars shirt but an original Star Wars
shirt — and I could tell it was his, not just some vintage purchase,”
Abrams adds. “I immediately knew that we were long lost brothers. It was
the first thing that made me say, ‘Okay I love this guy.’”
HIS FIRST STAR WARS MEMORY (2006):
“My first Star Wars memory was seeing the words ‘Star Wars‘ in Starlog Magazine
and thinking it was a weird title,” Abrams recalls. “I remember seeing
an early concept poster by Ralph McQuarrie for the movie. It stuck in my
head even though I didn’t know what it was — but it looked important.
My second memory is actually seeing it in the theater on opening day in
Westwood at Avco Theater and never being the same again.”
WHY STAR WARS CONTINUES TO RESONATE (2006):
“It was absolutely the first film that struck a cord and that
resonates to this day,” Abrams continues. “I think it’s because everyone
relates to being stuck in your life and feeling like something
extraordinary is just around the corner. To have something scary and
tragic happen, like what happens to Luke’s aunt and uncle, is such an
engaging story that could take place on a farm in the middle of the U.S.
and be just as compelling. And the fact that he ends up being the key
to preventing this galactic takeover is kind of an amazing wish
fulfillment. I think this taps into a universal desire that we all have
to find meaning and purpose that is larger than what we ever could have
imagined.”
HOW STAR WARS HAS INFLUENCED HIM (2006):
“I don’t know how many times in developing stories I have referenced the archetypes of Star Wars,”
Abrams says. “As a fan of Joseph Campbell and the use of myth in
storytelling, you could argue that it is a classic paradigm but it is
the common language among all of us because we are all so familiar with
the Star Wars canon. It’s hard to remember breaking a story for an episode of a show, whether it was Lost, Alias or even Felicity
and not feel like there was some way to reference the love triangle you
felt in Episode IV or the struggle of good and evil that you have seen
in all six of the films.”
“Star Wars is probably the most influential film of my
generation,” Abrams adds. “It’s the personification of good and evil and
the way it opened up the world to space adventure, the way Westerns had
to our parents’ generations, left an indelible imprint. So, in a way,
everything that any of us does is somehow directly or indirectly
affected by the experience of seeing those first three films.”
ON SEEING REVENGE OF THE SITH (2006):
“I was probably most affected by the end of the film when we are
returned to some of the sets on the ship that we see in the first Star Wars
movie, Episode IV,” Abrams says. “I was surprised by how good it felt
to be home. Given all of the scope and scale of everything that had come
before, there was something incredibly satisfying and warm and fuzzy
about being back in those white hallways that sort of rekindled the
feeling you had when you saw the Stars Wars universe for the first time.”
ON THE STORY OF ANAKIN SKYWALKER (2006):
“Obviously, his fall was inevitable and you learn that from the early
films,” Abrams says. “You know it’s going to happen and watching it
happen is tragic. What’s fascinating to me is that I grew up in a time
when my friends related to Luke and now, my kids relate to Anakin. There
is an interesting social comment there — that when I grew up the hero
was an optimistic young neophyte who becomes this hero and the new
generation’s hero is a strong-willed, ambitious and ultimately vilified
protagonist who is misled and, for reasons of ego and heartbreak,
literally becomes the very villain that my generation fought against.”
WHERE HE’D LIKE TO SEE STAR WARS GO NEXT (2008):
“I feel like the world of Star Wars has gotten to be so vast, not just in terms of the various mediums that Star Wars
occupies, but because of the visual possibilities that technology has
allowed and Industrial Light & Magic is so remarkably capable at
creating. My favorite thing about Star Wars is the ability to
tell an incredibly personal, intimate, and emotional story against a
backdrop of conflict and battle that’s planetary and massive. What I
would love to see is a story about characters that I am desperately
entertained by and definitely care about, and keep that story as focused
as possible and make more of that than the pyrotechnics of it all which
to me is what makes Star Wars so brilliant. If it’s a TV show,
that’s terrific. If it’s animated I’m all for it. If it’s a radio show
or a video game or an online experience — whatever it is I would love to
discover in this vast universe some new characters that make me feel
the way that Luke, Leia, and Han Solo did.”
STAR WARS CHARACTERS HE WISHES COULD HAVE A BIGGER STORY (2008):
“It’s funny how in a weird way sometimes by demystifying a character
it takes away from some of the fun that you felt about that character.
It takes the mystery out of it. Sometimes a character is more
interesting when you don’t know everything about them. Even someone from
my generation — and I’m ancient compared to so many of the Star Wars
fans that are out there — for me the character of Darth Vader was
always so compelling because you were putting together all these thing
in your head and making all these assumptions that to get to know Anakin
as much as we ultimately did, changes the way you consider Darth Vader.
It’s crazy to me that my kids relate to Anakin; which to me is criminal
because I grew up believing Vader is a bad guy. I related to Luke and
Leia and Han Solo. You don’t relate to Vader! I still think it’s wrong
to be on Anakin’s side. So I guess there’s no one character I can point
to and say that I want to know more about him or her, it’s just that Star Wars is so vast it would be great to find characters that have that level of emotional intimacy.”
WHAT HE’D LIKE TO SEE STAR WARS DO ONLINE (2008):
“Star Wars used to have a very defined focus as to what it
was and who the characters were, now it’s so vast that it encompasses so
much more. It’s not unlike how Star Trek was when it first
came out and you knew all the characters, but now when you ask about it
you have different answers from different generations of fans. So the
possibilities are endless even though so much of Star Wars has
been explored in the novels and elsewhere. Online is the perfect place
to have something like an interactive Senate where fans could represent
different worlds and debate in character. I could see a giant Star Wars debate team tackle all the issues that the prequels dealt with and having characters from the movie moderate the discussion.”
ON DOING A LOT IN THE SCI-FI GENRE (2008):
“I don’t ever look at genres of movies, but instead characters I’d
like to see. There are so many genres that are already out there. If you
want to go see a Western, or a ’70s period piece, it’s available. The
reason behind almost anything I work on is because it’s not out there
right now and I want to see it.”
Source: starwars.com




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