Transcript
Introduction
George Lucas unapologetically invested in what he believed in most: Himself. As a result, the film empire he created would empower not just him but other filmmakers to produce movies exactly as they envision them without a studio imposing its own priorities, grousing about budgets or micromanaging the process. George Lucas, the small-town son, had said no to the family business, then built a cinematic empire based on his own uncompromising vision of the film industry, not as it was, but as he thought it should be.
Much of that vision lay in the possibilities presented by new technology, technologies Lucas developed with his own money, an inherent ability to hire the right people, and a knack for asking the right questions. I can't help feeling that George Lucas has never been fully appreciated by the industry for his remarkable innovations, said the director, Peter Jackson. He is the Thomas Edison of the modern film industry.