logo
George Lucas brings the force to Comic-Con in historic first visit

George Lucas brings the force to Comic-Con in historic first visit

The Star2 days ago
Comic-Con fans pulled out their lightsabres on Sunday to welcome Star Wars creator George Lucas to the prominent pop culture convention for the very first time.
Attendees lined up for hours to grab a seat inside the 6,500-person capacity venue in San Diego, California to see the legendary filmmaker behind the Indiana Jones franchise speak at the event on its final day.
Comic-Con, which draws some 130,000 attendees, has become an important platform for movie studios and their stars to showcase the latest film and television offerings, especially those with a genre fan base.
"We've been waiting five decades for this!" said panel moderator Queen Latifah, who oversaw the discussion by Lucas and other filmmakers.
Instead of discussing his film works, however, Lucas graced the convention to preview the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art - opening in Los Angeles in 2026 - which the director co-founded with his wife, businesswoman Mellody Hobson.
"I've been collecting art since I was in college," Lucas, 81, told the crowd, adding that he has amassed tens of thousands of pieces in his collection.
https://apicms.thestar.com.my/uploads/images/2025/07/28/3440049.jpg
"I've been doing this for 50 years now, and then it occurred to me that what am I going to do with it all because I, I refuse to sell it.
"I could never do that, it's just, it's not what I think art is - I think it's more about an emotional connection," the director said.
In his description of the museum, Lucas said the institution will feature a blend of works.
They include illustrations by Normal Rockwell, Jessie Willcox Smith and N.C. Wyeth; artworks by Frida Kahlo, Jacob Lawrence, Charles White and Robert Colescott; and pieces by cartoonists and artists like Winsor McCay, Frank Frazetta and Jack Kirby.
"This is sort of a temple to the people's art," he said in summation.
The museum, housed in a sleek, curved building, will also feature items from Lucas's films and other exclusive pieces.
For the Star Wars mastermind, the museum aims to be a tribute to the importance of narrative art.
"When you're born, the baseline is fear. And as you go through life, you're curious about things, but you're especially curious about things you don't understand, and therefore that's a threat to you.
Queen Latifah, from left, George Lucas, and Guillermo del Toro attend a panel for the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art during Comic-Con International on July 27 in San Diego. Photo: AP
"And as a result, you make up stories to make it feel good," he continued.
"Science fiction is a myth ... but we've made it real because of science fiction books and art."
'A critical moment'
Among the other members of the panel were Oscar-winning director Guillermo del Toro and production designer Doug Chiang, who shaped the aesthetic of the Star Wars universe for decades.
"What's remarkable about George is that he leads from the heart, and this museum is him," Chiang said.
Del Toro, who will release his latest film Frankenstein in November, said many of the museum's pieces will celebrate freedom of speech.
"We are in a critical moment in which one of the things they like to disappear is the past, you know, and this is memorialising a popular, vociferous, expressive and eloquent moment in our visual past that belongs to all of us," Del Toro said.
The fantasy filmmaker also described comics as a medium with "a lot of social conscience" and joked that comic artists "were the first one to punch a Nazi" in their works.
"What a panel!" said attendee Jesse Goldwater, who travelled to San Diego from Los Angeles.
"They are the embodiment of Comic-Con itself, without them Comic-Con wouldn't exist." - AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Malaysian author Tash Aw's book 'The South' is longlisted for the Booker Prize
Malaysian author Tash Aw's book 'The South' is longlisted for the Booker Prize

The Star

time10 hours ago

  • The Star

Malaysian author Tash Aw's book 'The South' is longlisted for the Booker Prize

To promote his new book 'The South', Tash Aw appeared at Lit Books, CzipLee Bangsar, Kuala Lumpur, in March. Photo: The Star/Raja Faisal Hishan Malaysian author Tash Aw's new book The South is among 13 semifinalists announced on Tuesday for the Booker Prize. The list features writers from nine countries across four continents. Raised in Malaysia and educated in England, Aw has won the Whitbread, Commonwealth and O. Henry Awards, with his work translated into over 20 languages. 'To call The South a coming-of-age novel nearly misses its expanse. This is a story about heritage, the Asian financial crisis, and the relationship between one family and the land,' noted the 2025 Booker Prize judges. Aw, who has been a Booker Prize semifinalist twice before (with The Harmony Silk Factory and Five Star Billionaire ), will be the first Malaysian winner if he takes the £50,000 (RM283,000) prize for The South. Indian author Kiran Desai, who won the Booker Prize and then didn't publish a novel for almost two decades, is also up for the award again with her long-awaited follow-up. The Loneliness Of Sonia And Sunny, the 677-page tale of two young Indians making their way in the United States, is Desai's first novel since The Inheritance Of Loss, which won the Booker in 2006. Indian author Kiran Desai, a Booker Prize winner, is also up for the award again with a long-awaited novel. Photo: AP Two previous finalists are up for the prize again: British writer Andrew Miller, for The Land In Winter, and Hungarian-British writer David Szalay for Flesh. Five of the contenders are from Britain: Miller, Szalay, Natasha Brown ( Universality ), Jonathan Buckley ( One Boat ) and Benjamin Wood ( Seascraper ). Books by US writers in the running include Susan Choi's Flashlight, Katie Kitamura's Audition and Ben Markovits' The Rest Of Our Lives. Also on the list are Misinterpretation by Albanian-American Ledia Xhoga, Love Forms by Trinidad's Claire Adam, and Endling , a debut novel by Canadian-Ukrainian opera librettist Maria Reva. "The 13 longlisted novels bring the reader to Hungary, Albania, the north of England, Malaysia, Ukraine, Korea, London, New York, Trinidad and Greece, India and the West Country,' said Irish novelist Roddy Doyle, chair of a five-member judging panel that includes actor Sarah Jessica Parker. "All, somehow, examine identity, individual or national, and all, I think, are gripping and excellent,' he said. Founded in 1969, the Booker Prize has a reputation for transforming writers' careers and is open to novels from any country published in Britain and Ireland. Last year's winner was Orbital, by British writer Samantha Harvey. A list of six finalists will be announced Sept 23, and this year's winner will be crowned on Nov 10 at a ceremony in London. - AP

