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Star Wars poster

Star Wars

“A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away...”

8.2
1977
2h 1m
AdventureActionScience Fiction
Director: George Lucas

Overview

Princess Leia is captured and held hostage by the evil Imperial forces in their effort to take over the galactic Empire. Venturesome Luke Skywalker and dashing captain Han Solo team together with the loveable robot duo R2-D2 and C-3PO to rescue the beautiful princess and restore peace and justice in the Empire.

Trailer

Trailer Official

Cast

Reviews

AI-generated review
The Dust and the Destiny

In 1977, American cinema was knee-deep in the grime of reality. The defining films of the decade—*Taxi Driver*, *The Godfather*, *Network*—were cynical, complex explorations of moral decay and institutional failure. They were brilliant, but they were heavy. Into this atmosphere of cinematic malaise, George Lucas dropped a bomb that wasn't designed to destroy, but to transport. *Star Wars* (retroactively subtitled *A New Hope*) was an audacious act of regression. By looking backward to the serials of Flash Gordon and the samurai ethics of Akira Kurosawa, Lucas didn't just make a movie; he constructed a modern myth that offered a traumatized culture a new moral compass.

The vastness of the galaxy and the smallness of its heroes

To revisit the film today, stripping away decades of sequels, prequels, and merchandise, is to be struck by how tactile its universe feels. This was the invention of the "used future." Unlike the pristine, sterile corridors of Kubrick’s *2001: A Space Odyssey*, Lucas’s galaxy is dirty, dented, and lived-in. The Millennium Falcon is a hunk of junk held together by hope and duct tape; the droids are scuffed by sand; the bars are filled with smoke and sweat. This visual language serves a crucial narrative purpose: it grounds the fantastical elements in a reality we can recognize. We believe in the Force not because the special effects are flashy, but because the world it inhabits feels undeniably solid.

The kinetic energy of the space battles

At the center of this sprawling space opera is a narrative simplicity that borders on the divine. It is easy to dismiss the story as a basic "Hero’s Journey"—Joseph Campbell by the numbers—but that ignores the emotional precision with which it is executed. The film’s emotional anchor is not the destruction of the Death Star, but a quiet moment on a desert planet: Luke Skywalker staring at a binary sunset. In that single, wordless sequence, accompanied by John Williams’ swelling score, Lucas captures the universal ache of adolescence—the yearning for a life that is bigger than the one you have. It is a moment of pure cinematic poetry that transcends the genre’s trappings.

The tension of the final confrontation

Whatever complex empire of media *Star Wars* has become, the 1977 original remains a singular triumph of tone. It balances the terrifying scale of fascism (embodied by the cold, skeletal geometry of the Death Star) with the scrappy, desperate humanity of the Rebellion. It manages to be earnest without being saccharine, and terrifying without being hopeless. In shifting the industry focus from the director-driven dramas of the 70s to the era of the blockbuster, *Star Wars* may have inadvertently changed the business of movies forever, but its artistic legacy is one of pure, unadulterated wonder. It reminded us that sometimes, we don't go to the dark to see a reflection of our own ugly reality; sometimes, we go to see the light.

Clips (3)

Star Wars - briefing scene HD

Star Wars: A New Hope l Ben Kenobi Appears

TIE Fighter Attack A New Hope

Featurettes (17)

Kathleen Kennedy introduces a screening of the original 1977 print of Star Wars | BFI

Inside the Archive: Star Wars in Technicolor | BFI

All the Facts | Disney+ Deets

George Lucas & Harrison Ford on STAR WARS: A NEW HOPE

Neil Patrick Harris announces STAR WARS for AFI Movie Club

Is Star Wars science fiction? - Scott McGee

Star Wars Wins Art Direction: 1978 Oscars

Star Wars Wins Costume Design: 1978 Oscars

Mark Hamill, C-3PO and R2-D2 Present Special Sound Oscars for Close Encounters and Star Wars

Harrison Ford on Shooting Star Wars

Star Wars Wins Film Editing: 1978 Oscars

Star Wars Wins Original Score: 1978 Oscars

George Lucas On Creating Industrial Light & Magic

George Lucas On Casting STAR WARS: A NEW HOPE

George Lucas On How STAR WARS Got Made

James Earl Jones On Being The Voice Of Darth Vader

George Lucas Introduces Star Wars: A New Hope

Bloopers (1)

Star Wars: A New Hope Bloopers

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