...Lucas has a message for studios that are cutting their slates and shifting toward big-budget tentpoles and franchises: You've got it all wrong.
The creator of "Star Wars," which stamped the template for the franchise-tentpole film, says many small films and Web distribution are the future...
"We don't want to make movies. We're about to get into television. As far as Lucasfilm is concerned, we've moved away from the feature film thing, because it's too expensive and it's too risky.
"I think the secret to the future is quantity," Lucas told Daily Variety. "Because that's where it's going to end up."
Lucas spoke to Daily Variety after the groundbreaking ceremony for the renamed School of Cinematic Arts at USC.
He gave $175 million -- $100 million for endowment and $75 million for buildings -- to his alma mater. But he said that kind of money is too much to put into a film.
Spending $100 million on production costs and another $100 million on P&A makes no sense, he said.
"For that same $200 million I can make 50-60 two-hour movies. That's 120 hours as opposed to two hours. In the future market, that's where it's going to land, because it's going to be all pay-per-view and downloadable.
"You've got to really have a brand. You've got to have a site that has enough material on it to attract people."
He said he's even discussed this with Pixar's Steve Jobs and John Lasseter.
"If you don't do very many movies, and you're really lucky, and you really know what you're doing, you can get away with it. But you know at some point you're going to lose a game."
Lucas said he believes Americans are abandoning the moviegoing habit for good.
"I don't think anything's going to be a habit anymore. I think people are going to be drawn to a certain medium in their leisure time and they're going to do it because there is a desire to do it at that particular moment in time. Everything is going to be a matter of choice. I think that's going to be a huge revolution in the industry."
That doesn't mean Lucasfilm is diving into online distribution, though. "Having had a lot of experience in this area, we're not rushing in," he said. "we're trying to find out exactly where the monetization is coming from. We're not interested in jumping down a rat hole until such time as it finally figures itself out."
Nor is Lusasfilm's exit from features instant or absolute. "Indiana Jones 4" is still in development. "Steve (Spielberg) and I are still working away, trying to come up with something we're happy with. Hopefully in a short time we will come to an agreement. Or something," Lucas said, without a great deal of enthusiasm.
Lucasfilm also is working on a film about the Tuskegee airmen of World War II called "Red Tails."
"I've been working on that for about 15 years," he said, adding he's also been working on "Indy 4" for 15 years.
And Lucas Animation does plan to start making feature films -- eventually.
"Right now we're doing television, which looks great. I'm very very happy with it," he said of his animation division. "And out of doing the animation, we're getting the skill set and the people and putting the studio in place so we can do a feature. But it's probably going to be another year before we have the people and the systems in place to do a feature film."
Lucas admitted the big-budget strategy has done well for him in the past, but, "We're not going to do the $200 million investments."
He calls himself "semi-retired" but reiterated his plans to direct, "small movies, esoteric in nature," after his other projects are launched. He expects to serve as exec producer on the two features and the TV shows, including a live-action "Star Wars"[TV series].
At the USC groundbreaking, Lucas was honored amid canon-shots of confetti and fanfares from the USC Marching Band for his gift, the largest in the school's history.
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Lucas thinks studio's shouldn't depend on blockbusters anymore
I think the reason that movie attendance is down, has more to do with the quality of the product generated by Hollywood, rather than any technology. Add to that, the shrinking home video window and there you go. Sure, tech is a component of the problem, but if the films were better, people would return to the multiplex...When VHS first appeared some 30 years ago, I remember folks saying things very similar about movies then... I do agree with Lucas on the out of control budgets of films though.
I was fascinated by the characterization that Lucas isn't as optimistic about an Indy 4, as he once was...That makes 2 of us George.
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