Dark Schneider a écrit :Mouais, ce monsieur avait 87 ans et n'est connu que pour deux ou trois films qu'il a bien réalisé mais agissait en pur éxecutant, on peut pas dire que ça me touche le moins du monde.
Moui enfin il était bien plu qu'un simple exécutant sur L'Empire Contre-Attaque qui, rappelons-le au cas où, est un des meilleurs films de tous les temps. C'est pas rien, tout de même.L'entretien qu'a posté Gillo est très intéressant pour commencer à s'intéresser au sujet, et si jamais vous voulez approfondir un peu, vous pouvez aller voir
cette passionnante interview de Gary Kurtz.
PLUME: It was never George’s intention to direct Empire?KURTZ: No, no. After Star Wars, he didn’t really want to direct the others. I think he was unhappy that I – I’m the one that recommended Kershner, and had worked with him before. I think he was a good choice for Empire, I think he worked really well, but he wasn’t the kind of director… George, I think, had in the back of his mind that the director was a sort of stand-in – that he could phone him up every night and tell him what to do and kind of direct vicariously over the telephone. That never happened. Kershner’s not that kind of director, and even when George showed up a couple of times on the set, he found that it wasn’t easy to maneuver Kershner into doing what he would have done.So, on Jedi, he was determined to find a director who was easy to control, basically, and he did. And that was the result, basically – the film was sort of one that George might have directed if he had directed it himself… but maybe not, because it goes through so many interim bits, that if he had directed it probably would have been quite different.