Katy Perry and ex Canadian PM Justin Trudeau spotted dining in Montreal
Katy Perry and ex Canadian PM Justin Trudeau spotted dining in Montreal

The Star

time14 hours ago

  • The Star

Katy Perry and ex Canadian PM Justin Trudeau spotted dining in Montreal

Katy Perry and Justin Trudeau are both believed to have become single somewhat recently. Photos: AP Pop star Katy Perry and former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau dined together at a Montreal restaurant. Their Monday 'dinner date' was caught on film by TMZ, which said Trudeau picked up the tab on a feast that included lobster, tuna and lamb. Photos from earlier in the day show the pair walking through Montreal's Mount Royal Park for around 90 minutes before grabbing a bite. Trudeau was all smiles as her and Perry swung by a Ritz-Carlton hotel to drop off her dog. Perry and Trudeau are both believed to have become single somewhat recently. No public display of affection were observed during their outings, which appeared to be friendly affairs. The pair reportedly popped into the kitchen to thank staffers for their hospitality. Representatives for Perry and Bloom confirmed the couple's split on July 3. The pair had dated for about nine years, according to People. The 40-year-old singer is in Canada for her Lifetimes Tour, which includes a Tuesday night show in Ottawa. She'll perform at Madison Square Garden on Aug 11. Trudeau, 53, divorced Sophie Gregoire Trudeau in August 2023 after 18 years of marriage. He served as Canada's Prime Minister from nearly a decade before stepping down in March. – New York Daily News/Tribune News Service

AI bands signal new era for music business
AI bands signal new era for music business

Malay Mail

time16 hours ago

  • Malay Mail

AI bands signal new era for music business

NEW YORK, July 30 — A rising tide of artificial intelligence (AI) bands is ushering in a new era where work will be scarcer for musicians. Whether it's Velvet Sundown's 1970s-style rock or country music projects 'Aventhis' and 'The Devil Inside,' bands whose members are pure AI creations are seeing more than a million plays on streaming giant Spotify. No major streaming service clearly labels tracks that come entirely from AI, except France's Deezer. Meanwhile, the producers of these songs tend to be unreachable. 'I feel like we're at a place where nobody is really talking about it, but we are feeling it,' said music producer, composer and performer Leo Sidran. 'There is going to be a lot of music released that we can't really tell who made it or how it was made.' The Oscar-winning artist sees the rise of AI music as perhaps a sign of how 'generic and formulaic' genres have become. AI highlights the chasm between music people listen to 'passively' while doing other things and 'active' listening in which fans care about what artists convey, said producer and composer Yung Spielburg on the Imagine AI Live podcast. Spielburg believes musicians will win out over AI with 'active' listeners but will be under pressure when it comes to tunes people play in the background while cooking dinner or performing mundane tasks. If listeners can't discern which tunes are AI-made, publishers and labels will likely opt for synthetic bands that don't earn royalties, Spielburg predicted. 'AI is already in the music business and it's not going away because it is cheap and convenient,' said Mathieu Gendreau, associate professor at Rowan University in New Jersey, who is also a music industry executive. 'That will make it even more difficult for musicians to make a living.' Music streaming platforms already fill playlists with mood music attributed to artists about whom no information can be found, according to University of Rochester School of Music professor Dennis DeSantis. Meanwhile, AI-generated soundtracks have become tempting, cost-saving options in movies, television shows, ads, shops, elevators and other venues, DeSantis added. AI takes all? Composer Sidran says he and his music industry peers have seen a sharp slowdown in work coming their way since late last year. 'I suspect that AI is a big part of the reason,' said Sidran, host of 'The Third Story' podcast. 'I get the feeling that a lot of the clients that would come to me for original music, or even music from a library of our work, are using AI to solve those problems.' Technology has repeatedly helped shape the music industry, from electric guitars and synthesizers to multi-track recording and voice modulators. Unlike such technologies that gave artists new tools and techniques, AI could lead to the 'eradication of the chance of sustainability for the vast majority of artists,' warned George Howard, a professor at the prestigious Berklee College of Music. 'AI is a far different challenge than any other historical technological innovation,' Howard said. 'And one that will likely be zero-sum.' Howard hopes courts will side with artists in the numerous legal battles with generative AI giants whose models imitate their styles or works. Gendreau sees AI music as being here to stay and teaches students to be entrepreneurs as well as artists in order to survive in the business. Sidran advises musicians to highlight what makes them unique, avoiding the expected in their works because 'AI will have done it.' And, at least for now, musicians should capitalise on live shows where AI bands have yet to take the stage. — AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store